The “socialist revolution” in the Seychelles

Authors

  • Daniel Künzler University of Fribourg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18753/2297-8224-104

Keywords:

Seychelles, socialist revolution, universal social policy, social pension, free health care

Abstract

After the “socialist revolution” in 1977, the Seychelles introduced a universal social pension, free education and free health care. This path of the Seychelles to universal social policies is unique in several regards. On the one hand, the policies were financed by economic growth triggered by a non-dogmatic economic policy that focused on three partly state-led, partly privately driven key sectors. Especially important were services (tourism, finance) that replaced the colonial plantation economy. On the other hand, the country also successfully navigated the Cold War by attracting capitalist development aid to finance “socialist” policies. Finally, social policies contributed to a relatively high standard of living and persisted throughout economic and political liberalisation.

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Article

Issue 1/2018

Section

Thematic Section

Number

Article1.7

Language

English

Published

2018-06-28

License

Copyright (c) 2018 Daniel Künzler
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.