“…Moreover, welfare generosity, an alternative measure developed by the Comparative Welfare Entitlements Dataset, also cannot precisely capture how many people are covered by benefits or what the outcomes of the social security system are. In particular, this factor may underestimate outcomes in post-socialist countries because of the lack of massive upheavals during the transition period (Kuitto, 2018), as well as the small number of post-socialist countries covered. Thus, the dependent variable in this study is welfare effort, defined as the proportion of social security spending as a percentage of GDP and extracted from the International Monetary Fund Government Finance Statistics, which includes old-age, disability, and survivors' pensions, allowances for illness, family needs, and maternity, unemployment benefits, and industrial accident insurance benefits.…”