Introduction to Transition Economics.ppt
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1、Introduction to Transition Economics,I. Economics of Transition The demise of communism in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) ushered in a new phenomenon in economics, transition. The break up of the Soviet Union in 1991 was, in a sense a twofold event. The country that was the USSR broke into success
2、or states, such us the Russian federation and Ukraine. The Soviet Union lost its political control over many neighboring countries across CEE and the Baltic states. The econ transition brought increased political freedom but also econ and social depression. The degree of econ and political freedom i
3、n the Soviet successor states was quite low in the late 1980s. By the mid 1990s, these states enjoyed perhaps two-thirds of the political freedom of the developed, democratic nations of the world. The nations of the former SU and CEE entered a deep depression in the early 1990s. Econ growth started
4、again in EE by 1994 and in Russia around 1998 and has increased rapidly since. This is an unprecedented process as no economy has ever moved from a comprehensively controlled economy to a market economy,The Economist (March 24-30, 1990: 22) “Hundreds of books have been written on the transition from
5、 capitalism to communism but not the other way. There is no known recipe for unmaking an omelet.” The key problem is the difficult environment in which the new institutions must take root.In transition we are analyzing how one system transforms into another we need to understand what institutions ar
6、e needed to become market economies.Transition has brought significant changes in the lives of the citizens Rise in the standards of living Demographic changesTransition is not the simple process,II. Why Study Transition? Transition and development Transition is very different from development. Deve
7、lopment is the process of turning a less complex organism into a more complex one. Transition can be likened to changing the organism from one type to another. Transition thus involves the study of the creation of markets; hence, it should be of interest to all economists. Institutions are precisely
8、 what transition economies lack.Politics and Transition The end of communism is a political, as well as econ transformation. The collapse of communism led to political transformations as democracies replaced totalitarian political systems. developing democracy is thus as important in many countries
9、as the creation of markets.,III. The Nature of Transition Transition is the replacement of one ES with another ES. The Evolutionary View A central feature of transition is to build market-institutionslegal system, private property, financial system, etc. 2) The Importance of the Historical Legacy We
10、 are studying the transition from a particular system. The historical legacy is crucial. The most important of these legacies is: An industrial structure designed for a command economy; one that is dominated by large industrial enterprises that are destructive of value (i.e., produce negative value
11、added); The absence of property rights, dictatorship.Although transition economies share a common legacy, there are important differences.,3) Main explanatory forces in modeling transition are: Initial conditions, prevailing at the onset of transition Policy measures, chosen during transition (degre
12、e of liberalization) Environmental factors-resource base, level of developmentInitial Conditions: Two waves of transition Countries differ in the length of socialist period (Former Soviet republics, some 70 years). CEE were generally much smaller and homogeneous in many dimensions, Hungary and Polan
13、d more open economies) Different resource bases Degree of distortion in command economy:,Deviations from market patterns of resource allocation The plan was used to allocate resources. priority allocation based on ideology Biases in favor of industry Soviet industrial enterprises were large, capital
14、-intensive Industry as a source of GDP is higher than in mkt economies Emphasis on investment at the expense of consumption Allocation of labor distorted by rules against dismissal and state budgeting Regional preferences for resource allocation (e.g. Soviet preference for developing Siberia) Foreig
15、n trade distorted by state trading organizations Existence of large “shadow“ economy Evidence suggests larger in Russia and FSU Artificially high levels of employment Countries had been largely isolated from world competitive forces. Distortions growing out of economic isolation were: distorted trad
16、e patterns lack of foreign technological advances isolation from democratic ideas isolation from Western democratic institutions.,Why the initial conditions matter? As markets are introduced, we expect allocation patterns to revert to more “normal” patterns that resemble long-term market outcomes. T
17、he more serious the distortions are, the greater the distance that an economy must travel to reach market dimensions, therefore the more difficult the transition process will be.Can the effects of initial conditions and thus distortions be measured? To measure a countrys “initial condition” an “init
18、ial condition” index developed by European Bank of Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is used the index is “derived from factor analysis and represents a weighted average of measures of the level of development, trade dependence on CMEA (Council for Mutual econ Assistance), macroeconomic disequil
19、ibria, distance to the EU, natural resource endowments, market memory and state capacity.”,Common Features of transition economies at the beginning of transition Dominated by state ownership prior to transition; small private sector shareFSU 10%, CEE 20%. Foreign trade was controlled by the state Hi
20、gh level of secondary school enrollment; unlike developing countries, transition econ invested rather highly in education. A critical feature of transition is the decline in outputsince 1990 typical pattern is the J curve, the pattern of severe economic collapse followed by recovery; The significant
21、 increase in inflation accompanied liberalization in transition economies.,4. Transition Policies a) Important question about transition is the speed of transition should the economy be transformed rapidly, or should there be a more gradual adjustment to the new system. Big bang (shock therapy) stra
22、tegy that involves moving quickly to eliminate the old order and to replace it with new organizational and policy arrangements, i.e. markets; transition policies could be implemented rapidly. all at once and painful causes immediate, sharp economic collapse get it over with before it can be undone T
23、he window of opportunity for reform must be exploited It was often thought that markets would naturally emerge from decentralization as the state exited from its former dominant role. Poland, other Central European countries (Hungary, Czech, Slovenia, Slovakia) chose the big band strategy,slow and s
24、teady (gradual or evolutionary approach)- emphasizes complexity of organizations; process of learning and adaptation required. This approach drew on the analogy of how mkts and related organizational arrangements and policies emerged in Western industrialized economies, typically over extended perio
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