Creating Market Economy in Eastern Europe
Annual Paper of “World Economies” “Creating Market Economy in Eastern Europe” ПРИМЕЧАНИЕ: Раздел 3 данной курсовой работы и имеет отношение только к нашей республике, просьба обратить на это внимание и для каждого конкретного случая его необходимо переделывать под свой регион. Carried out By nd year student The Summary Introduction 1. Meaning of market Economy and Tasks of the Transitions. 2. The Emergence of Market Economy in European countries. 1. . The Transition to a Market Economy. 2. Poland and Hungary as the best example of transition in the East Europe. 2. Moldova’s way to an open economy. Conclusion. Introduction This paper is oriented toward the problems of transition and creating
in countries of Eastern Europe, namely Poland, Hungary, all of which are
attempting to make the transition under a democratic, parliamentary form of
government. The last new years have witnessed truly extraordinary events in the
formally communist societies. Under newly established conditions of free
speech and freedom of organization, communist principles of political and
economic control have been widely repudiated, and communist governments
have been swept aside, replaced by governments committed to democratic
principles and a market economy. While in some countries and parts of
countries former communist have not been decisively dislodged, in almost
all cases communism has lost whatever remaining legitimacy it possessed,
and it most of these societies the crucial economic issue has suddenly
changed from reforming the socialist planning system by the introduction of
market-like elements to moving to a market-economy with private ownership
of most of society's assets. There are several reasons why the task of designing this transition is
fascinating, especially to economists. First, the problem in new: no country prior to 1989 had ever abandoned
the communist political and economic system. Second, the experience to date indicates that countries attempting
transition face a number of common problems and difficulties. While there
are important differences in the inherited situations and the choices made
by governments of these countries, the similarities in the problems they
face and the difficulties they are encountering suggest that there is logic
to the transition process. Third, the absence of any close historical parallels and the limited
experience economics in transition offer an opportunity and a challenge for
development of normative transition scenarios. This turn out, however to be
extraordinarily difficult to construct. Finally, the problems are not waiting for annalists' solutions;
decisions currently being made may lead to an evolution with irreversible
consequences. 1. Meaning of Market Economy and the Tasks of the Transitions. That economic system which brings together natural resources, labour
supply and technology and which is principally privately owned and were
government has to some extent always been involved in regulating and
guiding the economy, has been referred to as "Market Economy". Yet, despite
this history of government intervention, individuals in that country have
always been able to choose for whom they will work and what they will buy. Now 3 groups make decisions and it is their dynamic interaction that
makes the economy operate. Consumers, producers and government make
economic decisions on a daily basis, the primary force being between
producers and consumers; hence, the market economy designation. Consumers look for the best values for what they spend while
producers seek the best price and profit from what they have to sell. Government, at state and local levels, seeks to promote the public
safety, provides social safety-net, ensures fair competition and also
provides a range of services believed to be better performed by public
rather include education, health service, the postal service road and
railway system, social statistical reporting and, of course, national
defense. In this market economy system, economic forces are unfettered, supply
and demands build up the price of goods and services. Entrepreneurs are
free to develop their business unless they can provide goods or services of
a quality and price to complete with others; they are driven from the
market. By and large, there are three kinds of business: 1) those started and managed personally by single entrepreneurs; 2) the partnership where two or more people share the risks and rewards of a business; 3) the corporation, there stock holders as owners can by or sell their shares at any time on the open market; this latter structure permits the amassing of large sums of money by combining investment, making possible large-scale enterprise. Innovations in economic theory in the last two decades undoubtedly
affect the way economists look at the transition problem and have probably
made them more pessimistic about the ease with which it can be
accomplished. Developments in transaction cost economics, the economics of
information, the new institutional economics, and evolutionary approaches
to economics have sensitized economists to the vital role that institutions
play in economic process. One way of thinking about a successful market
economy is that it is a set of convergent expectations in the population
about how other people will behave; these expectations support an extremely
elaborate division of labour or a high degree of specialization among
individuals, organizations, and geographic areas. In recent decades many economists have returned to the Schumpeterian
view that the advantage of the market economy (relative to its
alternatives) lies more in its facilitation of innovative activity than in
its allocative efficiency. The system of central planning is surely deficient in both respects
but it is shortcomings seem to be much greater in the area of innovation
than in allocative efficiency. Another development in economics that has reduced the affractiveness
of the large conception of market socialism is the increased attention paid
to the motivation of government officials, both legislators and
bureaucrats. In the 1950's and 1960's, much of economic analysis was focused on
market failures and government action to remedy these failures, under the
implicit assumption that government officials would follow the rules laid
down by the authorities. The analysis of the logic of collective action and
the formation of interest groups the theory of rent-seeking behavior, and
the study of the evolution of cooperation and norms have emphasized that
government failure as well as market failure must be taken into
consideration in designing institutions. A vivid analogy stated by Vladimir Benachek of Charles University is
that the socialist economics are at the top of a small hill (the planned
economy), and they want to get to the top of a larger hill (the market
economy). But in between the two hills is a valley, which may be both wide
and deep. The analogy illustrates the point that the centrally planned
economics did have a coherent economic system (i.e. they were at the top of
their hill). One might add that the smaller hill was being eroded by the
strengthening of special interest groups and was perhaps, settling due to
the seismic rumblings that shattered the communist authority. The band of
travelers must settle their differences, agree on a route, and avoid the
pitfalls and chasms along the way. Perhaps economic analysis can facilitate the journey by designing a
bridge between the two hills. Given the absence of close historical
parallels and the severe limitations of economic models of society it is
clearly beyond the capacity of social engineers to draw up very precise
plans for the bridge. The Tasks of the Transitions The list of activities which governments which governments must
undertake in countries attempting the transition to a market economy is
truly staggering. The list given here is designed to convey something of
the enormity and complexity of the job. First, there is a group of
activities related to creating a new set of rules:
1. Setting up the legal infrastructure for the private sector:
Commercial and contract low, antitrust and labour low, environmental
and health regulations; rules regarding foreign partnerships and wholly
foreign-owned companies; courts to settle disputes and enforce the laws. 2. Devising a system of taxation of the new private sector: Defining accounting rules for taxation purposes, organizing an
Internal Revenue Service to collect taxes from the private sector. 3. Devising the rules for the new financial sector: Defining accounting rules for reporting business results to banks and
investors; setting up a system of bank regulation. 4. Determining ownership rights to existing real property: Devising laws relating to the transfer of property, and laws affecting
landlord tenant relations; resolving the vexatious issue of restitution of
property confiscated by communist governments. 5. Foreign exchange:
a) setting the rules under which private firms and individuals may esquire and sell foreign exchange and foreign goods;
b) setting the rules in the same area for the not-yet-privatized enterprises. Next there are some tasks related to managing the: 6. Reforming prices: Enterprises that have been privatized will presumably be largely free
to set their own prices, but early on in the process, the demands of the
government budget will require raising prices on many consumer goods that
have been provided at prices for below cost. 7. Creating a safety net: Setting up an emergency unemployment compensation scheme; targeting
aid in kind or in cash to those threatened with severe hard ship by the
reforms. 8. Stabilizing the macroeconomic: Managing the government budget to avoid an excessive fiscal deficit
and managing the total credit provided by the banking system. Finally there are tasks related to privatization: 9. Small-scale privatization: Releasing to the private sector trucks and buses, retail shops,
restaurants, repair shops, warehouses, and other building space for
economic activities; establishing the private right to purchase services
from railroads, ports, and other enterprises which may remain in the public
sector. 10. Large-scale privatization: Transferring medium and large-scale enterprises to the private sector;
managing the enterprises that have not yet been privatized. An abstract Model of the Transition consist of three main phases: Phase 1: The cabinet-level negative phase In this phase members of the central government interact with
nationally representative interest groups. The tasks are organized into two
categories: they will determine the general institutional structure of
society and set guidelines that will be used in phase 2 to assign each
enterprise to one of many alternative "transition regimes". Phase 2: The assigned phase In this phase state-owned enterprises are matched with transition
regimes. One can assume that each state-owned enterprise is completely
described by some vector of attributes. These attributes specify such
diverse aspects of the enterprise as: a) the nature of the products produced by the enterprise, a description of its plant and equipment, and technology it utilized; b) a description of its financial states; c) the place of the enterprise within its industry, including its market share and the nature of its competition; d) some indication of the risk profile of the firm; e) the distribution of information within the enterprise; f) the nature of "measurement errors" in monitoring the performance of the enterprise; g) the relationship between the enterprise and the state bureaucracy; h) the "distance" between the enterprise and founding ministry; i) any potential synergies between the enterprise and some prospective foreign investor. Phase 3: The enterprise-level negotiation phase In this phase participants at the participants at the level of each
enterprise play an MB game (multilateral bargaining). For each enterprise
the structural parameters of the game are included in the characterization
of the transition regime to which the enterprise is assigned. 2. The Emergence of Market Economy in European Countries. 2.1. The Transition to a Market Economy 1) The Successes and Failures of Central Planning. Before considering the transition to a market economy, we must
consider the need for such a transition. Today the need is clear: socialist
and communist systems have failed to deliver (in a liberal sense) anything
like the standard of material advance so often promised. But more recent rasy assessments of central planning abound. Even as
late as 1979 the World Bank published a long and detailed study of Romania
– the most Stalinist of the eastern block. The Bank found that from 1950 to
1975 the Romanian economy had grown faster than any other country in the
world (9,8 percent per annum). The Bank attributed this startling
performance to the fact that government, through its system of central
planning, had control of all resources. The Bank forecast a rasy future for
Romania – growing at 8,7 percent per capita to 1990. Nor was Romania an
aberration. The Bank published in that same year of 1979 a most rasy
history of, and prognostication for Yugoslavia. Studies up to 1984
continued to show that central planning, albeit somewhat modified in
places, delivered the goods. This review is not intended to score paints, but simply to remind us
of the long addiction of economists to planning and regulation. 2) Transitions The transition to a market economy always and at all times involves a
familiar list of policies. First is financial stabilization reducing the budget deficit and the
monetary emissions of the central bank. This stabilization may involve many
complex policies – almost certainly a fax reform and expenditure controls,
particularly in the reduction of subsidies. There is no consensus on pegged
versus free exchange rates. Second is deregulation, elimination a myriad of government controls
and establishing the framework for free contractual relationships. This
priority involves the recognition of property rights and the development of
a legal system suitable for a market economy. It also implies a diminished
role for the central planners as more room is provided for private
initiative and enterprise. But oddly enough it is widely recognized that
there is a need for more restraint on industry, particularly the heavy
state owned firms, to reduce pollution. Other areas of deregulation include
trade reform and currency convertibility. Third is the reform and privatization of state- owned concerns to this
list should be added the reduction in monopoly power not only of industry
but also of trade unions, and in particular the reform of labour laws. The
reform of the banking system and the development of commercial rather than
planning criteria in banking it also of the utmost important. 3) The Political Economy of Transition in Eastern Europe: Packing Enterprises for Privatization. An abstract model of the transition from a centralized command economy
to a market economy focusing on privatization is a novel orientation for
this chapter. In much of the literature on privatization in central and
Eastern Europe, either a case is argued for a particular transition
proposal or specific aspects of the privatization problem are isolated and
considered in detail. The model focuses on the way in which government policies and
enterprise-level decisions are made and relatively less on the specific
content of these policies and decisions. The conceptual model has been designed with five basic premises in
mind: multilateral bargaining, political economy, heterogeneity,
decentralization, and pluralism. 4) Multilateral bargaining In a world in which economic rights are ill designed, a bargaining
problem naturally arises. Throughout Central and Eastern Europe, this
problem can be conceptualized as a multifaceted conflict between multiple
interests representing workers, management, claimants to property rights
based prior ownership, foreign investors, representatives of different
group in the distribution chain, etc. It is useful to distinguish two different kinds of bargaining
problems. There are issues that must be negotiated at the level of central
government: for example, what will be the nature the regulatory and legal
infrastructure within which these privatized enterprises will operate?
Other issues concern the disposition of individual state-owned enterprises
and must be negotiated on a case-by-case basis. In particular what will be
the precise nature of each corporate entity that is being packaged for sale
to private buyers? Who will control it? How will it be structured? What
kind of compensation schemes will be in place for management and workers?
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