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CATO INSTITUTE

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Title: CATO INSTITUTE


1
CATO INSTITUTE
  • BOOK PRESENTATION
  • SEPT. 25,2006
  • OLEH HAVRYLYSHYN
  • IMF CERES, University of Toronto

2
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3
OUTLINE
  • I. Expectations in 1989.
  • II. Outcomes 15 yrs. later
  • III. Why different outcomes ?(group 1 Liberal
    Democracies vs. group 2 Oligarch States)
  • IV Prospects for completing transition in
    Captured States?
  • V. Summing Up

4
I EXPECTATIONS AND DEBATES
  • Euphoria and optimism generally, but social pain
    expected, some lose some win
  • Fast or slow
  • What to do first ? (sequence)
  • How to mitigate adjustment costs,social pain

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7
All of 1990s Years of IMF Programs
8
BIG-BANG vs. GRADUALISM DEBATE
  • Gradual reforms allow time to create new
    industries and jobs as old eliminated, to reduce
    social pain most important recommendation put
    in place market institutions before
    liberalization of prices, markets
  • Big-Bang needed to change incentives, close
    rent-seeking opportunities and lobbying by Red
    Directors, prevent opponents of reform to delay
    process for own interests

9
DEMOCRACY VS MARKET REFORM DEBATE
  • Przeworski Market reforms cause pain.
    Democratic elections bring back renamed communist
    parties. Reforms reversed.
  • Balcerowicz Early democratization gives
    historical opportunity to move from communism to
    liberalism of markets and polity.
  • (Bunce calls this Dual Liberal Vision)

10
II OUTCOMES
  • How to measure?
  • Economic performance, democratic
    evolution,poverty and distribution,social
    indicators,regime typology, oligarch formation

11
Measuring Outcomes
  • Progress to Market (EBRD-TPI)
  • Economic Performance (GDP growth, inflation,
    FDI)
  • Social well-being (UNDP-HDI poverty, literacy,
    health, etc)
  • Degree of Democracy (contestable elections, media
    freedom)
  • Rule of Law( judicial and administrative
    institutional quality corruption).
  • Type of political regime (democratic, autocratic)

12
EBRD-TPI EXCELLENT PROXY
  • TPI a synthetic measure by EBRD experts of degree
    of free-market economy
  • 1.0 Central plan economy
  • 4.3 Fully operational market
    economy
  • TPI turns out to have strong statistical
    correlation with other outcome measures, e.g.
  • TPI and democracy
  • TPI and social well-being

13
EBRD Transition Progress Indicator 2004
14
Economic Recovery
15
Financial Stability
16
CUMULATIVE FDI PER CAPITA 1989-2003, U.S.(By
Subregion)
17
DEMOCRACY AND MARKET LIBERALIZATION
18
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDICATOR(UNDP Highest Value
Norway0.944 Lowest Value Sierra Leone0.275)
19
Outcome Regime-Types
  • Liberal societies with capitalism for all, open
    markets (CE, BALT Bg Cr Romarginal)
  • Still-undetermined polities (Some SEE) but
    progressing.
  • Oligarch societies, with capitalism for the few
    non-competitive markets (most CISM)
  • Unreformed polities, still very soviet-like
    (CISL)

20
Concentration of Forbes Billionaires
21
Preliminary Conclusions on Outcome
  • Wide-divergence of outcomes regardless of
    measuring stick dumping communism and letting
    capitalism blossom not so automatic.
  • In some countries real open markets with
    capitalism for all, in some non-competitive
    markets with capitalism for the few (oligarchs).
  • Przeworski hypothesis not confirmed by facts
    market liberality and political liberality
    complements rather than trade-offs.
  • Gradualist strategy for easing social costs or
    reforms not confirmed by outcomes on the
    contrary the more rapid reforms, the lower were
    social costs and the earlier they were overcome.

22
BIG-BANG vs. GRADUALISM EVIDENCE
  • When countries properly classified, BB perform
    much better on all indicators even most
    surprisingly on social indicators
  • Governments claiming pursuit of gradualist
    strategy delayed both liberalization and
    institutional development
  • One could conclude self-acclaimed gradualist
    governments more interested in self interest than
    easing social pain

23
IIIWHY DIVERGENT OUTCOMES?
  • Encyclopedic Approach 27 different stories for
    27 countries, each with unique combination of
    history, initial conditions, geographic-cultural
    distance to Europe etc.
  • Problem cannot see the forest for the trees
  • Political-Economy model three main causal
    factors broadly but not perfectly applicable to
    all countries
  • how long reforms debated and delayed
  • how powerful are vested interests
  • how important was reform discipline of
    international club memberships (EU, IMF)

24
WHY DIFFERENT OUTCOMES THE NAVIGATION MODEL
  • Uncharted waters Debate and delay cause slow and
    partial reforms, postpone adjustment
  • Pirate raids Rent-seekers stronger where old
    elite survives, and even stronger if reforms are
    slow and partial
  • Safe havens Progress steady, rent-seeking
    mitigated by efforts at global integration Most
    powerful beacon was EU membership

25
VICIOUS CIRCLE OF DELAYED REFORM AND OLIGARCHIC
DEVELOPMENT
26
State Capture Index, 1999
27
State Capture Higher the Longer Delay in
Stabilization
28
State Capture Lower the More Rapid Reforms
29
Regression Results State Capture 1999 determined
by (1) months to 5 Inflation and (2) TPI after
4 years
30
IV Prospects for Captured States
  • BB v. GRAD Debate is history future, new debate
    is Transition Inevitable(TI) vs. Transition
    Frozen (TF)
  • TI argument high degree of ownership eventually
    leads even oligarchs to seek security of property
    rights, (Coase Theorem in a market any demand,
    including for institutions, will generate a
    supply (Schleifer (1995) Aslund (1997) but
    different view later) (Buiter (2000)
    Yesterdays thief is the staunchest defender of
    property rights)
  • TF counter argument as long as rents and
    privileges from non-transparent lobbying exceed
    value of equal property rights for all, oligarchs
    prefer status quo (Havrylyshyn (1995) Hellman
    (1998) Polischuk Savateev (2004) Sonin (2003)

31
State Capture Leads to Frozen Transition
32
CAPITALIST ELITES IN HISTORY
  • Rent-seeking and Oligarch resistance to
    liberalism, not unique in Post-Communist
    Societies
  • Elite Entrenchment Resistance to liberal
    markets (article by Morck et al,
    Journ.of.Econ.Lit., September 2005).
  • Elite, or Incumbent Capitalist Lobbies against
    competition (e.g. Glass-Steagall Act.,1934, USA
    see Rajan and Zingales (2003) Saving Capitalism
    from Capitalists.
  • Successful Rent-Seeking Rewarded by Shareholders
    Lee Iacocca of Chrysler and US quotas on
    Japanese automobiles.
  • Post-Communist States, degree of state capture
    and short-time for oligarch creation very
    different and special in history. Not equivalent
    to US Robber Barons or Chaebol in Korea.

33
REDUCING POWER OF OLIGARCHS
  • Create open environment for small business.
  • Transparent and equal application of tax
    licensing, tender, other government actions.
  • Very judicious use of
  • re-privatization
  • Colour Revolutions provide opportunity to apply
    measures, but do not guarantee reversal of state
    capture.

34
VSUMMING UP WHAT HAPPENED?
  • Widely divergent outcomes, Central Europe and
    Baltics fully liberal societies, most CIS in
    frozen transition of oligarch regime.
  • Fears that rigid reforms cause greater social
    pain unfounded this argument for gradual reforms
    used maliciously by opponents of reform who
    contributed to formation of oligarch regimes.
  • No trade-off between democracy and market
    reforms where leaders and populace committed to
    dual liberal vision, the two reinforce each
    other.

35
SUMMING UP Why it happened?
  • Where reforms debated and delayed too long,
    vested interests, high jacked transition and
    oligarch regimes resulted.
  • EU membership a very powerful instrument for
    pursuing commitment to dual liberal vision.

36
SUMMING UP WHAT NEXT?
  • Best antidote to oligarch power is a strong
    middle-class anchored by small business.
  • Colour revolutions by the demos can affect
    oligarch power, but as always in history
    entrenched elites do not give up power easily.

37
APPENDIX
38
Table 4. Quality of Institutions in Transition
Economies 1997-98
39
Summary Outcome (cont.)
  • Output recovery in all
  • CE, Baltics, some in SEE, steady progress, strong
    FDI
  • CISM growth surge (10) since 2000, slowed
    sharply 2005
  • Even by official data. CE, BALTICS, SEE life
    much better
  • Unofficial data, consumer choice life is better
    even in CISM (bananas expensive but always
    available)

40
Summary Outcome (cont.)
  • Social impact
  • Some social costs in CE, B, SEE, but most
    overcome
  • Very unequal benefits in CIS, GDP poverty,
    social indicators still not fully recovered
  • Very high unemployment remains in most countries

41
BIG-BANG vs. GRADUALISM EVIDENCE
  • When countries properly classified, BB perform
    much better on all indicators even most
    surprisingly on social indicators
  • Governments claiming pursuit of gradualist
    strategy delayed both liberalization and
    institutional development
  • One could conclude self-acclaimed gradualist
    governments more interested in self interest than
    easing social pain

42
Transition Countries and Type of Reform Strategy
43
Transition Indicator Values by Year and Type
44
RENT-SEEKING TYPES HIGH AND LOW
45
EU OFFER AND REFORM DELAY
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