Andrei
Shleifer and Daniel Treisman have published a follow-up
to their 10-year old article arguing that transition was really a success
because, yes, some of these countries either have lower income levels than 25
years ago, and yes, some barely grew, but they are all “normal” in the sense that
their pathologies (crime, lack of democracy, inequality, oligarchs etc.) are generally
found at their (low) income level. So, there is nothing to complain.
It is a
deeply misleading article and since I do not have the time to go into all the
issues, I decided to highlight only the four most obvious misrepresentations, actually tricks, they
use.
1. Deny that actual levels of income at the end of Communism were
true. They were according to them much lower. Of course, that lowers the bar for the past. All
evidence, including household survey data, Maddison data, World Bank (which funded
a whole multi-year project on the issue), UN, OECD, IMF etc. show that Sh-T are wrong. Levels were actually
underestimated on account of exclusion of non-material services, a problem that was corrected later when "transition countries" adopted United Nations' NAS and redid historical statistics. The issue was laid to rest 15 years ago because nobody
any longer defended such an absurd position. But they come back to it.
2. Ignore GDP declines in the 1990s combined with all other
calamities (increase in morbidity, decline in life expectancy, huge poverty,
unemployment, gender discrimination, inequality, private militias, corruption
and kleptocracy) by saying that all these calamities are “normal” phenomena for
the now much poorer countries. Sure,
Chad and Mali are also “normal” countries
for their income level. Should we celebrate that? There is nothing inherently good
in being “normal” for your income level, especially if that level is now lower
than before.
3. Go back to the Soviet trick statistics by comparing data
from today with those from 25 years ago. The Soviet statistics routinely
compared income in (say) 1950 with 1917 (which was the time of revolution and
War). Why not use the same argument and tell
Americans, French etc. they have nothing to complain because they are all
much better-off today than in 1989?
4. Ignore conflicts and wars and at least ¼ of million people
who, yes, died!
My
requirements to be successful (see my blog
just below) were very clear and modest.
1. Catching-up with OECD countries, that is having an average rate of
growth over 25 years which is at least marginally higher than the mean rate of
growth of rich OECD countries. It is a standard requirement in the literature
to judge a country's success. Are you converging toward the rich or not?
2. A moderate increase in inequality, so that the Gini is in line with
OECD average.
3. A strong democracy so that your score is a full +10, or just slightly
below it.
Only Albania, Estonia, and Poland fulfill these modest requirements. They
account for 10% of “transition countries” population.
You be the judge if these are, or not, reasonable requirements.
PS. I forgot to add an important point. When in the early 1970s, my friends or myself, living in East European Communist countries, assessed success or failure of socialism we did not think it legitimate to just compare the indicators of the 1970s with those of 25 years before, around 1945-47, when Communists came to power. (Obviously, all economic indicators, and in all dimensions and in all countries, were better in the 1970s than in 1945.) We looked at whether socialism delivered what it promised and, especially, whether it made countries catch-up with the rich capitalist world. In the event, it did not and this largely explains its failure. But I do not see any reason to change the criterion now when we assess the success of capitalism in Eastern Europe in the past 25 years.
PS. I forgot to add an important point. When in the early 1970s, my friends or myself, living in East European Communist countries, assessed success or failure of socialism we did not think it legitimate to just compare the indicators of the 1970s with those of 25 years before, around 1945-47, when Communists came to power. (Obviously, all economic indicators, and in all dimensions and in all countries, were better in the 1970s than in 1945.) We looked at whether socialism delivered what it promised and, especially, whether it made countries catch-up with the rich capitalist world. In the event, it did not and this largely explains its failure. But I do not see any reason to change the criterion now when we assess the success of capitalism in Eastern Europe in the past 25 years.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.