捷克斯洛伐克的经济改革:我们该相信圣诞老人吗?

Economic Reform in Czechoslovakia: Should We Believe in Santa Klaus?

Economic Policy · 1991
被引 26
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

分析捷克斯洛伐克从计划经济向市场经济转型中的改革顺序、企业激励、私有化障碍及宏观政策挑战,对研究转型经济学者有参考价值。

Abstract

Czechoslovakia David Begg Between the wars Czechoslovakia was a prosperous market economy. Important legacies remain, but 40 years of planning have caused severe distortions. Can Czechoslovakia again become the jewel in the crown of Eastern Europe? Reforms began later than in Hungary and Poland, but are now proceeding apace. Traditional sequencing of reforms is unwise: micro reforms deserve greater priority and themselves affect macro credibility. Monetary and fiscal policies are intended to be tight, but worries remain: wage indexation, a fuzzy exchange rate commitment and rising unemployment. Enterprise reform divides into better internal and external incentives. Privatization will be impeded by restoration of property to former owners, and in any case is insufficient: problems of corporate control will remain; and inadequate attention is being given to incentives for state-owned enterprises. Better external incentives require more foreign competition (still limited); tougher domestic competition policy (still inadequate); attention to banks and credit (where bankruptcy is hard to enforce, and balance sheets should be restructured); and a temporary wage subsidy. Activities with negative value added at world prices should cease; other activities would be more efficiently supplied through imports. I discuss the principles governing the pace of intelligent restructuring and assess the prospects for its success in Czechoslovakia.

捷克经济改革微观改革优先企业改革私有化竞争政策