Stabilizing a Previously Centrally Planned Economy: Poland 1990
分析1990年波兰稳定计划中工业产出骤降和通胀持续的原因,认为信贷紧缩是核心因素,并讨论工资上涨如何阻碍产出复苏。
We examine the dynamics of the January 1990 stabilization programme in Poland, focusing on the substantial and sudden collapse in industrial output, and inflation persistence. We discuss three, non-mutually exclusive, explanations of these phenomena: excessive initial stocks of inventories, an exogenous fall in household demand and tight credit. We conjecture that tight credit was at centre stage: it helped to magnify the fall in output, and to coordinate such a fall across sectors. We base such a conjecture on the existence of substantial credit segmentation, and on the underdevelopment of private credit markets. This conjecture is further strengthened by the fact that wages increased, and even went beyond the programme's ceilings, as credit expanded during the year. We argue that the wage hike may be the reason why credit expansion did not result in a major output recovery, and inflation persisted during the year. There are discussions of this article by M. Burda and G. W. Kolodko, pp 209-212. -from Authors