Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Lecture 6. Partial reforms Lecture outline • Problems with partial reforms in general • Enterprise reform, price reform, labor market and wage reform, external sector reform, financial sector reform • Problems with specific partial reforms • “Pitfalls of Partial Reforms” paper and Chinese experience • Other examples of partial reforms General problems with partial reforms • “Second-best” principle in economics • In modern economy everything depends on everything else (very hard to reform in steps) • Internal consistency of STE’s (reforming one thing can cause another to get worse) • Problem of commitment (partial forms are relatively easy to undo, and therefore people do not think they will last) Enterprise reform • More independence for managers w.r.t. what to produce and whom to sell to • Fewer planning indicators • Lower targets • Enterprises are encouraged to enter into contracts with other state-owned enterprises and non-state entities Price reform • Increased price flexibility (to allow for stronger price signals) • Three categories of goods: - rigidly controlled prices - prices flexible within certain range - complete flexibility (The last two types of prices could be negotiated between supplier and customer) Other reforms • Wage reform: more leeway for enterprises to adjust workers’ wages, both relative and the entire wage fund • External sector reform: - reduction or even elimination of special currency exchange rates; - ability of enterprises to engage in international trade on their own • Financial sector reform: two-tiered banking (central bank & other banks), commercialization of some banks Problems with price reform • If some prices are fixed, it might be a bad idea to let other prices fluctuate • Officials still tried to influence prices • Under state ownership of capital, flexible prices do not reflect relative scarcities Problems with enterprise reform • Planners forced enterprises to produce beyond lower targets • Enterprises wanted planned input allocations • “Wrong” relative prices • Enterprises were not allowed to go bankrupt Problems with wage reform • Wage is just another price and so all problems with partial price reform exist here too • Workers exerted pressure on management to raise wages • Management did not have strong incentives to resist nominal wage increases Effective price under shortages If prices are fixed and shortage (i.e. , excess demand) exists, then other mechanisms (e.g., queues, black markets) have to be used to ration available supply. If queues are used, then the effective price is P = P0 + wt, where P0 is the fixed price, t is the time spent in a queue, and w is the value of the time (implicit wage) Nominal wage increases and welfare when prices are fixed Example: Let demand D=30-10P+I/10 and supply S=L/5 where P=“effective” price, I=income, and L=labor (in hours). The economy has 10 workers, working 8 hours/day. (1) Let wage/hour, W1=1, then I1=80, P1=2.2 (2) Let W2=2 I2=160 and P2=3 If P0=1 (fixed price), queues would be longer in (2) than in (1) Nominal wage increases and welfare when prices are fixed Another problem: Let Q=L1/2 and let prices be fixed at P=1. Denote wages by w and work hours by L. Market equilibrium: PQ=wL L*=(P/w)2 (1) Let w1=1 L1*=P2 and Q1=P=1 (2) Let w2=2 L2*=P2/4 and Q2=1/4<Q1 L2<L1 because of the need to queue up for goods, which implies Q2<Q1. Other problems with partial reforms • Foreign trade liberalization and subsidized goods • Growth of informal economy due to - commitment problems - wage inflation - rents from dealing with private firms - private firms as fronts for informal activities Pitfalls of partial reforms • 1987-8 still controlled prices, but permission of private firms - cooperatives, greater discretion over output and customer choice (suppliers get more contractual freedom in choice of their customers) Pitfalls of partial reforms Consider: • Market for timber • Two uses of timber: box-cars and houses • Timber is produced in the state sector, which delivers planned quotas at a price set by planners below market clearing price Pitfalls of partial reforms Main assumptions • Demand curves represent the true marginal valuations of timber • Producers are on their supply curves and not forced to produce more • Initially timber is rationed efficiently, so that marginal valuations of timber are the same in both industries “Pitfalls of Partial Reforms” (initial efficient rationing) Partial reform introduces • The price at which the timber industry can sell timber to the box-car industry is fixed, but the price to the housing industry is freely negotiable • Timber supplier can sell to whoever offers a higher price “Pitfalls of Partial Reforms” “Pitfalls” (initial inefficient rationing) Chinese experience (dual track reforms?) California electricity market reform • Deregulation of supply prices (distributors bought electricity in a spot market) • No long-term purchase contract allowed • Caps on retail prices paid by consumers • When spot market prices exceeded capped retail prices, distributors lost money and engaged in non-price rationing • Distributors went bankrupt, creating additional problems