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Bureaucratic Tenure and Economic Performance in Centrally Planned Economies

Roger L Faith and Nancy C Short

Public Choice, 1995, vol. 83, issue 1-2, 139-57

Abstract: P. Murrell and M. Olson (1991) set forth the hypothesis that, in centrally planned economies, economic interests over time become fragmented as bureaus become more autonomous and form into narrowly-based distributional coalitions. As a consequence, the national leader's encompassing interest in economic growth becomes compromised and growth begins to slow. This paper provides the first direct test of the hypothesis that growing bureaucratic autonomy results in declining economic growth in centrally planned economies. Copyright 1995 by Kluwer Academic Publishers

Date: 1995
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