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Socialism, Capitalism, and Transition-Coordination of Economic Relations and Output Performance

Dirk Bezemer (papers.econ@univie.ac.at), Uwe Dulleck and Paul Frijters

Vienna Economics Papers from University of Vienna, Department of Economics

Abstract: Contacts and the way they are organized in different economic systems matter for the economy. In this paper we introduce the notion of Relational Capital to model contacts. Contacts are an input into sold output in our macro model based on matching theory (Pissarides, 1990). We argue that the destruction of some contacts in search for better ones is an integral part of technological advancement. This destruction carries a negative externality on former business partners. Socialist economies restricted such creative destruction, which we argue lead to their increasing technological backwardness. This backwardness is our explanation of the output fall during (unrestricted) transition: the technological catch-up implied high levels of destroyed and replaced relational capital. This not only had high direct opportunity costs (more labor is used for the production of relational capital) but also led to a loss in overall relational capital. The basic model is used to simulate plausible transition paths which appear compatible with many stylized facts of the transition experience. Finally we discuss empirical observations as well as policy issues brought up in the literature.

JEL-codes: O33 P21 P51 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2003-03
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