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Paperback Without a Map: Political Tactics and Economic Reform in Russia Book

ISBN: 0262692694

ISBN13: 9780262692694

Without a Map: Political Tactics and Economic Reform in Russia

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Book Overview

A balanced look at Russia's attempts to build capitalism on the ruins of Soviet central planning.

Recent commentators on Russia's economic reforms have almost uniformly declared them a disappointing and avoidable--failure. In this book, two American scholars take a new and more balanced look at the country's attempts to build capitalism on the ruins of Soviet central planning. They show how and why the Russian reforms achieved remarkable...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Easy to read, good context, but somewhast repetitive

This book is a good source on Russian economic reform in the early to mid 1990's. Great for anyone with an interest in Russia's transition from socialism to capitalism. My only quarrel with the book is that it seems to be a bit repetitive. Other then that, great book.

Excellent Critique of Economic Reform In Russia, 1992-98

Without A Map, by Harvard economist Andrei Schleifer and UCLA political scientist Daniel Treisman, describes the successes and failures encountered by Russia's economic reformers in the years 1992-98. The three primary reform efforts, privatization, controlling inflation, and reforming the tax system, are presented individually. For each of these topics, the authors approach is to, first, describe the situation, the government's actions, and the results, second, present summaries of various explanations of these situations, actions, and results, and, finally, provide their own interpretation of the political tactics and economic results. Each of these areas of reform required approaches that were both economically appropriate (contributed to solving the problem) and politically acceptable (would be enacted by the legislature, carried out by the government, and not provoke major popular unrest). None of the reforms had a powerful constituency and most did have powerful opponents in the form of the various stakeholders in the status quo. In the cases where the reformers were successful they were able to split the opposition stakeholders by co-opting some (by offering them an alternative to their existing stake) and expropriating others (by transferring or abolishing their stake). In the case of privatization in 1992, the stakeholders were (1) the industrial ministries (which had controlled their respective industries under the Former Soviet Union), (2) the managers, (3) the workers, and (4) the regional and local governments. Several formulas for issuing vouchers that could be converted to shares were proposed. The winning solution was to co-opt the managers and workers by allocating them 51% share to be owned individually rather than collectively. This approach resulted in a higher concentration of initial ownership than might have been desirable, but this compromise was probably essential achieving any meaningful degree of privatization. In the case of controlling inflation in 1995-6, the key stakeholders were (1) the central bank and commercial banks and (2) the state subsidized industries (e.g., agriculture and defense). In a bizarre twist on western banking practices, Russian banks in these years paid their depositors interest rates lower than the inflation rate and invested the funds in commodities and currencies which appreciated relative to the ruble, effectively selling the currency short. The reformers co-opted the banks by creating a market for government securities with the banks as the primary dealers. The banks were transformed from short sellers of the ruble to stakeholders in the ruble by virtue of their holding of government securities. In addition, the 1996 "loans-for-shares" deals between the government and the banks further co-opted the banks. Under this program, the government obtained loans from the banks that rather obviously exceed the government's ability to repay. The loans were secured by shares in major oil and m

Recommendation for this book:

Without a Map is a good place to start learning about Russian economic reform in the 1990's. It is concise and thorough, and covers a lot of ground. As a result, it tends to be somewhat general, when one might be interested in specific details of reforms, but it's a very solid overview. It is not a book for just anyone, but will fascinate anybody who has an interest in the Russian economy or in economics in general. It is a perfect complement to Privatizing Russia, also co-authored by Schleifer.

A Perceptive Analysis

In a very readable book the authors provide an excellent account of fiscal federalism in Russia. They talk about the stagnation the Russian economy faces and provide a very valid hypothesis for its cause in Russia's taxation system - what many others have previously given scant attention to. This book will appeal to economists, political scientists, and anyone else interested in Russia today.
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