Can Neoclassical Economics Underpin the Reform of Centrally Planned Economies

This paper addresses whether neoclassical economics can provide the intellectual underpinning for a theory of reform. I examine whether the neoclassical model satisfies an essential condition to qualify for this role: does it give us a satisfactory explanation for the vast differences in performance between capitalist and socialist economic systems? First, I focus on the theoretical arguments that have traditionally been used to examine the comparative properties of central planning and markets. I show that developments within theory over the last 20 years have substantially changed the tone of these arguments, making their message more equivocal. Next I discuss empirical evidence, but of a particular sort. Much research shows that centrally planned economies perform less well than market economies; but few studies test whether the superiority of market economies appears within empirical models derived using the framework of basic neoclassical economics. Those studies are the relevant ones for the present exercise. The central conclusion is that economists must look outside the standard models of competition, the focus on Pareto-efficient resource allocation, and the welfare theorems to build a theory of reform.

[1]  C. Lovell,et al.  Monitoring the performance of soviet cotton-refining enterprises: Sensitivity of findings to estimation techniques , 1992 .

[2]  J. Kornai The Affinity between Ownership Forms and Coordination Mechanisms: The Common Experience of Reform in Socialist Countries , 1990 .

[3]  K. Wädekin Communist Agriculture: Farming in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe , 1990 .

[4]  Peter C. Murrell,et al.  The Nature of Socialist Economics: Lessons from Eastern European Foreign Trade , 1990 .

[5]  Kazimierz Z. Poznański Diffusion performance of major steel-making countries: alternative econometric tests , 1990 .

[6]  R. Koopman,et al.  Technical efficiency of Soviet cotton production. , 1990 .

[7]  Robert S. Whitesell Estimates of the Output Loss from Allocative Inefficiency: A Comparison of Hungary and West Germany , 1989 .

[8]  Joseph E. Stiglitz,et al.  FINANCIAL MARKETS AND DEVELOPMENT , 1989 .

[9]  J. Brada Technological Progress and Factor Utilization in Eastern European Economic Growth , 1989 .

[10]  Adjustment Processes and Stability , 1989 .

[11]  Robert S. Whitesell Why does the Soviet economy appear to be allocatively efficient , 1990 .

[12]  J. Stiglitz,et al.  Committees, hierarchies and polyarchies , 1987 .

[13]  R. Hogarth,et al.  Rational Choice: The Contrast Between Economics and Psychology , 1987 .

[14]  Subal C. Kumbhakar,et al.  Production Frontiers and Panel Data: An Application to U.S. Class 1 Railroads , 1987 .

[15]  Joseph E. Stiglitz,et al.  THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF THE DEPENDENCE OF QUALITY ON PRICE , 1987 .

[16]  K. Arrow Rationality of Self and Others in an Economic System , 1986 .

[17]  V. Danilin Measuring Enterprise Efficiency in the Soviet Union: A Stochastic Frontier Analysis , 1985 .

[18]  R. Färe,et al.  The relative performance of publicly-owned and privately-owned electric utilities , 1985 .

[19]  P. Schmidt,et al.  Production Frontiers and Panel Data , 1984 .

[20]  Rolf Färe,et al.  Measuring Productive Efficiency: An Application to Illinois Strip Mines , 1984 .

[21]  Hugo Sonnenschein,et al.  General Equilibrium with Free Entry: A Synthetic Approach to the Theory of Perfect Competition* , 1983 .

[22]  P. Desai,et al.  Efficiency Loss from Resource Misallocation in Soviet Industry , 1983 .

[23]  Peter C. Murrell Did the theory of market socialism answer the challenge of Ludwig von Mises? A reinterpretation of the socialist controversy , 1983 .

[24]  C. Lovell,et al.  Testing Efficiency Hypotheses in Joint Production: A Parametric Approach , 1983 .

[25]  P. Hanson Foreign Economic Relations , 1982 .

[26]  Rudolf Kötter,et al.  General Equilibrium Theory — An Empirical Theory? , 1982 .

[27]  S. Rosefielde Comparative advantage and the evolving pattern of Soviet international commodity specialization, 1950–1973 , 1981 .

[28]  Richard R. Nelson,et al.  Assessing Private Enterprise: An Exegesis of Tangled Doctrine , 1981 .

[29]  H. Burley,et al.  Productive Efficiency in U.S. Manufacturing: A Linear Programming Approach , 1980 .

[30]  C. Lovell,et al.  Estimating stochastic production and cost frontiers when technical and allocative inefficiency are correlated , 1980 .

[31]  F. Førsund,et al.  On the estimation of deterministic and stochastic frontier production functions : A comparison , 1980 .

[32]  J. Riley,et al.  The Analytics of Uncertainty and Information- An Expository Survey , 1979 .

[33]  T. Groves,et al.  Efficient Collective Choice when Compensation is Possible , 1979 .

[34]  E. Maskin,et al.  The Implementation of Social Choice Rules: Some General Results on Incentive Compatibility , 1979 .

[35]  D. Aigner,et al.  P. Schmidt, 1977,?Formulation and estimation of stochastic frontier production function models,? , 1977 .

[36]  W. Meeusen,et al.  Efficiency Estimation from Cobb-Douglas Production Functions with Composed Error , 1977 .

[37]  L. Hurwicz On informationally decentralized systems , 1977 .

[38]  Joseph E. Stiglitz,et al.  17 – EQUILIBRIUM IN COMPETITIVE INSURANCE MARKETS: AN ESSAY ON THE ECONOMICS OF IMPERFECT INFORMATION* , 1976 .

[39]  Y. Toda Estimation of a Cost Function When the Cost Is Not Minimum: The Case of Soviet Manufacturing Industries, 1958-1971 , 1976 .

[40]  M. Spence Product Selection, Fixed Costs, and Monopolistic Competition , 1976 .

[41]  Sanford J. Grossman,et al.  Information and Competitive Price Systems , 1976 .

[42]  J. Whalley Thornton's Estimates of Efficiency Losses in Soviet Industry: Some Fixed-Point-Method Recalculations , 1976, Journal of Political Economy.

[43]  A. Dixit,et al.  Monopolistic competition and optimum product diversity , 1977 .

[44]  E. Weintraub,et al.  General equilibrium theory , 1974 .

[45]  S. Rosefielde Soviet international trade in Heckscher-Ohlin perspective: An input-output study , 1973 .

[46]  J. Thornton Differential Capital Charges and Resource Allocation in Soviet Industry , 1971, Journal of Political Economy.