Was Stalin Necessary for Russia's Economic Development?
Author(s) -
Anton Cheremukhin,
Mikhail Golosov,
Sergei Guriev,
Aleh Tsyvinski
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
political institutions: parties
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w19425
Subject(s) - economics , consumption (sociology) , agrarian society , welfare , politics , capital (architecture) , product (mathematics) , fell , economic system , market economy , political science , geography , agriculture , social science , geometry , mathematics , cartography , archaeology , sociology , law
This paper studies structural transformation of Soviet Russia in 1928-1940 from an agrarian to an industrial economy through the lens of a two-sector neoclassical growth model. We construct a large dataset that covers Soviet Russia during 1928-1940 and Tsarist Russia during 1885-1913. We use a two-sector growth model to compute sectoral TFPs as well as distortions and wedges in the capital, labor and product markets. We find that most wedges substantially increased in 1928-1935 and then fell in 1936-1940 relative to their 1885-1913 levels, while TFP remained generally below pre-WWI trends. Under the neoclassical growth model, projections of these estimated wedges imply that Stalin's economic policies led to welfare loss of -24 percent of consumption in 1928-1940, but a +16 percent welfare gain after 1941. A representative consumer born at the start of Stalin's policies in 1928 experiences a reduction in welfare of -1 percent of consumption, a number that does not take into account additional costs of political repression during this time period. We provide three additional counterfactuals: comparison with Japan, comparison with the New Economic Policy (NEP), and assuming alternative post-1940 growth scenarios.
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