40L4 L12. D e l lr ... .. ... ....... . _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. . . . .. . . Transition and Macro-Adjustment Division * Policy Research Department * The World Bank .Bolshevik Biscuit in Private Hands Successful Transformation of a Russian Company mong the many ironies in by drawing up a specific divestiture purchase-in a "closed subscrip- A ppresent-dayRussiaisthatone proposal aimed at the retention of tion"-51 percent of the company's of the very first large enter- most shares by the enterprise's work- equity, at a price set by the govern- prises to be fully privatized is a firm ers and managers. This home-grown ment at 1.7 times the book, or histori- calledtheBolshevikBiscuitCompany. scheme was never implemented, but cal accounting, value'as of early 1992. As a state enterprise, this company was put on hold as the government The government applied the 1.7 mul- produced the best-known, highest- elaborated a complex set of privat- tiplier in an effort to make those opt- quality cakes and confectioneries in izationregulations throughthe spring ing for employee and management the Moscow region, and its new own- of 1992. In June the final detailed buyout pay a "reasonable" price. The ers see no reason to jettison a recog- program was published, and a large government added to the difficulty of nized brand name. Thus, the word number ofenterprises, including Bol- this option by requiringthat purchas- thatwas used to denote the most mili- shevik, were required to corporatize ers pay in full within 90 days of the tant, uncompromising wing of the and then to choose from among three sale but without providing any spe- Communist revolutionaries of 1917 alternative routes to the first phase of cial credit arrangements. Nonethe- now refers to a privatized joint stock divestiture. less, Bolshevik's workers and manag- company in the Russian capital. To ers chose the buyout option-indeed, date, only about 100 other large en- Bolshevik's workers and managers about half of all Russian enterprises terprises across Russia have matched opted for the approach that let them slated for divestiture are attempting Bolshevik's achievement. But several hundred others have launched a simi- lar process, andhundreds more-soon Whcafs inside. perhaps thousands-have taken the first steps toward becoming fully pri- vate. The details of the privatization Anatoly Chubais's Privatization Quotation of the Month: Berkeley process vary considerably in Russia's Update in Washington (page 2) historyprofessorurgesgreaterem- heavilydecentralized program, but all pathy toward Russia in The New Private Firms in St. Petersburg- Republic (page 9) companies must go th-rough the es- sential steps followed in the Bolshe- Findings of a Survey Most private service companies in St. Milestones of Transition (page 11) vik transaction. Petersburg are proving viable, conclude Bolshevik's managernent had ex the authors. (page 4) World Bank/IM Agenda (page 13) Bolshevik's management had ex- pressedinterestin"corporatization"- China's Surge toward a Socialist Conference Diary (page 15) transformation into ajoint stock com- Market Economy pany-in the late 1980s, during the China's parliament approved further New Books and Working Papers Perestroika reform period. When the reforms, and a slowdown of the over- (page 16) Russian government, in December heated economy. OxfordAnalytica pre- 1991, announced the general outline dicts further expansion of foreign in- Bibliography of Selected Articles of its 1992 privatization program, vestment and trade. (page 6) (page 19) Bolshevik's management responded The World Bank/PRDTM . to use this method. The other main inflation reduced the severity of the subscription process of corporat- closed subscription method gives 1.71multiplier; moreover, Bolshevik'A ization must put forward a proposal workers, free of charge 25 percent of workers and managers were able to specifying how the remainder of a companys shares-but they are use a previously established "privat- its equity would be disposed of. nonvoting. This option- also allows ization fund' in the company's ac- Bolshevik's proposal called for a pub- woikers to purchase an additional 10 'counts to make their payment. Little lic offering of the remaining shares, percent of-voting shares, and manag- ca'sh came from the purchasers, and with an additional portion reserved ers 5 percent, all at a price based on there appeared to be relatively little for workers and managers. The pro- book value. personal capital atriskinthis (or any posal did not set a specific timetable other) closed subscription transac- for the sale' of the remaining equity. In October 1992 Bolshev'ik's 2,300 tion. But it was generally assumed that workers (upfrom 1,600 fiveyears ago) sales would begin in the spring of and managers- paid 39.2 million What about the remaining 49 per- 1993, and that 35 percent of total rubles to the state to become the- cent of equity? The regulations state shares would be reserved for voucher majority owners of the firm. High that each firm undergoing the closed auctions (this had been set in the Highlights of Anatoly Chubais's Privatization Update Russia'sDeputyPrimeMinisterAnatoly 1.4 trillion rubles, calculated as of Janu- shares of huge, "GM-sized" companies Chubais made a short presentation in ary 1992]. By the end of January 1993 the will be offered for sale, and they require Washington on March 19. The presen- procedure had been completed; millions a nationwide sales center network. Just tation, hosted by the Professional Bank- of citizens have obtained freely tradable a few days ago one of the biggest Rus- ers'Association (PBA), was titled "Rus- vouchers. [InJanuary about 35,000 vouch- sian industrial enterprises,the ZILcom- sian Program of Privatization." ers a day were changing hands- on the pany, was put on the block. [The largest Chubais, as Chairman of the State Com- country's largest trading floor at the Mos- company yet to be privatized in Russia, mitteefortheMznagementofStateProp- cow Commodity Exchange.] The price theZILcompanyinearlyMarchbegan erty, is in charge ofthatprogram. While dropped to 5,000rubles last October, then selling off 35 percent of its assets for -inWashington, Chubais also signed a hit3,900irubles'inFebruary;inmid-March vouchers, about one million shares. The $90 millionprivatizationloan from the it was 4,500 to 4,600 rubles. As soon as company, which produces limousines, World Bank, on behalf of the Russian voucher auctions become part ofeveryday trucks, buses, and refrigerators, has government. The loan will finance ex- life, the market price should rise.- some 15 plants and employs more than pert advice for carrying out privatiza- 100,000 workers across the country. tion transactions and an information Enterpriselransformation:Thewide- About 60 offices have been opened .,campaign to educate Russians and po- range program started last October. In throughout Russia to accept bids from tential investors about the switch to a the first stage, 5,600 of the largest state voucher holders. In the next step, inter- market economy. Managing Director companies were selected for corpora- regional auctions require institutional Ernest Stern signed the agreement on tization, that is, to be transformed into decentralization, and a decision will be behalf of the World Bank. Some high- joint stock companies. [It is expected that made on the location of the voucher lights of the Russian guest's address by the end of May about 2,000 of the larg- auctions.] follow [with Editor's notes in brackets]. estenterprises willbe corporatized.] Work- ers and managers can use their vouchers Voucher Investment Funds: With Small-Scale Privatization:Almost 50 to purchase shares in their own company. the aim of aggregating shares-and di- percentofallsmallbusinesses-includ- [Most of the joint stock companies have versifying risks-several hundred in- ing retail outlets, restaurants, and ca- chosen a privatization option that gives vestment funds, with 700 local tering businesses-are already pri- workers and managers a 51 percent con- branches, have registered in Russia, vately owned. It is a considerable trolling share in the enterprise. See 7tan- andtheirnumberisgrowingrapidly.As achievement . as the small-scale sition, vol 3, no. 10, November 1992, p.6.] more assets appear onthe auctionmar- privatization[ofentitiesemployingless Closed subscriptions thus preceded auc- ket, we expect that the funds will play than 200 people] started only last year tions open to all voucher holders. a more active role. [When they are fully in earnest. functioning, funds will accumulate the Voucher Auctions: We must accelerate vouchers of citizens, giving them in re- Vouchers: The mass privatization pro- the -pace of voucher auctions, selling the turn shares in the fund itself. Funds gram got under way in the second half remaining shares in corporatized firms will trade their accumulated vouchers of 1992, as there was little chance to for vouchers. In December 20 enterprises for shares in enterprise auctions. No create investment demand otherwise. wereprivatizedthis way, 90 morein Janu- fund can hold more than 10 percent of Russia's 150 million citizens were able ary, 190 more in February, and about 300 the shares of any company, nor can it toobtainvouchersforthe nominalvalue in March; starting in May, 500 monthly invest more than 5 percent of its total of 10,000 rubles [representing an equal auctions are expected all over the country. assets in any one firm.] share of Russia's fixed capital stock of In the next stage of voucher auctions, 2 March 1993 Tr regulations asthe maximum percent- This entailed intense and exh,austi.ng In future auctions,;5 percent of age of a firm that could be sold for Fyork,by loth the Bo1evik staff and will be reserved to be sod'for vouchers). their external advisors,'since niotbing cover the costs incurred by local they were doing had any precedent in cies in the sale and to induce th In late October 1992, in an effort to Russia. 'The' preparatory work.was lead the-process. In Bolshevik'l drive up the market value of vouch- rapidlycompleted,numerousbureau- this was not done.,Bolshevik's ers,thegovernmentincreasedtheper- cratic and legal obstacles were over- agement claims that "a specia centageofsharesthatcouldbetraded come,. and the Bolshevik auction rangement"fwasstruekallowingv% for vouchers to 80 percent. And it ad- began on December 9, .1992. Trans- ers and managers eventually vanced the timing ofthe voucher auc- actions were allowed for two weeks, purchase an additional 5 percent, tion process to showaconcernedpopu- and by December24 the entire share that this amount is presently be. lation that the privatization program offering-44 percent of total equity- held by the Federal Property Fund. was moving forward. was divided among the voucher bids anyevent, 5 percentwas not sold; a received in' the trading periQd. no revenues accrued to any ofthe se At the end of October the federal ers. privatization agency (GKI) sent tele- The Russian government uses a grams to all oblasts asking regional simple voucher bidding system com- If one totals the vouchers traded a authorities to produce lists of enter- pared with that in Czechoslovakia. their face value of 10,000 rubles each, prisesthathad been corporatized and The number of shares pu't- up fior'sale one could say that 44 percent of Bol- had completed the closed subscrip- is calculated according to the historic shevik equity. was 'sold" in the auc- tion process, andwere ready andwill- bookvalue ofthe enterprise. During a tions for 197 million rubles. But in ing to take part in an advance, or two-wveekbiddingperiodinvestorscan December vouchers were trading at pilot, voucher auction program. The make an "unrestricted",bid, stating between 5,000 and 60,000 rubles,on response was highly positive; a large how many vouchers they wish to in- the Moscow secondary market. Tak- number of oblasts. put forward the vest in a company but without speci- ing an average voucher value of 5,500 names of dozens of firms-far, more, fyinga price. Orthey can make a"stop' rubles for the period, 44 percent of indeed, than local authorities can yet price",bid specifiing a ceiling price for equity went for 108.35 million rubles. handle. At Bolshevik the process was their investment. All, investors -end Details on how many individuals even more direct: the company's se- up paying the same price (in vouch- traded these 19,700. vouchers for nior managers were well known to ers) per share at the end of the bid- shares,are not yet available. Bolshe- high officials in the GKI, who simply dingperiod,whenthesupplyofshares vik management hazarded a guess phonedthem and asked whetherthey is equated to total demand. Those that between 50 and 80 percent of the werereadyto takepartinthe scheme. making an unrestricted bid always purchasers were insiders-workers, The answer was yes. get a share (or shares; or percentage managers, or pensioners of the com- of a share); those making a stop-price pany, and their families. Most trans- The G11 then furnished the enter- bid get shares if supply equals de- actions were small; observers could prisewithatechnicalassistanceteam mand at any price lower than their not recall seeing bundles of vouchers composed of a senior GK1 staff mem- ceiling.' beingtradedforlarge blocksof shares. ber, aninvestment banker, and a man- agement consultant (the lasttwo were foreigners, funded by a variety of ex- ternal grants). This team of outsiders Shareholders of Russia, Unite! worked in close consultation with Bol- shevik management. They explained "By the end of 1993 Russia will have line share trading system will be in the process to the work force. They taken an irreversible step towards the place., Depositories and systems for produced information for potential creation of a market economy if the clearance and settlement ofshare trad- purchasers.on the firm's assets and presentprivatizationprogramproceeds ing will have been established and in liabilities, finances, clients, suppliers, as planned. Up to 1,000 medium and operation. All of this will be very basic and prospects (no formal prospectus largestate-ownedenterpriseswillhave orrudimentary, but it will form the ba- was prepared; instead, information been privatized. Shares in these com- sis for an emerging capital market, a was printed on posters hung on the panies will have been issued to work- market ofimmense proportions and po- walls ofthe auction center). They un- ers, managers, and widely to the Rus- tential." dertook a public relations campaign sianpopulation.Investmentfundshave in the press and on television. And collected vouchers from the population From a presentation titled 'Russia as they handled the myriad legal and and issued shares in their closed-end anEmergingCapitalMarket"givenata administrative steps toobtain allnec- -mutual funds. Emerging stock ex- recent London conference. by Ira W. essary approvals for the auction, and changes in various regions throughout Lieberman, Senior Manager (PSD) at set up the mechanisms by which it the country will be linked and an off- the World Bank. would be carried out. Volume 4, Number 2 The World Bank/PRDTM What is clear is that the workers and vik is now a private joint stock com- and can Bolshevik take to maintain managers obtained their closed sub- pany. Its first annual general meet- its market position in-the face of grow- scription shares at a very large dis- ing will convene soon, and a board of ing entry? count comparedwiththevoucherauc- directors representing the interests tion prices. If workers and managers of the shareholders will be elected. None of these questions can at the had paid the December secondary Well and good. But where will it ob- momentbeansweredwithassurance. market price per share, the subscrip- tain its working and investment capi- What must be stressed, however, is tionwouldhavegenerated 155.65 mil- tal in the future? How ruthless can that in one short year, and mostly in lion rubles rather than 39.2 million. its commercial policy be when the the period from August to December, The government recognized that fix- vast majority of its shares are held BolshevikBiscuitmovedfrombeinga ing and transferring property rights by workers and other insiders? How state-ownedenterprisetobeingafully took precedence over maximizing sale will secondary trading evolve to bring private firm. If that can be accom- revenue. in foreign or strategic investors? Will plished, so can much else. managers buy up a significant num- Price is not the question; the real is- ber of shares from workers interested John Nellis sue is, what happens next? Bolshe- in quick profits? What steps should PSD, The World Bank Private Firms in St. Petersburg-Small Businesses with Great Ambitions Findings of a Survey nlate January, experts from the in the same enterprise before privat- Eighty-five percent of the firms World Bank, with the help ofstaff ization, usually as directors, or had claimed to have an operating profit, from the European Bank of Re- been in a similar line ofbusiness. The with only 5 percent indicating losses constructionandDevelopment(EBRD) firms' average number of employees and 10 percent a break-even situa- and from two Russian think tanks, ranged from 5 to 50. tion. Using a mix of indicators, the theLeontiefCenterforSocial and Eco- nomic Studies and the Institute of Economic Forecasting, surveyed 86 Real Income and Real Estate private service firms in the St. Peters- burg area. These firms, which offered St. Petersburghas apopulationof5 mil- buildings may be purchased, and any- servzces rangingfrom hairdressing to lion, and another 1.7 million people live one purchasing both the building and trading in raw materials, each had to in the surrounding Leningrad Region. the equipment it contains can also buy satisfy three criteria: that more than The Leontief Center estimates that in the land beneath it. Historic buildings 50 percent of their revenues are de- October 1992 the state sector employed canbeleasedforamaximumof49years, rived from services; that a majority of 79 percent of the work force, and that in and the land beneath them must also theirstockisprivatelyowned;andthat December 1992 about 100,000 people be leased. Space inside a building can their foreign ownership is less than 50 vwere unemployed. St. Petersburg's pro- be leased for a maximum of only 15 percent. Thefirst impressionsfrom the duction of goods and services is esti- years. Lease payments are set by a de- survey results are given below, and a mated to have declined by 20 percent tailed regulation that distinguishes report will be available in June. during the first nine months of 1992, both among categories of property and report and households' real income to have among categories of lessees. For ex- Boom and Bust fallen by 44 percent, compared with the ample, a trading firm would have to first nine months of 1991. St. Peters- pay more than a manufacturing firm, burg has been hit harder than the sur- and a foreigner more than a Russian Alout half of the enterprises surveyed rounding Lemingrad Region, where pro- citizen. Budgetary agencies-schools, were registered as ioint stock (limited duct'ion dropped 12 percent and hospitals, research institutes-pay the liability) companies. The average age household income 32 percent. lowest rent, and many of them try to of entrepreneurs was 42, and about *acquire as much space as possible so 90 percent were men. Many of the In this historic city, real estate is a com- that they can earn income by sublet- owners-especially at the small plicatedmatter.Inprinciple,nonhistoric ting. privatized firms-had either worked ___ 4 March 1993 Transition interviewers classified three-quar- ters of the firms as moderately or Hurdles in Business Finance highly successful and one-quarter as weak or muddling through. Those Real interest rates in Russia-with a Relativelyfewprivatefirmshaveout- judged as weak were mostly in con- monthly inflation rate of`40 percent- standing loans. The''reason for this, sumer services (such as hairdress- are highly negative. Nominal rates besides the lack of,;medium-term ing, tailoring, and watch repair), for range from 80 to 200 percent annu- credit, is that many firms were un- which demand has fallen sharply as ally, and loan maturities from several abletoobtainloanstocovertheircom- a result of the decline in real per- weeks to a year and a half. Banks can mercial transactions, which are sub- sonal income. Many firms with a do- charge these interest rates because ject to delays in delivery and in mestic business or a conventional ex- they pay low rates on savings deposits payment. port business, such as tourism, are and virtually nothing on demand de- exploringuntestedexportmarkets- posits. Penalty rates for loans not re- To overcome the financing shortage, for example, for alternative medical paid on time are substantially higher most businesses in St. Petersburg ei- practices. (up to 5 percent a day) than the con- therploughbacktheirprofits or tryto tractual interest rate. find a 'silent partner" to provide of- Some Concerns fice space or cash for an in-kind re- To obtain a loan, a client must have turn. Many firms are looking for a The private firms surveyed reported collateral, a guarantee from another foreign investor who could provide a few worries, incliding: company, or loan insurance. (Appar- hard currency and help promote ex- ently, collateral is not registered any- ports. And several firms are making where, and there are no procedures equity investments in banks with a Uncertainties about the future * Uncertainties about the future for sales when the borrower defaults. view to assuring adequate credit in course of reform. Thus, banksmayenfdupowningfirms the future. * Rampant inflation accompanied that owe them money.) by frequent and unexpected changes in relative prices. * Sluggish demand for many ser- vices, especially private health care, fees, lack of medium- or long-term communication facilities. hairdressing, transport of goods, finance, and lack of confidentiality. * Services facilitating contacts advertising, catering, tourism, and * The absence of affordable work with foreign businesspersons. research, the last due to the drop in space and the insecurity of lease ar- * Technical advice in financial government contracts. (At the same rangements. management and project develop- time,thereisstrongdemandforsome * High tax rates. The main taxes ment. business services, such as consult- are the value added tax (20 percent * Business incubators. ing and legal assistance.) on most products), the profits tax (32 * Training and-foreign study. * The absence of a stable and trans- percent), several payroll taxes (to- parent body of laws and regulations, taling 38 percent), the personal in- Questions that need to be ex- includingtaxlaws. Existinglaws are come tax (with a basic rate of 12 per- plored-and that are undoubtedly subject to frequent and unexpected cent), and various local taxes, being explored elsewhere in Rus- changes. Property law and contract including taxes on transport and ad- sia-are whether such services law are unclear, and there is little vertisement, that have recently been should be provided together or legal recourse in the face ofinjustice. imposed. Tax authorities sometimes through competing centers, how There is onlylimited use ofthe courts request taxpayers to prepay certain such activities should be financed to settle disputes or collect debts. taxes, andincreasetaxpayers'liabili- (whether such an operation could Meanwhile, "Mafia" groups extort ties retroactively. obtainitsownfinancing,eitherfrom payments for protection and also - user charges or external grant as- provide some 'legal. services," such Business Center-A Suggestion sistance), and whether such cen- as debt collection and contract en- ters could provideloans for projects. forcement. Some seed money could be offered to The city government could perhaps * The absence of citywide programs set up one or more business centers be persuaded to provide space for of training, technical assistance, or in St. Petersburg to provide: such pilot projects. credit for private businesses. (There are several training programs sup- * Information on domestic laws. Martha deMelo, GzurOfer, and Olga ported by Finland, Germany, and the * Updated standard forms required Sandier United Kingdom, however.) for obtaining permits, concluding PRDTM, The World Bank * Deficiencies in banking services, leases, and filing taxes. such as delays in payment, excessive * International information and Volume 4, Number 2 5 The World Bank/PRDTM China's Surge towardi a S:ocialist Market Economy Spring Session of the Parliament, C^ hina's parliameent, the Na-* The description of the economy is * He referred to 'some state enter- tional People's Congress, ap- to be'formally changed to a 'socialist prises which may be leased or sold to proved a new government market economy," with references to collectives or individuals through lineup and a series of economic, legal, "planned economy" excised. public bidding," an indication of a andacininistrative'reformsduringits * 3All references to 'state-run indus- change of heart on the issue of session in the second half ofMarch. It try rebeingamendedtoread"state- privatization. did not conceal its intention "to trans- owned industry," paving the way for He voiced the government's deter- late the outcome of the Communist rapid corporatization of public enter- mination to "rectify the excessively Party's last Congress in October into prises. low prices of coal, electricity, oil and an action program for the government" railway services." (see Transition, vol. 3, no. 9, October Prime- Minister Li Peng, later ap- * The banking system is to see an 1992). Going beyond just rubber- pointed to a second five-year term, important, though risky, innovation stamping the Party's decisions, the introduced the government's Work with the establishment of "banks parliament has approved several Report (the Chinese version of the whose sole function is to make low- amendments to the Chinese constitu- State of the Union address) calling interestloansforstateprojects,"while tion. (The former version, adopted in for continued rapid economic'growth the commercial banks would "gradu- 1982, had been amended only once,in and more free-market reforms. The allyrelinquish"theirpresentrespon- 1988, to permitprivate ownership and report announced the formal adop- sibility for this. the transfer of land.) tion of the revised target.of 8 to 9 * Labormarketreformhasincreased percent annual economic growth for in importance, as reflected by a set of The latest amendments to the consti- the next five years, allowing indi- policies to eradicate permanent em- tution include the following: vidualregionsto pursue fastergrowth ployment, such that "enterprises will if conditions permit. The official tar- be able to hire employees indepen- The theory of developing "social- get for 1993 is an 8 percent increase dently and individuals to choose their ism 'with Chinese characteristics"- in GNP. own jobs." This is the strongest such the formal 'description of Deng statement on labor reform ever seen. Xiaoping's philosophy-is incorpo- Onthe expansion of economic reform, ratedinto the preamble with the same the prime minister mentioned four At the same time, the net result ofthe status as Marxism-Leninism and Mao relatively new areas: reorganization of the government- Zedong's thought. China and Other Asian Economies-Some Economic Indicators The National People's Congress is E- 1992-estimate * 1993 forecast China's parliament, the highest offi- cial state body. It'is elected-or se- - . . _ - lected-every five years and has one annual meeting. A standing commit- CHINA 11.3 5.5 11.7 tee carries on its business for the rest 12.2 12.0 7.6 of the year. Its method of selection, Malaysia 8.5 4.8 2.1 which assures that the delegates will 7.6 3.6 support theVCommunist Partypropos: Thailand 4.3 -6.9 als, is peculiarly Chinese. Once 8.1 4.3 -6.4 elected, the People's -Congress per- Indonesia 7.9 -3.4 forms three main functions: 6.9 5.8 -2.9 * Itpasseslaws,andamendsthecon- South Korea 5.3 6.7 -4.4 stitution. 6.8 3.3 -2.1 * Itappointsseniorgovernmentand Singapore 53 2.3 5.8 state officials, including the prime 6.0 1.7 6.8 minister and the president. India 3.9 13.3 -5.7 * Itapprovestheannualbudgetand 5.4 10.8 -6.1 the government's economicand devel- Philippines 0.8 9.1 -1.5 opment progra'm. 2.1 8.3 -2.4 Source: Merrill Lynch From the Economist. London 6 March 1993 Transition Economic Prospects for China in 1993-Predictions of Oxford-Analytica China is poised to enter its third con- output increased only 1.8 percent, al- preference for control whenever pos- secutive year of rapid growth. GDP thoughproductionofrefineryproductswas sible. With market prices stable over growth will continue in the 8 to 10 per- up 8.5 percent. Coal production increased --the'past two years, policymakers have cent range, and foreign trade could in- 3.1 percent, and electric power genera- been able to concentrate price reforms crease byabout 20 percent. Forthepast tion was up 10.8 percent. The changes in state-controlled sectors. State prices twoyears,theeconomyhasbeenemerg- reflect the inefficiency of traditional in- were adjusted upward toward market ing from recession, with slack capacity dustry and the impact of large stockpiles prices, with the bulk of adjustments in andabundantsuppliespreventingover- built up during the 1989-90 recession. 1991 concentrated in energy and fer- heating. This 'period is now over. rous and nonferrous metals. Because Growth-induced strains are likely to These trends will continue in 1993.Nomi- these commoditiesare producedinlarge become more evident in 1993, provid- nal investment' growth will continue at state firms, the price hikes increased ing new challenges to policymakers as about 30 percent, although price inc'r-eases state revenues. - they debate the' pace of reform. Infla- for investment goods will, to sone extent, tionary pressures have already begun offset this. Delays and occasional short- With this period over, reformers face to mount. Markets for consumer goods ages will increase. greater fluctuations in market prices have remained stable, but danger signs - and a period of rising prices. With re- have emerged in the markets for pro- Foreigntradewillcontinuetobe-dynamic. form policies likely to return to apat- ducer goods that will make macroeco- Imports are accelerating from last year's tern of decentralization and the open- nomic management more difficult in 23 percent growth rate, and exports will ing up of markets, -future trends are 1993. maintain their 1992 growth rate, averag- likely to include the following: ing about 17 percent. By increasing' the The consumer markets show little sign availability of essential inputs, rapid im- * ' Local market ;experiments will be of impending inflation: port growth has eased strains on the given more leeway. economy. * Shanghai's stock exchange will ex- * The urban wage bill increased only ' - pand significantly, and local land mar- 16 percent in the first three quarters of Foreign investment is likely to accelerate kets will be formalized in a number of 1992 while the price level increased 9 further. Contracts for new investment, regions (in addition to Guangdong). percent(12 percentin the larger cities). which typicallyleadactual investmentby * Moves to tackle the inefficient state By contrast, industrial output, mea- a year or two, doubled in value in both industrial sectorwill'commence in 1993. suredinconstantprices, was up 20 per- 1991 and' 1992: Aplanto lay off 30,000 coal miners and cent over the same period. close 30 pits was announced in the offi- * Another good harvest is being * In Guangdong province, rapid export cial media in December 1992. Never- reaped. Total grain output is expected growth based on foreign investment is ex- theless, changes will be cautiously in- to exceed last year's record, and the pected to be maintained. The province's troduced. steady growth of subsidiary farm prod- exports to the United States are growing * The Lower Yangtze region will ucts has continued. The prices on farm- at about'40 percent a year. (The United match, and in some respects surpass, ers' markets are stable. States' deficit with China was approach- the degree of market orientation that * Sales of big-ticket durables have ing $20 billion by the end of 1992.) With Guangdong already displays. grown slowly, and the savings rate re- investment in export-oriented factories * Because of its size, population, and mains high. rising, this trend will continue. energy and raw material resources, The performance ofthe LowerYangtze China will continue to expand as a cen- As for the producer markets, fixed in- provinces is even more impressive.. ter for manufacturing operations, par- vestment has jumped 37 percent, put- Jiangsu's industrial output increased 35 ticularlyforthoserelocatingfrommore tingpressureontheindustrialeconomy: percent during the first three quarters of expensive sites in East Asia. 1992, and output in October 1992 was 47 * Foreign trade-liberalization will be- * Market prices for producer goods percent higher than in the previous year. come increasingly central to economic have been increasing since mid-1992. Jiangsu's exports increasedby 19 percent, reform. The most important provisions Structural steel and cement saw the "showing that its rapid growth is based of the October 1992 T.S.-China trade biggest rises. - largely on the domestic market. agreement will take effect in December * Bottlenecks, are emerging in the' - ' 1993. transportsector. Totalfreighttrafficin- While export growth has preserved the * Thesechangeswillbecontroversial. creased only 4.6 percent, and transport -trade surplus and.foreign exchange re- Differences about specific policy initia- delays have increased markedly. serves, most of the slack within the do- tives will intensify, but with economic * Energy shortages are reemerging. 'm-estic economy has now been used up. fundamentals remaining positive, po- The primary energy supply grew only With soundforeignexchange reserves and tential instability is unlikely to under- 2.8 percent during the first 10 months a stable consumer market,:the authori- mine rapid growth in 1993. of 1992. ties are unlikely to apply the brakes to economic growth during 1993. From reports of Oxford Analytica, the Problems in energy supply have so far London-basedeconomicresearchgroup. been averted by improved sector per- Although China's current leadership has formance, however. Crude petroleum accepted the market, it retains a distinct Volume 4, Number 2 7 The World Bank/PRDTM announced at the October Party and encouraging staff to work in ser- from 12 percent of transactions by Congress-is to reduce the number vice industries or to start their own value to only 7 percent in 1993. This of ministries from 41 to 40 and to add businesses. is the first occasion that can be re- one new state commission. In one called in which a public statement on interesting development, however, The annual development plan, which the scale of planning was given in the Ministry of Materials is being usually adds little to the prime terms of value. combined with the Ministry of Com- minister's speech, signaled important merce to form a Ministry of Internal changes in the role of the Planning Two other aspects of Li Peng's speech Trade responsible for regulatory is- Commission (SPC), changes that the merit a mention: sues. World Bank has been encouraging for some time. * The frequent and strong state- The widespread reform of industrial ments on the need to eradicate cor- ministries did not occur; all that * The plan contained many more ruption 'indicate that the problem took place was the conversion of the macroeconomic projections than ever must be reaching very serious propor- Ministries of Light Industry and before, including external trade fore- tions and that is an issue of real con- Textiles into industry associations. casts and, for the first time, the tar- cern to the government, not least Nevertheless, the prime minister get for credit growth. because of its importance to the did announce an intention to reduce * The SPC stated clearly that the fo- events of 1989. the number of government employ- cus of public investment would be on * The speech contained a vitriolic ees by 25 percent over the next the provision of economic and social attack on the proposals by the gover- three years. About 2 million people infrastructure, which would receive nor of Hong Kong for greater democ- will be affected. The government 70 percent of such funds. racy; this signaled continued wran- will shed employees by enforcing * There would be continued reduc- gling on the issue, which could regulations concerning retirement tions in mandatory planning, falling complicate China's international re- lations. A number of important The Banks and the States of the Former Soviet Union personneldecisionswere announced before the 1993 session was wrapped up, including the promotion of Commu- nist Party General Secre- tary Jiang Xemin to President, the appoint- ment of PieMnster Li Penig to a second five- year term, and the ap- pointments of Qiao Shi as chairman of parliament and Li Ruihuan as chair- man of the Chinese People's Political Consul- (1?fi) \ tative Conference, the top (i l. - 0 \ yx . advisory body. Tob sum up, the Chinese parliament had a busy session this year, one that will further cement the position of reform at the center of China's strat- egy, and secure Deng Xiaoping's philosophy -: _ . _ - --- 0 0 ; Ft tW f and approach to develop- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~ment. "-But are you creditworthy?" P C ard JPeter C. Harrold, From the German daily Kdiner Stadt-Anzeiger EA2CO, The World Bank 8 March 1993 Transition Quotation of the Month: "The success of Russian democracy cannot be gauged only by high politics in Moscow" History Professor from Berkeley Cautions in The NewRepublicagainst Prema- ture Panicking T he real questionis not whether amounted to the same thing, with its Communist Party still in power, and the Yeltsin-Gaidar reforms only legal basis the Brezhnev Consti- in possession of an army, exploited have 'succeeded"-of course tution of 1977, as amended more than Serbian nationalism to combat seces- Russia does not yet have an effective 200times andwrittenfor a Unionthat sion and so maintained its position, market democracy-but how good are was now disappearing. whereastheRussiandemocratsaimed the results thus far. And this can be to destroy the Party and to shrink the answered only ifwe take sober account Thus the internal political problem armed forces, and therefore sponsored of the universal "rubble," in fusedwiththeissueofwhattodoabout secession in the Baltic states and Cen- Solzhenitsyn's metaphor, that was the Union. As a matter of both prin- tral Asia and accepted it in Ukraine Russia's inheritance from Sovietism. ciple and practical politics, it was im- and Belarus. This, of course, does not For the Soviet Union was not Franco's possible to demand democracy in Rus- mean that the Russian diaspora no Spain or Pinochet's Chile, where a sia and yet refuse self-determination longer presents a potential for con- market, private property, and civil to the Union republics. And after the flict, as the currenttensioninMoldova society existed beneath a despotism shock of the coup, these all voted to shows. But it does mean that post- whose end sufficed for democracy to secede, leaving some 25 million Rus- Soviet ethnic problems can be resolved emerge. The Soviet Union was totali- sians stranded in what was now the nonviolently if they are channeled tarian: everything-from politics to "near abroad.' This result was unset- through democracy. And this brings the economy to culture-was absorbed tling to most Russians, who, though up the matter on which democracy's into the Party-state. Gorbachev's they had always lived badly under success depends above all: the economy perestroika showed that such a total communism, still derived consolation and the fortunes of shock therapy. system cannot be reformed piecemeal: from being citizens of a great state. it ends in total collapse, leaving be- Thus, the end of the now detested old Tobe sure,Yeltsin's firstyear has been hind a total problem. And to climb out regime was nonetheless felt as a na- the worst one yet in Russia's long-run- from under the wreckage, everything tional humiliation, a sentiment aggra- ningeconomiccrisis;thegrossnational has to be done at once, thus creating vated by Russia's new dependence on product dropped around 20 percent, an impossible situation where every- the West. and industrial production 50 percent; thing, logically, has to be done first. prices rose 2,000 percent while infla- All the same, it is an exaggeration to tion was running at a monthly rate of Yeltsin did not have the choice of car- say that these circumstances have 25 percent to 30 percent; and the ruble rying out separately and seriatim a engenderedrabid nationalism. Infact, was down to 450 (now 550) to the dol- democratic political reform, a liberal for the magnitude of the loss in power lar from 135 in June. Only 40 percent economic reform, and building a Rus- and prestige, and the very real prob- of taxes were being collected, and the sia distinct from the Soviet Union. He lem posed by the Russians "abroad," government lost control of the money had to take the gamble of attempting the reaction has been mild-as com- supply, with a deficit of 1.5 trillion all at once. This took him beyond re- parison with the backlash in France rubles. form to revolution-but revolution of after the loss of Algeria or America's an unprecedented sort. Earlier West- trauma afterthe "loss" of Chinareadily Yet it is absurd to impute these prob- ernrevolutions were bybreakthrough, reveals. lems primarily to the mistakes of the as when an already formed English Yeltsin-Gaidar government, real Parliament or the dynamic French ForthosewhowouldreadtheRussian though these at times have been. The ThirdEstatecrackedtheoutwornshell future through the prism of Croatia economic decline began under of royal power. But the anti-Commu- and Bosnia, it should be pointed out Brezhnev; it had assumed crisis pro- nist revolutions of 1989-91 were by that the Commonwealth of Indepen- portionsbyl989underGorbachev;and implosion, with the shell of the Party- dent States has already passed the it had become afreefallby 1991. Ifthis state simply disintegrating, leaving flash point that produced that trag- process accelerated in 1992, this was, no viable institutions for the succes- edy. This point was the Yugoslav se- partly, because of the collapse of both sor democracy to build on. cession movement in late 1991 and the external and internal Soviet em- 1992, a process the Soviet Union went pires and the disruption of trade. But, SotheoldParliamentwasleftinplace, throughnonviolentlyinthefallof 1991. above all, the decline was due to the and Russian democracy began its ca- And the reason for the difference in salutaryreductionofmilitaryprocure- reer without a constitution; or, what the two outcomes was that aYugoslav ments by around 80 percent from the Volume 4, Number 2 9 The World Bank/PRDTM previous year, which accounts for most the short-run revival of the economy, government was always autocratic, ofthe production fall bemoaned by the but the destruction of the old com- after 1855 the autocracy was con- Civic Union. Far from beingthe cause mand-administrative system; forthis stantly under challenge by such of the deepening debacle, shock is the indispensable prelude to real "Westernizers" as Alexander Herzen, therapy was the first serious attempt economic revival, stable democracy, even from the progressive bureaucrats to do something about it. and national reconstruction alike. In who devised the Great Reforms of publictheytalked only aboutthe mar- Alexander II, and then the Kadet In theory, there are two economic op- ket and private property; in private Party in the Legislative Duma after tions for the exit from communism: they called their program "capital- 1905. Old regime Russia was thus therevolutionarywayofshocktherapy ism." Gaidar also said he was a 'ka- going through the same transition and the evolutionary way of gradual mikaze" who expected to last only a from royal absolutism to constitu- transition. Gorbachev's perestroika few months after price liberalization; tional democracy as the rest of pre- was an approximation of the second in fact he lasted a year. They were as 1914 Europe, but some 50 years later. way. He never intended to go over to much interested in shock itself as in This tradition, of course, lost out in the market and private property, as its immediate therapeutic results, for 1917. We should not forget that the his rejection of the Five Hundred Day their goal was to create an 'irrevers- more advanced liberal traditions of Plan in 1990 attests. But the result of ible situation" that would make re- most of Europe also lost out between his half measures, such as enterprise turn to the old order impossible. 1918 and 1945. Yet this did not pre- autonomy, was to disrupt the Plan, vent all of Europe from turning to which at least kept production going, The success of Russian democracy democracy between 1945 and 1989. without creating a market. So the cannot be gauged only by high politics Nations do change. Russiahas already democrats concluded that a clean in Moscow. Perhaps more important done so mightily since 1985, again 50 break with the old order alone could are spontaneous changes at the grass years after the other interwar dicta- salvage the economy. roots and in the provinces, changes we torships. And never has this change heat little about because they escape been more rapid than inYeltsin's first And this was the pattern in all post- the net of Russia's deficient statistics. year. Communist countries. Poland, after And in those areas, centrifugence has the failure ofthe Jaruzelski-Rakowski unleashed the entrepreneurial spirit So what does that year add up to? The perestroika, was the first to try a "big among the population, especially the first aim of stabilization was not real- bang" of liberalization, in January young. To be sure, some of this has fed ized, but a great advance was made 1990; but all Eastern European coun- mafias and criminal activities, facili- toward the objective of irreversible tries (with the partial exception of tated by the lack of a new administra- structural change. Societyhas become Hungary) attempted one or another tive andjudicial system appropriate to monetarized; real prices-not admin- variant of a cold turkey cure. In East the market. But activity from below has istrative directives-arenowthe norm Germany this took the bruising form also produced a surge ofmarketization for economic activity. Although the of unification with the West; in the in services and light consumer produc- bulk of the country's capital stock is Czech republic, ofVaclav Klaus's care- tion. Both sectors have doubled in the still state-controlled, privatization of fully calibrated liberalization plus last year. They now employ around 40 this sector is gaining momentum and privatization. percent of the labor force outside agri- a new, nonstate sector is developing culture. If we add to this the privatiza- even more rapidly alongside it. All Everywhere, too, the pain ofthe result tion of old enterprises, some 25 percent these trends can no longer be stopped, led to outcries that a more "gradual" of GNP is now nonstate. Moreover, re- only slowed. course should have been followed. Yet gions such as Nizhnii Novgorod, the it is a curious fact that nowhere has a Urals, and the Far East are introduc- Still, in a society as radically dysfunc- concrete program of gradual transi- ing their own market reforms. The tional as Russia amid the rubble of tion been advanced. When one looks mainfailure ofreform thus farhas been Sovietism, things have to get worse at the various candidates for this"cen- in collective agriculture. The govern- before they get better. So we should trist"role-fromlastyear'sbacktrack- ment claims 150,000 new private brace ourselves for the long haul, and ing Olszewski government in Poland, farms, butthis is probably anexaggera- not panic every time there is a crisis tothatofMeciarpresentlyinSlovakia, tion. Still, in November the term 'pri- in Moscow. Crisis is the stuff that ex- totheCivicUnioninRussia-onefinds vate property" was at last introduced its from communism are made of. only such ad hoc measures as subsi- into the constitution by presidential dies and price controls to preserve the decree; and 15 percent of agricultural Excerpts from Martin Malia's article existing industrial plant and worker production is now marketed privately. "Yeltsin's Plan for Survival-Apoca- security,butnothingtopromoteatran- lypse Not" in The New Republic, a sition. This is what the Gaidar team of But will Russia's bleak political cul- U.S. weekly. The author is a history Young Turks realized. They, like ture permit it to achieve any constitu- professor at the University of Califor- Yeltsin, are not reformers, but revolu- tionalism? Well, that heritage is not nia, Berkeley. tionaries. Their chiefaim has not been monolithic or immutable. Though its 10 March 1993 Transition Milestones of Transition Bulgaria reached an association would have been offered to all adult law was promulgated in December agreement with the European Com- citizens in Poland for a nominal fee. 1987. According to the account, 44 munity in early March that provides Employees of privatized firms would projects were licensed in the first two for a gradual opening of markets in have received 10 percent of the shares months of this year. More than 600 both directions, financial and techni- in their firms free of charge. The pro- projects in total have been licensed. cal assistance to the Bulgarian gram was designed both to improve economy, and regular political consul- the management of the privatized The German government, the opposi- tations. The EC's agreement with firms and to give the broader public a tion,andGermany'sl6regionalstates Bulgaria is similar to those it struck chance at ownership. The funds would have agreed on long-term measures earlier with Poland, Hungary, then- have been run initially by Western to finance east German reconstruc- Czechoslovakia, and Romania. An in- experts, whose fees, paid in cash, would tion. East Germany will receive about terim trade accord will be in force until depend on the performance ofthe com- DM55.8 billion in 1995-DM51 bil- the association agreement is ratified panies under their management. lion from the federal government and by the EC and the Bulgarian legisla- Prime Minister Hanna Suchocka an- the rest from western regional states. ture. In separate news, the new mini- nounced that the government would A housing program for east Germany mum monthly wage in Bulgaria rose reintroduce the plan in parliament. financed by the Reconstruction Loan from 850 leva ($33) to 1,200 leva ($46). Corporation will be doubled to DM60 Viet Nam approved foreign invest- billion. The Treuhand privatization Poland's parliament defeated a gov- ment projects in the first two months agency's borrowing limit will be ernment bill that would have con- of 1993 worth $510 million, equal to doubled to DM60 billion to enable it verted 600 state companies into pri- the amount approved for all of 1989, to preserve core industries and clean vateenterprisesbycreating20mutual accordingtotheVietNamnewsagency. up pollution. There will be no cuts in investment funds to oversee the com- That brought to $5.2 billion the total social benefits. In February the un- panies and hold controlling shares in foreign investment capital registered adjusted unemployment rate stood at them. Shares in the mutual funds since the country's foreign investment 15 percent in east Germany, and at 8.4 percent in the western half of the country. -*...WREN Tf COMJNISTS WJE IN JPowE I f WIE AT ILEAST AJ &D JOBS. rHungary's commercial banks ___A__EA-sT had by mid-March traded bad loans amounting to FtlO2.6 bil- lion (about $1.2 billion) for gov- ernment bonds maturing in 20 years with interest rates ad- -Agr ir ( tBoQt It. Jf - - - justed to the 90-day Hungarian treasury bills. (These bills carry tbst t / \ an annual interest rate of 15.9 - / ;/ / . . , \1, ~~~~~~~~~~~percent in the first halfofl1993.) The badloans were transferred to the state-owned Hungarian Investment and Development Bank Ltd (MBFB), which is t working out restructuring pro- grams tailor-made for 115 ma- jor loss-makers. The MBFB is > u MJ $ 1R Xexpected to forgive a significant part of the debts, according to _HVG, the Hungarian economic weekly. Direct foreign investments are flowinginto Hungary. PepsiCo, the U.S. food and drink group, has acquired a 79 percent inter- est in. FAU, a leading Hungar- By Toles for the Buffalo News ian soft drink company, and has Volume 4, Number 2 l The World Bank/PRDTM said that it will invest $115 million in country's economic decline, as the. Croatia's Prime Minister Hrvoje the Budapest area in the next five government cannot reverse the situa- Sarinicresigned, andNildcaValentic, years. FAU had produced Pepsi prod- tion by itself, he added. (According to the former head of the Croatian INA ucts under license for the Budapest official statistics, Slovakia had more oil company, is to form a new govern- area. In addition, the Marriott Hotel than 300,000 jobless workers at the ment. The country's economy has been Group has acquired Hotel Duna In- end of February, making the unem- badly disrupted since the outbreak of tercontinental for $52 million. ployment rate almost 12 percent. Of hostilities in the Balkan. Last year the 301,244jobless, 35.4 percent were Croatproduction and employmentfell No agreement was reached on prices receiving unemployment benefits.) by 30 percent, and the inflation rate for Ukrainian imports of Russian Later, in London the prime minister for the year hit 1,000 percent. Prices natural gas in the mid-March nego- also disclosed that Slovakia will not for textiles rose by more than 4,000 tiations in Moscow. Under a Russian hold a second round of privatization percent, and production in high-tech proposal Ukraine would pay 26,700 based on the voucher method, but will industries dropped by,70 percent. Iron rubles per 1,000 cubic meters (about sell enterprises directly to foreign and steel production came to a virtual 60 percent of the world price) for the firms in competitive public bidding. halt. next half year and guarantee transit deliveries to the West. Another Rus- Romania's privatization authorities BeginningApril 1, Serbia's commer- sianproposalwouldhavehadUkraine recently published a list of the first cial banks may offer a monthly inter- paying 15,600 rubles per 1,000 cubic 162 candidates for a privatization est rate no higher than 2 percent on meters (about 35 percent of the world schemedesignedtoselloff2,000small short-term deposits. Earlier, private price) untilApril30, with firmer com- companies over the next two years. banks offered 15 percent monthly in- mitments -on deliveries and future Voicingconcernoverplansforthenew terest rates for deutsche mark depos- prices to be worked out later. Accord- administrative board of the State its, according to a report by Oxford ing to the Russian daily Izvestiya, Ownership Fund to privatize larger Analytica. The German currency's Russia sells its natural gas for 15,000 companies, SOF President Emil Dima unofficial exchange rate shot up from rubles per 1,000 eubicmeters, or about saidthat some are too important to be 2,000 dinar to 20,000 dinar during 33 percent of the world price, to other closed. 'The state should increase its the first quarter of 1993. The monthly signatory states of the CIS customs interventions in the economy to boost inflation rate reached 600 percent union treaty. production and efficiency,' he added. during the same period. Last year (Unemployment in Romania grew GDP fell by 25 percent and industrial Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Azer- from 8.5 to 9.2 percent in February, outputby22 percent, withthevehicle baijan, and Turkmenistan will and the number of jobless reached manufacturing and nonferrous met- adopt a Latin-based 34-character al- 1,025,000, according to the Ministry allurgy sectors registering declines of phabet after making the necessary of Labor and Social Protection.) 50 percent over 1991. internal changes, according to a mid- March statement by the four Central A,sian countries. In February consumer prices in the Czech Republic were on average 8.5 perceht higher than in the previous month, says the Czech Statistics Of-X Ii/ fice. Food prices had increased by 8.2 percent, nonfood prices by 6 percent, C c;) and prices for services by 12.7 per- cent. And compared with January i ? / 1992, consumer prices were 21.2 per- ((/ - = - cent higher. The price hikes were caused by the introduction of a new 4 l_l______ tax system in January. ; l =L7 ta_ _ The social character of Slovak eco- -___ nomicreformwilldifferentiateitfrom the Czech model ofreform, PrimeMn- M ister Vladimir Meciar disclosed in a l March interview with Slovak televi- .e r sion. All citizens, institutions, and en- Stuttmann/Freitag/-erlin terprises must cooperate to halt the From the WORLD PRESS REVIEW 12 March 1993 Transition World Bank/IMF Agenda The IMF StanWds by Prague tions. The IMF would consider an IBRD: $150 Million to Pave increase of the stand-by credit if Po- Poland's Roads The IMF approved a $243 million land and its commercial bank credi- stand-by credit for the Czech Repub- torsconclude-financingarrangements The World Bank approved a $150 lic on March 17 to support the that reduce Poland's debt service and million loan for the Poland Road country's 1993 economic program and that are consistent with its economic Project (total cost, almost $300 mil- to boost official reserves. Those re- program. (Polandisnegotiatingwith lion). The loan is for 17 years, includ- serves fell sharply, reaching the theLondonClubtorescheduleits $12 ing five years of grace, with avari- equivalent of about two and a half billionincommercialdebt.) Theagree- able interest rate, currently 7.43 weeks of imports early this year, be- ment notes that Poland wants to re- percent, linked to the cost of the cause of capital flight and a sharp duce its budget deficit from 7.2 per- Bank's borrowing. The project, ex- acceleration in imports at the end of cent of GDP in 1992 to 5 percent in pected to be completed in 1999, in- last year. The Fund expects the re- 1993, bring inflation down from 45 cludes improvement of the road net- serves to be rebuilt quickly. (The percent to 32 percent, hold social se- work, further development of a Czech Republic's outstanding finan- curity payments constant relative to private construction industry, and cial obligations to the IMF, about $1 GDP, and introduce the value added introduction of competitive bidding billion, are the result of transactions tax. for road works. of the ex-Czechoslovakia.) For this year the Czech government envisages economic growth of 1 to 3 percent, inflation of 15 percent, a balanced Lewis Preston on the World Bank's policy in Russia state budget, and moderate wage in- creases. World Bank President Lewis Preston barrels a day in each of the past three addressed the Foreign Policy Associa- years. lb stabilizeproductionatthe 1993 A second wave of large-scale tion in New York on March 25 on the level (about 350 million tons) will re- privatization now under preparation Bank's newchallenges inthe post-Cold quire investing about $50 billion be- will involve about 900 companies; War period. He voiced concern that the tween now and the year 2000. Without with about a third to be privatized new nations ofthe former Soviet Union this, Russia faces the prospect of be- through the distribution of vouchers are confronting an economiccrisis much coming an oil importer by the end of the to the adult population at a nominal worse than the Great Depression. Their decade. The World Bank is trying to fee. Under the first wave, 1,500 en- exportshavefallenbyhalfoverthepast help shape an investment climate that terprises were privatized, of which 'two years. Their average GDP declined can attract the badly needed foreign 990 were in the Czech Republic. Of byaboutafifthlastyear.Andpricesare capital. The Bank is also working with 990wesres in theszech eterpubis; Of rising 25 to 30 percent a month. In Rus- the European Bank for Reconstruction the shares,in these enterprises, 65 sia, the drive to establish a market- and Development on a $1 billion oil sec- percent (by book value) were sold. orientedeconomyisfalteringintheface tor project in Western Siberia. If suc- through the voucher method, 3 per- of hyperinflation and political opposi- cessful, this project could quickly gen- cent were sold to foreigners, 15 per- tion. The major obstacle to progress is erate additional revenues-about $750 cent went to the National Property the constitutional crisis and the lack of million a year by 1994. Fund, and 12 percent went to state political consensus on the direction of participation'infinancialinstitutions. reform; thus, to that extent, the fate of Fifty million people, a third of the Rus- The remaining 5 percent were set Russia lies in Russia's hands. Preston sian population, are now living below aside to satisfy restitution claims and urged macroeconomic stabilization and the poverty line. More than half of the for possible further sale. With 22,000 soundmonetarypolicyinRussia, adras- households headed by women have units sold, the privatization of small tic reduction of subsidies to large-scale fallen into poverty. Buffering the im- enterprises was almost completed by enterprises, and an acceleration of the pact of the transition is important to the end of 1992. privatization process. reduce social and political tensions. Existing arrangements for pensions, Debt Reduction from Poland's Oil and gas resources have the poten- unemployment compensation, and the Stand-by? tial to finance the restructuring of the protection of vulnerable groups need to economythroughincreasedexportearn- be strengthened. The Banlks Board has TheIMF approveda$655millionone- ings.Majorinvestment,bothpublic and already approved an employment ser- year stand-by credit for Poland on private, is needed to rehabilitate these vicesprojectandislookingatotherways March 8. Polish authorities have industries. Russia's oil production is in which to help the poor. asked that 25 percent of the credit be declining rapidly-it has lost a million set aside for debt reduction opera- Volume 4, Number 2 13 The World Bank/PRDTM World Bank Loans to China real component ofthe IMF's compen- enable Bulgaria to meet its demand satory and contingency financing for electricity and cut back on expen- China has designed a teacher devel- facility. This component provides sive electricity imports. The project opment program for lower middle resources to member countries expe- includes the completion of a 432- schools in 15 provinces and autono- riencing balance of payments prob- megawatt power plant at Chaira, mous regions in an effort to intro- lems caused by an excess in the cost southeast of Sofia. It also includes duce universal nine-year basic edu- of cereal imports that is both tempo- technical assistance to Bulgaria's cation. TheWorldBankis supporting rary and beyond the control of the national electric company to help the the initiative with an IDA credit of authorities.) organization become more commer- $100 million. (More than 95 percent cially oriented and streamline its op- of Chinese children enroll in elemen- New Address in Moscow erations. Prices for coal and other tary schools, the drop-outrate is low, forms of energy hadbeen artificially and the literacy rate for those age 15 VThe World Bank's resident mnission low until the government launched and above is about 77 percent.) The in Moscow has moved to a new loca- reforms in 1990 giving a greaterrole project will focus on institutional, tion. The new address: World Bank, to market forces in setting energy management, and quality improve- Moscow Resident Mission, Sadovo- prices. The reforms also discouraged ments in lower middle school teach- Kudrinskaya No.3, Moscow 123242, waste and promoted energy effi- ing services. Itwill target 124 teacher Russian Federation. The telephone ciency. training institutions and provincial number is 7-095 (254-8685), and the and county education bureaus. The fax number 7-095 (254-8765) or 7- New World Bank Members-, $100millionloanbringsWorldBank 095 (254-8368). Croatia and Slovenia lending to China's education sector to about $1.29 billion. Algeria to Receive Loans of Following their admission to the $240 Million IMF, Croatia-and Slovenia have also Five key industrial sectors in the become members of the IBRD, suc- Municipality of Tianjin, located Algeria'shousingsupplyisestimated ceedingin the membership ofthe ex- aroundChina'sthirdlargestcity,will to fall 2 million units short of de- Yugoslavia on February 25, 1993. be restructured with help from an- mand, with the average occupancy Croatia and Slovenia have also be- other World Bank loan, this one for rate hitting 8.5 persons per unit. The come members of the IDA and the $150 million. Targeted sectors in- country plans to bring more housing. IFC. The IBRD now has 174 mem- clude machine tools, construction toitsovercrowdedcitieswiththehelp ber countries, the IDA 150, and the machinery, automotive parts, elec- of a $200 million World Bank loan IFC 153. tronic components, and electric mo- approved in early March. The loan tors. will enable Algeria to complete the Madagascar Nutrition Project construction of 51,000 public hous- Support to Moldova's Drought- ing units for sale. The loan will also, To support the Masdagascan govern- Stricken Farms support Algeria's reform plan for the ment in carrying out a food security housing market, aimed at reducing and nutrition project, the World Under Moldova's Emergency the government's dominance in the BankapprovedanlDAcreditof$21.3 Drought Recovery Project, $26 mil- housingmarketandallowingprivate million. (The credit is for 40 years, lion of a World Bank loan approved entrepreneurs to play a bigger role, including 10 years of grace; it car- on March 15 will go to help the liberalizingreal estate development, ries no interest but has an annual country's farmers, hit last year by and freeing the rental housing mar- charge of 0.75 percent on the dis- themostseveredroughtinmorethan ket. A $40 million World Bank loan bursed balance and a variable fourdecades. The loanwill help farm- toAlgeria will support improvements charge-currently zero percent-on ers plant for the coming season, and to basic and secondaryeducation. The the undisbursed balance.) The pro- acquire seeds, pesticides, poultry project will affect about 14,000 basic posed project will help alleviate pov- feed, andsparepartsforagricultural and secondary schools and improve erty and reduce malnutrition by pro- machinery. In February the IMF learning for about 5 million pupils. viding the poor with access to approved a credit equivalent of about income-earning opportunities. $19 million for Moldova to help de- Electricity Loan to Bulgaria, fray the excess cost of cereal imports for the 12 months ending June1993. A project financed in part by a $93 (The credit was made under the ce- million World Bank loan may soon 14 March 1993 Transition Conference Diary For the Record Forthcoming ronment;andtheeconomicsofregress. Information: The World Bank, Reforming the Hungarian Economy: European Bank for Reconstruction Research Administration, Boris Stony Path or Road to Prosperity? and Development (EBRD)-Second Pleskovic, tel: (202) 473-1062. March 1, 1993, London Annual Meeting April 26-27, London Guaranteeing, Collateralizing, and Istvan Szekely, an economist at the Financing Foreign Investment and U.N. Department of Economics and The two-day meeting of the Board of Regional Economic Development Social Development who is participat- Governors will be preceded by May 6-9, Middlebury, Vermont ingin the Research Program on Trans- roundtables and seminars for all par- formation in Eastern Europe of the ticipants starting on April 23. Topics Geonomics Gateway Seminar spon- Centre for Economic Policy Research include accounting systems and prac- sored jointly by the Geonomics Insti- (CEPR), discussed the current state tices in the Central and Eastern tute, the Russian State Investment of the Hungarian reform process at a European countries, the EBRD's pro- Corporation (RSIC), and the Fund for lunchtime meeting organized by the curementpolicies,introducinginstitu- the Complex Development of the CEPR. In Szekely's view, Hungary's tional investors in Eastern Europe, Volgograd Region. Topics include: economy could produce a further in- cofinancing with export credit agen- crease of exports in 1993. Also on the cies, regional environmental pro- * Relationships between regional positive side, investment revived to a grams,Asian models oftransition, and and national governments in address- certain degree, the current account of unemployment and migration issues ing economic development issues. the balance of payments improved, in Central and Eastern Europe. * Defense conversion as a priority for international reserves were replen- national and regional economic de- ished, net foreign debts were reduced, Black Sea Oil and Gas: Emerging velopment funds. and foreign direct investment has sta- Opportunities * Specific opportunities for western bilized at a relatively high level. April 28-29, Istanbul investment in Volgograd and the South Russia region. Persistent budget deficits are endan- Conference hosted by Europe Energy gering Hungary's economic recovery, Environment Ltd. and the Marmara Information:Nancy Ward, Vtce Presi- however. [Editor's note: A senior offi- Bank. dent, orRobert Waltemyer, Geonomics cial at the Ministry of Finance dis- Information:EuropeEnergyEnviron- Institute, 14 Hillcrest Avenue, closed in early April that the budget ment Ltd., London, tel: (4471) 493- Middlebury, VT 05753, tel: (802) 388- deficit might exceed Ft185 billion 4918, fax: (4471) 355-1415. 9619, fax: (802) 388-9627. (about $2 billion) by year-end.] High real interest rates and an increase in World Bank-IMF, Meetings of the In- MoneyMarket '93-Rebuilding Fi- bankruptcy and liquidation proce- terim Committee and the Develop- nance and Trade in the Central and dures foreshadow another wave of ment Committee Eastern European Region layoffs. Majornew reform steps should April 30-May 1, Washington, D.C. May 6-7, Budapest include financial, budgetary, social security, and pension reforms, and Fifth Annual Bank Conference on International conference organized by relatively rapid completion of the Development Economics CMC Ltd., Budapest, and sponsored privatization process. May 3-4, 1993, Washington, D.C. by Hungarian Foreign Trade Bank Information: David Guthrie, Centre Ltd. Tbpics include the role of finance forEconomicPolicyResearch (CEPR), This conference sponsored by the in rebuilding trade relations in Cen- London, 25-28 Old Burlington St. World Bank traditionally brings to- tral and Eastern Europe; financing London WlXlLB, tel:(4471) 7349110. gether international researchers, foreign trade and the development of See also the recent CEPR book "Hun- Bank staff, policymakers, and devel- commercial banking; government ex- gary: An Economy in Transition," ed- opment practitioners to focus on ma- port credit guarantees in support of ited by Istvdin Szekely and David jor issues in development policy. This foreign trade; money markets and Newberyandpublished by Cambridge year's topics include financial policy economic growth in the region; and University Press. lb order: Cambridge (R. McKinnon will present a study on setting up direct sales networks. University Press, Customer Service financial control of state enterprises Information: Dora Hadhazy, CMC Dept., TheEdinburgh Building, Cam- in the Russian transition: lessons Of Ltd., 1145 Budapest, 3 Szabo Lorinc bridge, CB2 2RU, tel: (44-223) 32- the Chinese experience); principles, u., tel: (361) 251-1647, fax: (361) 184- 5970. capacity, and constraints of regula- 3982. tion; the energy sector and the envi- Volume 4, Number 2 15 The World Bank/PRDTM How to Fund Exports and Invest- tory requirements; VAT, social Privatization and Socioeconomic ments to Eastern Europe and the security, and reinvestment credits; Policy in Central and Eastern Europe Newly Independent States maximizing deductions and utilizing June 7-10, 1993, Krakow, Poland May 13-14, New York training and R&D incentives; and opportunities in the Budapest Expo International conference organized by Ajoint conference of the World Bank 96. (On May 6 Hungarian Minister Boston College Graduate School of and the EBRD. Participants will ex- of Finance Ivan Szabo will meet with Social Work, The Carroll School of plore possibilities for tapping into the the Hungarian-U.S. Business Coun- Management, International Market- $24 billion in World Bank, IFC, and cil.) ing Institute and the Department of EBRD contracts in Central and East- Information: M. Kay Lercom, Execu- Economics, and hosted by the ern Europe and the former Soviet tive Director, U.S. Chamber of Com- Jagiellonian University, the Krakow Union. Speakers from those interna- merce, 1615HStreet, N.W., Washing- Academy of Economics, and the tionalfinanceinstitutesandfromU.S. ton, D.C. 20062, tel: (202) 463-5488, Krakow International Cultural Cen- federal agencies and U.S. companies fax: (202) 463-3114. ter. It will address such questions as: will speak on the procurement proce- How can a society best transform its dures and upcoming projects and pro- Sources of Privatization Financing socioeconomicstructure?Whobenefits vide lessons of experience. in Eastern Europe from and who bears the burden of eco- Information: Bill Collins, Conference May 21-22, Budapest nomic and social change? What social, Coordinator, ITC ConsultantsInc., tel: political, and economic decisions seem (813) 572-8035, fax: (813) 965-2630. International workshop sponsored by toleadtoasuccessfultransition?What UNCTAD and the Kopint-Datorg Re- determines the willingness of firms to DoingBusinesswithHungary Bank- search Foundation, Budapest. Discus- locate and invest in the transitional ing, Currency, and Taxation sions will focus on privatization ex- economies? How can society balance May 20, Washington, D.C. periences in the Czech Republic, economic efficiency and social justice? Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia, and A Hungarian-U.S. Business Council on financing privatization through The conference program will include Conference. Topics include an over- foreign investments and domestic countryreportsonBulgaria,theCzech view of Hungary's financial sector; savings. Participants include Republic, Germany, Hungary, Poland, accessing Eximbank financing; for- WlodzimierzBrus,MarekDabrowski, Russia, and Slovakia. eign exchange transactions in Hun- KarelKouba,MichalMejstrik, Bruno Information:.Prof. DemetriusIatridis, gary; sources of offshore and domes- Dallago, Wladimir Andreff, Eva International Conference Planning tic investment capital; risks and Voszka, and David Stark. Committee, Boston College Graduate opportunities forU.S. financialfirms; Information: Laszlo Szamuely, School of Social Work, Chestnut Hill, the present and future ofinvestment Kopint-Datorg Inc., Budapest, tel: Massachusetts 02166, tel: (617) 552- tax credits; coping with tax regula- (361) 266-6640, fax: (361) 266-6483. 4041, fax: (617) 552-3199. New Books and Working Papers PRDTM regrets that it is unable to supply the publications listed. Recent World Bank die from the disease. AIDS has over- experienced. That loss could make Publications taken malaria as the nation's leading Tanzania's gross domestic product fall cause of death among adults, and in 14 to 24 percent below normal levels Tanzania: AIDS Assessment and the next few years it is expected to by 2010. New demands from victims Planning Study become the leading killer'among chil- will strain the health system and the A World Bank Country Study, Wash- dren as well. By 2010, up to one of budget in a country in which the aver- ington, D.C., 1993,161 p. every sixTanzanians couldbeinfected age per capitaincome is about $100.To with HIV. cushion the impact of AIDS, Tanzania Tanzania has been one of the nations should continue to pursue economic hardest hit by AIDS. Among its 25 The epidemic will change Tanzania's reform that will allow the country to million people, 800,000, or 3.2 per- economy, its demographic composi- grow, and seek help from donors and cent, are believed to be infected with tion, and the makeup of its workforce. investors. And health care should be the human immunodeficiency virus The country will lose many skilled stepped up and made more efficient. A (HIV). About one-eighth of those in- workers, often in their prime years of successful prevention program could fected have developed AIDS, and ev- productivity. The labor force will be- save up to 4.5 million lives during the eryyear, 20,000 to 30,000 Tanzanians come younger, less educated, and less next 20 years. 16 March 1993 Transition This study calls for a broad govern- ful and unsuccessful firms. (By 1992, influence resource allocation, the ment program focusing on the pre- presumably,thetransitionalmeasure- paper's analysis suggests that: vention and control of all sexually ment distortions of 1990 and 1991 had transmitted diseases (STDs), andlow- disappeared.) Successful managers * Once budget constraints are hard- cost measures for coping with the con- have tended to stress a change in prod- ened and credit markets begin to func- sequences of AIDS. By treating and uct mix, have generally become more tion appropriately, the externalities counseling people with curable STDs, efficient in the use of materials and associated with production bottle- the program would reach those most energy, have maintained labor pro- necks and adjustment costs provide a at risk of getting and transmitting ductivity, and have shown restraint case for subsidizing the costs of criti- AIDS. The study also calls for improv- in settingwagesanddinborrowingfrom cal inputs for the state industrial sec- ing the supply, distribution, and pro- banks. Theauthors concludethat, over tor but not for the new private sector. motion of preventives and reducing the past three years, managers have * The appropriate policy has an im- the need for blood transfusions. Bet- learned a good deal about operating portant time dimension, with the op- ter information, education, and com- in a market economy. timal 'finance' through taxing the municationprograinsaimedatchang- To order: Marylou Kam Cheong, The wage income generated in the state ing behavior are also important. World Bank, Room K6-115, tel: (202) sector, which will strengthen incen- 473-9618. tives for workers to move out of that Jean-Louis Lamboray andA. Edward sector. Elmendorf, Combatting AIDS and Richard Bird and Christine Wallich, * The eligibility requirements for Other Sexually Transmitted Dis- FiscalDecentralizationandInter- such subsidies should be made condi- eases in Africa: A Review of the governmental Relations in Tran- tional on maintaining wage restraint World Bank's Agenda for Action, sition Economies: Toward a Sys- andmeetingprespecifiedbenchmarks World Bank Discussion Paper 181, temic Framework of Analysis, in restructuring and in other enter- Washington, D.C., 1992, 34 p. WPS 1122, 1993, 85 p. prise reforms. To order: Bonnie Pacheco, The World Both of the above publications are Bank, Room H11-065, tel: (202) 473- Althoughfinancingrequirementscon- availableattheWorldBankbookstore, 7033. strain the size of the subsidies that or to order: World Bank Publications, [Editor's note: See also Research Up- can be provided to the state sector tel: (908) 225-2165, or P.O. Box 7247- date in Transition, vol. 3, no. 11, p. withoutunderminingmacroeconomic 8619, Philadelphia, PA 19170-8619. 10.]- stability, countries should view the amount of financing to raise as a fun- Policy Research Working Papers Recent IMF Publications damental policy choice in designing their reform strategy. Their willing- BrianPinto,MarekBelka,andStefan Joshua Aizenman and Peter Isard, ness and ability to finance a gradual Krajewski, Transforming State Resource Allocation during the ormoderatelypacedcontractionofthe Enterprises in Poland: Microeco- Transition to a Market Economy: state industrial sector may be crucial nomic Evidence on Adjustment, Policy Implications of Supply in maintaining popular support for WPS 1101, 1993,43 p. Bottlenecks and Adjustment the transformation effort and making Costs, IMF Working Paper 93/6, the sustainability of the reform pro- The authors present new evidence- Washington, D.C., 1993. gram credible. This in turn may be drawn from visits in late 1992 to 75 crucial for obtaining the financial large state-owned manufacturing en- While much ofthe concern withbottle- support of domestic savers and for- terprises first surveyed inmid-1991- necks has centered on impediments eign private investors. about the successful transformation tointernationaltrade,bottleneckscan of several state-owned enterprises in also arisewhenever the requirements Ehtisham Ahmad and Jean-Luc Poland. The largely autonomous busi- for certain inputs to production are Schneider, Alternative Social Se- ness operations of those enterprises stochastic (such as needs for energy curity Systems in CIS Countries, indicate that decentralized transfor- sources or spare parts) and the oppor- IMF Working Paper 9678, Washing- mationcouldbeefficient-ifbolstered tunity cost of holding inventories is ton, D.C., 1993. byappropriatemanagerialincentives. high. Once budget constraints are hardened and creditmarkets beginto This paper presents a simple demo- The authors analyzed various adjust- function effectively, these conditions graphic model to compare pay-as-you- ment indicators (labor shedding, ma- are likely to prevail in the state in- go (PAYG) and funded options for pro- terial and energy costs, bank borrow- dustrial sector-whose creditworthi- viding benefits. It concentrates on ing, and export performance) and ness is currently limited by its out- pensions and standardized family al- correlated those indicators with the dated production technologies. lowances, although the argument firms' 1992 financial performance. could be extended to provisions for This revealed significant differences Although many other factors need to the unemployed. The empiricalinves- in business strategy between success- be considered in designing policies to tigations, for Belarus, Russia, Volume 4, Number 2 17 The Wprld Bank/PRDJM Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbek- tions during the transition period, To: order NERA Working Papers: 15 istan, illustrate the effects of differ- involving major -changes inxelative Stratford Place, London, WlN 9AF, entdemographiccharacteristicsinthe prices. tel: (071) 629-6787, fax: (071) 493- European and Central Asian repub- 5937. lics in 1991. They show that if inter- The concentration of -people at- rela- est rates are negative in the medium tively low income levels is a feature, Other New Publications term, a move away from a PAYG sys- common to all of the states of the tem would be undesirable and, spe- former Soviet Union, and in some the GeorgeSoros, Nationalist Dictator- cifically, that a move toward a funded reforms have increased the concen- ships versus Open Society, The system would greatly increase contri- tration of "vulnerable" groups. As a Soros Foundations, New York, 1993, bution rates. Even if rates of return result, their options for reforming the 20 p. are positive, they would need to ex- social security instruments-in par- ceed population growth rates for a ticular, pensions and allowances- are Mr. Soros, in this expanded version of funded system to be desirable. Thus, limited. The differences in demo- a November1992 lecture he delivered the funded option would be less at- graphiccharacteristicswillgovernthe at the Harvard Club in New York, tractive in the Central Asian coun- emphasis that is given to each instru- compares the success of the Soros tries than in, say, Belarus or Ukraine. ment. Foundations in the postcommunist economies with his personal failure Alternative methods of lowering net Although means testing may be use- to influence policy in those regions. overall outlays are also discussed, ful for restricting outlays, the distri- He concludes that while the founda- including the basic benefits-in-kind bution of incomes suggests that sav- tions proved to be the appropriate system providing basic food items ings are likely to be small; moreover, institutional framework for persons through: food stamps or the cash administrative outlays may be sub- eager to act, his policy initiatives in- equivalent. The paper concludes that stantial. It will take time to develop directly tried to influence govern- a combination of PAYG benefits and adequate local social assistance ments that were not that eager to act. basic benefits in kind would be most mechanisms. A combination of mea- effective in minimizing overall cost sures that includes targeted subsidies Defining "open society," he points out while providing, adequate benefits for essential goods could be an option. that it is more than just democracy in during the transition period. the popular meaning of the term. If Financial- Sector Reforms and democracy is taken simply as the rule Ehtisham Ahmad, Poverty, Demo- Exchange Arrangements in East- of the majority, it can lead to intimi- graphic-Characteristics,andPub- ernEurope, twopapersbyGuillermo dation and even ethnic cleansing. A lic Policy in CIS Countries, IMF A. Calvo and Manmohan S. Kumar, market economy, the protection of Working Paper 93/9, Washington, and Eduardo Borensztein and Paul minorities, and freedom of thought D.C., 1993. R.Masson,IMFOccasionalPaper 102, and expression are vital ingredients Washington, D.C., 1993, 59 p. of an open society. So is the existence The states of the former Soviet Union of a civil society that is not dominated represent two broad demographic ar- To order IMFPublications:IMFPub- by the state. chetypes. The first group of coun- lication Services, 700 19th Street, NW, tries-which includes Belarus, Rus- Washington, D.C. 20431, tel: (202) 623- In the United States and the United sia, and Ukraine-is characterized by 7430, fax: (202) 623-7201. Kingdom, in particular, the dominant relatively low birthrates and a ma- view was that freedom is best served ture-and aging population. Because of National Economic Resource As- by allowingpeople to pursue their self- the extremely high loss of life among sociation (NERA) WorkingPapers interest. But the most important les- males in the European republics dur- son to learn from recent history is ing the Second World War, many of J. Stern, K. Bunt, and N. Thomas, that the pursuit of self-interest is not the current retirees are single women. Foreign Direct Investment to the sufficient to produce a free and open Countries of Central and Eastern society. And the collapse of a closed Countries in the second group, includ- Europe, NERA Working Paper 2, society does not automatically lead to ing Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, 104 p. the emergence of an open society. typically have lower per capita in- People must also be willing to subor- comes, relatively high population D. Barrowclough, J. Rhys, and J. dinate their self-interest to the pur- growth rates, highyouth-dependency Stern, eds., Case'Studies of the Ef- suit of this goal. Advancing from a ratios, and relatively few retirees. fects of Economic Reform in Cen- closed to an open society requires ac- Although countries will base their tral and Eastern Europe on tive assistance from the outside. The policy choices on these key character- Greece, the Republic of Ireland, closed society of communism has dis- istics when adopting permanent so- Northern Ireland, Southern Italy, integrated, and the process is likely to cial security instruments, they are Portugal and Spain, NERA Work- continueindefinitelyuntilandunless likely to need similar policy interven- ing Paper 3, 183 p. sufficient forces are mobilized to es- 18 March 1993 Transition tablish a different principle of social Michael P. Claudon and Kathryn Modelling of Soviet and Post- organization.- Wittn-eben, eds',After-theColdWar: Soviet Experience, Nova Science Toorder:TheSorosFoundations,888 Russian-American Defense Con- Publishers, Inc., University of SeventhAvenue, New York, NY10106, version for Economic Renewal, Toronto, February 1993. tel: (212) 757-2323, fax (212) 974- Geonomics Institutefor International Information: Nova Science Publish- 0367. EconomicAdvancement Series, 1993. ers, Inc., 6080 Jericho Turnpike, Suite The 14 papers in this volume argue 207, Commack, NY 11725, tel: (516) StephenG.-Deets, ed., TheEconom- that Russia's fledgling free-market 499-3013 / 6, fax (516) 499-3146. ics of Sustainable Agriculture: economic reforms cannot succeed American and Bulgarian Per- without the conversion and privat- East/West Letter, NovEcon Con- spectives, NationalAcademy Press, ization of much of the country's mili- sulting Group (U.S.). Washington, D.C., 1993. tary-industrial complex. Quarterly analysis of economic and Summary of a Bilateral Workshop, To order:Michael R Claudon, Editor, political issues in Eastern Europe October 21-30, 1991, cosponsored by Geonomics Institute, 14 Hillcrest Av- and the former USSR. theNationalAcademyofSciencesand enue, Middlebury, Vermont05753, tel: Information: NovEcon Consulting the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. (802) 388-9619, fax: (802) 388-9627. Group, 1217 Olivia Avenue, Ann Ar- To order:Office of Central Europe and bor, Michigan 48104. Eurasia, National Research Council, Privatization: A Bibliography- 2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W., References, University of Maine, Central Asia Monitor Washington, D.C. 20418, tel: (202) Eastern European Enterprise Insti-' A bimonthly magazine on Kazakh-- 334-2644, fax:' (202) 334-2614. tute, 1993. stan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turk- To order:Dr. Dennis McConnel, East- menistan, and Uzbekistan. The Uncertain State of the Rus- em European Enterprise Institute; Information: Central Asia Monitor, sian Economy, Itstitute for College of Business Administration, RR 2, Box 6880, Fair Haven, Ver- EastWestStudies,NewYork/Prague/ University of Maine, Orono, Maine mont 05743, fax: (802) 537-4362. Budapest, 1992, 109 p. 04469, tel: (207) 581-1988, fax: (207) To order:Institute for EastWest Stud- 581-1930. - John Dixon and David Macarov, eds., ies, 360 Lexington Avenue, New York, Social Welfare in Socialist Coun- NY 10017, tel: (212) 557-2570, fax: Val Samonis, Foreign Investment tries, Routledge Publishers, New (212) 949-8043. -in the East:' An Interpretative York and London, 1992. Bibliography of Selected Articles Staff may contact the Joint Ban-Fund Library, (202) 623-7054. Postsocialist Economies Greatbatch, P., and G. Jaksity. Hungary Lengyel, L. The Second Round: The and Its Financial Markets-An Out- Economic Stakes of the 1994 [Hun- Bienkowski, W. The Bermuda Tri- look. Hungarian Economic Review, no. garian] Elections. Hungarian Eco- angle: Why Self-Governed Firms 12, pp. 52-53, February 1992. nomic Review (Hungary), no. 12, pp 2- Work for Their Own Destruction. 3, February 1992. Journal of Comparative Economics HanAk, P. Central Europe:AnAlterna- (U.S.) 16:750-62, December 1992. tive to Disintegration. The New Hun- Meehan, S. Hungary Cites Progress garian Quarterly (Hungary) 33 (127):3- on Privatization, Outlines Priori- Hillman, A. Progress with Priva- 10, Autumn .1992. ties. IMF Survey (U.S.) 22 (6), March tization. Journal of Comparative Eco- 22, 1993. nomics (U.S.) 16:733-49, December Ionescu, D. Romania's Cabinet, in 1992. SearchofanEconomicStrategy.RFE/ Papp, E. The Difficult Year in the RL Research Report (U.S./Romania) [Hungarian] Banking System. The Central and Eastern Europe 2(4):45-49, January 22, 1993. Hungarian Economy 20 (4):17, 1992. Abel, I., J.P. Bonin, and I. Sz6kely. Does Iseman, E. Testing the Waters in East- Financial Tlmes Survey-Czech Re- Levelling Lead to Shortages? An ern Europe. The Journal of European public. Financial 7Ymes, sec. IV, March EmpiricalTest.InternationalJournal Business (U.S.), January/February 1993. 24, 1993. of Production Economics (U.S./U.K.) 26:5-11, 1992. Koranyi, T. Compensation Vouchers- Zoethout, T. Financing Eastern A Specifically Hungarian Security. Europe's Capital Requirements. East European Property, Hungary, Hungarian Economic Review, no. 12, pp RFEIRL Research Report 2 (7):38-43, Poland, CIS, Czech and Slovak Re- 58-59, February 1992. February 12, 1993. publics. Financial 7imes, pp. 13-15, March 12, 1993. Volume 4, Number 2 19 The World Bank/PRDTM Bibliography-continued China Song, S. PolicyIssues InvolvingHous- Research Report 2 (7):32-34, February ing -Commercialization in the 12, 1993. Chan, M.W. Luke, Richard Deaves, and People's Republic of China. Socio- ChengWang.AnalysisofMoneyand Economic Planning Sciences (U.K.) Hanson, P. The Baltic States: Output in the Industrial Sector in 26:213-22, July 1992. Boosted by Foreign Investment, China. Journal of Asian Economics Economic Transformation Is Mak- (U.S.) 3:271-80, Fall 1992. Yeh, K.C. Macroeconomic Issues in ingProgress.ResearchBulletin.RFE/ China in the 1990s. China Quarterly RL Report 10 (50):1-2, March 2, 1993. Conable, B., Jr., and D.M. Lampton. (U.K.) no. 131:501-44, September 1992. China TheComingPower.Foreign Goble, P. Russia and Its Neighbors. Affairs (U.S.)71:133-49, Winter 1992/ Yu, D. Shanghai's Bold Experiment Foreign Policy, no. 90, p. 79, Spring 9g. with Financial Reforms. Asia Money 1993. andFinance (U.K.) no. 10:19-21, October Field, R. China'sIndustrial Perfor- 1992. Lawrence, P., and C. Vlachoutsicos. mance since 1978. China Quarterly Four Corners: Joint Ventures in (U.K.) no. 131:577-607, September Zhao, S. From Coercion to Negotia- Russia: Put the Locals in Charge. 1992. tion: The Changing Central-Local Harvard Business Review (U.S.), p. 44, Economic Relationship in Mainland January/February 1993. Gunasekera, H.D.B.H., G. Rodriguez, China. Issues and Studies:A Journal of and N. Andrews. Effects of Alterna- ChineseStudiesandInternationalAffairs Marine,S.TheUnresolvedQuestion tive Chinese Policies on the World (Taiwan) 28:1-22, October 1992. of LandReforminRussia.RFE/RL Grains Market. Journal of Agricul- Research Report 2 (7):35-37, February turalEconomics (U.K.) 43:440-51, Sep- Africa 12, 1993. tember 1992. Roberts, J. Seignorage and Resource Russian Far East Update. Focus: Kachelmeier, S., and S.Mohamed. Cul- Mobilization in Socialist Ethiopia. U.S. Technical Assistance Programs to ture and Competition: A Labora- DevelopmentPolicyReview (U.K.) 10:271- the Russian Far East (U.S.) 3 (2):6-7, tory Market Comparison between 88, September 1992. February 1993. China and the West. Journal of Eco- nomic Behavior and Organization Waterhouse, R.Mozambique:Banking Sachs, J. Russian Sachs Appeal. In- (Netherlands) 19:145-68, October 1992. Reforms Begin At Last. African Busi- ternational Economy (U.S.) 7:50-53, ness (U.K), p. 27, February 1993. January/February 1993. Lardy, N. Chinese Foreign Trade. China Quarterly (U.K.) no. 131:691- Russia and Other New States Szamuely, L. After the Fall: The Eco- 720, September 1992. nomic Relationship of the New Aukutsenek, S., and E. Belyanova. Rus- Russia with the Former "Sister McGuckin, R., and others. Post- sian Credit Markets Remain Dis- Countries."TheEconomicReview(Ja- reformProductivityPerformance torted. RFE/RL Research Report (U.S./ pan) 43 (4):320-24, October 1992. and Sources of Growth in Chinese Russia) 2 (4):37-40, January 22, 1993. Industry: 1980-85. Review of Income Teague, E. Organized Labor in Rus- and Wealth (U.S.) 38:249-66, Septem- Belyanova, E., and S. Aukutsenek. sia in 1992.RFEIRL ResearchReport ber 1992. Russia's Economic Decline: State (U.S./Russia) 2 (5):38-41, January 29, Manufacturers Suffer Less. RFE/RL 1993. Sen,S.MilitaryExpenditure,Arms Research Report (U.SlRussia) 2 (4):41- Exports, Development: China and 44, January 22, 1993. Whitlock,E.IndustrialPolicyinRus- ItsRegionalContext.Internationale sia. RFE/RL Research Report (U.S.) 2 Spectator(Netherlands)46:664-69,No- Bush, K. Industrial Privatization in (9):44, February 1993. vember 1992. Russia: AXProgress Report. RFEIRL TRANSITIONis a regular publication of the World Bank's Transition and Macro-Adjustment Division, Policy Research Department. The findings, views, and interpretations published in the articles are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the World Bank or its affiliated organizations. Nor do any of the interpretations orconclusions necessarily represent official policy of the World Bank or of its Executive Directors or the countries they represent. Richard Hirschler is the editor and production manager; Jennifer Walker is the research assistant. If you wish to receive TFansition, send name and address to Richard Hirschler, Room N-11003, The World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20433 or call (202) 473-6982, or fax (202) 676-0439. Information on upcoming conferences on transforming economies, indication of subjects of special interest to our readers, letters to the editor, and any other reader contributions are appreciated. 20 March 1993