The effects of financial liberalization and new bank entry on market structure and competition in Turkey
In: Policy Research Working Papers, 1839
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In: Policy Research Working Papers, 1839
World Affairs Online
In: NBER Working Paper No. w6457
SSRN
Working paper
In: Journal of development economics, Band 105, S. 288-302
ISSN: 0304-3878
In: Journal of development economics, Band 105, S. 288-302
ISSN: 0304-3878
World Affairs Online
In: Comparative economic studies, Band 48, Heft 4, S. 563-582
ISSN: 1478-3320
During the transition from central planning to market economies now under way in Eastern Europe, output levels first collapsed by 40 to 50 percent in most countries, then staged a modest recovery in the last two years. Longer-term revival of growth requires a resumption of investment and thus, realistically, of domestic savings. To explore the determinants of household savings rates in transition economies, the authors studies matching household surveys for three Central European economies: Bulgaria, Hungary, and Poland. They find that savings rates strongly increase with relative income, suggesting that increasing income inequality may play a role in determining savings rates. Savings rates are significantly higher for households that do not own their homes or that own few of the standard consumer durables - possibly because, with no retail credit or mortgage markets, households must save to purchase houses and durables. The influence of demographic factors broadly matches earlier findings for developing countries. Perhaps surprisingly, variables associated with the households position in the transition process - including either sector of employment (public or private) or form of employment - do not play a significant role in determining savings rates.
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In: Policy research working paper 2462
In: Policy Research Working Papers, 1063
World Affairs Online
This article takes an integrated approach to evaluating the interaction of initial conditions, political change, reforms and economic performance in a unified framework covering 28 transition economies in East Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, and the Former Soviet Union (FSU). Initial conditions and economic policy jointly determine the large differences in economic performance among transition economies. Initial conditions dominate in explaining inflation, but economic liberalization is the most important factor determining differences in growth. Political reform emerges as the most important determinant of the speed and comprehensiveness of economic liberalization, raising the important question of what determines political liberalization. Results suggest the importance of the level of development in determining the decision to expand political freedoms.
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