Measuring National Income in the Centrally Planned Economies

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A01=William Jefferies
Author_William Jefferies
Bergson's Method
Bergson’s Method
boundary
Capital III
Category=GTM
Category=GTQ
Category=JP
Category=KCB
Category=KCL
Category=KCM
Category=KCP
China's Gdp
China’s Gdp
CIA Estimate
CIA's Analysis
CIA's Assessment
cial
CIA’s Analysis
CIA’s Assessment
Concrete Labour Time
CPEs
economic measurement methods
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
estimates
German Gdp
Gerschenkron Effect
globalisation impact studies
Hydraulic Cement
Imputed Fi Gures
jasny
market
Market Boundary
market production estimation
Measuring National Income
National Income Estimates
naum
Naum Jasny
offi
output
planned economy analysis
post-communist economic transition analysis
profi
Real Gdp
Real National Income
soviet
Soviet economic statistics
Soviet National Income
Soviet Output
Soviet Prices
transition economies research
UK Pound
UK Price
West Germany
World Capitalist Production

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138818323
  • Weight: 385g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Dec 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In 1991 "Communism" collapsed. The cold war was over and the West had won. Whole cities, Moscow, St Petersburg, Warsaw, Beijing, Budapest and Bucharest, whole countries indeed, were privatised for nothing or next to nothing. This was probably the greatest expansion of the world market in history. And yet, according to national income measurements of the CIA, OECD, World Bank and IMF, this gigantic expansion of market production, led to a decline in market production in the very countries where it was introduced. How to explain this paradox?

This book traces the origin of the West’s national income measurements, from their origin in the 1923/4 Balance developed in the USSR, to the USA in the early 1930s via two Soviet exiles, Simon Kuznets and Wassily Leontief, and then back to the USSR again, after a vigorous debate, through a protégé of Kuznets, Abram Bergson. The AFC imputed national incomes to a centrally planned economy, based on physical not income measurements. This book provides a detailed assessment of the failure of the AFC method to measure the real growth of actual market production during the transition period.

This book provides a detailed account of the application of national income measurements to the centrally planned economies. It assesses all of the major contributors to this debate, including Colin Clark, Naum Jasny, Alexander Gerschenkron, G.Warren Nutter and Abram Bergson. It provides a new much higher, estimate of the expansion of market production during the transition period, based on an estimate of the actual growth of real market production. It discusses the very significant implications of this re-estimate for contemporary theories of globalisation.

William Jefferies has a PhD from Manchester Metropolitan University, UK

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