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Kornai’s Overcentralization and naïve empiricism
- Source :
- Public Choice. 187:55-62
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.
-
Abstract
- This paper addresses Janos Kornai’s early work on the socialist economy as summarized in his first book, Overcentralization in Economic Administration. In this context, I discuss the parallel research of the 1950s by American scholars, such as Joseph Berliner, David Granick, Gregory Grossman and Eugene Zaleski, who used similar methods and arrived at similar conclusions. Kornai found little evidence of comprehensive planning. Instead, he determined that the planning system consisted of quarterly gross output orders that could readily be manipulated by managers and had to be fulfilled at any price. Kornai’s Overcentralization already contained the seeds of Kornai’s later key findings of the dysfunctionalities of socialist planning; namely, soft budget constraints and the shortage economy. Kornai’s most important finding was largely overlooked throughout the socialist world—that the planned economy could not be reformed by partial measures.
- Subjects :
- Economics and Econometrics
Sociology and Political Science
05 social sciences
Gross output
Planned economy
Naïve empiricism
Context (language use)
Neoclassical economics
0506 political science
0502 economics and business
050602 political science & public administration
Economics
Socialist economics
Comprehensive planning
050207 economics
Budget constraint
Public finance
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15737101 and 00485829
- Volume :
- 187
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Public Choice
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........dc9c51664adc9c6b19027b9d4b9222a5