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The gains from the transition in post-communist Russia were captured by the new managerial class, which won rents from the state in the form of privatized enterprises, state subsidies, credits, and opportunities for tax evasion. Those rents reduced state revenues that could have supported social...
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The paper tries to explain the increase in inequality that occured in all transition economies by constructing a simple model of change in composition of employment during the transition. The change consists in the "hollowing-out" of the state-sector middle class as it moves either into the...
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Economic transition in Russia was accompanied by a precipitous decline in real income for most of the population. How was people's perception of a minimum income level needed to survive affected by such a rapid decline in their incomes? Based on individual-level data collected from repeated...
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Since the beginning of transition to market economy, inequality has increased in all transition countries. The factors driving inequality up: increasing wage inequality (as workers move from a relatively egalitarian state sector to a less equal private sector), and the rising share of income...
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The median voter hypothesis plays an important role in endogenous growth theories. It provides the political mechanism through which voters in more unequal countries redistribute a larger proportion of income and thus, it is argued, by blunting incentives reduce country's growth rate. However,...
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