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E-raamat: Structural Reforms Without Prejudices

Edited by (, Associate ), Edited by (, Professor of Economics, Università degli Studi di Roma Tor Vergata), Edited by (, Professor of Economics, Bocconi University and Fondazione Rodolfo DeBenedetti), Edited by (, Professor of Economics at the Université Libre de Bruxelles)
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  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jun-2006
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191525315
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jun-2006
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191525315

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Our economies face constant challenges from many different directions. Structural reforms are implemented every day, either to grasp the benefits of globalization and technological change, or to avoid foundering on unaffordable welfare systems or the rise of new economies.

Despite this flurry of reforms, many of their effects are insufficiently understood. What makes reforms a success or a failure? Why do we witness systematically ambivalent attitudes to reforms? Can governments implement reforms differently, without inflicting prejudice to large fringes of the population?

This book explores these issues by comparing a number of reforms, across a large set of countries and sectors. First, through an innovative multisectorial input-output analysis, the authors compare the effects of liberalisation reforms in the telecommunication and electricity sectors across Europe. Surprisingly, they find that very similar and well-intended reforms can generate highly contrasted outcomes. It is also shown that governments must consider the effects of each reform on all sectors of the economy. Second, the authors explore how governments can tailor their reform strategy to alter the redistributive effects of reforms. They show that the government's approach to reforms has been very different across time and across countries. A government's approach depends on local institutions, on the nature of the opposition, and on the scope of the reform under way. The authors, however, show that governments do have alternatives. Often, there are ways to tailor reforms so as to protect specific parts of the population; and there are ways to experiment gradually, to avoid costly policy mistakes.
List of Figures
xi
List of Tables
xiii
List of Contributors
xv
Introduction 1(14)
Part I. Contrasting Europe's Decline: Do Product Market Reforms Help?
15(126)
Riccardo Faini
Jonathan Haskel
Giorgio Barba Navaretti
Carlo Scarpa
Christian Wey
Introduction
17(4)
Competition and Economic Performance: A Brief Review of the Literature
21(3)
The Maze of Services Regulation
24(65)
A brief overview
24(1)
Energy
25(16)
Electricity
27(1)
Pre-privatization structural issues
27(1)
The EU reform agenda
28(1)
Reform in the three countries
28(1)
Privatization and structural change
28(3)
Regulation and deregulation
31(1)
Economic outcomes
31(3)
Evaluation
34(1)
Natural Gas
34(1)
Pre-privatization structural issues
34(1)
The EU reform agenda
35(1)
Reform in the three countries
36(1)
Privatization and structural change
36(2)
Regulation and deregulation
38(1)
Economic outcomes
38(2)
Evaluation
40(1)
Telecommunications
41(6)
Pre-privatization structural issues
41(1)
The EU reform agenda
41(1)
Reform in the three countries
41(1)
Privatization and structural change
41(2)
Regulation and deregulation
43(1)
Economic outcomes
44(2)
Evaluation
46(1)
Railways
47(7)
Pre-privatization structural issues
47(1)
The EU reform agenda
47(1)
Reform in the three countries
48(1)
Privatization and structural change
48(1)
Regulation and deregulation
49(2)
Economic outcomes
51(2)
Evaluation
53(1)
Professional services
54(6)
Structural issues
54(1)
The Need for a reform agenda
55(2)
The outcome of a slow reform
57(2)
Evaluation
59(1)
Retailing
60(12)
Basic characteristics of the retail industry
60(1)
The reform agenda
61(2)
Implementation of the reform agenda in Germany, Italy, and the UK
63(3)
Comparison of performance
66(6)
Postal services
72(10)
Postal service systems before liberalization
72(2)
The reform agenda
74(3)
Implementation of the reform agenda in Germany, Italy, and the UK
77(3)
Comparison of performance
80(2)
Water
82(7)
Pre-privatization structure
82(1)
The EU reform agenda
83(1)
Reform in the three countries
83(1)
Privatization and structural change
83(2)
Regulation and de-regulation
85(1)
Economic outcomes
86(2)
Evaluation
88(1)
The Changing Role of the Tertiary Sector
89(8)
The Impact of Services Regulation
97(8)
Productivity in manufacturing
97(4)
Inward FDI
101(4)
Looking Ahead: Will Liberalization Policies Succeed?
105(36)
References
110(6)
Appendix 1
116(7)
Appendix 2
123(3)
Comments
126(1)
Olivier Blanchard
126(9)
Jan Svejnar
135(6)
Part II. How to Gain Political Support for Reforms
141(156)
Micael Castanheira
Vincenzo Galasso
Stephane Carcillo
Giuseppe Nicoletti
Enrico Perotti
Lidia Tsyganok
Introduction
143(8)
Evidence and Theory of Reforms
151(14)
Evidence about the reform momentum
151(6)
Theories of reforms: a framework of analysis
157(8)
Exploit a Parliamentary Majority
165(22)
The 1986 Social Security Act in the UK
167(6)
``Pushing reforms'': the role of momentum
173(7)
Strengths and caveats: a tale of three failures
180(7)
Widen Your Political Base
187(19)
Flexicurity in Denmark
189(4)
Mass privatizations in Central and Eastern European transition countries
193(6)
The season of reforms in Italy
199(7)
Divide and Conquer
206(26)
Divide et Impera
207(12)
Privatize or corporatize: Telecom Italia versus France Telecom
210(6)
Break vertical chain: intermediate goods
216(3)
Trickle-down effects
219(13)
Market power and gradual reforms
220(6)
The 1994--1997 reforms of EPL in Spain
226(6)
Exploit External Constraints
232(17)
Skoda (Czech Republic) and AvtoZAZ (Ukraine)
233(2)
The privatization of Skoda
235(4)
The privatization of AvtoZAZ
239(8)
Broader evidence
247(2)
How to Reform: Pulling the Strings
249(48)
References
255(8)
Comments
263(1)
Gerard Roland
263(8)
Stefano Scarpetta
271(9)
Final Remarks
280(1)
Christopher Pissarides
280(3)
Andre Sapir
283(4)
Vito Tanzi
287(10)
Index 297
Tito Boeri received his Ph.D. in economics from New York University and is currently Professor of Economics at Bocconi University and is Director of the Fondazione Rodolfo Debenedetti. He has also acted as consultant to the European Commission, International Monetary Fund, the ILO, the World Bank and the Italian Government.

Micael Castanheira received his Ph.D. in economics from the Free University of Brussels and is currently a research fellow of the Belgian National Research Foundation (FNRS), and Professor of Economics at the Free University of Brussels.

Riccardo Faini is Professor of Political Economy at the University of Rome Tor Vergata. He was previously Director General at the Italian Treasury and has held the post of Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund.

Vincenzo Galasso obtained his Ph.D. in economics from the University of California at Los Angeles and is currently Associate Professor of Economics at Bocconi University, Milan, and Research Fellow of IGIER.