The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the change in real GDP per capita is an overestimate of welfare losses in transition economics. In this study virtual prices are used to calculate new cost-of-living indices (CLIs). The results for Polant show that from 1987 to 1992 the CLI ignoring the rationing effects is biased upward from 1.53 to 3.71 percentage points per year. Compared to the estimates of welfare loss that neglect the rationing effects during the prereform period, the estimated welfare losses that reflect the rationing are reduced by 50% using Hausman\u27 virtual prices and by 75% using external proxy virtual prices
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the c...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the ...
Poland was the first country in Eastern Europe to re-establish a market economy. The new government ...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. In this st...
Abstract—The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. T...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. In this st...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. In this st...
The costs of shortages/rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the chan...
The costs of shortages/rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the chang...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the c...
This study tests hypothesis derived from the theory of rationing using data for Polish households du...
Many Central and Eastern European nations transitioned from centrally planned to market economies du...
The costs of shortages/rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the chang...
This study tests the theory of rationing, examining changes in household consumption behavior during...
The costs of shortages/rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the chang...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the c...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the ...
Poland was the first country in Eastern Europe to re-establish a market economy. The new government ...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. In this st...
Abstract—The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. T...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. In this st...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. In this st...
The costs of shortages/rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the chan...
The costs of shortages/rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the chang...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the c...
This study tests hypothesis derived from the theory of rationing using data for Polish households du...
Many Central and Eastern European nations transitioned from centrally planned to market economies du...
The costs of shortages/rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the chang...
This study tests the theory of rationing, examining changes in household consumption behavior during...
The costs of shortages/rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the chang...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the c...
The costs of shortages and rationing are not captured by standard consumer price indices. Thus the ...
Poland was the first country in Eastern Europe to re-establish a market economy. The new government ...