Understanding the pattern of postwar slowdown in Soviet productivity growth requires evaluation of the impact of World War II and associated shocks. Continuous productivity series for industry and the whole economy are estimated for the period 1928–85. The pattern of Soviet productivity growth was highly disturbed; by postwar standards its underlying growth was slow. Rapid growth and slowdown from the late 1940s through the 1960s and beyond are explained just by postwar recovery possibilities and their exhaustion. Clear evidence of an adverse break in the productivity trend does not transpire until the 1970s
This article reviews the existing literature on Hungarian economic growth between the communist take...
The paper examines official Soviet estimates of the change in total output and output per worker in ...
The last remaining gap in the national accounts of Russia and the USSR in the twentieth century, 19...
Understanding the pattern of postwar slowdown in Soviet productivity growth requires evaluation of t...
The existing studies usually find that technical change was very important in constraining the econo...
Soviet growth for 1960-89 was the worst in the world, after controlling for investment and human cap...
The present study reviews the “productivity slowdown” of the 1970s and 1980s. The study also develop...
In terms of economic development, Russia before and after the Soviet era was just an average economy...
It has become accepted doctrine among economists that the rate of profit in the United States has de...
This paper contains estimates of comparative labour productivity levels in manufacturing for the Sov...
This article reconsiders the relative growth performance of centrally planned economies in the broad...
assistance, which included making her data and working papers freely available to me; without this g...
On the basis of a comparative growth analysis of ten major industrial countries, it is shown that th...
This paper considers the productivity impact on the US economy of the period of war mobilization and...
This paper reports the results of an econometric examination on the links between labour productivit...
This article reviews the existing literature on Hungarian economic growth between the communist take...
The paper examines official Soviet estimates of the change in total output and output per worker in ...
The last remaining gap in the national accounts of Russia and the USSR in the twentieth century, 19...
Understanding the pattern of postwar slowdown in Soviet productivity growth requires evaluation of t...
The existing studies usually find that technical change was very important in constraining the econo...
Soviet growth for 1960-89 was the worst in the world, after controlling for investment and human cap...
The present study reviews the “productivity slowdown” of the 1970s and 1980s. The study also develop...
In terms of economic development, Russia before and after the Soviet era was just an average economy...
It has become accepted doctrine among economists that the rate of profit in the United States has de...
This paper contains estimates of comparative labour productivity levels in manufacturing for the Sov...
This article reconsiders the relative growth performance of centrally planned economies in the broad...
assistance, which included making her data and working papers freely available to me; without this g...
On the basis of a comparative growth analysis of ten major industrial countries, it is shown that th...
This paper considers the productivity impact on the US economy of the period of war mobilization and...
This paper reports the results of an econometric examination on the links between labour productivit...
This article reviews the existing literature on Hungarian economic growth between the communist take...
The paper examines official Soviet estimates of the change in total output and output per worker in ...
The last remaining gap in the national accounts of Russia and the USSR in the twentieth century, 19...