This research examines differences in earnings structure between Communist and post-Communist Czech Republic and Slovakia using four sets of similar micro-data. It presents hypotheses about how earnings dispersion returns to education and returns to experience will change across regimes and tests those hypotheses using earnings equations. From approximately 2.5 percent in 1984, the return to education increased to approximately 5 percent by 1993. During that period, returns to experience fell. Though women have higher returns to education, returns for men increased more across regime change. Those with academic secondary education experienced a particularly large earnings increase. Earnings structure changes appear larger in the Czech Repub...
Using data for 22 economies in Eastern and Western Europe, we find evidence that having studied unde...
A major issue in the market transition debate on transitional societies is the extent to which chang...
Is it true that communist countries had well-developed human capital, or is it just a myth? What wer...
This research examines differences in earnings structure between Communist and post-Communist Czech ...
This research examines how the earnings structure in the Czech Republic and Slovakia changed after t...
We estimate returns to human capital during communism and the transition using data on 2,284 men in ...
Under communism, workers had their wages set according to a centrally-determined wage grid. In this...
Using micro data on women in the Czech Republic, we compare returns to various measures of human cap...
Wage and income surveys covering the period 1989-1999 are used to display changes in inequality of e...
The 'velvet' revolutions and the fall of the Berlin Wall resulted in the end of the Communist rule o...
The 'velvet' revolutions and the fall of the Berlin Wall resulted in the end of the Communist rule o...
Abstract: Recent political, economic and social developments in East-European countries offer except...
The 'velvet' revolutions and the fall of the Berlin Wall resulted in the end of the Communist rule o...
Wage and income surveys covering the period 1989-1999 are used to display changes in inequality of...
How valuable are the education and skills acquired under socialism in a market economy? This paper u...
Using data for 22 economies in Eastern and Western Europe, we find evidence that having studied unde...
A major issue in the market transition debate on transitional societies is the extent to which chang...
Is it true that communist countries had well-developed human capital, or is it just a myth? What wer...
This research examines differences in earnings structure between Communist and post-Communist Czech ...
This research examines how the earnings structure in the Czech Republic and Slovakia changed after t...
We estimate returns to human capital during communism and the transition using data on 2,284 men in ...
Under communism, workers had their wages set according to a centrally-determined wage grid. In this...
Using micro data on women in the Czech Republic, we compare returns to various measures of human cap...
Wage and income surveys covering the period 1989-1999 are used to display changes in inequality of e...
The 'velvet' revolutions and the fall of the Berlin Wall resulted in the end of the Communist rule o...
The 'velvet' revolutions and the fall of the Berlin Wall resulted in the end of the Communist rule o...
Abstract: Recent political, economic and social developments in East-European countries offer except...
The 'velvet' revolutions and the fall of the Berlin Wall resulted in the end of the Communist rule o...
Wage and income surveys covering the period 1989-1999 are used to display changes in inequality of...
How valuable are the education and skills acquired under socialism in a market economy? This paper u...
Using data for 22 economies in Eastern and Western Europe, we find evidence that having studied unde...
A major issue in the market transition debate on transitional societies is the extent to which chang...
Is it true that communist countries had well-developed human capital, or is it just a myth? What wer...