Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Preface
- List of conference participants
- List of acronyms
- 1 Introduction
- I Trade relations
- II Investment patterns
- 5 Investment and its financing during the transition in Central and Eastern Europe
- Comments
- 6 Privatization, structural change, and productivity; toward convergence in Europe?
- Comments
- III Labor market issues
- IV The process of integration
- Index
Comments
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Preface
- List of conference participants
- List of acronyms
- 1 Introduction
- I Trade relations
- II Investment patterns
- 5 Investment and its financing during the transition in Central and Eastern Europe
- Comments
- 6 Privatization, structural change, and productivity; toward convergence in Europe?
- Comments
- III Labor market issues
- IV The process of integration
- Index
Summary
The paper by Professor Welfens is an analysis of three related issues: privatization, structural change, and productivity. The study of the relationship between structural change and productivity is an ambitious topic. To add in privatization is a necessary piece of the understanding of the new landscape of economies in transition. Professor Welfens does an admirable job of pulling these issues together, and in the course of this journey avoiding most traps and, despite the complexity, arriving at a number of important insights and recommendations.
His most important observation is that privatizing an entire industry poses fundamentally different implications than privatizing a firm. There are macroeconomic implications due to the effect on the budget, financing, and employment. There are also important network externalities that are generated through establishing suddenly large numbers of private firms.
Welfens's assessment of privatization is largely positive. He sees privatization increasing productivity, as long as a number of pitfalls are avoided. He places particular emphasis on the effect of increased competition on productivity and warns against the policy that privatizes without establishing competition. His comments on the dangers of subsidies are particularly apt. Noting first that the potential for externalities suggests a policy of intervention, he cautions that a program of subsidization is likely to open the doors to rent seeking. It would be better to restructure first, close down inefficient operations, and then consider subsidies for particular activities. For particular sectors, he notes that government finances are inadequate to correct potential gaps between private and social returns. This perspective leads him to argue for the privatization of university education, since the current wage gap between the public and private sectors has led to the loss of the more qualified teachers.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Europe's Economy Looks EastImplications for Germany and the European Union, pp. 258 - 266Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997