By Justin Callais. He the Chief Economist with the Archbridge Institute. Excerpts:
"Recent work
by JP Bastos, Jamie Bologna Pavlik, and Vincent Geloso shows that Cuba
severely underperforms “synthetic Cuba,” or what Cuba’s growth
trajectory would have been if not for the socialist policies
post-Revolution. Notably, they conduct their analysis based on reported
GDP per capita numbers, adjusted (to account for fabricated data) GDP
per capita, and adjusted for aid from the Soviet Union."
"Using the corrected data, Cuban GDP per capita was 48.3% below the
synthetic counterfactual by 1972, and 44.3% below by 1989. When Soviet
subsidies are stripped out, the picture is even grimmer: by 1972, Cuba’s
GDP per capita fell 55.5% below the counterfactual, with that gap
persisting through 1989.
Is this really just the US’s fault
because of embargos? The authors account for this with specifications
that are generous to inflate the embargo’s damage. Even so, the verdict
is clear: the embargo can account for at most 8% to 10% of the
difference between Cuba’s actual GDP and the counterfactual, a trivial
share of the Revolution’s total effect."
"Before the Revolution, Cuba (much like Venezuela, which is covered in another great paper
by Kevin Grier and Norman Maynard) was one of the wealthiest countries
in Latin America. In just four years after the Revolution, Cuba returned
to roughly the same living standards it had in 1937, effectively
erasing more than two decades of economic growth."
"Louis Rouanet studies
the impact of François Mitterrand’s 1981 election, who ran on a
platform of “rupture with capitalism.” The findings are drastic: by
1996, France’s GDP per capita was roughly 26% lower than that of the
synthetic counterfactual, a gap of about $7,300 in constant 2017
dollars. Investment collapsed relative to the counterfactual, and the
employment rate underperformed by more than two percentage points."
"Even though Mitterrand somewhat reversed course after 1983, Rouanet
argues that the policies persisted. The policies that expanded welfare
spending, created hundreds of thousands of public sector jobs, and
restructured the labor market were not reversed, and they locked in
institutional arrangements that outlasted the President himself.
France’s centralized, bureaucracy-dominated politics made bad policies
stickier than they would have been elsewhere.
It is important to
note that this wasn’t the type of social democracy (large welfare state
complemented with a market economy) that exists in Scandinavia. The
French Socialist Party in 1981 openly declared its goal to be the
“socialization of the means of investment, production, and exchange.”"
"The broadest of the three, this paper
by Andreas Bergh, Christian Bjørnskov, and Luděk Kouba, asks the
question most directly: what does socialism do to economic growth,
across countries and time? The authors draw on a dataset covering 192
sovereign countries from 1950 to 2020 and focus on the 22 countries that
made a decisive transition to socialist planned economies after
independence, countries like Tanzania, Zambia, Vietnam, Sudan, and
Venezuela.
They use neighbor comparisons (China vs. Taiwan,
Czechoslovakia vs. Austria, Yugoslavia vs. Greece) as a first cut, then
apply more formal panel methods. The neighbor comparisons are striking:
Taiwan’s
annual growth rate between 1950 and 1990 was on average 2.7 percentage
points higher than China’s, Austria’s was 1.6 percentage points higher
than Czechoslovakia’s, and Greece’s was .7 percentage points higher than
Yugoslavia’s despite Greek instability, coups and a period of military
dictatorship.
The results are consistent across every specification: adopting
socialism is associated with a decline in annual growth rates of
approximately two percentage points during the first decade after
implementation. That sounds modest, but compound it over decades and
it’s the difference between prosperity and stagnation. Let’s make a
simple comparison. Assume two countries both have GDP per capita of
$10,000. One goes socialist and grows at 2 percentage points less than
the non-socialist country (assume 1% versus 3%). After 10 years, the
socialist country has a GDP per capita of $11,046; the non-socialist one
has GDP per capita of $13,439. After 20 years? Just $12,202 versus
$18,061, a nearly $6,000 per capita difference!"