Working Paper

Revealed in Transition: The Political Effect of Planning's Legacy

Timur Natkhov, William Pyle
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 9929

Decades of investment decisions by central planners left communist societies with structures of production ill-prepared for competitive markets. Their vulnerability to liberalization, however, varied across space. Similar to the effects identified in the “China shock” literature, we hypothesize that post-market-shock outcomes will reflect pre-market-shock structures of production. Tracking voting outcomes at the district level in Russia’s presidential elections, we document asymmetric reactions to the liberalization of markets in 1992. Electoral support for the pro-market incumbent declined most in areas with structural inheritances that made them most vulnerable to reforms. This finding sheds new light on an old debate about the importance of “initial conditions” (as opposed to policies) to the trajectories of post-communist societies.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Labour Markets
Keywords: industrial structure, transition economy, voting, Russia
JEL Classification: N330, N530, I150, O150