Happy May Day
01 May 2015 Leave a comment
in liberalism, Marxist economics Tags: capitalism and freedom, fall of communism, full of Soviet Union, May Day
Paul Samuelson’s repeated predictions of the Soviet Union economy catching up with the USA
24 Jan 2015 1 Comment
in economic history, economics of bureaucracy, growth disasters, Marxist economics Tags: fall of communism, fall of the USSR, forecasting errors, Paul Samuelson, The fatal conceit, The pretence to knowledge
Paul Samuelson wrote in the 1961 edition of his famous economics textbook that GNP in the Soviet Union was about half that in the United States but the Soviet Union was growing faster.
Figure 1: Samuelson’s 1961 Forecast of Soviet catch up

Source: Levy and Peart (2006)
As a result, Soviet GNP would exceed that of the United States by as early as 1984 or perhaps by as late as 1997, depending on whether you were reading the early 1960s or later editions of Samuelson’s immensely popular textbook. In the 1980 edition there was little change in the analysis, though the two dates were delayed to 2002 and 2012

Samuelson predicted that the Soviet Union would catch up with the United States and kept predicting this until 1989 in every edition of his textbook of which there are at least 14. Levy and Peart were good enough to tabulate these predictions by Samuelsson of Soviet catch up with the USA over the editions of his textbook in the table below.

Source: Levy and Peart (2009)
Samuelson’s predictions of the Soviet Union catching up to and overtaking the United States were echoed in most other major economics textbooks of his time.
Plainly, they all got it wrong except for the Austrian economists, Eastern bloc émigrés and G. Warren Nutter.
From 1956 to 1961, Nutter undertook a massive study of the history of the economy of the Soviet Union and published The Growth of Industrial Production in the Soviet Union in 1962.
Nutter’s study concluded that Soviet economic growth over the first half of the 20th Century was indeed remarkable, and that there had been periods of growth spurts, but when the entire Soviet period was taken into consideration, Soviet growth lagged behind Western economies and Soviet economic capacity showed every sign of falling further behind rather than catching up with the West.
Nutter’s conclusions were certainly not welcomed by the Sovietologists of his time. As the fall of the Soviet Union revealed more realistic data, Nutter’s estimates of Soviet growth rates have been vindicated, and in fact, if anything Nutter overstated rather than understated Soviet economic performance.
Paul Craig Roberts found worse exaggeration with the Romanian economy in 1979. A World Bank report, Romania: The Industrialization of an Agrarian Economy under Socialist Planning, credited central planning with achieving a 9.8 annual rate of economic growth over the quarter century from 1950 to 1975. It should be added that in the 1970s, Romania was a western favourite because of its independent stance within the Eastern European bloc.
The World Bank did not realize that using these growth rates to project backward these growth figures on Romanian income per capita quickly produced a figure too low to sustain life. This mistake provoked the Wall Street Journal observation:
We have heard exaggerated claims made for central economic planning, but never that it resurrected a whole nation from the dead.
Samuelson never reflected in his later textbooks after 1989 about how wrong he was for many decades about Soviet economic performance. Few people, thank you for admitting that there you’re wrong – they are more likely to dance on the grave of your error.
In Paul Samuelson’s case, he had more reasons of most to learn from his failed predictions because as his predictions didn’t work out, he had to rewrite and update his book and charts predicting the USSR was going to overtake the USA in about 20 years.
Rather than the suspect that there something wrong with the Soviet economic system, Paul Samuelson looked for excuses – increasingly pathetic excuses. As Larry White explained:
In the seven editions of his textbook published from 1961 to 1980, Samuelson kept including a chart indicating that Soviet output was growing faster that U.S. output, and predicting a catch-up in about twenty-five years. He repeatedly had to move the predicted catch-up date forward from the previous edition because the gap had never actually begun to close. In several editions he blamed low realized Soviet growth on bad weather.
What is more puzzling is Samuelson did update his views on the merits of fiscal and monetary policy in stabilising the economy, and the effectiveness of each over the decades in light of experience and between the 1960s and 1980s. In the 1948 edition of his best-selling textbook, Economics, Samuelson wrote that:
few economists regard Federal Reserve monetary policy as a panacea for controlling the business cycle.
In 1967 Samuelson said that monetary policy had “an important influence” on total spending. His 1985 edition states;
“Money is the most powerful and useful tool that macroeconomic policymakers have,” adding that the Fed “is the most important factor” in making policy.
Samuelson’s 1967 edition said policymakers faced a trade-off between inflation and unemployment. His 1980 edition said there was less of a trade-off in the long run than in the short run. The 1985 edition, he said there is no long-run trade-off between unemployment and inflation.
Samuelson gave quite compelling reasons as to why Keynesianism declined:
- Keynesian macroeconomists and policymakers made the mistake of projecting the experience of the Great Depression onto the post-war era;
- it turned out that, contrary to what Keynes had said, monetary policy mattered a lot; and
- The final blow to Keynesianism was stagflation: There is nothing in Keynesian macroeconomics that would allow you to solve stagflation.
Samuelson did not learn in the same way from brute experience regarding the economics of socialism.
Via Why Were American Econ Textbooks So Pro-Soviet? Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty and Soviet Growth & American Textbooks.
Thatcher on the fall of communism
10 Nov 2014 Leave a comment
in liberalism Tags: fall of communism, Margaret Thatcher
Reagan at Brandenburg gate
10 Nov 2014 Leave a comment
in liberalism Tags: Brandenburg gate, fall of communism, fall of the Berlin wall, Ronald Reagan
When Boris Yeltsin went on a 20 minute unscheduled grocery shopping visit in Clear Lake, Texas 1989
10 Nov 2014 Leave a comment
in liberalism Tags: fall of communism, fall of the Berlin wall, The Great Fact

…a Yeltsin biographer later wrote that on the plane ride to Yeltsin’s next destination, Miami, he was despondent. He couldn’t stop thinking about the plentiful food at the grocery store and what his countrymen had to subsist on in Russia.
In Yeltsin’s own autobiography, he wrote about the experience at Randall’s, which shattered his view of communism, according to pundits.
Two years later, he left the Communist Party and began making reforms to turn the economic tide in Russia. You can blame those frozen Jell-O Pudding pops.
“When I saw those shelves crammed with hundreds, thousands of cans, cartons and goods of every possible sort, for the first time I felt quite frankly sick with despair for the Soviet people,” Yeltsin wrote. “That such a potentially super-rich country as ours has been brought to a state of such poverty! It is terrible to think of it.”
via When Boris Yeltsin went grocery shopping in Clear Lake – The Texican.
Paul Samuelson (1989) on the bright future of the Soviet Union
28 Jul 2014 Leave a comment
in comparative institutional analysis, Marxist economics Tags: fall of communism, forecasting, Paul Samuelson
My favourite speech: Vaclav Havel’s address to the US Congress, 21 February 1990
29 Apr 2014 Leave a comment
in politics Tags: fall of communism, unanticipated revolutions
Dear Mr. President, dear Senators and Members of the House, ladies and gentlemen:
My advisers advised me to speak on this important occasion in Czech. I don’t know why. Perhaps they wanted you to enjoy the sweet sounds of my mother tongue.
The last time they arrested me, on October 27 of last year, I didn’t know whether it was for two days or two years.
Exactly one month later, when the rock musician Michael Kocab told me that I would be probably proposed as a presidential candidate, I thought it was one of his usual jokes.
On the 10th of December, 1989, when my actor friend, Jiri Bartoska, in the name of the Civic Forum, nominated me as a candidate for the office of president of the republic, I thought it was out of the question that the parliament we have inherited from the previous regime would elect me.
Nineteen days later, when I was unanimously elected president of my country, I had no idea that, in two months, I would be speaking in front of this famous and powerful assembly and that what I say would be heard by millions of people who have never heard of me and that hundreds of politicians and political scientists would study every word that I say.
When they arrested me on October 27, I was living in a country ruled by the most conservative communist government in Europe, and our society slumbered beneath the pall of a totalitarian system.
Today, less than four months later, I’m speaking to you as the representative of a country that has set out on the road to democracy, a country where there is complete freedom of speech, which is getting ready for free elections and which wants to create a prosperous market economy and its own foreign policy…



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