From Stabilization to Marketization: The Political Economy of Reforms in Azerbaijan

Q2 Social Sciences
Fuad B. Aliyev
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

(ProQuest: ... denotes formulae omitted.)IntroductionSince gaining its independence in 1991, Azerbaijan has started to implement marketoriented reform policies. The transition to the new political-economic order has not been smooth, but instead accompanied by political cataclysms and military conflicts. The World Bank classified Azerbaijan as a war-torn country with a semidemocratic political regime.1The literature on the political economy of transition has grown considerably in the last decade because of the reality of the problem and uncertainty about the future of market reforms throughout the former Soviet states. Various concepts of interconnection between politics and economic reforms have been developed and regional and country explanations of the transition of post-Communist countries.The first question I discuss in this article is: What does "market reform" mean? Because of Shafiqul Islam's clear explanation of the market-reform process, I will follow his theory, which claims there are four interlocking wheels in the transition vehicle: macroeconomic stabilization, liberalization, privatization of the economy, and development of marketsupporting institutional infrastructure.2 The last three wheels he grouped together under the label of "marketization." He also discusses other concepts and theories of political economy of post-Communist transition.However, I focus on how political changes have affected the reform process in Azerbaijan during transition. The trajectory of the post-Communist transition in Azerbaijan can be roughly divided into three stages: (1) first years of independence (1991-94), the state of nature; (2) powerful autocratic regime and stabilization (1994-2003), the state of Heydar Aliyev; and (3) Heydar Aliyev's death and the election of his son Ýlham Aliyev as the new president (post-2003), the post-Heydar Aliyev state. I review all three stages of political development in Azerbaijan and their effects on market reforms, particularly the marketization process. Measures of nominal political stability and market reforms are obtained using the mix of qualitative and quantitative methods and then analyzed. In the end, I show how the centralization of power was helpful in one dimension of reforms-stabilization-but has been an impediment for the other dimension-marketization. Moreover, this article claims that once centralized, it is extremely difficult for a political-economic system in transition to undergo decentralization.Finally, I propose and discuss further public policy steps and examine the "three I's" approach to addressing issues of a post-Communist transition.The Political Economy of Post-Communist TransitionFirst, we must define "market reform" and "transition." According to Adam Przeworski, market-oriented reforms are reforms that aim "to organize an economy that rationally allocates resources and in which the state is financially solvent."3 Islam highlights four "interlocking wheels" of market-oriented reforms: macroeconomic stabilization, liberalization, privatization, and institutional reforms.4Joan Nelson has examined an unprecedented case of "simultaneous economic and political transformation" that has characterized transitional reforms.5 All newborn countries have had to pass through this dual transformation, but each has chosen various policies and has had different results. In short, economic reforms progressed successfully in countries where wealth was distributed more or less equally and there was political consolidation within the society.6These issues have to do with the role of ex ante and ex post political constraints in the transition experience. If the former deals with the feasibility and acceptability of reforms, the latter refers to the danger of backlash and reversal after decisions are made and outcomes are observed.7 Joel Hellman argues that although post-Communist countries have not suffered from the standard ex ante and ex post constraints to reform, "they have faced an equally difficult set of challenges from an unexpected source;" the political obstacles were the most challenging. …
从稳定到市场化:阿塞拜疆改革的政治经济学
(ProQuest:……表示省略公式。)自1991年获得独立以来,阿塞拜疆开始实施以市场为导向的改革政策。向新的政治经济秩序的过渡并不顺利,而是伴随着政治灾难和军事冲突。世界银行将阿塞拜疆归类为一个半民主政体的饱受战争蹂躏的国家。1 .在过去十年中,由于这个问题的现实和前苏联国家市场改革未来的不确定性,关于转型政治经济学的文献有了相当大的增长。政治和经济改革之间相互联系的各种概念已经发展起来,并对后共产主义国家的过渡进行了区域和国家解释。我在这篇文章中讨论的第一个问题是:什么是“市场改革”?由于Shafiqul Islam对市场改革过程的明确解释,我将遵循他的理论,他认为在转型过程中有四个连锁的轮子:宏观经济稳定、自由化、经济私有化和市场支持机构基础设施的发展他把后三个轮子放在一起,贴上了“市场化”的标签。他还讨论了后共产主义转型政治经济学的其他概念和理论。然而,我关注的是政治变化如何影响过渡时期阿塞拜疆的改革进程。阿塞拜疆后共产主义过渡的轨迹大致可以分为三个阶段:(1)独立的最初几年(1991- 1994年),自然状态;(2)强大的独裁政权与稳定(1994-2003),盖达尔·阿利耶夫国家;(3)盖达尔·阿利耶夫的死亡和他的儿子Ýlham阿利耶夫当选为新总统(2003年后),后盖达尔·阿利耶夫国家。我回顾阿塞拜疆政治发展的所有三个阶段及其对市场改革,特别是市场化进程的影响。名义上的政治稳定和市场改革的措施是使用定性和定量方法的混合,然后分析。最后,我展示了权力的集中如何在改革的一个维度——稳定——上有所帮助,但在另一个维度——市场化——上却成了障碍。此外,本文声称,一旦集中,过渡中的政治经济制度就极难进行分权。最后,我提出并讨论了进一步的公共政策步骤,并研究了解决后共产主义过渡问题的“三个我”方法。后共产主义转型的政治经济学首先,我们必须定义“市场改革”和“转型”。根据Adam Przeworski的说法,市场导向的改革旨在“组织一个合理分配资源的经济,并使国家在财政上有偿付能力”。伊斯兰强调了市场导向改革的四个“环环相扣的轮子”:宏观经济稳定、自由化、私有化和体制改革。琼·纳尔逊研究了一个前所未有的“经济和政治同步转型”的案例,这是过渡改革的特征所有新生国家都必须经历这种双重转变,但每个国家都选择了不同的政策,并产生了不同的结果。简而言之,在财富分配或多或少平等、社会内部政治巩固的国家,经济改革取得了成功。这些问题与过渡经验中事前和事后政治限制的作用有关。如果前者涉及改革的可行性和可接受性,后者则是指在做出决定并观察到结果后出现反弹和逆转的危险乔尔·赫尔曼认为,虽然后共产主义国家没有受到标准的事前和事后改革限制,但“它们面临着同样困难的挑战,这些挑战来自一个意想不到的来源”;政治障碍是最具挑战性的。…
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来源期刊
Demokratizatsiya
Demokratizatsiya Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Occupying a unique niche among literary journals, ANQ is filled with short, incisive research-based articles about the literature of the English-speaking world and the language of literature. Contributors unravel obscure allusions, explain sources and analogues, and supply variant manuscript readings. Also included are Old English word studies, textual emendations, and rare correspondence from neglected archives. The journal is an essential source for professors and students, as well as archivists, bibliographers, biographers, editors, lexicographers, and textual scholars. With subjects from Chaucer and Milton to Fitzgerald and Welty, ANQ delves into the heart of literature.
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