Soviet macroeconomic data
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Yasushi NAKAMURA, Yokohama National University
Version: View help for Version V2
Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
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Descrption-of-the-Soviet-macroeconomicdata_v2.pdf | application/pdf | 199.4 KB | 02/19/2018 04:35:PM |
Soviet_Macroeconomic_Data.xlsx | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet | 15.8 KB | 05/28/2017 08:11:PM |
Project Citation:
NAKAMURA, Yasushi. Soviet macroeconomic data. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2018-02-19. https://doi.org/10.3886/E100666V2
Project Description
Summary:
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The project
The Soviet macroeconomic data was compiled from published and archive materials to investigate relationship between Soviet real and financial economies. The new data revealed that government debt increased to compensate for inefficient use of funds for most of the Soviet period. Given the difficulty in managing fiat money without information and data generated by the market, and the simple Soviet financial structure, the increasing debt suggests that non-performing financial assets accumulated in the household sector, and inefficient real assets built up in the enterprise sector. The empirical analysis using a small time-varying parameter vector autoregression model identified that funds supplied to the economy had contributed at a decreasing rate to economic growth during nearly the entire Soviet period. Funds continued to be used wastefully, non-performing financial assets accumulated, and consequently the value of the ruble was decreasing. In this sense, Soviet monetary management was inefficient.
The files
The data file includes all series used in the study. The description file gives explanations of the series and their sources. It also includes the R and JAGS codes of the Soviet time-varying parameter vector autoregression model.
The Soviet macroeconomic data was compiled from published and archive materials to investigate relationship between Soviet real and financial economies. The new data revealed that government debt increased to compensate for inefficient use of funds for most of the Soviet period. Given the difficulty in managing fiat money without information and data generated by the market, and the simple Soviet financial structure, the increasing debt suggests that non-performing financial assets accumulated in the household sector, and inefficient real assets built up in the enterprise sector. The empirical analysis using a small time-varying parameter vector autoregression model identified that funds supplied to the economy had contributed at a decreasing rate to economic growth during nearly the entire Soviet period. Funds continued to be used wastefully, non-performing financial assets accumulated, and consequently the value of the ruble was decreasing. In this sense, Soviet monetary management was inefficient.
The files
The data file includes all series used in the study. The description file gives explanations of the series and their sources. It also includes the R and JAGS codes of the Soviet time-varying parameter vector autoregression model.
Funding Sources:
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JSPS (15H01959)
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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economic systems;
monetary policy;
Soviet
Geographic Coverage:
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Soviet Union,
Russia
Time Period(s):
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1/1/1925 – 1/1/1990 ('1925 to 1990')
Data Type(s):
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aggregate data
Related Publications
Published Versions
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