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Viable Institutes As Guarantee For Development

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  • Viable Institutes As Guarantee For Development

    VIABLE INSTITUTES AS GUARANTEE FOR DEVELOPMENT

    Yerkir.am
    June 23, 2006

    Only 15 years after Armenia launched market reforms Europe is mulling
    granting Armenia a status of a country with market economy. It is
    said that the issue could be solved by the end of the year.

    How serious are these discussions and what actually a 'country with
    market economy' means?

    The experience of leading countries

    The fact is that only 10 percent or 20-25 countries out of 200 have
    developed market economies. While other have some infrastructures
    typical for market economies, market stagnates in those countries
    without ensuring a glut for society's prosperity.

    International donors spend billions of dollars to reform the economies
    of those countries but the expected results are not reached. The gap
    between the rich and poor is gradually widening.

    The experience of developed countries indicates that the first
    precondition for a developed market economy is an efficient formulation
    of property rights. Only then we can expect that the property rights
    could become permanently available, standardized and subject to
    exchanges that could be centrally registered, legally formulated and
    guarantee that their owners would not be deprived form their rights,
    or nationalized or uncertainty.

    The situation in other countries

    Apparently, in countries with underdeveloped market economies not only
    are the property rights weak and unclear but also their registration
    and protection mechanisms are inefficient.

    This means that institutional weakness and underdeveloped
    infrastructures are obstacles for implementing efficient market
    economy. And fist of all this applies to underdeveloped government
    institutions.

    In theory, government can both contribute to establishment of
    efficient and viable market institutions and block its development
    through beneficent institutions.

    Statements of politicians on political goals and necessity of reforms
    often do not correspond to the institutional mechanisms capacities
    for implementing such reforms since the price a society is to pay is
    not clearly defined.

    In this regard, a choice for an institutional structure of a country
    is a result of proactive measures to better implement reforms. Western
    countries posses more developed institutions that are in line with
    dominating method of economic coordination.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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