Transition and post-conflict macroeconomic policies in Serbia
This paper evaluates the economic performance of the three distinct policy regimes that have been adopted in Serbia since the onset of transition in 2000. The conflict period from 1991 to 1999 determined the starting point of transition and its subsequent realisation. This pre-transition sh...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Faculty of Economics, Belgrade
2020-01-01
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Series: | Ekonomski Anali |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0013-3264/2020/0013-32642026073L.pdf |
Summary: | This paper evaluates the economic performance of the three distinct policy
regimes that have been adopted in Serbia since the onset of transition in
2000. The conflict period from 1991 to 1999 determined the starting point of
transition and its subsequent realisation. This pre-transition shock was
more severe than the shock imposed by the Great Recession in 2008. Besides
these shocks, the legacy of conflict, and unresolved privatisation issues,
macroeconomic policies also substantially influenced the performance of the
Serbian economy. Three distinct policies were implemented between 2000 and
2018 with clearly different approaches: neoliberal, populist, and
interventionist. This paper evaluates these policies using quarterly data on
20 macroeconomic indicators classified in 5 groups: macroeconomic stability
and domestic, foreign, financial, and labour markets. Regarding the
achievements of the three macroeconomic policies, the neoliberal policy is
usually blamed for all the deficiencies in the economy in the period between
2000Q1 and 2006Q2. To the contrary, our data indicates that this policy
performed the best. The populist policy in the next period from 2006Q3 to
2012Q2 performed the worst. Finally, the interventionist policy, starting in
2012Q3 and evaluated up to 2018Q4, has been inferior to the neoliberal
policy but superior to the populist policy. The analysis suggests that apart
from macroeconomic policies the starting point of transition matters for a
successful economic transition. |
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ISSN: | 0013-3264 1820-7375 |