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Economic Transformation and the Return to Human Capital - The Case of Hungary, 1986-1996

Author

Listed:
  • Maria Vincze

    (Faculty of Economic Sciences of Babes-Bolyai University)

  • Janos Kollo

    (Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences)

Abstract

Millions of East-Europeans started businesses during the transformational recession but, according to a wide-spread interpretation, many of them did so only temporarily and 'unwillingly' under the threat of unemployment. The paper looks at the relevance of the 'disguised unemployment approach to entrepreneurship' using regional data.It first examines how net flows into self-employment were affected by corporate labour demand in Hungarian and Romanian regions. Second, it looks at the responses of self-employment and unemployment to increases in labour demand at later stages of the transition. Finally,.it makes attempts to measure the 'wage push' of selfemployment. The evidence suggests that self-employment and unemployment were guided by rather different forces In Hungary. By contrast, the Romanian agriculture absorbed a non-trivial proportion of the potential unemployed following the unique land reform and the introduction of a restrictive UI system. The data suggest larger flows into self-employment in regions hit hard by the transition shock but they do not indicate net flows from self-employment back to paid employment in the few Romanian regions where labour demand was rising between 1993 and 1996. The pool of private farmers failed to behave as a 'reserve army' in this period and did not have strong influence on wage claims at the enterprise sector.

Suggested Citation

  • Maria Vincze & Janos Kollo, 1999. "Economic Transformation and the Return to Human Capital - The Case of Hungary, 1986-1996," Budapest Working Papers on the Labour Market 9907, Institute of Economics, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies.
  • Handle: RePEc:has:bworkp:9907
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Pfeiffer, Friedhelm & Reize, Frank, 2000. "Business start-ups by the unemployed -- an econometric analysis based on firm data," Labour Economics, Elsevier, vol. 7(5), pages 629-663, September.
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