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Planning

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Title: Planning


1
Planning
2
Marxs View of Planning
  • Replaces anarchy of markets
  • resources no longer chasing the latest fad
  • Relatively simple process
  • determining peoples needs not hard to do

3
Real-World Planning
  • There are typically several plans covering
    different time periods
  • quarterly
  • annual
  • medium term
  • usually five-year
  • expression of goals
  • annual plans, especially in terms of investment,
    supposed to be consistent with five-year plan
  • Annual plan typically most important and by far
    the most detailed
  • what is normally being referred to by the plan
  • Long-term plans covering up to 20 years occur
    occasionally
  • usually cover special projects like rural
    electrification

4
Plan Elaboration
  • Planning normally coordinated by a special
    planning ministry
  • Gosplan in the Soviet Union
  • Involves several other specialized planning
    agencies
  • In the Soviet Union, Gosnab (for material
    supply), the Finance Ministry, the State Bank,
    KGB, and others
  • Involves dozens of sectoral ministries
  • over fifty in the Soviet Union
  • Each ministry has many regional departments

5
  • Final plan endorsed by Central Committee and the
    Council of Ministers and then passed by
    parliament
  • Plan covers every aspect of the economy
  • output
  • material supply
  • labor
  • investment
  • financial
  • pricing

6
  • First part specifies what will be produced
  • At national level, it is highly aggregated but
    hundreds and sometimes thousands of priority
    products are specified
  • listed in physical units
  • tons of steel, numbers of cars, bushels of wheat
  • Next part deals with the uses of these outputs
  • especially important is how outputs of materials
    and semi-processed goods will be used in
    production
  • These uses have to be balanced with their sources
  • sources include production, imports, and
    reduction of stocks
  • uses include inputs in production, exports,
    consumption, and additions to stocks

7
  • Materials balancing enormously important
  • plans that do not balance are useless
  • In Soviet Union, Gosplan would prepare around two
    thousand balances and Gosnab and ministries would
    produce tens of thousands more
  • Balancing enormously difficult and time-consuming
  • a change in output of any one good could have
    repercussions throughout the plan
  • consider an increase in output of cars, for
    instance
  • in principle, could be balanced by computer as
    solution to a system of simultaneous equations
  • no computer powerful enough exists
  • in reality, a process of iteration and
    negotiation used to inch toward a solution

8
Annual Planning Timetable in Soviet Union
  • Spring -- Directives
  • Council of Ministers and Communist Party set
    aggregate growth targets
  • Targets reflect
  • goals of current five-year plan
  • Gosplans assessment of feasibility
  • Directives (tentative plan assignments at highly
    aggregated level) sent to each ministry
  • Spring -- Directives
  • Council of Ministers and Communist Party set
    aggregate growth targets
  • Targets reflect
  • goals of current five-year plan
  • Gosplans assessment of feasibility
  • Directives (tentative plan assignments at highly
    aggregated level) sent to each ministry

9
  • Summer -- Input claims and bargaining
  • each ministry makes up separate tentative output
    assignments for each of its departments
  • each department makes tentative output assignment
    for each of its enterprises
  • each enterprise then requests inputs from its
    department
  • each department aggregates input claims and
    requests total from ministry
  • each ministry makes its requests from Gosplan
  • intense bargaining at each step as lower level
    attempts to bargain with higher level for easier
    output and input assignments

10
  • Fall -- Balancing
  • Gosplan and other planning agencies balance
    revised aggregate assignments into a consistent
    national plan
  • November and December -- Approval
  • Plan submitted to Council of Ministers in
    November and ratified by Supreme Soviet in
    December

11
  • December -- Disaggregation
  • Gosplan sends each ministry its plan
  • each ministry sends each department its plan
  • each department sends each enterprise its plan
  • process often bled into January
  • After plan approval, State Committee for Material
    and Technical Supply (Gossnab) matches up
    supplying and customer enterprises

12
Evaluation of Planning Process
  • Ideal plan would have to be
  • consistent
  • achieves balance between sources and uses of all
    resources and commodities
  • castings from the steel industry to be used in
    the production of machinery must be same in steel
    plan (where it appears as a use) as in machinery
    plan (where it appears as a source)
  • feasible
  • both consistent and possible
  • resources and technologies actually exist to do
    what the plan requires

13
  • efficient
  • must be feasible
  • plan efficient if planners cannot reallocate
    resources so as to increase one output without
    having to reduce others
  • infinite number of efficient plans
  • optimal
  • the one efficient plan most desirable from
    planners perspective

14
  • Actual planning process so cumbersome consistency
    never achieved for overall plan
  • Those parts that were consistent often turned out
    to be infeasible
  • Inconsistent and infeasible plans cannot be
    efficient
  • Even if efficiency could be achieved there would
    be no way to try out different efficient plans to
    choose the most desirable

15
Planning and Enterprise Management
  • Enterprise management expected to implement the
    enterprise plan fully
  • the plan is a command
  • management given various material and moral
    incentives to follow orders
  • bonus
  • prospect of promotion/demotion
  • prosecution for sabotage

16
  • Enterprise not free to implement plan on its own
  • superior unit intervenes daily in every detail of
    enterprise activity
  • not really centrally planned but centrally
    managed
  • This system of central management gets the job
    done
  • the economy produces stuff
  • resources get allocated
  • households consume things
  • high-priority projects accomplished
  • space and arms races in Soviet Union
  • literacy campaign in Cuba

17
  • The system is hugely inefficient and rigid
  • cannot adapt fast enough to changes in economic
    realities
  • unplanned shortages or surpluses accumulate
  • new technologies ignored or avoided
  • ephemeral opportunities missed
  • outside world ignored
  • no incentives for initiative, entrepreneurial
    spirit, innovation
  • Schumpeters process of creative destruction
    absent

18
Motivation of Leaders (Anyone Who Has
Subordinates)
  • Political and moral conviction
  • motivating to extent leaders have bought into
    socialist ideology
  • what happens when this conviction diminishes?
  • Identification with job
  • most people want to be good at what they do
  • Power
  • most leaders love power and those who dont avoid
    leadership positions

19
  • Prestige
  • unlike the case with capitalism, position in the
    state-party apparatus the only source of prestige
  • Material rewards
  • salary
  • salary rises as ones position in hierarchy rises
  • bonus for plan fulfillment
  • in-kind benefits
  • recreation facilities
  • vacation facilities
  • superior health-care facilities
  • superior educational facilities
  • superior access to goods and services
  • special stores for the nomenklatura

20
  • The quiet life
  • leaders motivated by opportunities to avoid
    conflict with superiors, suppliers, customers
  • Punishment
  • all the way from a rebuke from a superior to
    execution
  • Proprietorial motivation absent
  • leader gets no residual income
  • evaluated on basis of how well he implements
    specific orders
  • leads to risk avoidance
  • innovation is risky
  • initiative is risky
  • introduction of new technology is risky
  • all actions taken by a leader constantly being
    interfered with by superior levels
  • leader smart to keep his head down and not rock
    the boat

21
Bargaining And Dysfunctional Behaviors
  • A leaders job is to implement orders
  • A leader is evaluated and rewarded according to
    how well he or she implements orders
  • Orders are often difficult or even impossible to
    implement
  • Leaders are therefore motivated to resolve this
    chronic bind that they find themselves in

22
  • Leaders engage in vertical bargaining
  • as opposed o the horizontal bargaining of market
    participants trying to strike the most profitable
    deal
  • each leader is constantly engaged in bargaining
    with superiors and subordinates
  • superior depends on subordinate for information
    on which to base orders
  • subordinate has an incentive to provide distorted
    information so as to get easier orders
  • enterprise directors complain of obsolete
    machinery, long repair times, unreliable
    suppliers, etc.
  • superiors know the game and initially demand more
    than they think is realistic

23
  • superiors have an incentive not to be too
    demanding of their subordinates, however
  • superiors are at the same time subordinates at
    the next level and depend on their own
    subordinates to help make the case for easier
    plan assignments for them
  • the more superiors demand of their subordinates,
    the harder their own assignments are
  • superiors have to expect at least what their
    subordinates delivered the previous period
  • referred to as planning in the previous
    periods results
  • a ratcheting effect

24
  • subordinates respond by avoiding over-fulfilling
    targets
  • as plan fulfillment approaches, enterprise
    responds by slowing production so that plan will
    not be over-fulfilled
  • enterprise will also try to conceal extra output
    to apply to following years production
  • enterprises that cannot meet planned targets will
    slow down production in order to plan in a lower
    level for the next year
  • known as lethargy
  • enterprises that can realistically meet targets
    but have fallen behind tend to ramp up production
    at end of year
  • storming
  • not an efficient way to time production

25
  • therefore, output planning and plan
    implementation generate dysfunctional behaviors
  • underestimation of capacities
  • withholding performance
  • inefficient output surges
  • input planning and implementation also generates
    dysfunctional behavior
  • inputs are a free good from perspective of
    subordinate
  • more is always better as long as the extra input
    does not result in an increase in output
    assignments
  • always excess demand for inputs and enterprises
    have no reason to be frugal in use of inputs

26
Merger of Economic and Political Spheres
  • Every leader expected to contribute to all the
    goals of the system
  • economic considerations but one of many
    ideological, domestic policy, foreign policy
    considerations
  • weighting of these considerations under constant
    flux
  • political events or changes in political goals
    force changes in plan and plan implementation
  • all things economic subordinate to the political
  • the economic merely a component of the political

27
Conflicts of Interest and Ambiguous Motivations
  • Leaders always face conflicts of interest and
    uncertainties on how to resolve them
  • For instance, plans specify output quantity and
    quality targets
  • But there is a strong bias in favor of quantity
    targets
  • quantity drive
  • rapid growth a central goal of socialism
  • superiors constantly pushing subordinates to
    produce more
  • users constantly pushing for more, as well

28
  • Bias in favor of quantity usually comes at
    expense of quality
  • Enterprises can generally get away with poor
    quality as long as quantity targets are achieved
  • Impossible to satisfy all aspects of the plan
  • hierarchy of importance develops concerning plan
    implementation
  • dysfunctional behavior results
  • substitution of lower-quality inputs for inputs
    specified in the plan
  • results in flimsier outputs that have shorter
    useful life
  • not obvious until later
  • Never complete assurance that this informal
    hierarchy of importance will not change and get
    leader in trouble

29
The Problem of Information Proliferation
  • The sheer quantity of information, even in the
    absence of incentives to distort it, is a cause
    of breakdown
  • collecting, organizing, and using it to
    coordinate decision making is too much
  • the task never gets done
  • the result is planning mistakes and incomplete
    plans
  • low-priority sectors take the brunt
  • when errors reveal themselves during the year,
    the bureaucracy is usually too rigid to respond
  • any change would have repercussions throughout
    plan

30
  • The situation tends to worsen over time as
    planning becomes increasingly complex
  • Planners respond to tendency of enterprises to
    interpret plans in ways that are easier for the
    enterprise to implement but not what was intended
    by planners
  • plans become increasingly specific
  • have to avoid the one-ton nail
  • No matter how specific and complex, the
    information does not exist for a single mind or
    group to achieve an efficient outcome
  • this is Hayeks point
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