Integration: An Empirical Assessment of Russia
Preprint
- 1 January 2001
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
In the process of implementing market reforms, many post-socialist countries have struggled to preserve economic and political integration. Using a statistical model of commodity trade, we quantify the evolution of economic integration observed among regions within Russia during 1995-1999, and then explore potential determinants of the patterns of integration we observe. Our measure of integration exhibits rich regional variation that, when aggregated to the national level, fluctuates substantially over time. In seeking to account for this behavior, we draw in part on theoretical models that emphasize the potential role of openness to international trade, regional disparities in income, and inflation volatility in threatening economic and political integration. Controlling for a host of additional regional and national level variables, we find a strong negative correspondence between openness to international trade and internal economic integration within Russia. We also find negative links but weaker links between integration and regional-income disparities and inflation volatility.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Policy reform and growth in post-Soviet RussiaEuropean Economic Review, 2003
- The evolution of market integration in RussiaEconomics of Transition, 2001
- The Role of Market Size in the Formation of JurisdictionsThe Review of Economic Studies, 2001
- Economic Integration and Political DisintegrationAmerican Economic Review, 2000
- Russia’s internal borderRegional Science and Urban Economics, 1999
- The Breakup of Nations: A Political Economy AnalysisThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1997
- Relative Price Variability and Inflation: Evidence from U.S. CitiesJournal of Political Economy, 1997
- Relative Price Convergence in RussiaStaff Papers, 1996
- How Wide is the Border?Published by National Bureau of Economic Research ,1994
- A Theory of Monopolistic Price AdjustmentThe Review of Economic Studies, 1972