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In the shadow of the Gulag: worker discipline under Stalin

In the shadow of the Gulag: worker discipline under Stalin

218/2015 Marcus Miller and Jennifer C. Smith
working papers,economic history
Journal of Comparative Economics
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jce.2015.01.005

218/2015 Marcus Miller and Jennifer C. Smith

Forthcoming in Journal of Comparative Economics, available at: //authors.elsevier.com/sd/article/S0147596715000207An ‘efficiency wage’ model developed for Western economies is reinterpreted in the context of Stalin’s Russia, with imprisonment – not unemployment – acting as a ‘worker discipline device’. The threat of imprisonment allows the state to pay a lower wage outside the Gulag than otherwise, thereby raising the “surplus” left over for investment: this externality provides a reason for coercion over and above the direct productivity of those in custody.Just how credible the threat of imprisonment was under Stalin is documented using archival data now available; but the enormous scale of random imprisonment involved is, we argue, attributable not to economic factors but to Stalin’s insecurity in the absence of a legitimate process for succession.We develop a model of demand and supply for industrial labour in such a command economy. To get more resources for investment or war, the state depresses the level of real wages; to avoid incentive problems in the wider economy, the harshness of prison conditions can be intensified. This is the logic of coercion we analyse.

Economic History

Journal of Comparative Economics

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jce.2015.01.005