Lessons from Georgia

Guest Post by John Stossel

Lessons from Georgia

Georgia (the ex-Soviet Republic, not the U.S. state) is now a remarkable success story.

Its economy is growing at 5% per year, and the country ranks ahead of the United States in economic freedom.

Yet, 20 years ago, Georgia was even more miserably poor than the rest of the former Soviet Union.

So, what can America and the rest of the world learn from Georgia’s progress?

A lot, says my executive producer Maxim Lott. He’s spent the past several months in Georgia and made a StosselTV video about it.

All former Soviet states are poor because the communists had grabbed everyone’s private property and put it under government control.

They thought they were smart enough to run the economy. They did things like order Georgians to produce tea. Soon, 95% of tea in the Soviet Union came from Georgia.

But Georgia is not the best place to grow tea.

After the Soviet Union collapsed, “People started to taste Indian tea and realized that tea is actually better,” says Georgian politician Zurab Japaridze. “Nobody wanted Georgian tea.”

That industry, and most others, vanished when Soviet support ended. “Three-fourths of the Georgian economy disappeared,” he says.

Central planners are never smart enough to run something as complex as an economy.

Fortunately, in Georgia, an eccentric libertarian, Kakha Bendukidze, became economy minister in 2004. He made “everything private, as much as possible.”

Georgia scrapped 90% of licensing and permit requirements. That reduced corruption.

“Every license means interaction with officials. Every interaction with the official can be an open door for a corrupt request,” explains Fady Asly, chairman of Georgia’s International Chamber of Commerce.

Before those reforms, “Corruption was so rampant!” says Asly. “A high-ranking official told me: ‘I have a friend who’s very honest. We would like him to chair of the anti-corruption commission, but he has to pay someone $10,000 to get this job.’ The future chair of the anti-corruption commission had to bribe someone to get the job!”

Georgia has come a long way since then. With fewer rules to obey and licenses to get, there are fewer reasons to bribe. Transparency International now says Georgia is less corrupt than all its neighbors. The country also fired its entire police force, customs office and tax service, and diminished government agencies by half.

This created a “huge boom,” says Asly. “Georgia turned from a failed state to a very successful state.” Its economy grew 10% a year.

Buildings that had been burned were restored. McDonald’s and KFC arrived. Some prosperity came to Georgia.

“This was kind of a libertarian utopia for four years,” says Iva Nachkebia, national coordinator for Georgia’s branch of Students for Liberty.

But then the politicians decided that since things were going well, they would get in on the action. Instead of leaving markets free, they gave privileges to cronies.

“They chose 10, 15, 20 businessmen who were close to the government,” says Asly. “And they started protecting them at the expense of their competitors.”

Since the protected businesses got big tax breaks, businessmen like Asly couldn’t compete.

“After losing a couple of million dollars,” says Asly, “I decided to stop the business.”

Economic growth slowed. Now the economy grows at half the rate it once grew.

Japaridze thinks Georgia re-embraced big government because “people did not actually understand” why Georgia’s economy improved. Years of Soviet propaganda kept people from learning about markets.

He says that mentality must change for Georgia to develop. Either “you want to take responsibility about your life, or you are fine with being a slave and having some kind of a master who will provide you with your needs.”

He’s right, but I question whether “years of Soviet rule” are what made the difference. There’s plenty of hostility toward free markets among privileged Americans who’ve never heard Soviet propaganda.

The overall lesson from Georgia, says Asly: “Government should be very small. It should just regulate the minimum.”

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9 Comments
RJ
RJ
August 26, 2021 11:08 am

“McDonald’s and KFC arrived.” This is not a cause for celebration, nor a reason why the economy was doing so well.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  RJ
August 26, 2021 11:42 am

Indeed, two crony capitalist companies. Saying that Georgian companies began adding new branches, restaurants, etc would have been a better sign.

Javelin
Javelin
August 26, 2021 11:36 am

Georgia cannot be exempt from the global governance push… Those apparatchiks behind closed doors are probably answering to the davos crowd.

Arthur
Arthur
  Javelin
August 26, 2021 12:42 pm

Precisely. Finance is the real problem, not government, which is just a tool in the hands of the banks. IMF, World Bank, and BIS decide whether governments can borrow and on what terms. It’s easy to pull their strings with that leverage.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
August 26, 2021 3:20 pm

I thought it was going to be a lesson from the US State of Georgia: Don’t date the governor’s daughter.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
  Iska Waran
August 26, 2021 5:05 pm

Or, attempt to count votes on a “re-count”…

PB
PB
August 26, 2021 7:38 pm

I suspect too that Georgia isn’t riddled with economy-draining vibrant diversity from third-world sludgeholes.

MartelsHammer
MartelsHammer
  PB
August 26, 2021 9:15 pm

Well, Georgia has mostly Georgians but a few Chechens and Armenians. I have been there many times from right after the civil war ended post-USSR collapse to recently. Great people, well educated but typically corrupt like most former Soviet republics…riddled with Mafia. Yes this article is directionally correct, much better than back in the day when shootouts would happen in the hotel lobby (1993).

Dirtperson Steve
Dirtperson Steve
August 26, 2021 9:11 pm