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Recent cataclysmic changes in the international economic order are
shaping the global policy changes of the 1990s. In his final
collection of essays, Belta Balassaa examines the implications of
these recent changes for developed, developing and reforming
socialist economies. Essays on the developing countries cover
development strategies, adjustment policies, the public sector and
financial liberelization. Essays on the reforming socialist
economies cover econmic integration in Eastern Europe, foreign
economic ties of the Soviet Union, and the use of indicative
planning. Trade policy negotiations are covered in several essays
on GATT negotiations and on hte consequences of the EEC
enlargement. The volume closes with selected essays on trends in
economic policies.
First published in 1962, The Theory of Economic Integration
provides an excellent exposition of a complex and far-reaching
topic. Professor Balassa has been remarkably successful in covering
so much ground with such care and balance, in a treatment which is
neither in any way abstruse nor unnecessarily technical. His book
will interest economists in Europe by reason of its subject and
treatment, but it is also a valuable and reliable textbook for
students tackling integration as part of a course of International
Economics and for those studying Public Finance. He distinguishes
between the various forms of integration (free trade area, customs
union, common market, economics union, and total integration). In
addition, he applies the theoretical principles to current projects
such as the European Common Market and Free Trade Area, and to
Latin American integration projects. In offering this theoretical
study, the author builds on the conclusions of other writers, but
goes beyond this in providing a unifying framework for previous
contributions and in exploring questions that in the past received
little attention - in particular, the relationship between economic
integration and growth (especially the interrelationship between
market size and growth, and the implications of various factors for
economic growth in an integrated area).
First published in 1962, The Theory of Economic Integration
provides an excellent exposition of a complex and far-reaching
topic. Professor Balassa has been remarkably successful in covering
so much ground with such care and balance, in a treatment which is
neither in any way abstruse nor unnecessarily technical. His book
will interest economists in Europe by reason of its subject and
treatment, but it is also a valuable and reliable textbook for
students tackling integration as part of a course of International
Economics and for those studying Public Finance.
He distinguishes between the various forms of integration (free
trade area, customs union, common market, economics union, and
total integration). In addition, he applies the theoretical
principles to current projects such as the European Common Market
and Free Trade Area, and to Latin American integration
projects.
In offering this theoretical study, the author builds on the
conclusions of other writers, but goes beyond this in providing a
unifying framework for previous contributions and in exploring
questions that in the past received little attention ? in
particular, the relationship between economic integration and
growth (especially the interrelationship between market size and
growth, and the implications of various factors for economic growth
in an integrated area).
Recent cataclysmic changes in the international economic order are
shaping the global policy choices of the 1990s. In his final
collection of essays, the late Bela Balasa, a foremost
international economist, examines the implications of these recent
changes for developed, developing and reforming socialist
economies. Essays include development strategies, adjustment
policies, the public sector, and financial liberalization, economic
integration in Eastern Europe, and trade policy negotiations.
Aims to improve our understanding of the factors determining the
economic performance of the Pacific area developing countries. The
book deals with both the newly industrializing countries and the
newly exporting countries.
List of Participants - Preface - PART 1 THE RELEVANCE OF ECONOMIC
INCENTIVES FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT - Prices, Incentives and
Economic Growth; B.Balassa - Microeconomic Incentives and
Macroeconomic Decline; M.Olson - Social Insurance: Incentives and
Disincentives to Save and to Work; M.Janssen - Incentives and
Disincentives: International Migration; J.N.Bhagwati - Incentives
for the Homogenization of Time Use; D.S.Hamermesh - Incentives for
Entrepreneurship and Supporting Institutions; R.R.Nelson - The
Incentive Limits of Firms: A Comparative Institutional Assessment
of Bureaucracy; O.E.Williamson - PART 2 COUNTRY EXPERIENCE WITH
RESTRUCTURING INCENTIVES - Incentives in the Soviet Economy;
T.S.Kahchaturov - Restructuring Incentives in Hungary; B.Csik
s-Nagy - Incentives in the United Kingdom; P.Minford - Economic
Reforms in Chile, 1973-1981; A.Saieh and L.A.Sjaastad -
Restructuring Incentives in the People's Republic of China;
A.Gutowski and R.Merklein - From Bankruptcy to Revival: The Turkish
Experience with Restructuring Economic Incentives, 1980-1984; E.G
nensay - Obstacles to Changing the Incentive System: The Case of
the Federal Republic of Germany; H.Bonus - PART 3 INCENTIVES IN THE
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY - Incentives and Disincentives for Foreign
Direct Investment in Less Developed Countries; V.N.Balasubramanyan
- Rent-Seeking and Trade Policy: An Industry Approach; R.E.Baldwin
- The Function of Governments and Intergovernmental Organizations
in the International Resource Transfer: The Case of the World Bank;
B.S.Frey - PART 4 CONCLUDING APPRAISALS - Incentives and Growth: An
Appraisal; K.J.Arrow - Incentives and Growth: A Summary Appraisal;
J.B.Donges - Index
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