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First published in 1997, this volume examines how Bulgaria has been
an early starter, but a slow and often erratic mover in the path of
stabilization and systemic transition. This book provides a most
useful account of the development to date, and of the costs
associated with Bulgarian strategy (or lack of), empirical analysis
and theoretical reflections, especially in comparison with other
transition economies. It will be of great interest to any scholar,
official or businessman involved not only with Bulgaria, but more
generally with post-communist countries.
First published in 1997, this volume examines how Bulgaria has been
an early starter, but a slow and often erratic mover in the path of
stabilization and systemic transition. This book provides a most
useful account of the development to date, and of the costs
associated with Bulgarian strategy (or lack of), empirical analysis
and theoretical reflections, especially in comparison with other
transition economies. It will be of great interest to any scholar,
official or businessman involved not only with Bulgaria, but more
generally with post-communist countries.
The effects and impact of employee participation and employee
ownership continue to be themes of enduring interest to social
scientists from a range of disciplines. The analysis presented in
this volume are representative of the best economics research being
carried out in the study of labor and empirical studies. Several of
the papers deal with the issue of privatization in transition
economies, where a large number of newly privatized firms have
effectively been transformed into employee owned enterprises. Other
key themes covered in this volume are profit sharing in both East
and West Europe, the issue of evolutionary transformation of
cooperatives into conventional private firms, and the growing
importance of the role of social cooperatives in the welfare state.
The New Economy Handbook will primarily serve reference users in
business schools, economics departments, public and university
libraries, special libraries, and institutions/agencies concerned
with finance, trade, e-commerce, banking, and other regulatory,
trade, and commercial activities. Secondary users will be business
professionals and managers, as well as entrepreneurs, bankers, and
others who need traditional economic information and data about new
technology firms. Because of the scope of its table of contents,
the book might well be used as a supplement to many courses.
The revolutions that brought about the New Economy are quietly
embedded in familiar, old products, not necessarily ringing,
beeping, and vibrating next to our skins. Why is the bulky,
battery-operated e-book the new economy, while Lockheed-Martin's
swooping F-16 is consigned to the Old Economy?
The information technology boom of the 1990s stoked a New Economy
characterized by surging output per worker but with hard-to-measure
and vulnerable underpinnings. Faster productivity is, of course,
the key to higher living standards. The most important aspect of
the New Economy might not, therefore, be the shift to high-tech
industries, but the way that Information Technology improves the
efficiency of all parts of the economy.
This collection of original essays offers the first thorough
investigation of the New Economy. Its poignancy is even more
apparent in the wake of the 1990s technology bubble. Articles share
a format that encourages accessibilty, including an outline,
glossary, and summary, and an extensive index adds utility. Written
for students and scholars seeking authoritative data and
perspectives.
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