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This title was first published in 2000: A study of the diffusion
and effective use of ICT in industry in Hungary, Poland, Lithuania
and Ukraine. It explores quantitative and qualitative overviews of
the current state of affairs with respect to computer-networking in
industry, and examines prospects and obstacles.
First published in 1998, this deeply engaging volume describes the
'great transformation' of our time. While transformation, it is
definitely not a transition to the market economy, civil society
and democratic rule. Instead, this book maps the growth of the
economic jungle, clan society and a corrupted, criminalised state.
Capitalists but no capitalism. Watching Warsaw, Prague and
Budapest, one should not forget about Zaporizhzhya. After this
book, one cannot.
This title was first published in 2000: A study of the diffusion
and effective use of ICT in industry in Hungary, Poland, Lithuania
and Ukraine. It explores quantitative and qualitative overviews of
the current state of affairs with respect to computer-networking in
industry, and examines prospects and obstacles.
First published in 1998, this deeply engaging volume describes the
'great transformation' of our time. While transformation, it is
definitely not a transition to the market economy, civil society
and democratic rule. Instead, this book maps the growth of the
economic jungle, clan society and a corrupted, criminalised state.
Capitalists but no capitalism. Watching Warsaw, Prague and
Budapest, one should not forget about Zaporizhzhya. After this
book, one cannot.
Hans van Zon analyzes the financialization of developed capitalism,
and argues that the emergence of finance as a dominant force has
contributed to the relative decline of the West. He demonstrates
that the neo-liberal model is inherently unstable and undermines
capitalist economies, which can only function if they are embedded
in institutions that are non- or even pre-capitalist. He shows how
a toxic combination of financialization, corporate globalization,
and a deregulated and parasitic financial industry have led to
structural economic stagnation in both the USA and the greater part
of the EU.
Hans van Zon analyzes the financialization of developed capitalism,
and argues that the emergence of finance as a dominant force has
contributed to the relative decline of the West. He demonstrates
that the neo-liberal model is inherently unstable and undermines
capitalist economies, which can only function if they are embedded
in institutions that are non- or even pre-capitalist. He shows how
a toxic combination of financialization, corporate globalization,
and a deregulated and parasitic financial industry have led to
structural economic stagnation in both the USA and the greater part
of the EU.
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