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This volume explores a wide range of case studies, analyses,
histories, and polemics on the fate of post-socialist Europe- and
why that matters to readers today. Nearly 30 years after the fall
of the Berlin Wall, the post-socialist economies of the former East
remain adrift, buffeted by the international financial crisis, the
Ukraine crisis, and the ongoing instability in the European Union.
This new book brings together a diverse range of scholars in
offering a comprehensive look at the struggles faced by
policymakers, economists and business people across the former
East, and the ways that they responded to crisis. This volume also
will be of great value to policymakers, academics, historians, and
economists seeking to understand possible influence of China's One
Belt One Road policy on Eastern Europe and Russia.
The authors of this volumescrutinize the Russian business sector
with attention to firm organization, business integration,
corporate governance, and company management. Using a unique
dataset of Russian joint-stock companies obtained from a
large-scale enterprise survey conducted throughout the country, the
authors empirically examine key issues for understanding the
Russian corporate sector: ownership and the internal control
system; the impact of business integration upon corporate
governance and performance of affiliate business groups; and the
role of external agents including commercial banks, business
associations, and the state in corporate governance and management
in non-financial enterprises.
In the last three decades since the fall of the Berlin Wall, there
has been a vast amount of study looking at transforming the planned
economy to a market economy from both theoretical and empirical
aspects. This book provides an overview and insight into transition
economies in the recent decades and looks at key economics topics
from the so-called "transition strategy debate" to environmental
reform. The book also includes an analytical review and
meta-analysis of the existing literature. By integrating
theoretical discussions and synthesizing empirical findings in a
systematic manner, this book may help to enlighten the debate on
the timing, speed, and policy sequence of economic transition. The
book will particularly appeal to researchers, policy makers, other
practitioners, and under- and post-graduate students who are
interested in transition economies in Eastern Europe, the former
Soviet Union, Southeast Asia, and China. It aims to be read as an
advanced reader.
This volume explores a wide range of case studies, analyses,
histories, and polemics on the fate of post-socialist Europe- and
why that matters to readers today. Nearly 30 years after the fall
of the Berlin Wall, the post-socialist economies of the former East
remain adrift, buffeted by the international financial crisis, the
Ukraine crisis, and the ongoing instability in the European Union.
This new book brings together a diverse range of scholars in
offering a comprehensive look at the struggles faced by
policymakers, economists and business people across the former
East, and the ways that they responded to crisis. This volume also
will be of great value to policymakers, academics, historians, and
economists seeking to understand possible influence of China's One
Belt One Road policy on Eastern Europe and Russia.
This book is designed to scrutinize the Russian business sector in
transition with special attention to firm organization, business
integration, corporate governance, and company management. Using a
unique dataset of Russian joint-stock companies, the authors
empirically analyze key issues for understanding the Russian
corporate sector.
In the last three decades since the fall of the Berlin Wall, there
has been a vast amount of study looking at transforming the planned
economy to a market economy from both theoretical and empirical
aspects. This book provides an overview and insight into transition
economies in the recent decades and looks at key economics topics
from the so-called "transition strategy debate" to environmental
reform. The book also includes an analytical review and
meta-analysis of the existing literature. By integrating
theoretical discussions and synthesizing empirical findings in a
systematic manner, this book may help to enlighten the debate on
the timing, speed, and policy sequence of economic transition. The
book will particularly appeal to researchers, policy makers, other
practitioners, and under- and post-graduate students who are
interested in transition economies in Eastern Europe, the former
Soviet Union, Southeast Asia, and China. It aims to be read as an
advanced reader.
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