|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
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 is an examination of the progress that Croatia, the Czech
Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia have made in the
process of transformation since the collapse of the Soviet bloc.
Looking at issues such as democratization, the transition to a
market economy and the new orientations in foreign policy, this
book provides a report of th
This book focuses on economic problems related to changes in the
countries of the former Eastern Bloc and Yugoslavia, thus
contributing to better understanding of the difficulties of
economic transition which these countries must currently face.
This is an examination of the progress that Croatia, the Czech
Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia have made in the
process of transformation since the collapse of the Soviet bloc.
Looking at issues such as democratization, the transition to a
market economy and the new orientations in foreign policy, this
book provides a report of th
The contributors to this volume analyze the general problems of
economic transition in countries of the former Eastern bloc:
changing the ownership structure, abolishing the command economy,
and integrating with the world economy. Because unique political,
economic and social conditions in each nation require individual
policy solutions, the contri
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 contains the main results of INDEUNIS, which is an
international research project coordinated by the Vienna Institute
for International Economic Studies and financed by the European
Commission under its Sixth Framework Programme. Researchers from
Austria, Poland, Hungary, Estonia, Finland, Russia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, and Ukraine have jointly investigated recent
experiences with economic transition, restructuring, and
integration. There is a set of non-exclusive policy options for the
NIS (Newly Independent States) which include being able to proceed
with the liberalization and institutional development process, to
provide more government budget for renewing and expanding
infrastructure, to establish an Industrial Policy to promote
priority sectors, and to use tariff and other protection for
temporary support to infant-industries. The bottom line on the
experience of structural change and policy implications for the
future is that the NMS (New EU Member States) provide an object
lesson for the NIS. The major component of NMS' success has been
the steady progress in market reforms, including liberalization,
all with a small lag in institutional development. The best
recommendation for the NIS is to follow the same path, despite the
problems early delay has caused.
|
|