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This book provides a comparative analysis of the emerging corporate control structures in the transition economies. It details characteristics of corporate governance in the two largest transition economies: Russia and Poland. It explores what kind of ownership structures are emerging in these two countries and to what degree they are they path-dependent and conditional on the initial choice of privatization methods - fast ownership transfer through the mass privatization programme and loans-for-equity scheme in Russia, and a more 'organic' growth of the new private sector in Poland. It examines the directions of the subsequent, post-privatization, secondary ownership flows in both countries and the impact of the government on corporations, implied both by the residual shareholding of the state and by its regulatory and administrative actions.
Fifteen years ago, twenty-seven countries in Europe and Central
Asia embarked on their economic transition paths. For some, the
outcome was a considerable success. Several others are still
struggling to shed the inheritance of the past and to correct more
recent policy mistakes. Why were post-Communist recessions so long
in some countries and growth disappointing? Why was fiscal
performance so different? Was democracy a factor, which facilitated
reforms or rather slowed them down? This book discusses these
questions in the context of new empirical evidence, including a
critical examination of the main themes in the economics of
transition literature.
Fifteen years ago, twenty-seven countries in Europe and Central Asia embarked on their economic transition paths. For some, the outcome was a considerable success. Several others are still struggling to shed the inheritance of the past and to correct more recent policy mistakes. Why were post-Communist recessions so long in some countries and growth disappointing? Why was fiscal performance so different? Was democracy a factor, which facilitated reforms or rather slowed them down? This book discusses these questions in the context of new empirical evidence, including a critical examination of the main themes in the economics of transition literature.
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