Already have an account? Get multiple benefits of using own account!
Login in your account..!
Remember me
Don't have an account? Create your account in less than a minutes,
Forgot password? how can I recover my password now!
Enter right registered email to receive password!
Policy: Post-Communism
Demolition of the Berlin Wall and take-down of the Iron Curtain hasn't significantly improved the situation in what are optimistically and euphemistically called 'economies in transition' [from socialism to capitalism which is]. Figuring out how to move from a stagnant, ex-Communist economy to a dynamic and growing one is very difficult and no one has ever done it before.
A few of the "economies in transition" appear on the path to rapid convergence to Western Europe: Slovenia, Hungary, Czech Republic and Poland have already clearly and successfully maneuvered through enough of 'transition' to have advanced their economies beyond the point reached before 1989. It seems clear that their economic destiny is about to become effectively part of Western Europe. Lithuania, Slovakia, Latvia and Estonia appear to have good prospects of following their example.
Somewhere else, though, the news is bad. Whether reforms have been step-by-step or all-at-once or whether ex-communists have been excluded from or have dominated the government or whether governments have been internationalist or nationalist, results have been similar. Output has fallen, corruption has been rife and growth hasn't resumed. Material standards of living in the Ukraine today are less than half of what they were when General Secretary Gorbachev ruled from Moscow.
Economists debate ferociously the appropriate economic strategy for unwinding the inefficient centrally-planned Soviet-style economy. The fact that this 'transition' has never been undertaken before should make advice-givers cautious. And there is one other observation that must make advice-givers depressed: the best predictor of whether an eastern European country's transition would be rapid and successful or not appears to be its distance from western European political and financial capitals such as Frankfurt, Vienna and Stockholm
describe scitovosky''s double criterion
What is "high-powered money"? The "high-powered money" is the similar as monetary base, which is defined, at the minimum, as the sum of the currency in circulation (banknotes
Special Drawing Rights: The late 1960s witnessed that the growth in world resources did not keep pace with the growth in international trade. The slackness in the growth of re
how can a consumer get maximum Equlbrim
What are the advantages of leaving the allocation of a countrys resources to the price mechanism? Ans) The main conditions needed are: 1. Either a finite number of agents or pr
how does the concept of possibility production curve aplicable in real life?
International Comparisons Method In the 1960s, a few developing countries of the world looked around the developed world in search of models of development. For instance, Sout
Why is investment so important in an economy? Define investment as an enhance in capital stock and link this to broad macro issues; future output, enhance in living standards, ta
a severe restriction occurs to the availability of consumer credit throughout the banking and finance system
A 1500 word research paper on the economic, social or environmental effects of the widespread use of robots in factories (this meets Learning Outcome 4)
Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!
whatsapp: +91-977-207-8620
Phone: +91-977-207-8620
Email: [email protected]
All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd