Economic Transition in Russia and the New States of EurasiaBartłomiej Kamiński M.E. Sharpe, 1996 - 430 pagini This volume covers the economic progress made by the new states of the former Soviet Union in the transition from command to market economies. Topics discussed include: political and economic adjustments; the domestic dimension; macropolicies; restructuring; and regional and world integration. |
Cuprins
Introduction | 3 |
An Overview | 11 |
A Comparative | 42 |
Integrating the Unofficial Economy into the Dynamics of PostSocialist | 81 |
Russias Oil and Gas Exports to the Former Soviet Union | 121 |
Foreign Investment and Trade in Kazakhstan | 138 |
Prospects for Regional Integration | 159 |
What | 171 |
Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States in | 238 |
Russia and the Challenge | 252 |
A Review | 277 |
Emerging Patterns of Enterprise Behavior | 315 |
Note on Privatization in Moldova | 344 |
Note on Privatization in Georgia | 354 |
Factors Affecting Trade Reorientation of the Newly | 384 |
Project Participants | 417 |
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
The International Politics of Eurasia: V. 8: Economic Transition in Russia ... S. Frederick Starr,Karen Dawisha Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 1996 |
Economic Transition in Russia and the New States of Eurasia Bartłomiej Kamiński Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 1996 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
50 percent adjustment agreements agricultural average Azerbaijan Baltic Belarus budget Bulgaria capital Central Asian communist controls costs currency Czech Republic decline domestic Eastern Europe economic reform employment enterprises Estonia European exchange rate export firms fiscal Fiscal Federalism foreign trade former Soviet Union funds Gazprom global growth Hungary important income increased industrial inflation institutions integration investment Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan labor Latvia liberalization Lithuania macroeconomic managers market economy ment million mimeo Moldova monetary Moscow newly independent nomic oblasts OECD official GDP organized crime output overall pension percent of GDP Poland political population poverty private sector production regime regional rent seeking restructuring result revenues Romania ruble Russia share social Soviet Union stabilization Table Tajikistan tion transfers transition economies Turkmenistan Ukraine unofficial activities unofficial economy USSR Uzbekistan vouchers wage workers World Bank