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Transition from Socialist to Market Economies: Comparison of European and Asian Experiences

Editat de S. Ichimura, T. Sato, W. James
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 oct 2009
20 years after the collapse of communism in Central Eastern European countries and 30 years after the start of market-oriented reforms in China, this book provides a framework for understanding the differing emphasis and sequencing of two reforms and explores in-depth these issues in the demise of communism and the triumph of the market economy.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780230228030
ISBN-10: 0230228038
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: XIV, 280 p. 7 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:2009
Editura: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Introduction PART I GENERAL FRAMEWORK OF COMPARISON Conversion and Divergence in Transition Process: Europe and Asia China's Transition to a Market Economy: How Far Across the River Two Reforms under Mono-Party Systems-Hungarian NEM and China's Reform PART II OWNERSHIP REFORM AND PRIVATIZATION SOE Reform and Privatization in Transition—China in Comparative Perspective Vietnamese Gradualism in SOE Reforms From Public to Private Savings: Decline of State Ownership in China PART III THE ROLE OF THE STATE AND MARKET IN TRANSITION The Special Safety Net in a Transitional Economy: the Case of China The State and the Transformation of Economic Systems Can the Japan Inc. Model be a Middle Course for Transition: Industrial Policy and Postwar Economic Development of Japan Market and Political Justice in Transformation of Poland PART IV LESSONS OF THE FIRST DECADE REVISITED Facts and Lessons of Ten Years of Transformation in Central Europe Lessons of Transformation in the Czech Republic: 1990-2000

Recenzii

"[C]ontain[s] a wealth of information about China's economic development since 1978... Recommended." - CHOICE

Notă biografică

SHINICHI ICHIMURA is a well-known econometrician (the Econometric Society fellow since 1962) and leading scholar of Asian economies, director of Kyoto University, Japan. He worked in the Institute of SEAS for 1969-79 and was a vice-chancellor of Osaka International University (88-95). He also was director of ICSEAD, Kitakyushu (95-2005) and founder of East Asian Economic Association (1987)

TSUNEAKI SATO is Professor Emeritus, Yokohama City University, Japan. Between 1987 and 1991 he was President of the Japan Association for Comparative Economic Studies (JACES). He was on the Editorial Board of the international journal Comparative Economic Studies (1991-95), and worked as temporary research staff with the UN (1992-93, 96-97). He has written extensively on the economic reforms in the former Soviet and Eastern European Countries and then systemic transformation in these countries. In the late 1980s and 1990s, he took part in a number of advisory groups for Transition countries. At a conference in Moscow early in June 1992, he strongly argued against Jeffrey Sachs. His major work after the Transformation is The Economic System of Post-Socialism (Iwanami Pub., Tokyo, 1997, in Japanese). His contributions to international publications include Moct-Most (No.1, 1995), Economic Systems (No.2, 1999), Privatization in the Transition Process : Recent Experiences in Eastern Europe, (UNCTAD, Geneve, 1994), Re-evaluating Economic Reforms in Central and Eastern Europe since 1989 (Budapest, 1996) and The 10-Year Review of Transitional Economies and Challenges in the Next Decade (UNIDO, Vienna, 2001).

WILLIAM E. JAMES is a Principal Economist at the Asian Development Bank, Philippines. He regularly contributes to the Asian Development Outlook and writes extensively on Asian economic issues. He has served as advisor to trade, finance ministers and central banks in Asia and taught at several universities in Japan and the US.