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Industry and Higher Education, 1997
In the early stages of economic transition in Hungary, stagnation was the dominant characteristic of the country, accompanied by crisis indicators such as marked internal and especially external economic instability, instability in foreign trade, and structural impediments to development.
András Benedek, Péter Klekner
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In the early stages of economic transition in Hungary, stagnation was the dominant characteristic of the country, accompanied by crisis indicators such as marked internal and especially external economic instability, instability in foreign trade, and structural impediments to development.
András Benedek, Péter Klekner
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Journal of Policy Modeling, 1998
Abstract This paper presents a computable general equilibrium model with a two-tier price system incorporated. The model allows for analyzing reform policies in relation to plan prices and quantities. It captures the income effects generated from divergence between market and plan prices.
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Abstract This paper presents a computable general equilibrium model with a two-tier price system incorporated. The model allows for analyzing reform policies in relation to plan prices and quantities. It captures the income effects generated from divergence between market and plan prices.
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Transition economics meets new structural economics
Journal of Economic Policy Reform, 2015Erik Berglof, Justin Yifu Lin and Slavo RadosevicThis discussion forum selects a set of communications from the workshop “Transition economics meets new structural economics”, held 25–26 June 2013 ...
Erik Berglof +7 more
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1979
At the end of the nineteenth century the discrepancy between the upper and lower classes in Western societies had grown in many ways. Whereas the income, wealth and power of the upper classes had increased, the position of the lower classes continued to be miserable, although slight improvements in their living conditions were already noticeable and a ...
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At the end of the nineteenth century the discrepancy between the upper and lower classes in Western societies had grown in many ways. Whereas the income, wealth and power of the upper classes had increased, the position of the lower classes continued to be miserable, although slight improvements in their living conditions were already noticeable and a ...
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Economic transition: conclusion
2000Summary of findings on the economy In Part II we have approached the Dutch economy in the nineteenth century from a number of different angles. It is now time to draw the strands of these separate approaches together, first in a summary, and then in the form of some conclusions.
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2015
Neo-transitional economics is a policy-oriented collection of contemporary theoretical and empirical research studies on transition countries in the post-crisis paradigm. Topics covered range from monetary and financial economics to international trade and formation of a welfare state.
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Neo-transitional economics is a policy-oriented collection of contemporary theoretical and empirical research studies on transition countries in the post-crisis paradigm. Topics covered range from monetary and financial economics to international trade and formation of a welfare state.
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Transitive Social Choice in Economic Environments
International Economic Review, 1992\textit{R. B. Wilson} [J. Econ. Theory 5, 14-20 (1972)] had shown that if within the Arrovian axiom system yielding his famous impossibility result, the Pareto condition is weakened to ``nonimposition'', then the only rules which become available in addition are the ``null social welfare function'' (setting everything socially indifferent to everything
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Constitutional Economic Transition
1999AbstractThe US Constitution embodied a limited degree of laissez faire, enough to give capitalism at least an advantage over any other economic organization of the society if Adam Smith's theory is roughly right. What capitalism mainly needed was free markets, and the US Constitution went very far toward providing that interstate commerce would not be ...
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Economic Relationships in Transition
PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, 2001The project involves a critical analytical investigation of the domestic and international legal regimes available for recognizing, valuing, preserving, and compensating for the genetic resources held by indigenous peoples in the form of biological and human genetic diversity and indigenous knowledge, an exploration of available forms of domestic law ...
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