Traitement en cours...
Fermer la notification

Le saviez-vous ?

SIDE a travaillé avec ses fournisseurs pour rendre ses colis respectueux de l'environnement.
Fini le plastique !
Le ruban adhésif qui sécurise la fermeture de nos colis et les chips de calage qui immobilisent les livres dans les cartons sont en matériaux recyclables et biodégradables.

Afficher la notification

New neighbours in Eastern Europe

Collectif d'auteurs
Date de parution 01/09/1998
EAN: 9782911762093
Disponibilité Manque temporaire
What happened to Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia on their way from socialist Soviet Republics to European capitalist market economies?This book tries to answer this difficult question through a comprehensive coverage of economic and industrial reforms ... Voir la description complète
Nom d'attributValeur d'attribut
Common books attribute
ÉditeurECOLE DES MINES
Nombre de pages264
Langue du livreFrançais
AuteurCollectif d'auteurs
FormatPaperback / softback
Type de produitLivre
Date de parution01/09/1998
Poids422 g
Dimensions (épaisseur x largeur x hauteur)1,50 x 15,80 x 24,00 cm
Economic and Industrial Reform in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia
What happened to Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia on their way from socialist Soviet Republics to European capitalist market economies?This book tries to answer this difficult question through a comprehensive coverage of economic and industrial reforms in the Baltic countries. Though small in size and population, the three have recovered their strategic position on the interface between Russia and Western Europe. As candidates for EU- and NATO-membership, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia have become new neighbours in more than one sense, not only for Central Europe, but for Western Europe as well.Just like in the rest of Central and Eastern Europe, there was no way to avoid the radical break between Soviet socialism and post-socialism, i.e. the emergence of a capitalist market economy. In macroeconomic terms, the Baltic countries have moved from depression to rapid growth within five years. The real difficulties consisted - and still consist - in structural reforms, on the enterprise level, on the level of newly emerging networks, and on the institutional surrounding: the science & technology system, competition policy, banking and financial institutions.This book presents the result of an expert study financed by the European Commission, and conducted jointly by Lithuanian, Latvian, Estonian, British and French institutions. Based upon on-site research, it covers macro and industrial reforms as well as case studies of selected branches and enterprises. The reader gets a comprehensive overview of the unique first post-socialist years of the Baltic economies, and the conditions of development of our "new neighbours".Christian von Hirschhausen was, at the time of writing, researcher at the Centre for Industrial Economics (CERNA) at the Ecole des Mines de Paris. He is now senior researcher at DIW-German Institute for Economic Research (Berlin) and member of the German Group of Advisors to theGovernment of Ukraine (Kyjiw).The Centre for Industrial Economics (CERNA) at the Paris School of Mines deals with the processes by which enterprises and markets operate, and the role played by the state therein. As practised at CERNA, industrial economics involves an inductive approach; research is mainly based on surveys and case studies conducted with companies. The current volume was developed in the division "State,Post-Socialism, Capitalism and Industry", created right after the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989.