Economic Reform in Poland and Czechoslovakia: Lessons in Systemic Transformation
By (Author) Raphael Shen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th July 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political economy
Macroeconomics
338.94
Hardback
288
This study examines the relative successes and failures of reform programmes in Poland and Czechoslovakia, as well as the causes of these successes and failures. It provides a synthesized and comparative study of efforts to achieve systemic economic transformation. The work begins with the identification of background forces in these two countries - cultural, social, political and economic - analysing their impact on micro-responsiveness to reform policies. Then, within the framework of these forces, the author traces the causes of the two economies' reform failures during and since the Communist era. The central purpose of the work is to provide objective lessons for economies attempting systemic transformations or implementing development policies.
RAPHAEL SHEN is a member of the Society of Jesus and a professor of economics at the University of Detroit. He is the author of The Polish Economy: Legacies from the Past, Prospects for the Future (Praeger, 1992).