Synopses & Reviews
Hungary: Towards a Market Economy is the latest in the successful sequence of volumes on major topics in international economics published under the auspices of the Centre for Economic Policy Research. This volume offers the most recent and up-to-date assessment of the Hungarian economy, combining intimate local knowledge with up-to-date modes of economic analysis. It will be of interest to all those following the process of economic transition, whether academic researchers, students, policy-makers or analysts.
Review
"...the most comprehensive and thorough account of the Hungarian economic reform processes of the 1990s..." Paul Hare, Slavic Review
Synopsis
A comprehensive assessment of the Hungarian economy.
Table of Contents
List of figures; List of tables; Foreword; Acknowledgements; List of conference participants; 1. The hidden Hungarian miracle László Halpern and Charles Wyplosz; Part I. Macroeconomic Policy: 2. Fiscal difficulties in the transition: the case of Hungary between 1991 and 1995 Pál Gáspár; Discussion David Begg; 3. The interest rate transmission mechanism in Hungary, 1991-1995 Balázs Világi and János Vincze; 4. The nature of Hungarian inflation Isvtán Hamecz, János Vincze and Isvtán Zsoldos; Discussion Ratna Sahay; 5. The hidden economies of Visegrád countries in internal comparison: a household electricity approach Mária Lackó; Discussion Michael A. Landesmann; Part II. Industrial Structure: 6. Corporate governance in the transition - the case of Hungary: do new structures help create efficient ownership control Ádám Török; 7. Corporate performance in the transition: econometric analysis of Hungarian exporting firms, 1985-1994 László Halpern and Gábor Körösi; Discussion Jan Svejnar; 8. Hungary's Ponzi game László Szakadát; Discussion Jérôme Sgard; Part III. Labour Markets: 9. The minimum wage in Hungary: subsistence minimum and/or bargaining tool Jenö Koltay; Discussion George Kopits; 10. Welfare institutions and the transition: in search of efficiency and equity Iván Csaba and András Semjén; Discussion Christine H. Allison; 11. Regional unemployment rate differentials in Hungary, 1991-1995: the changing role of race and human capital Árpád Ábrahám and Gábor Kertesi; Discussion Michael Burda; Index.