In the late 1980s, transitional socialist economies (TSEs) in Central and Eastern Europe were only somewhat more sophisticated than shell money systems: savings books or currency had to be used for most transactions and there was no risk assessment, information monitoring and acquisition, or portfolio management. The TSEs have moved toward a two-tiered banking system but they lag in the development of competitive, market-based financial systems. In several TSEs the financial system seems to be part of a shell game to hide the losses of the real economy. The authors argue that rapid, successful economic reform requires putting the shell game to an end. They review several contentious issues of financial reform in the TSEs, especially issues ...
The formerly planned economies (FPEs) of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union are a rather dis...
This paper provides a unified theory to explain the onset of the financial crisis in 1998 and the st...
It is naive to believe that a market economy can be introduced by"shock therapy,"the author argues. ...
Financial reforms initiated in most transitional socialist economies do not yet ad-equately provide ...
In several transitional socialist economies the financial system is in danger of becoming part of a ...
The authors examine the decisions policy-makers in transitional socialist economies must make: how t...
This study critically analyses the intended and unintended consequences of financial sector policy i...
This paper offers a classification of credit markets in transition economies. It describes a continu...
Abstract. The finance dominated type of capitalism that has developed from the late 1970s and early ...
The advent of a market economy in formerly centralized economies has led to dramatic change in their...
It is a far from widely shared proposition that banks should have anything to do with any alternativ...
We examine the efforts of transition economies to deal with financial fragility and resolve banking ...
Narratives of macroeconomic stabilization played an important part in the financialization of the fo...
The social transformation of Eastern Europe has proceeded much faster, and the destruction of commun...
In developing the architecture for a financial system, the challenge is to combine deregulation and ...
The formerly planned economies (FPEs) of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union are a rather dis...
This paper provides a unified theory to explain the onset of the financial crisis in 1998 and the st...
It is naive to believe that a market economy can be introduced by"shock therapy,"the author argues. ...
Financial reforms initiated in most transitional socialist economies do not yet ad-equately provide ...
In several transitional socialist economies the financial system is in danger of becoming part of a ...
The authors examine the decisions policy-makers in transitional socialist economies must make: how t...
This study critically analyses the intended and unintended consequences of financial sector policy i...
This paper offers a classification of credit markets in transition economies. It describes a continu...
Abstract. The finance dominated type of capitalism that has developed from the late 1970s and early ...
The advent of a market economy in formerly centralized economies has led to dramatic change in their...
It is a far from widely shared proposition that banks should have anything to do with any alternativ...
We examine the efforts of transition economies to deal with financial fragility and resolve banking ...
Narratives of macroeconomic stabilization played an important part in the financialization of the fo...
The social transformation of Eastern Europe has proceeded much faster, and the destruction of commun...
In developing the architecture for a financial system, the challenge is to combine deregulation and ...
The formerly planned economies (FPEs) of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union are a rather dis...
This paper provides a unified theory to explain the onset of the financial crisis in 1998 and the st...
It is naive to believe that a market economy can be introduced by"shock therapy,"the author argues. ...