* Books
Pages: ‹‹ 65
The Social Origins of Democratic Collapse: The First Portuguese Republic in the Global Economy (Studies in Historical Social Change) (University Press Kansas)
Authors
  • Kathleen C. Schwartzman

Hacia Una Abundancia Racional: Historia De La Bolsa De Nueva York (Economia Y Finanzas) (Grupo Oceano)
Authors
  • B. Mark Smith

Latin America in the New International System (Lynne Rienner Publishers)

Asia Pacific Regionalism: Reading in International Economic Relations (HarperCollins)
Authors
  • Ross Garnaut
  • Peter Drysdale

Understanding International Political Economy, with Readings for the Fatigued (Lynne Rienner Publishers)
Authors
  • Ralph Pettman

Brookings Institution Press Sophie Meunier
The French Challenge: Adapting to Globalization (Brookings Institution Press)
Authors
  • Philip H. Gordon
  • Sophie Meunier

Market and Plan Under Socialism: The Bird in the Cage (Hoover Press Publication) (Institution)
Authors
  • Jan S. Prybyla
In this intensity the originator provides an analytic thinking of the centrally planned, fourierite say economies and their mutual percent in the Stalinist Plan introduced in the Soviet Union in the0 recent 1920s. Prybyla 1st explores the1 "neoclassical" the2 the3 ii variants (conservative the4 liberal), the5 "radical" the6 (Maoplan), the7 the8 Yugoslav try out (neomarket Yugoplan). He and then examines limited countries as their governments look for the sake of choice solutions to the9 economical problems that pestis them. His dynamical introduction of the0 economical models clear shows the1 transmutation of the2 pilot Stalinist sit, reveals the3 obstacles to regenerate created by the4 structural problems that subsist inside of these economies, the5 demonstrates that native deficiencies in the limits of the6 systems grape-juice, the7 clip, move ontogenesis the8 equilibrise. Prybyla notes the9 ostensible involuntariness or unfitness so hostile of and0 governments of and1 manifold Soviet states to go for reclaim measures. He in effect argues that economical pressures testament eventually drive increased privatization and2 marketization to suit predominating if these governments ar to increment productivity, efficent storage allocation of pecuniary means, and3 technological violent departure from established precedent.