Economic institutions, markets and competition : centralization and decentralization in the transformation of economic systems

Bibliographic Information

Economic institutions, markets and competition : centralization and decentralization in the transformation of economic systems

edited by Bruno Dallago and Luigi Mittone

Edward Elgar, c1996

Available at  / 35 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes rev. versions of some of the papers presented at the fourth Trento Workshop held at the University of Trento, Feb. 28 to March 1, 1994

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The decentralization of economic institutions in the West since the 1970s and in Eastern and Central Europe since 1989 is a significant and ongoing process which has implications for the nature of economic systems.This major new book explores the importance of institutions in economic systems and challenges the traditional assumption of antagonism between tendencies to centralize and tendencies to decentralize. An international group of authors from Europe and the US addresses different aspects of the centralization-decentralization issues including privatization, fiscal federalism, the recent experience of Russia and Eastern Europe, and the role of quasi-markets and non-profit organizations. Drawing on theoretical approaches and empirical material, they argue that the real achievement of efficiency requires the presence of certain key criteria in the structure of the market. Every move towards decentralization, such as privatization, is shown to entail counter-balancing moves towards centralization, such as the introduction of improved, central regulation. Economic Institutions, Markets and Competition will be welcomed for exploring the implications of centralization and decentralization in the transformation of economic systems and for emphasizing market structure as well as market competition.

Table of Contents

Contents: 1. The State and the Firm: The Centralization and Decentralization of Economic Institutions: an introduction (B. Dallago, L. Mittone) Part I: Institutions and Markets 2. "Creative Destruction" in Economic and Political Institutions (M. Egidi) 3. Decentralization as Ability to Adapt (J. Birner) 4. What Type of Capitalism is Produced by Privatization? (H.-J. Wagener) 5. The Market for Institutions Versus the Strong Hand of the State: The Case of Eastern Europe (S. Pejovich) Part II: Centralization and Decentralization, Paradigms and Facts 6. A Presentation of Fiscal Federalism (G. Brosio) 7. Fiscal Federalism in Russia (P. Sutela) 8. Privatization, Decentralization, Competition: Some Lessons from a Concentration Analysis of Hungarian Industries (Z. Bara) 9. Labour Market and Employment Policy in Central and Eastern Europe in the Context of Systemic Change (J. Koltay) Part III: Creation and Development of Markets in Eastern Europe 10. Behavioural Constraints and the Creation of Markets in Post-Socialist Economies (W. Swaan) 11. Decentralization and Centralization in the Enterprise Sphere of the Czech Republic (J. Sereghyova) 12. The Collapse of the Russian Economy: An Institutional Explanation (R. Knaack) 13. The Revival of Redistribution in Hungary (E. Voszka) 14. Inter-enterprise Arrears in Economies in Transition: Analytical, Empirical and Policy Issues (F. Coricelli) Part IV: The Quasi-Market Formula 15. The Privatization of Welfare Services and the Role of Non-Profit Organziations (C. Borzaga) 16. Quasi- Markets and Incomplete Information: The Case of Medical Services in the UK and Italy (L. Mittone) 17. Privatization, Non-profit Trusts and Contracts for Healthcare Services in the UK (W. Bartlett) Index

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top