Cover image for Turmoil at Twenty : Recession, Recovery and Reform in Central and Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union.
Turmoil at Twenty : Recession, Recovery and Reform in Central and Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union.
Title:
Turmoil at Twenty : Recession, Recovery and Reform in Central and Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union.
Author:
Mitra, Pradeep.
ISBN:
9780821381144
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (219 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- Overview -- 1 Prelude to the crisis -- Vulnerable . . . but with variation -- Transition meets global finance -- Would different macroeconomic policies have lessened vulnerability? -- Opening the toolkit -- Annex 1.1 -- Annex 1.2 -- 2 How much adjustment? How much financing? -- Different shocks for different countries -- Sharing the burden: private and public, domestic and external -- Crisis, adjustment, and financing in low-income and lower middle-income CIS countries -- Of parents and offspring: understanding rollover risks in ECA -- Three concluding arguments-three caveats -- Annex 2.1 -- 3 Restructuring bank, corporate, and household debt -- Financial systems need to be fixed -- For the lenders: bank restructuring -- For the borrowers: corporate and household debt restructuring -- Lessons on restructuring from previous banking and capital account crises -- Lessons for strengthening bank regulation and supervision -- 4 Scaling up social safety nets -- Existing social assistance programs -- Safety nets: ready to be scaled up? -- How important are safety nets in transferring income? -- Cost of expanding means-tested programs -- An opportunity for further reform -- 5 Prioritizing structural reform -- Interpreting business environment surveys -- Overview of results -- Growth bottlenecks -- The persistence of legacy in shaping the business environment -- Annex 5.1 -- Annex 5.2 -- Annex 5.3 -- 6 The day after -- Bottlenecks in electricity-an agenda for reform -- The education and skills agenda-making the grade -- Bibliography -- Back Cover.
Abstract:
Two decades since the fall of the Berlin wall, Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, is experiencing the deepest contraction and is expected to see the weakest recovery in output among all emerging and developing economy regions a result of the global financial and economic crisis. Their commitment to open trade and financial integration as part of the transition from plan to market has brought many gains, but a combination of large global imbalances during this period and policy weaknesses in a number of countries made them vulnerable to the crisis. The global recession is expected to be deeper and more protracted than any in recent memory and will test the international community's commitment to both the middle income countries of emerging Europe with access to capital markets as well as the poorest countries of the former Soviet Union. Recovery from the crisis will require domestic policy reform in the countries and coordinated and sustained international collective action.After two decades, the business environment in transition countries increasingly resembles that of market economies at similar levels of per capita income. Strong private sector growth preceding 2008-2009 led to firms reporting infrastructure and skilled labor as being among the most important barriers to doing business for the first time since transition began. But rapid growth has also increased the costs to firms of weak market economy institutions, in part the product of legacy, especially in respect of the legal environment and corruption. Preparing for the recovery from crisis will require attention to these weaknesses in the enabling environment.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: