- Docente: Carolyn Ann Kadas
- Credits: 8
- SSD: SECS-P/02
- Language: English
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Forli
-
Corso:
Second cycle degree programme (LM) in
International Politics and Markets (cod. 9226)
Also valid for Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Interdisciplinary research and studies on Eastern Europe (cod. 8049)
Learning outcomes
Student is expected to have an in-depth knowledge of Central European economies either in regional terms or looking at individual countries' economic strategies and policy choices particularly in market economies macroeconomic stabilization, microeconomic adjustment, privatization, and price, trade and financial liberalization.
Course contents
Syllabus Part I : Economics of Transition in Central Europe Lecture 1: Introduction
- Defining macro-economic terms
- Features of Stalinist systems, 1950s
- Soft budget constraint
- Shortage economy
- Pre-1989 economic reforms
- Import-led growth
- Foreign indebtedness
- Socialist market economy
- Collapse of Soviet-type systems
- Strategies and priorities of economic transformation – the Washington consensus
- Macroeconomic stabilization and economic liberalization
- Shock-therapy vs. gradualism
- Economic recession, output fall
- Political constraints on privatization
- Centralized and decentralized privatization
- Modes of privatization - Voucher privatization, management and employee buy-outs, direct sales.
- Share of private sector in economies
- Re-birth of 3 nations
- Policy choices
- International influences
- Priorities in the new welfare states
- Taxation, public spending
- Shock and recovery
- Growth of new firms
- Different business environments: Russia vs. Central Europe
- Foreign direct investment
- Accession effects on economic growth, FDI
- Maastricht criteria and new member states
- Varieties of capitalism
- Economic conditions prior to the “crash”
- Role of international financial institutions
- Lessons learned
- Basic features of Yugoslav economy prior to 1990s
- Trade integration
- Conditionality, institutional reform
Lecture 17: Impact of global economic crisis on SEE
- Fiscal and monetary policy measures
- Euroization – causes and effects
- Poverty levels
Lecture 18: Current and future trends in CEE and SEE
- Current outsourcing trends between west and east – industries, strategies
- Recent investment from China and the Middle East
Readings/Bibliography
Core Textbooks:
- Myant, Martin and Jan Drahokoupil, Transition Economies: Political Economy in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia,(2010) Wiley-Blackwell
- Aslund, Anders, How Capitalism was Built: The Transformation of Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Central Asia (2007) Cambridge University Press
- Bohle, Dorothee and Bela Greskovits, Capitalist Diversity on Europe’s Periphery. Cornell University Press, 2012
- Lavigne, Marie, The Economics of Transition: From Socialist Economy to Market Economy (1999) Macmillan
- Sznajder Lee, Aleksandra, Transnational Capitalism in East Central Europe’s Heavy Industry: From Flagship Enterprises to Subsidiaries (2016) University of Michigan Press
- R.J. Crampton. The Balkans Since the Second World War (Pearson, 2002)
- Will Bartlett. Europe's Troubled Region: Economic Development, Institutional Reform and Social Welfare in the Western Balkans (Routledge, 2008).
- Milica Uvalic. Serbia’s Transition: Towards a Better Future (Palgrave, 2010)
Teaching methods
Lectures outlined in Power point presentations with abundant class participation
Assessment methods
- Mid-term exam - a choice of 3 out of 5 essay questions on the first 9 topics, in 2 hours.
- Research project: Research paper of 3,000-3,500 words plus bibliography on a topic chosen from the themes we will be covering in class; oral presentation of main points of research paper (with power point) of 10 minutes.
- Final written exam – a choice of 5 out of 7 essay questions, in 3 hours.
Teaching tools
Power point, on-line research of scholarly works
Office hours
See the website of Carolyn Ann Kadas