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Adam Smith Goes to Moscow

A Dialogue on Radical Reform

Walter Adams, James W. Brock

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Wirtschaft

Beschreibung

Adam Smith Goes to Moscow is a captivating dialogue between the head of a hypothetical, formerly socialist East European country and a fervently market-minded American adviser. Their spirited give-and-take highlights the monumental political as well as economic complexities currently faced by the former Soviet bloc countries as they struggle to transform themselves into free market economies.

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Schlagwörter

Unemployment, Competition, Soviet Empire, Adam Przeworski, Czechoslovakia, Credit (finance), Liberalization, Competition (economics), Bankruptcy, Nomenklatura, Fiscal policy, Market economy, Totalitarianism, Milton Friedman, Cato Institute, Marketization, Monetarism, Berlin Wall, Leonid Brezhnev, Capital flight, Capitalism, World Bank, Alfred E. Kahn, Moscow Exchange, Supply (economics), Tax, Deregulation, Jeffrey Sachs, Inflation, Bailout, Military–industrial complex, Glasnost, Shortage, Oleg Baklanov, International Monetary Fund, Economy of the Soviet Union, Employment, State-owned enterprise, Ronald Coase, Steven N. S. Cheung, Economic interventionism, Warsaw Stock Exchange, Stabilization policy, Externality, Economy, Structural adjustment, Economist, Soviet Union, Economics, Restructuring, Soviet people, Central bank, Consumer, Monetary policy, Post-communism, Andrei Shleifer, Inroads (organization), Hudson Institute, Ludwig von Mises, Market power, Privatization, Bank regulation, Economic planning, The Communist Manifesto, Price controls, Privatization in Russia, Income, Stagflation, John Kenneth Galbraith, Corporatization