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Networks and institutions in Europe's emerging markets /

"Do ties between political parties and businesses harm or benefit the development of market institutions? The post-communist transition offers an unparalleled opportunity to explore when and how networks linking the polity and the economy support the development of functional institutions. A qu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schoenman, Roger
Language:English
Published: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Series:Cambridge studies in comparative politics
Subjects:
Online Access:Cover image
https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/networks-and-institutions-in-europes-emerging-markets/D721D1740D8F60D490F6888A982ECB88
Description
Summary:"Do ties between political parties and businesses harm or benefit the development of market institutions? The post-communist transition offers an unparalleled opportunity to explore when and how networks linking the polity and the economy support the development of functional institutions. A quantitative and qualitative analysis covering eleven post-socialist countries combined with detailed case studies of Bulgaria, Poland and Romania documents how the most successful post-communist countries are those where dense networks link politicians and businesspeople, as long as politicians are constrained by intense political competition. The comparison of original network datasets shows how this combination allowed Poland to emerge with stable institutions. Bulgaria, marred by weak institutions, corruption and violence, cautions us that in developing economies intense political competition alone is harmful in the absence of dense personal and ownership networks. Indeed, as Romania illustrates, networks are so critical that their weakness is not mitigated even by low political competition"--
Physical Description:xiv, 226 p.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 196-215) and index.
ISBN:9781107031340 (hardback)