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East-West Trade Policies

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Development Policy
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Abstract

Trade policies in general, and terms of trade in particular, between EE countries (Eastern European countries — the Soviet Union included and Yugoslavia when mentioned) and OECD countries are among the strongest links in the chain that encircles EE countries in their attempt to achieve market efficiency, and above all speedy overall growth.

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Notes

  1. This particular statement could be found in otherwise sober and sound predictions of Eastern events — see R. Portes et al., ‘Monitoring European Integration — The Impact of Eastern Europe’, CEPR Annual Report (London: CEPR, 1990): 38–9.

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  2. D. L. Prychitko, ‘Perestroika in Yugoslavia: Lessons for decade of self-management’, in Global Economic Policy, The Journal of the Geonomics Institute, 2 (2): 30; 1990.

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  3. See more detailed in H. W. Singer, ‘The 1980s: a lost decade — Development in reverse’, Global Economic Policy, 2 (2): 60; 1989.

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  4. In 1979, for example, Brazil, Mexico and Argentina absorbed 83 per cent of all net Euro-currency lending to non-oil countries, as quoted in G. Bird ‘A role of IMP in economic development’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro, Quarterly Review, 143 (1982): 429–30.

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  5. See, for instance, P. Hanson, ‘Trends and policies in East-West economic relations — A view from the West’, in G. Bertsch and C. T. Saunders (eds), East-West Economic Relations in the 1990s (London: Macmillan, 1989): 56–7.

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  6. A specific EE approach to real economic analyses and interpretation of statistics data is fairly visible in I. Angelis, ‘Determinants and prospects of East-West economic relations — A view from the East’, in Bertsch and Saunders, East-West Economic Relations: 67, 1987.

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  7. See E. A. Hewett, ‘The global framework and East-West economic relations’, in B. Csikos-Nagy and D. G. Young (eds), East-West Economic Relations in the Changing Global Environment (London: Macmillan, 1986): 41.

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© 1992 Soumitra Sharma

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Družić, I. (1992). East-West Trade Policies. In: Sharma, S. (eds) Development Policy. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22385-5_11

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