The Logic of Economic Reform in Russia
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:1st Apr '01
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

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This book examines the failure of economic reform in Russia since 1991, when Boris Yeltsin proclaimed his commitment to economic stabilization, privatization, and price liberalization. Optimism over Russia¡¯s market reforms vanished with the crash of August 1998, when the ruble lost over 70 percent of its value and banks defaulted on their debts and forward currency contracts. Contrary to Yeltsin¡¯s reform promises, the Russian economy of the 1990s more closely resembled a Soviet model than a market-driven one. The Logic of Economic Reform in Russia illuminates the general problems of establishing market economies in settings where the institutional system to support the market has not had decades to develop. Suggesting that corruption may be associated with growth in the early stages of capitalism, Jerry F. Hough argues that the disappointing results of Yeltsin¡¯s reform efforts were not the product of Russian culture or history, but the logical consequences of rational men responding to the incentive system created by economic reform.
""In fact, anyone interested in Russia's future should pay attention to what Hough concludes must be done to make the reform worngs right." —Anonymous, Russian Life, 11/1/2001
|"Hough exposes better than others what was going on behind the facade of reforms." —Robert Legvold, Foreign Affairs, 11/1/2001
|"Jerry Hough is probably the profession's most diligent Sovietologist. Hardly a source escapes his eye...." —Marshall I. Goldman, Harvard University, International Affairs, 4/1/2002
|"Jerry F. Hough offers a provocative thesis to account for the failure of the economic program pursued by the El'tsin government in the 1990s." —Thomas F. Remington, Emory University, Slavic Review, 12/1/2002
ISBN: 9780815737537
Dimensions: 229mm x 150mm x 20mm
Weight: 535g
338 pages