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This insightful book examines the necessary conditions for the successful initiation and consolidation of unpopular economic reforms. Drawing on the burgeoning literature in the area of policy reform, it features a comparative analysis of fiscal reform in Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic at different stages of the post-communist transformation. This analysis demonstrates that a significant number of the national differences in fiscal reform can be attributed to differences in political constraints. It also reveals that these very constraints change in the course of transformation and have become increasingly similar to the 'standard' restrictions which exist in the traditional EU and OECD countries.This in-depth analysis of the changing role of political determinants in post-communist fiscal reform will strongly appeal to economists and political scientists interested in the political economy of policy reform, post-communist economic transformation and the role of international organizations (IMF, EU) in shaping domestic policy-making. Policy analysts interested in fiscal reform in Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic will also find much to interest them in this book.
Frank Bönker, Berufsakademie Sachsen- Staatliche Studienakademie Riesa, Germany
Contents: 1. Introduction: Fiscal Reform, Post-communist Transformation and the Political Economy of Policy Reform 2. The Political Economy of Fiscal Reform in the OECD Countries and the Developing Countries 3. Agenda and Context of Post-communist Fiscal Reform 4. Getting Started: The Initiation of Fiscal Reform after the Fall of Communism 5. Staying the Course I: Fiscal Reform During the Post-communist Fiscal Crisis 6. Staying the Course II: Fiscal Reform from the End of the Post-communist Fiscal Crisis to EU Accession 7. Conclusion: Post-communist Fiscal Reform and the Changing Nature of Political Constraints References Index
'Frank Bonker has done a masterful job. . . This is probably the best book available on this important subject. And its significance is not limited to studies of postcommunist societies. It has important theoretical implications for everyone interested in the Political Economy of Policy Reform perspective within the field of comparative political economy.'