Currency Convertibility in Eastern Europe


Book Description

Analyzes the issue of convertibility of currency in an Eastern European context, reviews the history of efforts elsewhere to achieve it, and recommends preferred courses of action. In particular, it considers the relative merits of shock programmes and more gradual approaches.










Integrating Eastern Europe into the Global Economy:


Book Description

This book is designed as a modest contribution to the ongoing deliberations about how to ease the fairly tight constraints on the external payments of many countries of the eastern part of Europe. In the fIrst instance, this inquiry is addressed to those that have embarked on wide-ranging systemwide reforms. External constraints have been markedly hampering the introduction of market oriented economic mutations, thereby raising the cost of transition far above levels expected at the outset of the present wave of uniquely restructuring the countries involved. I explore here several angles of this discussion. But three stand out. One is the disintegration of the postwar framework for economic cooperation in that part of the world. Another is the disarray brought about by incisive economic transformations in the area. Finally, various national, regional, and international interest groups are at work there, hoping to mold somehow the drift of the reform, or at least key components thereof, in their own "image. " In the process it is often forgotten, as Ralf Dahrendorf (1990, p. 41) so pointedly remarked that "[ a]ll systems mean serfdom, including the . natural' system of a total . market order' in which no one tries to do anything other than guard certain rules of the game discovered by a mysterious sect of economic advisers.
















The Economic Opening of Eastern Europe


Book Description

This analysis comprises the final chapter of Currency Convertibility in Eastern Europe by John Williamson. That chapter rounded off and summed up a critique of how currency convertibility has worked in Eastern Europe and how it may work in the future.