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The Political Economy of Poland's Transition
New Firms and Reform Governments

This book examines how new, domestically owned firms contributed to Poland's transition between 1990 and 1997.

John E. Jackson (Author), Jacek Klich (Author), Krystyna Poznanska (Author)

9780521838955, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 6 June 2005

296 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm, 0.52 kg

"Both owing to its content and the intellectual and emotional inspiration behind it, this work is undoubtedly worthy of notice." - Jerzy Hausner, Akademia Ekonomiczna, Krakow, Poland

In the time span of a two-term US presidency, Poland went from an authoritarian one-party state with a faltering centrally planned economy to become a relatively stable multiparty democracy and a market economy with one of the highest GDP growth rates in Europe. A central feature of these economic and political reforms is a high rate of entry of new, domestically owned firms. This book uses detailed economic and political data to examine how these new firms contributed to the Polish transition. The authors test propositions about why some regions have more new firms than others and how the success of these new firms contributed to political constituencies that supported economically liberal parties. The book concludes by contrasting the Polish with the experiences of other transitional countries.

1. Why Poland?
2. The dynamics of the Polish political economy
3. Creative destruction and economic transitions
4. The social and distributional costs of transition
5. Individual attitudes and voting
6. De Novo job creation and election returns
7. Liberal economic interests and seat allocations
8. The political economy after 1997
9. The political economy of transitions: why Poland?

Subject Areas: Political economy [KCP], Comparative politics [JPB], Regional studies [GTB]

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