De-monopolization And Competition Policy In Post-communist Economies

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Active Competition Policies
Aggregate Consumer Price Index
Antimonopoly Law
Antimonopoly Office
Antimonopoly Policy
antitrust enforcement
Antitrust System
APA Official
capitalist economies
Category=JP
Competition Agencies
Competition Offices
Competition Policy
competition policy development in Eastern Europe
competition policy programs
Eastern bloc
economic regulation
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eq_society-politics
FSO
Government Bodies
institutional change
Magyar Posta
market liberalization
Mongolian Parliament
MPRP.
Natural Monopolies
Natural Monopoly Regulation
Post-communist Economies
post-Communist monopoly
post-Communist transition
post-socialist reform
Public Telecommunications Services
Regulated Firms
Soviet Type Socialism
Structural Concentration
Structural Deconcentration
transition economies
Unfair Competition Law
Vertical Agreements

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367016852
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 237mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Even in developed capitalist economies, markets function poorly without regulation by competitive forces. The countries that once were part of the Eastern bloc are introducing market forces into industries created according to the monopolistic logic of central planning, so that competition policy plays an important role in the transition to capitalism. This interdisciplinary study examines how barriers to the development of competitive markets and competition policy are being overcome in Russia, Poland, Hungary, and Mongolia. A group of U.S., Russian, and East European specialists explores the institutions and programs of competition policy as well as its role in the overall post-Communist transition. Providing a complete, comparative picture of the development of competition policy in a broad cross section of formerly socialist countries, the contributors consider the extent of the post-Communist monopoly problem as well as progress in de-monopolization.