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  The role of indigenous institutions in the economic transformation of Eastern Europe: The Hungarian chamber system - one step forward or two steps back?
 
 
Title: The role of indigenous institutions in the economic transformation of Eastern Europe: The Hungarian chamber system - one step forward or two steps back?
Author: Ingleby, Susan J.
Appeared in: Journal of European public policy
Paging: Volume 3 (1996) nr. 1 pages 102-121
Year: 1996-03
Contents: Employers' associations, and their influence on the economic transformation in Eastern Europe, have been largely ignored. In spring 1994, the Hungarian Parliament passed a law on Chambers which will render three new Chambers the supreme regulating source for all entrepreneurs' licensing, training and economic actions; membership will be compulsory. Drafters of the law claim the Austrian/German system as a model, but it is more reminiscent of the socialist structure of authoritarian/state corporatism. What prompted this development in a society with long exposure to market forces? As old normative patterns disintegrate, associations motivated by financial survival compete with the state for the power to dictate new norms. Co-evolutionary theory demonstrates the complex interaction of actors at the macro, organizational and micro levels of this competition and how it is translated into policy.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 11 of 12 found articles
 
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 Koninklijke Bibliotheek - National Library of the Netherlands