What Happened in East European (Political) Economies? A Balance Sheet for Neoliberal Reform
What Happened in East European (Political) Economies? A Balance Sheet for Neoliberal Reform
Author(s): Mitchell A. OrensteinSubject(s): Supranational / Global Economy, Economic history, Political history, Economic policy, Government/Political systems, Economic development, Transformation Period (1990 - 2010)
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: neoliberal; economic; reform; Central and Eastern Europe;
Summary/Abstract: Assessing the results of neoliberal reform remains controversial even twenty years after 1989. While neoliberal reform programs appeared to have finally produced rapid economic growth in the 2000s after a long transitional recession, the 2008 global economic meltdown plunged Central and East European countries back into crisis. This article offers a mixed assessment of the results of neoliberal economic reforms and questions the easy compatibility of democracy and radical reform observed during the 1990s. Since the 2000s, both democratic and authoritarian countries in Eastern Europe have experienced rapid growth. Geopolitics, more than reform or democracy, seems to separate the winners from the losers. Successful countries are those that either joined the European Union or developed close political and economic relations with Russia. Those betwixt and between and those suffering internal strife (or both) still have not reached 1989 levels of economic production.
Journal: East European Politics and Societies
- Issue Year: 23/2009
- Issue No: 04
- Page Range: 479-490
- Page Count: 12
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF