1st Edition

Systems, Institutions, and Values in East and West Engaging with János Kornai's Scholarship

Edited By Dóra Piroska, Miklós Rosta Copyright 2020
232 Pages
by Central European University Press

Leading social scientists, empirical analysts, and policy practitioners demonstrate the various ways in which the insights of János Kornai, a renowned early analyst and critic of the command economies of Eastern European communist states, are stirring academic and policy discussions about current challenges. While dissecting the economic theories and practices in the Soviet Bloc, Kornai... Read more
Engaging with János Kornai's Scholarship: Systems, Institutions, and Values, János Kornai's Theory of Socialism, Thinking Capitalism with János Kornai The Theories of János Kornai and a Less-known Hungarian Economist, Ferenc Jánossy, on Unbalanced Economic Growth, Mistaking Markets: Seeing Markets Where They Do Not Exist, The System Paradigm and the European Monetary Union: What János Kornai's Contribution to Comparative Economics Can Suggest to the Eurozone, Independent Fiscal Institutions: New Kids on the Block in Economic Policy, Modified Management Thinking in Health Care: The Impacts of Centralization and the Soft Budget Constraint, Resource Reallocation and Ambiguous Economic Performance in a Captured State: The Case of Hungary, About the Value of Democracy and Other Challenging Research Topics: Closing Remarks at the Conference on February 22, 2018, Notes on the Contributors, Index

Biography

Dora Piroska has been a Lecturer at the Department of Government at the University of Texas at Austin, an Associate Professor at the Corvinus University of Budapest and currently a Visiting Professor at the Central European University, Budapest. She is a political economist with a special interest in the Central and Eastern European region.

Miklós Rosta received his PhD in Economics in 2012. Currently, he is the head of the Department of Comparative and Institutional Economics and Director of the Center of Central Asia Research at Corvinus University of Budapest. His main research interests include issues connected to institutional economics and public management studies. He serves as editor of the Hungarian Economic Review (Közgazdasági Szemle).