Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 306
pro vyhledávání: '"Cevdet Denizer"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Productivity Analysis. 27:177-195
This paper examines the banking efficiency in a pre- and post-liberalization environment by drawing on the Turkish experience by using DEA. The paper also investigates the scale effect on efficiency. Our findings suggest that liberalization programs
Publikováno v:
The World Bank Economic Review. 10:397-424
Patterns of transition from plan to market. Martha de Melo, Cevdet Denizer, and Alan Gelb Hungary's bankruptcy experience, 1992-1993. Cheryl W. Gray, Sabine Schlorke, and Miklos Szanyi Why and when do governments initiate public enterprise reform? Jo
Publikováno v:
Comparative Economic Studies. 48:563-582
In recent years, a ‘consensus’ explanation of policy reform in the transition economies has emerged, according to which, greater political partisanship and intra-government division promotes progress in reform. Using panel data from 24 post-Commu
Publikováno v:
Comparative Economic Studies. 48(4):563-582
In recent years, a ‘consensus’ explanation of policy reform in the transition economies has emerged, according to which, greater political partisanship and intra-government division promotes progress in reform. Using panel data from 24 post-Commu
Publikováno v:
Journal of Comparative Economics. 30:463-475
We explore household savings decision in Bulgaria, Hungary, and Poland during the transition from plan to market, finding four main results. First, except for the age profile, the effects of standard determinants on savings are comparable for transit
Autor:
Holger C. Wolf, Cevdet Denizer
Publikováno v:
The Savings Collapse during the Transition in Eastern Europe
Almost all of the transition economies in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union experienced a severe decline in their national saving rates. The saving collapse could be explained by the elimination of involuntary saving, a feature of central pl
Publikováno v:
Finance a uver - Czech Journal of Economics and Finance. 50(1):17-39
The financial systems of developing countries tend to be restricted or repressed by burdensome reserve requirements, interest-rate ceilings, foreign-exchange regulations, constraints on banks? balance sheets, and the heavy financial-sector taxation.