313 research outputs found

    Avoiding a new European divide

    No full text
    The financial crisis, which is now hitting the new member states severely, highlights the shortcomings of the existing institutional architecture in Europe. Current strains reflect a revaluation of risks but they also result from policy mistakes. In this policy brief, Zsolt Darvas and Jean Pisani-Ferry show that some of the non euro-area new member states suffer from serious vulnerabilities, to which policy has been slow to respond. They believe that the crisis management in the euro area has had the unintended consequence of putting non euro-area new member states at disadvantage. These are unhealthy developments and without decisive action, a new political and economic divide within Europe may emerge.

    The Baltic challenge and Euro-area entry. Bruegel Policy Contribution 2009/13, November 2009

    No full text
    Resident Fellow Zsolt Darvas takes a look at the issue of the Baltic states - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - and the challenges facing those three countries in the aftermath of the financial crisis. He argues that because it is in the broader European interest to prevent a collapse in the Baltics, the best option is immediate euro entry at a suitable exchange rate supported by appropriate resolution in order to manage the resulting debt overhang. However, there seems to be no legal basis for this under the current euro accession criteria. Furthermore, the economic foundations of the criteria are fundamentally flawed, as euro-area members continue to violate the criteria while the EU's expansion to 27 members has made the criteria tougher for new member states to meet themselves. Ultimately, the European Council has the ability to reform the criteria without a formal treaty change. The Council should do so, the author argues, and allow for more meaningful benchmarks for all future euro-area applicants

    Exchange Rate Policy and Economic Growth after the Financial Crisis in Central and Eastern Europe

    No full text
    In a paper on the effects of the global financial crisis in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), the author reacts to a paper of Åslund (2011) published in the same issue of Eurasian Geography and Economics on the influence of exchange rate policies on the region’s recovery. The author argues that post-crisis corrections in current account deficits in CEE countries do not in themselves signal a return to steady economic growth. Disagreeing with Åslund over the role of loose monetary policy in fostering the region’s economic problems, he outlines a number of competitiveness problems that remain to be addressed in the 10 new EU member states of CEE, along with improvements in framework conditions supporting future macroeconomic growth

    Avoiding a new European divide. Bruegel Policy Brief 2008/10, December 2008

    No full text
    The financial crisis, which is now hitting the new member states severely, highlights the shortcomings of the existing institutional architecture in Europe. Current strains reflect a revaluation of risks but they also result from policy mistakes. For many years, growth in the new member states has relied on massive inflows of foreign capital that are now being called into question. Some of the non euro-area new member states suffer from serious vulnerabilities, to which policy has been slow to respond. Crisis management in the euro area has also had the unintended consequence of putting non euro-area new member states at a disadvantage. These are unhealthy developments and without decisive action, a new political and economic divide within Europe may emerge

    Fiscal federalism in crisis: lessons for Europe from the US. Bruegel Policy Contribution 2010/07, July 2010

    No full text
    Drawing comparisons between the fiscal situation in the US and the European Union, Bruegel Research Fellow Zsolt Darvas answers three questions in this Policy Contribution- Why has the euro been hit so hard? How would a more federal European fiscal union closer to the US model have helped? How do the euro area’s fiscal architecture reform plans stand up in light of the US example? The author analyses why current fiscal reform proposals if implemented will result in improvements but implementation could be deficient or lack credibility and can lead to disputes and carry political risk

    The small mirror of Hungarian literature

    No full text
    Title: A magyar irodalom kis-tükre (The small mirror of Hungarian literature) Originally published: Budapest, Athenaeum, 1896 Language: Hungarian The excerpts used are from A magyar irodalom kis-tükre, (Budapest: Athenaeum, n.d. [1930]), (seventh edition), Introduction, pp. 4–9. About the author Zsolt Beöthy [1848, Buda – 1922, Budapest]: writer, literary historian. He stemmed from a Protestant gentry family, his father was Zsigmond Beöthy, prominent writer, jurist and politician. He studied ..

    False answers in Hungarian agriculture after accession to European Union

    No full text
    The research based on primary data examines the answers given by Hungarian farms to the challenges of the changing economic environment following the accession to the European Union. The experience shows that the Hungarian farms have given basically false answers to the changing economic relation system. The subsidies have emerged on the market as "visible hands" and by allowing their impact which distorted the economic rationality, the basic economic aspects of production have been ignored. In the near future it will be especially important to liquidate this abnormal situation. This step will definitely indicate the demand to separate the social and producing agriculture, providing ground for the spreading of farmers’ cooperation.competitiveness, cooperation, subsidies, Agricultural and Food Policy, Farm Management,

    The metamorphosis of the communist party: from entity to system and from system towards an entity

    No full text
    A complex analytical framework, the Interactive Party state model (IPS), is offered for revealing the structural and dynamic background of opposite processes: first, the development of the communist party as a political entity into a politically monopolized regime and then to a social system; second, the retreat of the party as a social system towards a politically monopolized regime or a political entity during the process of transformation into another system. We shall point to the fact that it is the structural background of the differences of the transformation process that brings about the different sequence of the retreat of the party as a social system from economic or political sub-fields first. The different sequence will be accompanied by different economic conditions for political transformation contributing to the complete or partial retreat of the party to either a political entity or to an authoritarian political regime.party-state systems, social system evolution, differences among partystates, varieties of capitalism, path-dependencies in system transformation

    THE MUSICALITY OF STYLE – LÁSZLÓFFY ZSOLT’S ESSAYS ON MUSIC (LÁSZLÓFFY ZSOLT: A STÍLUS ZENEISÉGE. PARTIUM KIADÓ, NAGYVÁRAD, 2014)

    No full text
    As a representative of the Transylvanian composers’ younger generation, Zsolt Lászlóffy marks out not only by his exciting works and intense performing activities, but also through his writings. Behind his versatile output lays a keen commitment toward the Hungarian culture of his native land, that of protecting and promoting - as a musician - our cultural heritage. Through this new opus the readers are invited to discover, along with the author, another field of his musical adventures, sounding experiences and exciting wanderings in style and aesthetics

    THE MUSICALITY OF STYLE – LÁSZLÓFFY ZSOLT’S ESSAYS ON MUSIC (LÁSZLÓFFY ZSOLT: A STÍLUS ZENEISÉGE. PARTIUM KIADÓ, NAGYVÁRAD, 2014)

    No full text
    As a representative of the Transylvanian composers’ younger generation, Zsolt Lászlóffy marks out not only by his exciting works and intense performing activities, but also through his writings. Behind his versatile output lays a keen commitment toward the Hungarian culture of his native land, that of protecting and promoting - as a musician - our cultural heritage. Through this new opus the readers are invited to discover, along with the author, another field of his musical adventures, sounding experiences and exciting wanderings in style and aesthetics
    corecore