The Ukrainian Economy Since IndependenceDespite the fact that Western governments have provided Ukraine with over $10 billion in foreign aid, little is known of Ukraine's economy since it declared independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. In this book, Professor Banaian describes the halting steps towards transition that Ukraine has taken and analyses their effects. Ukraine is an example of how slow or gradual reform was attempted and stopped. The author argues that this has been the result of several political and economic factors, and that the resulting 'arrested transition' may continue indefinitely. Backed by extensive econometric analysis, the book provides insight into its hyperinflationary experience, the causes of continued economic contraction, Ukraine's experience with exchange rate regime changes, its large underground economy and the prospects for long run growth. The Ukrainian Economy since Independence will be of interest to scholars of the economics and political science of transition as well as policymakers in the area. |
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Page 44
... Prime Minister Leonid Kuchma and Vice Prime Minister for Reforms Viktor Pynzenyk clearly understood the nature of the problem and began to reform these policies in early 1993. A budget was introduced and passed in April 1993 which ...
... Prime Minister Leonid Kuchma and Vice Prime Minister for Reforms Viktor Pynzenyk clearly understood the nature of the problem and began to reform these policies in early 1993. A budget was introduced and passed in April 1993 which ...
Page 84
... prime minister . He was placed in charge of an anticrime campaign which drove most of the corrupt holdovers of the Kravchuk era into the private sector . While not an economic reformer like Kuchma's old deputy prime minister Pynzenyk ...
... prime minister . He was placed in charge of an anticrime campaign which drove most of the corrupt holdovers of the Kravchuk era into the private sector . While not an economic reformer like Kuchma's old deputy prime minister Pynzenyk ...
Page 121
... prime minister . Officially Marchuk was fired because he had retained his seat in the Rada at the same time ; this ... prime minister's resignation was an economic question , not a political one , " stated Volodymyr Horobulin , head of ...
... prime minister . Officially Marchuk was fired because he had retained his seat in the Rada at the same time ; this ... prime minister's resignation was an economic question , not a political one , " stated Volodymyr Horobulin , head of ...
Contents
Figures | 10 |
The Hyperinflation Process | 28 |
Reform and Power | 56 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
agricultural amount argue Banaian Bank of Ukraine Belarus billion bribes budget deficit Burdekin Burmeister and Wall cash cent of GDP central bank clans coal Cobb-Douglas commercial banks Communist corruption countries decline deposits Dnipropetrovsk dollars Donbas Donetsk Economic Review elections enterprises equation estimates exchange rate expected export Figure financing firms foreign currency Gosbank growth rate hryvnia hyperinflation income increase independence industry inflation rate International Monetary Fund Kalman filter karbovanets Kravchuk Kuchma Kuzio Kyiv Lazarenko loans long-run macroeconomic Marchuk Market Economies money demand Moroz National Bank output parliament Party political privatization production function Pynzenyk Rada real interest rate republics reserve requirements ruble Rukh Russia sector seigniorage seigniorage revenues share of GDP Source Soviet Union stabilization subsidies Table target zone tax revenues trade transition economies Ukraine's Ukrainian USSR vote wage western workers World