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2008 | 55 | 2 | 149-168

Article title

The rise and fall of Hungary - the Britain of East-Central Europe

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

HU

Abstracts

EN
Hungary, once the best-performing socialist country and a leader in the 1990s, now has a rate of economic growth slower than that of the other countries in the region. The present overweight, overspending state and the returning disequilibria derive from the softer dictatorship of the Kádár period, which instated a 'quasi-welfare state' to boost its legitimacy. Maintaining this on a macro level has softened the country's budget constraint and led to indebtedness. This uncovered 'welfare policy' has survived in a mutant form under democratic conditions and become one of the main causes of today's woes. While the micro-level budget constraints of companies have hardened, soft democracy has allowed the macroeconomic budget constraint on the state to remain soft. The two Hungarian characteristics of a state overweight for decades and the continuity of the process of systemic change have between them turned Hungary into a textbook example of the decline of a society ruled by Olson interest groups.

Year

Volume

55

Issue

2

Pages

149-168

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

  • Zsolt Murakozy, no address given, contact the journal editor

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
10HUAAAA07868

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.51bdc8d1-dfa7-35c4-826e-fa4aedddf8e8
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