The paper focuses on selected legal aspects related to taking land out of agricultural or forestry production in order to extract minerals. It presents regulations pertaining to the discussed subject and is an attempt at answering questions about: defining the moment when a decision on permitting the taking of land out of production is required, determining when the taking of land is permanent and when it is temporary, and specifying the area of land that is to be taken out of production.
In this paper, we consider identifying features of sectoral structuring within the national economy that has definite foreign trade product specialization. Examination of the sector-specific division methodology enabled identification of its strong association with certain sector dominance in the economy. It is against this background that we offer an explanation for the delay in transferring from the post-Soviet to the applicable international classification of economic structure elements in Russia and Belarus. We perform analysis of the three-component P-S-T model (primary, secondary, tertiary sector) using statistical and econometric methods and define properties of the sectoral shares dynamics in national economies of oil and gas producing countries. Analysis of the Russian and Norwegian economies’ intersectoral changes suggests that it is necessary for the government to develop and implement selective structural policy to overcome the existing structural disproportions.
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.