National Accounts Statistics

National Accounts Statistics
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 964
Release: 2008
Genre: Income
ISBN:

Provides estimates for countries with market economies on gross domestic product expenditures and receipts, production, income and outlay, capital accumulation and capital finance accounts for government, corporations, households, and private, non-profit institutions. Also includes production by sector. For centrally planned economies includes net material product, primary incomes, capital formation and consumption for a range of years (1970-1985).

Hungary

Hungary
Author:
Publisher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 196
Release: 1995-01-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780821334416

Annotation Addresses the challenge Hungary faces in overcoming threatening deficits in its current and fiscal accounts without hampering economic growth. The Hungarian economy is emerging from a severe four-year recession with positive developments on numerous economic fronts, but with major weaknesses remaining because of large current and fiscal account deficits. This book addresses the challenge Hungary faces in overcoming these deficits without hampering economic growth. The report examines the country's macroeconomic performance in the first half of the 1990s and the stabilization package launched in March 1995. It explores the structure of fiscal revenues, pension reform, and enterprise and banking reforms. The study also looks at the impact of structural reforms on future economic growth and at Hungary's bid to integrate with the European Union.

The Accounts of Nations

The Accounts of Nations
Author: Zoltan Kenessey
Publisher: IOS Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1994
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9789051991567

National income and products estimates are used extensively worldwide. During the 1950's P. Studenski's work `The Income of Nations' became a classic on the topic. With more extensive compilations, more sophisticated applications, the results and methodology and far reaching international agreements, the international comparability in accounts is now insured. This volume supplements the earlier research in national accounting with a historical overview that shows the development in national income and product accounts. Readers: researchers and professionals in economy, statistics and accounting.

Highway and Byways

Highway and Byways
Author: János Kornai
Publisher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1995
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780262111980

Hungarian economist Janos Kornai first used the metaphor of a single path to postsocialist transition in his earlier book, The Road to a Free Economy. The new metaphor that frames this collection of eight recent studies reflects a broader perspective and understanding of the complexities of transition: every highway and byway leads eventually to capitalism, Kornai observes, but to what kind, how fast, and at what cost? Who wins and who loses? Kornai draws from his experiences of Hungarian reform as well as from countries of the former Soviet Union to make several major points. The first three studies describe what went wrong in countries that tried to mix elements of planned and market economies. Efforts made by communist countries to introduce market socialism (the "middle road") contained an inherent contradiction between the logic of socialism and the logic of a free enterprise system, and were doomed to failure. In the studies that follow, Kornai analyzes the on-going dilemmas. The transition from communism to free enterprise is filled with daunting hurdles; it requires no less than redefining ownership, changing values concerning the distribution of wealth, transferring the control of political power, creating financial institutions and enforcing financial discipline, and making deep economic sacrifice. Kornai closes with an overall survey of postsocialist transition, describing the stages that countries tend to go through, that will be particularly useful to scholars of comparative economic systems.