Public and Private Enterprise in Mixed Economies

Public and Private Enterprise in Mixed Economies
Author: Wolfgang Friedmann
Publisher: London : Stevens
Total Pages: 430
Release: 1974
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Monograph on the legal aspects and legal status of private enterprise and public enterprise in mixed economies - deals with problems regarding competition and monopoly, etc., and includes a comparison of the situation in France, Italy, Nigeria, Turkey, the UK and the USA. References.

The Public Sector in the Mixed Economy

The Public Sector in the Mixed Economy
Author: Merlyn Rees
Publisher: London : Batsford
Total Pages: 248
Release: 1973
Genre: Corporations, Government
ISBN:

Textbook presenting a comprehensive survey and critical analysis of the real extent and actual workings of the public sector in the presentday mixed economy system of the UK - describes the economic system, the activities of central government and local government, public expenditure in the private sector, public enterprises, the extent of public shareholding (shareholder), etc., and discusses government policy trends. References and statistical tables.

Public Enterprise in Mixed Economies

Public Enterprise in Mixed Economies
Author: Mr.Robert H. Floyd
Publisher: International Monetary Fund
Total Pages: 220
Release: 1984-09-15
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780939934300

This volume, written by Robert H. Floyd, Clive S. Gray, and R.P. Short, contains three papers dealing with various aspects of the public enterprise sector and the impact that these may have on macroeconomic analysis.

India, Mixed Enterprise and Western Business

India, Mixed Enterprise and Western Business
Author: Daniel L. Spencer
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9401507139

This book is a study of one type of relation between public authorities and the private sector. In the modern world it is becoming increasingly clear that these two ways of organizing economic life must learn to get along with each other and develop vehicles of mutual advantage. This is especially true in the re lations between advanced and developing economies because for historical reasons, the development of non-Western economies today is taking a course quite different from the path of the advanced business economies of the West. It is desirable for both spheres to try and understand each other and look for ways of getting along. International tensions can be alleviated to the degree that positive attitudes are taken and mechanisms of the kind dealt with in this book are created. Much of the problem is simply one of semantics. The term "socialism" or "socialistic pattern of society", for example, which is often used in India as a positive word has very negative conno tations for Americans. There are, of course, socialists in India who would make their economy entirely publicly owned, indis tinguishable from the Chinese or the Russian, but the vast majority of leaders associated with the dominant party in India visualize a present and future mixed economy not too different from that reached by the United States through a very different road. We in the United States have been nurtured on the belief in private enterprise.