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Markets and networks in Romania - life after disorganisation

Author

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  • Geomina Turlea

    (Institute for World Economy, Bucharest Romanian Centre for Economic Modeling)

  • Cezar Mereuta

    (Centre for Management and Technological Transfer, Bucharest Romanian Centre for Economic Modeling)

Abstract

The level of development of Romania is at the moment somewhere in between the one of the fast reforming economies in central Europe and the late reformers in the ex-USSR. Behind this statement however, one can find an uneven growth process, with multi-dimensional distortions and pronounced polarisation. The overall underdevelopment when comparing Romania with Central Europe is the statistical result of a melange of highly efficient performers on one hand and loss-making, strongly resisting to restructuring, economic agents on the other hand, acting together in an unfriendly and unpredictable business environment. There is no doubt that a mix of legal, institutional and political factors, as well as social and cultural ones, contributed to this outcome. In this paper we attempt looking at some aspects of industrial networks integration during transition. Our hypothesis is that, after a stage that could be better characterised, for reasons that will be outlined further, as an incomplete Blanchard disorganisation, the growth of private sector did not compensated for the decline in state sector output. Various constraints and modifications of behavioural characteristics of economic agents affect its potential growth. A stance that reflects a permanent and complex effort of adaptation to pronounced incertitude, and that we call systemic unrest. The main consequence is that the economy is evolving as a chaotic system. Both vertical and horizontal links between economic agents are established under a high moral hazard in an uncertain environment. Due to the implied significant instability of those links, the formation and alignment networks, as it is described by the western literature, is only emerging.

Suggested Citation

  • Geomina Turlea & Cezar Mereuta, 2002. "Markets and networks in Romania - life after disorganisation," UCL SSEES Economics and Business working paper series 15, UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES).
  • Handle: RePEc:see:wpaper:15
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Andreea Vass, 2005. "Romania and the trade and the development approaches to CEE convergence with the EU, under the competitive pressures of integration," IWE Working Papers 151, Institute for World Economics - Centre for Economic and Regional Studies.

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