The promise of former eastern-bloc economies is mostly unfulfilled
But those that joined the EU have done much better than the rest
WHETHER OR NOT Vladimir Putin sends Russian troops into Ukraine, increasingly icy relations between East and West may signal a coda to the era of increasing global economic integration which began with the collapse of communism. In the mid-1980s scarcely a quarter of the world’s population lived in economies which could be considered open to foreign trade and capital flows, according to an estimate published in 1995 by Jeffrey Sachs, Andrew Warner, Anders Aslund and Stanley Fischer. Less than a decade later, the figure had jumped above 50%, and a three-decade burst of rapid globalisation was under way.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “The curtain falls”
Finance & economics February 12th 2022
- Is the modern, bank-light financial system better than the old one?
- Who buys the dirty energy assets public companies no longer want?
- How unlisted startups’ valuations will adjust to falling share prices
- Asia is not feeling the same price pressures as the West
- China does not always collect its debts on time
- The promise of former eastern-bloc economies is mostly unfulfilled
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