Central, Eastern, and South-Eastern Europe: Safeguarding the Recovery as the Global Liquidity Tide Recedes
Growth is gathering momentum in most of Central, Eastern, and South-Eastern Europe (CESEE) in the wake of the recovery in the euro area. Excluding the largest economies—Russia and Turkey—the IMF’s latest Regional Economic Issues report projects t...
Financial Stress and the Economic Sensitivity Forecasts
About a year and a half ago CASE launched a project to compile the Financial Stress Index (FSI) and the Economic Sensitivity Index (ESI). The aim...
What have we learned from transitions in Europe and the CIS and do they matter for the Arab Regio...
“At the beginning of 2014, more than three years after the start of the political uprising against the authoritarian regimes in the Arab world call...
The consequences of the unconventional monetary policy: what central banks do not take into account?
„In 2009, the world economy contracted for the first time since the end of the World War II. It was a result of an unexpected by the majority of e...
Employee financial participation in businesses: Is it worth discussing?
During the systemic transformation of the Polish economy in the late 980s and early 990s, a keen interest arose in various forms of participation...
Macroeconomic and fiscal challenges faced by the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean region
The current fiscal imbalances and fragilities in the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean countries (SEMC) are the result of decades of instability,...
Crisis Management and the Changing Role of the State – 2nd Central European PhD Workshop in Hunga...
An increasing role of state operations in the economy has been generally perceived as a response to the financial crisis. Yet, in many countries, i...