Publication | Closed Access
The Political Economy of Crisis Management in East–Central European Countries
56
Citations
5
References
2013
Year
Fiscal IssueCrisis ManagementEconomic CrisisPolitical BehaviorInternational Financial CrisisEconomic InstitutionsSocial SciencesGovernment SpendingPolitical EconomyInternational RedistributionLogical RequirementsTax PolicyFiscal PolicyPolitical PartiesEconomicsPublic PolicyEast European CountriesPolitical Budget CyclePolitical RiskPolicy StudiesPublic FinanceMacroeconomicsEconomic PolicyPublic EconomicsBusinessFiscal StimulusSocial PolicyCurrency CrisisPolitical Science
The financial and economic crisis in the Central and East European countries raised the profile of economic policy themes that relate to the role of taxation and state spending. The key policy differences related to public budgets and support for a demand stimulus. Responses fall broadly into two categories that we link to a social-democratic and a neo-liberal response. The distinction indicates that the policy responses were linked to the party affiliation of the government on the left–right spectrum. There were some remarkable common trends that cannot be explained by the logical requirements of the economic situation alone. There are differences in timing and in severity, but every country has at some point moved towards a policy of balancing the budget by making cuts. In all cases there were cuts in benefits for marginal groups in society and a switch towards indirect rather than direct taxes. These carry clear distributional implications.
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