K42 - Illegal Behavior and the Enforcement of LawNávrat zpět

Výsledky 1 až 3 z 3:

Obchodování s deriváty a pokoutní bankéři - ohlédnutí za finančním trhem v meziválečném Československu

Derivatives and Bucketshops: A Forgotten History of Czech Financial Markets between the World Wars

Jan Vlachý

Politická ekonomie 2011, 59(2):205-223 | DOI: 10.18267/j.polek.781

Building upon exhaustive research of extant and often fragmentary contemporary resources, this paper provides a thorough analysis of financial options trading and sales in interwar Czechoslovakia. Whilst focusing primarily on a remarkable bucketshop episode occuring in the late twenties and early thirties, it also comprises the so far most comprehensive study on the historical development and practices of derivatives trading on the Prague Exchange including the eminent role of private banking firms. A distinct intertemporal and international perspective facilitates the establishment of numerous parallels and patterns, strikingly instructive in times of crises.

Předem odsouzeno k neúspěchu: měření šedé ekonomiky tranzitivních zemí pomocí makroekonomických metod

Mission impossible: measuring the informal sector in a transition economy using macro methods

Jan Hanousek, Filip Palda

Politická ekonomie 2006, 54(2):190-203 | DOI: 10.18267/j.polek.552

An easy and popular method for measuring the size of the underground economy is to use macro-data such as money demand or electricity demand to infer what the legitimate economy needs, and then to attribute the remaining consumption to the underground economy. Such inferences rely on the stability of parameters of the demand equations, or at very least on knowledge of how these parameters are changing. We show that the pace of change of these parameters (such as velocity) is too variable in transition economies for the above methods of estimating the size of the underground economy to be applicable.

Budování institucí v České republice

Building institutions for the Czech Republic

Jiří Havel

Politická ekonomie 2004, 52(6) | DOI: 10.18267/j.polek.486

Badly defined institutional framework caused many problems of the Czech transition. Designers of the economic reform did not respect the importance of precisely functioning market institutions. No doubts that building institutions supports the functioning of markets. The article analyses why Czech economists and politicians did not understand the problem in the beginning and how they attempted to correct this initial mistake. The Czech (Slovak) economy was in a worse situation if compared with other central European countries because any private sector did not exist there before 1990. Both formal and informal institutions were built here in the green field. After politically sensitive problems with financial crime the building of institutions was accelerated in late 1990s. The process of re-building Czech market institutions continues within EU now.