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PAUL MARER (Curriculum Vitae, August 2016)
CONTACT INFORMATION
Email: paul.marer@gmail.com
Current residence: Budapest, Hungary
Mobile: (36) 20-48-29-198
PERSONAL
Place of birth: Budapest, Hungary.
Citizenship: U.S. (1961) and Hungarian (reclaimed in 2000)
EDUCATION
1968 University of Pennsylvania, Ph.D. in Economics
1962 University of Pennsylvania, M.A. in Economics
1961 Florida Southern College, B.A. in Economics and Accounting
FULL-TIME POSITIONS
CEU Business School, Budapest
As of August 1, 2016: Emeritus Professor of Business
2009- 2016 Professor of Business, Coordinator, Academic Outreach
2006-2008 Professor and Associate Dean for Academics
2000-2004 Professor and Academic Director
China Europe International Business School, Shanghai, China
2004 (Sept-Dec) and 2006 (Nov-Dec) Visiting Professor of International Business
University of Trento, Trento, Italy
20005 (April-July) Visiting Professor of International Business
Indiana University
1981-2000 Professor of International Business, Kelley School of Business
1981 and 1983-84 Chairperson of the International Business Department
1979-2000 Professor of Central Eurasian (formerly, Uralic and Altaic) Department
(concurrently with full-time Business position)
1975-1981 Associate Professor of International Business
1971-1975 Senior Research Associate, International Development Institute and
Visiting Associate Professor of Economics
City University of New York
1968-1971 Assistant Professor of Economics, Lehman College
1965-1968 Lecturer (part time)
Columbia University
1965-1968 Research Economist, Project on National Income in East Central Europe
(full time), 1969-70 (part-time)
Philadelphia Bulletin
1964-1965, Assistant to the Financial Editor & syndicated columnist, J. A. Livingston
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Detailed CV - C o n t e n t s
Personal, Education, Current and Previous Fulltime Positions ………………………………….. 1
Background and Career Highlights ………………………………………………………………. 3
Professional Societies ......................................................................................................................4
Distinctions ......................................................................................................................................4
National Service in the USA ……………………………………………………………………. 5
Research Consultancies ...................................................................................................................6
World Bank ................................................................................................................. 6
International Monetary Fund ...................................................................................... 7
OECD ........................................................................................................................ 7
United Nations ..............................................................................................................7
Hudson Institute .......................................................................................................... 7
U.S. Department of Commerce..…………................................................................................... 8
USAID ..................................................................................................................... 8
Other professional consultancies ………………………………………………….. 8
Research Grants ………….............................................................................................................. 8
International Experience..................................................................................................................10
Publications ................................................................................................................................... 11
Books, Monographs and Similar Works .................................................................... 11
Major Reports ……. ................................................................................................ 14
Cases …………………………………………………………………………………15
Articles and Chapters ................................................................................................. 16
Book Reviews in ........................................................................................................ 27
Manuscript Reviewer for ……….............................................................................. 29
Other Publications .................................................................................................... 29
3
Background and Career Highlights
Background
 Born in Hungary, immigrated to the USA in 1956. US citizen since 1961; dual
US/Hungarian citizen since 2000.
 M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania, concentrating on economics
and business.
Career Highlights
 Professor, Business School of Central European University (CEU), Budapest; Academic
Director (2000-2004; Associate Dean for Academics (2006-2008); Professor and
Coordinator, Academic Outreach (2009 - 2016). Elected member of the CEU Senate. As of
August 2016: Emeritus Professor
 Visiting Professor of International Business, China Europe International Business School
(CEIBS), Shanghai, 2004 and 2006 (fall semesters).
 Visiting Professor, University of Trento, Trento, Italy (2005).
 Twenty-five years at the Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business (1975-2000),
promoted to full professor of international business.
 Appointed by President George Bush in 1990, re-appointed by President Clinton in 1996
and by George W. Bush in 2001, to the Board of Trustees of the Hungarian-American
Enterprise Fund. The Fund invests and monitors – like a private venture capitalist – the $78
million the U.S. gave to Hungary to promote private enterprise. Member, Audit Committee
(1990-2006), when the Fund, mission accomplished, went out of business.
 Served as principal architect and co-director of the Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon
Commission, a multi-year effort during 1989-90 to blueprint Hungary’s transformation to a
market economy. Recruited and managed 100 experts from 11 countries and raised $1
million, working with Hudson Institute, Indianapolis, as a Senior Adjunct Fellow.
 Repeated invited testimony before Congressional committees. During the 1970s and 1980s,
briefed members of the US House and Senate and newly-appointed Briefing members of
the U.S. House and Senate and newly-appointed US ambassadors to the countries of Central
and Eastern Europe.
 Consulting experience with the IMF, the World Bank, the UN, the OECD, USAID, Eli
Lilly, Cummins Engine Co., and other firms.
 Appointed by U.S. Secretary of Commerce to Advisory Board on East-West Trade.
 Wrote or edited 24 books and more than 150 articles, chapters, and reports, mainly on the
changing political, economic and business situation in Hungary, the other countries of
Central and Eastern Europe, Russia and China. Currently working on linking
Csikszentmihalyi’s famous theory of Flow with leadership practice.
 Honorary doctorate from the Budapest University of Economic Sciences (renamed Corvinus
University), 1999.
4
PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES
Academy of International Business
Association for Comparative Economic Studies
American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies
DISTINCTIONS
Invited member: Hungarian Accreditation Agency (Magyar Akkreditacios Bizottsag),
2014-2015
Editor for North America, Economic Policy in Transition Economies (1998-2000).
Business Alumni Achievement (Distinguished Graduate) Award, Florida Southern
College (1998).
Fulbright Scholar (Hungary 1997; Poland 1979)
Member, Board of Trustees, Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund (appointed by
President Bush, reappointed by President Clinton and then by George W. Bush)
1990-2006
Chairperson, Accreditation Committee, Budapest University of Economic Sciences
(renamed Corvinus University), 1997-1998
Senior Adjunct Fellow, Hudson Institute, Indianapolis, 1989-1992
Fellow, Indiana Center for Global Business, Kelley School of Business, Indiana
University, 1989-1997
IREX, grant award (1997); member, selection committee (1998-2000).
The W. George Pinnell Award for Outstanding Service to Indiana University 1994.
Distinguished Service Award of Indiana University, 1993.
Indiana University's John Ryan Award for Distinguished Contributions to
International Programs and Studies, 1992.
Member, Board of Trustees, The National Council for Soviet and East European
Research (nominated by the President of Indiana University), 1983-86.
Executive Committee, Association for Comparative Economic Studies 1981-82.
Board of Editors, Journal of Comparative Economics (1990-93); Journal of East-
West Business (1994-96).
American Council of Learned Societies, grant award, 1971-72, 1979, 1980.
National Council for Soviet and East European Research, grant award, 1989-90.
American Council of Learned Societies, Joint Committee on Eastern Europe,
member, 1974-77.
Advisory Committee on East-West Trade, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1974-75.
Danforth Fellow, 1961-65.
Omicron Delta Kappa.
5
NATIONAL SERVICE IN THE USA
(1) Member of the Board of Trustees of the Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund (1990-2006).
Board members volunteer their time.
(2) Principal architect and Co-Director. Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon
Commission. This was a one-year effort during 1989-90, while on leave from Indiana
University, to design a comprehensive economic transformation program for Hungary.
Approximately 100 experts from eleven countries were recruited to participate in the
project. Had a similar role in Blue Ribbon Commission-2 (1991-95), which commissioned
and debated studies on economic policy issues facing Hungary in its transformation to a
market economy. A volunteer position that had involved considerable work during 1989-
95.
(3) Faculty presenter and resource person, orientation for MBA Enterprise Corps (1992 and
1994). The MBA Enterprise Corps selects 50 to 100 outstanding MBA graduates a year
from a consortium of 16 leading business schools to serve for a year as consultants to
privatized firms in the transition economies of Central and Eastern Europe and the NIS.
(4) Invited presenter and resource person at Aspen Institute conferences for members of the
U.S. Senate and House, and European parliamentarians, on developments in, and U.S.
relations with, Central and Eastern Europe and the USSR/Russia: Vienna, August 1992 and
Prague, August 1990.
(5) Member, Board of Trustees (1983-86), the National Council for Soviet and East European
Research. The Council is a national organization that provides competitive research grants
to scholars. Approximately 100 grant applications were evaluated each year. Member,
IREX Selection Committee (1998-2001). Approximately 100 grant applications are
evaluated each year.
(6) Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress. Contributor to and advisory board member of
the triennial volumes of expert studies on the economies of Central and Eastern Europe
(1974, 1977, 1980-81, 1985, 1988-89, 1994).
(7) U.S. Department of State: briefing new U.S. ambassadors to the Central and East European
countries. Occasional lectures at the Foreign Service Institute; participant at conferences
(1980-95).
(8) Invited Testimony before Congressional Committees
1985:House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on Europe & Middle East.
Topic: USSR economic relations with Eastern Europe and U.S. foreign policy.
1983:House Committee on Ways and Means, Subcommittee on Trade.
Topic: Dumping laws on products imported from non-market-economy
countries.
6
1978:House International Relations Committee, Subcommittee, Europe & Middle East.
Topic: The economic situation in Eastern Europe and U.S. foreign policy.
1976:Senate Committee on Commerce.
Topic: American role in East-West trade.
1975:House Ways and Means Committee, Subcommittee on Trade.
Topic: Granting MFN status to Romania.
1970:Joint Economic Committee, Subcommittee on Foreign Economic Policy.
Topic: East-West trade
(9) Evaluating project proposals for the U.S. National Research Council, the Ford Foundation,
the German Marshall Fund, the Canada Foundation, the Social Science and Humanities
Research Council of Canada, and other organizations (1976-1997).
(10) Presenter at East-West trade conferences organized by the Department of Commerce for
academic, business and government participants (1974-85).
(11) Member, American Council of Learned Societies, Joint Committee on Eastern Europe,
1974-77. National grant competition in research focusing on Eastern Europe.
(12) Appointed by Secretary of Commerce to Advisory Board on East-West Trade (only
academic member) (1973-74).
RESEARCH CONSULTANCIES
World Bank
(1) Invited presenter to the staff of the Foreign Investment Advisory Service (FIAS) in
Washington D.C.; participant in a conference organized by FIAS in Paris on Foreign Direct
Investment in Central and Eastern Europe (1994).
(2) Socio-Economic Data Division and Transition Economies Division: coordinator of their
joint project to prepare a Guidebook to Economic Statistics of the Historically Planned
Economies (1990-92). Senior author of the resulting World Bank publication, 2nd
ed.
(3) Socio-Economic Data Division: Statistical research on transition economies (1989-92).
(4) Country Programs Department, Europe, Middle East and North Africa Region: consultant
on Hungary and member of a mission to the country (1983-84).
(5) Economic Analysis and Projections Department: helped organize, coordinate, and serve as
principal investigator of an 11-person project to evaluate and estimate the national accounts
of eight centrally planned economies (USSR, Eastern Europe and Cuba), 1981-83. (Much of
the work was done during a year's research leave from Indiana University). Single author of
the resulting World Bank hard-cover book, Dollar GNPs of the USSR and Eastern Europe.
(6) The World Development Report Core Group: prepared a background study on the role of
the USSR and East Europe in the world economy (1980-81).
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(7) Economic Development Institute: participated as a presenter on economic reforms in
Eastern Europe, in the National Economic Management course for Chinese managers and
officials, Shanghai, March 1980 and April 1981.
International Monetary Fund
Consultant on Hungary, June-September 1982, Washington D.C. (on leave from Indiana University).
OECD
(1) Helped plan and organize, wrote the background paper, served as rapporteur, and prepared
the final report of an international conference in Paris on Trade Relations with Countries in
Transition: Separating Fact from Fiction (1994-95).
(2) External Examiner of OECD team to assess Hungary's science, technology, and innovation
policies (1991-92).
(3) Helped organize, served as rapporteur, and edited the proceedings of an international
conference on Transition to a Market Economy in Central and Eastern Europe (1990-91).
(4) Project to evaluate the impact of the transfer of Western technology to the East European
countries (1981-84).
United Nations
(1) UNCTAD: instructor and resource person, orientation program for UNCTAD personnel
assigned to the countries of Central and Eastern Europe and the NIS: Berlin, 1993.
(2) Secretariat, Economic Commission for Europe: prepared study of the East-West trade of the
U.S. (1 983).
(3) UNCTAD: prepared study on tripartite industrial cooperation, focusing on joint projects
involving U.S., centrally planned economies, and developing countries (1975).
Hudson Institute
(1) Senior Adjunct Fellow and Member, Advisory Council to the Institute's Center for Central
European and Eurasian Studies, 1987-1992. Hudson served as US secretariat of the joint
Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission (see National Service, item 2).
(2) Co-author of Hudson Institute study, The Substitutability of Eastern Europe's Trade with
Other Soviet Bloc Countries and with the West (1988).
Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates: PlanEcon Research Reports; and Economist Intelligence
Unit - Business International
Occasional contributor to their current news analysis on centrally planned and transition
economies and occasional presenter at annual world economic survey conferences.
8
U. S. Department of Commerce
Initiated and coordinated several research projects for the Department's former Bureau of
East-West Trade, the largest being a comprehensive survey of 110 U.S. corporations
implementing or negotiating industrial cooperation agreements in Eastern Europe and the
USSR (1973-76).
Advisory Committee on East-West Trade (1974-77).
USAID
Co-author, Twenty Years of USAID Economic Growth Assistance in Europe and Eurasia
(Washington D.C.: USAID, 2013.
Principal investigator in $5 million project grant to Indiana University to help establish
comprehensive business education programs at the Management Development Center of the
Budapest University of Economic Sciences (renamed Corvinus University), 1995-1999.
Organizational contributor and keynote speaker at USAID, East Europe Bureau’s Annual
Regional Conferences on Competitiveness and Economic Growth, Kiev, Ukraine, June
2009; Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, June, 2010; Budapest, May 2011.
Other Professional Consultations (1980-2000)
Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE)
Dow Europe
Council on Foreign Relations
Eli Lilly & Co.
Multinational Strategies, Inc.
Frost & Sullivan (Country Risk Service)
Chemical Bank of New York
Continental Illinois Bank
Manufacturers Hanover Trust
Cummins Engine
Stanford Research Institute
RESEARCH GRANTS (SINGLE OR SHARED RESPONSIBILITY)
Total grants obtained during 1973-1997 for which I had principal or co-responsibility:$1.5 million.
(1) Kelley School of Business, Indiana University, Competitive Summer Research Grant, 1999.
(2) Indiana University Graduate School, Summer Faculty Fellowship, 1998.
(3) IREX and Fulbright Scholar Awards to East and West Europe 1997 (travel).
(4) CIBER Summer Research Award, 1996.
(5) To support the work of the first and second joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon
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Commission (working with Hudson Institute, East-West Forum, Nomura Research Institute,
the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Budapest University of Economics), jointly
raising approximately $1 million for BRC-1 and BRC-2 (1989-94).
(6) To establish (in cooperation with Indiana University's Polish Studies Center and School of
Business) a Young Professionals Abroad Program to teach "Culture and Entrepreneurship"
and other courses at the American Studies Center, Warsaw University, Poland: $50,000
from USIA (1993-95).
(7) IU School of Business CIBER travel/research grant of $2,000 to prepare case study of
General Electric's manufacturing operations in Hungary (1994).
(8) To organize and hold in Bloomington the Eleventh U.S.-Hungarian Economic Roundtable,
in 1987 ($12,000).
(9) To organize and hold an Indiana University-sponsored international conference on the
Polish economy and debt, at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., 1985 ($8,000).
(10) To assess the basic economic statistics of eight centrally planned economies with the help of
a team of experts and to hold two workshops at the World Bank, 1981-82 ($110,000).
(11) To help assess the impact of Western technology on Hungary, as part of a comprehensive
OECD project on East-West technology transfer, 1981-84 ($9,600).
(12) To organize U.S. participation in a joint Indiana University School of Business and
University of Tilburg conference on East-West economic relations, held in Tilburg, The
Netherlands, in 1983 ($2,000).
(13) To organize in Bloomington a Midwest seminar on centrally planned economies, in 1982
($5,000).
(14) To hold an international conference in Bloomington on the Hungarian economy and East-
West commercial relations, in 1982 ($10,000).
(15) To hold an international conference in Bloomington on multinational corporations in Latin
America and Eastern Europe, in 1981 ($10,000).
(16) To implement during 1976-81 a collaborative research project between a seven-member
team of U.S. and a seven-member team of Polish scholars on U.S.-Polish industrial
cooperation. The research included several extended trips to Poland, interviews with U.S.
and Polish firms and two large conferences, one in Bloomington, the other in Warsaw
($45,000).
(17) To implement during 1977-80 a "Problem-Oriented Interdisciplinary Training and Research
Program on Eastern Europe". The principal purpose of the project was to bring together
faculty and graduate students from the School of Business, the Russian and East European
Institute (REEI), and various disciplines in the College of Arts and Sciences in a cooperative
teaching, training, and research effort centered upon contemporary problems relating to
Eastern Europe and the USSR and their relations with the West ($110, 000).
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(18) To hold an international conference in Bloomington on integration in Eastern Europe and
East-West trade, in 1976 ($25,000).
(19) To plan and implement at Indiana University's IDRC research proposals submitted to the
U.S. Department of Commerce during 1973-75 ($150,000).
INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
Since about 1980, involved in projects, presented papers, and gave lectures or courses: in Canada
(5 occasions), the UK (3), Ireland (1), the Federal Republic of Germany (7), France and
Finland (5 each), Italy (4), the Netherlands (3), Belgium and Norway (1 each), Austria (6),
Hungary (very large number), Poland (7), Bulgaria (1), Romania (8), the Czech Republic (4), former
Yugoslavia (4), the USSR/Russia (3), Ukraine (4), China (5), Israel (1), Turkey (1), Japan (1) and India
(1). Have made a brief research trip to Hong Kong. International experience includes:
(1) Professor (along with various administrative positions) at the CEU Business School,
Budapest, 2000-2016 (with interruptions for shorter assignments in other countries).
(2) Visiting Professor, Somaiya University Business School, Mumbai, India (Nov 2014.)
(3) Teaching short MBA courses on international business at the Institute of International
Business, Kiev, Ukraine (2008 and 2009) at GISMA (Hannover, Germany 2013, 2014,
2016), and Maastricht (the Netherlands, 2016).
(4) Taught an intensive MA course on China, University of Economics, Prague (2009, 2010).
(5) Visiting Professor at the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS), Shanghai
(fall semesters in 2004 and 2006).
(6) Visiting Professor at the University of Trento, Trento, Italy, Spring-Summer semester, 2005.
(7) Sabbatical semester at Budapest University of Economic Sciences; Chairman of the
Accreditation Committee of that University (Fall 1997). Served as faculty coordinator of
Indiana U’s Management Training Cooperation Hungary (MATCH) Program (1997).
(8) Resident Faculty Advisor for 37 Indiana University business undergraduates, University of
Maastricht, The Netherlands (Spring 1997).
(9) Taught a three-week (one-semester) course at the Helsinki School of Economics and
Business, Helsinki and Mikkeli, Finland (1994, 1996, and 1997). Served as “opponent” at
Ph.D. defense of faculty member (1996).
(10) Co-organized meetings of the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission, held
in Brussels, Vienna, Budapest, Indianapolis (see National Service, p. 2, item 2) (1989-95).
(11) Co-organized and participated in four international conferences on Central and Eastern
Europe and the NIS organized by the OECD in Paris (1991-95)
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(12) USIA-sponsored lecture tours: Germany, Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria, and Hungary
(1987).
(13) Exchange professor at Wuhan University, China, under the IU School of Business faculty
exchange program (6 weeks), including lectures at universities and research institutes in
Beijing, Tiensin and Shanghai (1981).
(14) World Bank-sponsored lecture series in Shanghai, China (1 week each in 1980 and 1981).
(15) Fulbright professorship (5 weeks) at the Central School of Planning and Statistics, Warsaw,
Poland (1979).
(16). Member, U.S.-Hungarian Economic Roundtable. Annual conferences between U.S. and
Hungarian economists, held in the respective countries (1978-1987).
(17) U.S. State Department lectureship in Hungary and Poland (10 days each), with extensive
contacts with academic and research institutes in the two countries (1978).
(18) Member, U.S.-Romanian Economic Seminar. Four biannual conferences held in the
respective countries (1974-80).
PUBLICATIONS1
Books, Monographs and Similar Works
2015
24 Missing Link Discovered: Integrating Csikszentmihalyi’s Flow Theory into Managementl
and Leadership Practice. (Los Angeles: ALEAS Simulations). Senior author.
2013
23. Twenty Years of USAID Economic Growth Assistance in Europe and Eurasia
(Washington D.C.: USAID, 2013). Co-author; 171 pp.
2000
22. Enterprise Case Studies [Vallalati Esettanulmanyok], Vol. I: Logistics and Marketing; Vol.
II: Strategy and Privatization; Vol. III: Information Technology and Commerce (in
Hungarian). Co-editor. (Budapest: Aula, 2000), 206 pp, 190 pp, and 250 pp, respectively.
1996
21. Education for Transition to Market Economies in Countries of Central and Eastern Europe.
Co-editor. (Warsaw, Poland: Polish-U.S. Fulbright Commission, 1996.) 221 pp.
1
Each set of publications--books, major reports, and articles and chapters--is arranged by year and is numbered sequentially,
with the most recent publications showing the highest numbers.
12
20. Transforming the Core: Restructuring Industrial Enterprises in Russia and Central Europe.
Co-author. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1996.) 315 pp.
1995
19. Trade Relations with Countries in Transition: Separating Fact from Fiction. Author.
(Paris: OECD, 1995.) 29 pp. Published in English and French.
18. Financial Sector Reform and Enterprise Restructuring in Hungary. Policy Study No. 4 of
the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Editor. (Indianapolis: Hudson
Institute, 1995.) 54 pp.
1994
17. Hungary's Welfare State in Transition: Structure, Initial Problems and Recommendations.
Policy Study No. 3 of the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Editor.
(Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1994.) 73 pp.
16. Privatizing the Management of Temporary State Property. Policy Study No. 2 of the Joint
Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Editor and co-author. (Indianapolis:
Hudson Institute, 1993.) 43 pp.
1992
15. Historically Planned Economies: A Guide to the Data. Senior author. (Washington, D.C.:
The World Bank, 1992); second and revised edition in 1993. 264 pp.
14. Sustainable Forint Convertibility for Hungary: What Type, and When and How to
Introduce It? Policy Study No. 1 of the joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon
Commission. Co-author. (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1992.) 86 pp.
1991
13. Transition to a Market Economy, Vol. 1: The Broad Issues (307 pp.); Vol. II: Special
Issues. Co-editor (Paris: OECD, 1991.) 461 pp.
12. Foreign Economic Liberalization: Transformations in Socialist and Market Economies.
Co-editor. (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1991.) 208 pp. Also appeared in Hungarian:
Kulgazdasagi Liberalizalas: Nemzetkozi Tapasztalatok es Magyar Gazdasagpolitika
(Budapest: KOPINT-DATORG and Kozgazdasagi es Jogi Konyvkiado, 1991).
1990
11. Hungary in Transformation to Freedom and Prosperity: Economic Program Proposals of
the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Co-author. (Indianapolis and
Budapest: Hudson Institute and Blue Ribbon Foundation, in English and in Hungarian,
respectively, 1990.) 104 pp.
13
1988
10. Creditworthiness and Reform in Poland: Western and Polish Perspectives. Co-editor.
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988.) 346 pp.
1987
9. East European Economic Trends and East-West Trade: U.S., West and East European
Perspectives. Co-editor. (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1987.) 152 pp.
1986
8. East-West Technology Transfer: Study of Hungary 1968-1984. Author (Paris: OECD,
1986). (Published simultaneously in French.) 283 pp.
1985
7. Dollar GNPs of the USSR and Eastern Europe. Author. (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins
University Press for the World Bank, 1985.) 241 pp.
6. U.S. Polish Industrial Cooperation in the 1980's: Findings of a Joint Research Project. Co-
editor (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1981.) 409 pp.
1980
5. East European Integration and East-West Trade. Co-editor. (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1980.) 480 pp.
4. Annotated and Cross-Referenced Bibliography of East-West Commerce. Compiler and
editor. (Bloomington: Indiana University, International Development Institute, 1977. 160
pp. Second and revised edition, 1980. 186 pp.
1975
3. U. S. Financing of East-West Trade: The Political Economy of Government Credits and the
National Interest. Editor. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press for the International
Development Research Center, 1975.) 442 pp.
1972
2. Soviet and East European Foreign Trade, 1946-1969: Statistical Compendium and Guide.
Author. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1972.) 480 pp.
1. Postwar Pricing and Price Patterns in Socialist Foreign Trade (1946-1971). Author.
(Bloomington: Indiana Univ., International Development Research Center, 1972.) 105 pp.
14
Major Reports2
2014
17. China's Growth Rates, 1978-2013: Believe It or Not? Working Paper of Indiana
University's Research Center for Chinese Politics and Business. 100 pp.
2003
16. Business Case Studies: Preparation, Teaching and Learning. (Budapest: CEU Graduate
School of Business). Co-editor. 257 pp.
2002
15. Economic Reform Support and Technical Assistance Programs to Yugoslavia, 2000-2002:
Summary and Evaluation (Center for International Private Enterprise, CIPE), 40 pp. plus
appendices.
1999
14. Center for International Private Enterprise in Hungary, 1989-1999: CIPE’s Contributions
to Strengthening Private Enterprise and Building Democracy. Co-author. 39 pp.
1995
13. General Electric in Hungary (1989-94): Study of the Largest U.S. Investment in Central and
Eastern Europe. Co-author. 73 pp.
1993
12. Foreign Direct Investment in Hungary: A Proposed Framework, Research Issues, Methods.
Author. (Background study prepared for the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon
Commission.) 61 pp. of text plus 100 pp. of appendices.
1992
11. Invest Hungary. Senior author and project leader of a set of printed brochures on Hungary's
investment environment, privatization policies, business conditions, taxation, currency
system, labor and social policies. Printed in 5,000 copies and used by Hungary's Ministry of
International Economic Relations as well as by the State Property Agency to provide
information to prospective foreign investors. 50 pp.
1991
10. The Hungarian Experiment: The Political Economy of Change in a Communist-Led
Country. Final Report to the National Council for Soviet and EE Research. 1991. 85 pp.
2
Distributed, but not formally published as a book, article, or chapter.
15
1989
9. Implications for the USSR of Eastern European Economic Reforms. Co-author. Study of
the Hudson Institute's Center for Soviet and Central European Studies (Indianapolis:
Hudson Institute, 1989.) 64 pp.
1988
8. The Substitutability of Eastern Europe's Trade with Other Soviet Bloc Countries and with
the West. Co-author. Study of the Hudson Institute's Center for Soviet and Central
European Studies (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1988.) 250 pp.
1984
7. Hungary's Price, Wage, Tax and Subsidy, Systems and Policies, and Their Effects on Its
Economy. Author. Annex 1 to the Country Economic Memorandum, Hungary:
Stabilization, Growth, and Structural Adjustment (Washington, DC: World Bank Report
No. 5006-HU.) 122 pp.
1976
6. East-West Industrial Cooperation: The U.S. Perspective. Co-author. Report to the Bureau
of East-West Trade, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1976. 340 pp.
5. The Mirror Statistics Problem in East-West Trade: Discussion of the Issues and a Pilot
Reconciliation. Co-author. Unpublished report submitted on contract to the Bureau of East-
West Trade, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1976. 160 pp.
1974
4. East-West Trade and Technology Transfer. Co-editor. Indiana University, International
Development Research Center, 1974. 85 pp.
1971
3. Recent Developments in the Hungarian Financial System. Co-author. Columbia University
for the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, 1971. 252 pp.
2. Selected Comparisons of the Financial Systems of the USSR, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and
Poland. Columbia University for the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, 1971.
70 pp.
1968
1. Foreign Trade Prices in the Soviet Bloc: A Theoretical and Empirical Study (Ph.D.
dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 1968).
16
Cases
2. "A Light in Hungary: GE Acquires Tungsram.” Co-author. Indiana University, CIBER
Case Collection, 1996. Reprinted in the largest-selling IB textbook, Danel & Radabaugh,
International Business (7th
and 8th
editions, 2000).
1. “U.S. & German Telecom Giants in Hungary.” Co-author. Indiana U MATCH, 1996.
17
Articles and Chapters (Single author, unless otherwise noted3
2016
145. “On the likelihood of the euro replacing the forint”, Budapest Business Journal, March.
144. “The Euro and Eastern Europe” in Bruno Dallago, Gert Guri and John McGowan (eds), A
Global Perspective on the European Economic Crisis (Oxford: Routledge).
2015
143. “Neo-Transitional Economies: The Broad Context” International Finance Review, Vol 16,
pp. 21-52.
2014
142. "The Eurozone Crises and Eastern Europe" in M. Kisilowski (ed.), Free Market In Its
Thirties: Modern Business Decision Making in Central and Eastern Europe (Budapest:
CEU Press, 2014).
2013
141. “Toward a New Growth Model in Eastern Europe” in P. Hare and G. Turley (eds),
Handbook of the Economics and Political Economy of Transition (Oxford, UK: Routledge,
March 2013).
2012
140. “Crises and Recovery in Central and Eastern Europe: Commonalities and Differences” in G.
G. Gorzelak, C. C. Goh, and K. Fazekas (eds), Adaptability and Change: The Regional
Dimensions in Central and Eastern Europe (Warsaw: W.N. Scholar).
2010
139. “A New Growth Model [for Emerging Europe].” Finance: The Executive Magazine for
Emerging Europe. Autumn 2010.
138. “Global Economic Crises: Impacts on Eastern Europe.” Acta Oeconomica, January 2010.
2009
137. “A Vilagvalsag es Keleteuropa” [The Global Crisis and Eastern Europe]. Chapter in Istvan
Magas (ed.), Chapter in Vilaggazdasagi Valsag 2008-2009: Diagnozisok es Kezelesek
[Global Economic Crisis: Diagnoses and Prescriptions]. (Budapest: Aula Publisher). An
article based on this essay has appeared in Kulgazdasag, No. 1-2, 2010.
3
Papers presented at conferences are not listed, if unpublished.
18
2007
136. “Tardos Marton: In Memoriam” [in Hungarian]. In Baratunk, Marci (Budapest:
Penzugykutato).
135. “Governance Challenges and Their Implications for Management Development.” In
Globalization and Its Implications of Management Development: Proceedings of the 15th
CEEMAN Annual Conference (Istanbul, Turkey, September 27-29, 2007).
2006
134. “EU Expansion and Regional Policy.” In Bruno Dallago (ed.), Transformation and
European Integration: The Local Dimension (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2006).
2000
133. “Business Cultures in Market and Transforming Economies”, In Society and Economy
in Central and Eastern Europe (Journal of the Budapest University of Economic Sciences
and Public Administration, Vol. XXII, No. 3 (2000).
1998
132. “Hungary’s Economic Transformation, 1990-98.” In Aurel Braun and Zoltan Barany (eds.),
Dilemmas of Transformation: The Hungarian Experience (New York: Roman and
Littlefield, 1999).
131. “Tungsram.” Co-author. In J. Brada and I.J. Singh (eds), Corporate Governance in Central
Eastern Europe: Case Studies of Firms in Transition (Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1999).
130. “Economic Role of Governments: Global Comparisons and Trends.” The Global
Connection (publication of Indiana University’s Global Business Information Network),
Vol. 6, No. 1 (Fall 1998).
129. “Introducing Culture in Business Courses”. In International Teaching Resources for
Business (Indiana University CIBER Newsletter), No. 12, Autumn 1998.
1997
128. “The Soviet Bloc as an Integration Model: Economic, Political and Military Aspects.” In A.
Ban, I. Dioszegi, P. Marer and I. Romsics, Integration Attempts in Central and Eastern
Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Budapest: Teleki Foundation, 1997.) In
Hungarian.
127. “How Hungary Dialed Up a Privatization Success.” Co-author. The Wall Street Journal
Europe, March 13, 1997.
126. “Foreign Investment Brings a Clash of Cultures.” Co-author. Transition (The World
Bank), Vol. 8, No. 1 (February 1997).
19
125. "The Postwar Role of Germany in Central and Eastern Europe." In Roland Schönfeld (ed.),
Germany and Southeastern Europe: Aspects of Relations in the Twentieth Century (Munich
and Los Angeles, Südosteuropa Gesellschaft and UCLA, 1997).
1996
124. "International Finance and International Financial Institutions." In K. Cichocki and P. Marer
(eds.), Education for Transition to Market Economy in Countries of Central and Eastern
Europe (Warsaw: Polish-U.S. Fulbright Commission).
123. "Summing Up and Reflections on Education for Transition to Market Economy." In K.
Cichocki and P. Marer (eds.), Education for Transition to Market Economy in Countries of
Central and Eastern Europe (Warsaw: Polish-U.S. Fulbright Commission).
122. "GE Acquires and Restructures Tunsgram: The First Six Years (1990-1995)." Coauthor.
Trends and Policies in Privatization, Vol. III, No. 1 (1996). An abbreviated version
appeared in Hungarian in Vezetéstudomány, June 1996.
121. "Comparative Privatization and Restructuring in Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic,
1989-1995." In Ivan Berend (ed.), Long-Term Structural Changes in East Central Europe
(Munich and Los Angeles, Südosteuropa Gesellschaft and UCLA).
120. “Foreign Economic Relations During Transition: Trade Policies and Developments Between
the OECD and the Central and East European Countries and the NIS, 1989-1994, " Journal
of Transition Management, 1/1996.
1995
119. "Hungary's Path Between 1989 & 1994" (in Hungarian), Külgazdaság, Vol. XXXIX, No. 5.
118. "Privatization in Transition Economies: Should Assets be Distributed or Sold?" Global
Connection (publication of the Indiana Center for Global Business), October 1995.
117. "Hungary Five Years After Communism." Global Connection (publication of the Indiana
Center for Global Business), January 1995.
1994
116. "Hungary During 1988-1994: A Political Economy Assessment." In East Central European
Economies in Transition (Washington D.C., U.S. GPO, 1994). Compendium of invited
papers by the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress.
115. "Privatizing the Management of State Property." Journal of East European Law (Columbia
University), Vol. 1, No. 2.
114. “Economic Relations between Eastern, Central and Western Europe: An Historical
Perspective." In Ivan T. Berend (ed.), Transition to a Market Economy at the End of the
Twentieth Century. (Munich, Germany: Südosteuropa Gesellschaft, 1994).
20
113. Conceptual and Practical Problems of Comparative Measurement of Economic Performance
of the East European Economies in Transition. "In Economic Statistics for Economies in
Transition: East Europe in the 1990's (Washington: U.S. Dept. of Labor).
1993
112. "Economic Transformation in Central and Eastern Europe." In Shafiqul Islam and Michael
Mandelbaum (eds.), Making Markets: Economic Transformation in Eastern Europe and the
Post-Soviet States (New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 1993).
1992
111. "Central and Eastern Europe: An Economic Perspective. In Dick Clark (ed.), United States
Relations with Central and Eastern Europe (Eleventh Congressional Conference)
(Queenstown, MD: Aspen Institute, 1992).
110. "Growth without Inflation." Figyelö (in Hungarian), April 2, 1992.
109. "Non-Profit Organizations in the United States: Description and Relevance for Hungary."
Aula (Quarterly Journal of the Budapest University of Economic Sciences). In English.
Nov. 1, 1992.
108. "Soviet Reform Prospects." Two-part article, Tokyo Shimbun (one of Japan's largest
circulation newspapers, in Japanese). June 28 and July 3, 1992.
107. "Transformation of a Centrally-Directed Economy: Ownership and Privatization in Hungary
during 1990." Bruno Dallago et al., (eds.), Privatization and Entrepreneurship in Post-
Socialist Countries: Economy, Law and Society (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992).
106. “Roadblocks to Changing Economic Systems in Eastern Europe." In William S. Kern (ed.),
From Socialism to Market Economy: The Transition Problem (Kalamazoo MI:
W. E. Upjohn Institute, 1992).
1991
105. "Reform in Eastern Europe: Comment on the Presentation of Lawrence Summers, Chief
Economist of the World Bank." In Charles Wolf, Jr., (ed.), Promoting Democracy and Free
Markets in Eastern Europe (Santa Monica, CA: Rand, 1991).
104. "Pitfalls in Transferring Market-Economy Experiences to the European Economies in
Transition." In Paul Marer and Salvatore Zecchini (eds.), The Transition to a Market
Economy (Paris: OECD, 1991).
103. "Models of Successful Market Economies." Transition to a Market Economy. Cited above.
102. "Hungary.” The Journal of Multinational Strategies, Vol. 1, No. 1 (Summer 1991).
101. "Foreign Economic Liberalization in Hungary and Poland." American Economic Review:
Papers and Proceedings, Vol. 81, No. 2, May 1991.
21
100. "The Transition to a Market Economy in Central and Eastern Europe." The OECD
Observer, April-May 1991.
99. "Hungary: Reform and Transition." In Ilpyong Kim and Jane Zacek (eds.), Reform and
Transformation in Communist Systems: Comparative Perspectives (New York: Paragon).
98. "Economic Liberalization in Eastern Europe and in Market Economies." Co-author. In Paul
Marer and András Köves (eds.), Foreign Economic Liberalization: Transformations in
Socialist and Market Economies (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1991). Also appeared as a
refereed journal article, in Hungarian, in Külgazdaság, Dec., 1990 and, in German, in
Südosteuropa Mitteilungen, Vol. 31, No. 1 (1991).
97. "Foreign Trade Strategies of Nations: A New Interpretation." Co-author. In Foreign
Economic Liberalization: Transformations in Socialist and Market Economies. Cited
above.
96. "Joint Ventures in Centrally Planned Economies." In Rose Marie Bukics and Bernard Katz
(eds.), International Financial Management: A Handbook for Finance, Treasury and
Accounting Professionals (Chicago: Probus, 1991)
95. "Foreign Trade Strategies in Eastern Europe: Determinants, Outcomes, Prospects". In Gary
Bertsch and Steven Elliott-Gower (eds.), The Impact of Governments on East-West
Economic Relations (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1991).
1990
94. “Hungary Joins the West." Challenge, Volume 33, No. 5 (Sept/Oc. 1990).
93. "Roadblocks to Economic Transformation in Central and Eastern Europe and Some Lessons
of Market Economies. In Dick Clark (ed.), United States-Soviet and East-European
Relations: Building a Congressional Cadre (Queenstown, Md.: Aspen Institute, 1990).
92. "Entrepreneurship and Reform in Communist Countries." In The Political and Social
Environment for Entrepreneurship. (Washington, D.C.: George Washington, University.,
1990). Proceedings of a conference.
91. "Reforms in the USSR and Eastern Europe: Is There a Link?" In Aurel Braun (ed.), The
Soviet-East European Relationship in the Gorbachev Era: The Prospect for Adaptation.
(Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1990).
1989
90. "A Five-Point Definition of a Socialist Market Economy." Acta Oeconomica, Vol. 40, Nos.
3-4 (1989).
89. "Economic Reform and Privatization in the USSR and Eastern Europe." SPEA Review, Vol.
10, No. 2 (Spring, 1989).
22
88. "East Europe's Debt Situation in Global Perspective: Utopian versus Realistic Solutions." In
H. W. Singer and Soumitra Sharma (eds.), Growth and External Debt Management
(London: Macmillan, 1989).
87. "Hungary's Reform and Performance in the Kadar Era (1956-88)." In Pressures for Reform
in the Eastern European Economies (Washington, DC: U.S. GPO, 1989). Compendium of
invited papers by the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress.
86. "Reform and Membership of the Planned Economies in the GATT, the IMF, and the World
Bank." Co-author. In Pressures for Reform in the Eastern European Economies. See above
85. "Hungary's Political and Economic Transformation (1988-89) and Prospects after Kadar." In
Pressures for Reform in the Eastern European Economies. Cited above.
84. "Market Mechanism Reforms in Hungary." In Peter Van Ness (ed.), Market Reforms in
Socialist Societies: Comparing China and Hungary. (Boulder, CO: L. Rienner, 1989).
83. "The Economies and Trade of Eastern Europe. "In William E. Griffith (ed.), Central and
Eastern Europe and the West (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1989).
82. "Centrally Planned Economies in the IMF, the World Bank, and the GATT." In Josef
C. Brada, Ed A. Hewett, and Thomas A. Wolf (eds.), Economic Adjustment and
Reform in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union: Essays in Honor of Franklyn Holzman,
(Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1989).
81. "The Impact of U. S. Policy on Its Trade with the CMEA. In Jan K. Fedorowicz (ed.), East-
West Trade in the 1980's: Prospects and Policies (Boulder, CO: Westview Press).
1988
80. "Ungarns Aussenhandel, Zahlungsbilanz und Schuldenentwicklung, 1970-1990" [The
Development of Hungary's Balance of Payments and Debt, 1970-1990]. Europaeische
Rundschau (Austria), Vol. 16, No. 3 (1988).
79. "Comparing the Foreign Economic Strategies of Market and Centrally Planned Economies."
In Christopher T. Saunders (ed.), Macroeconomic Management and the Enterprise in East
and West (London: Macmillan, 1988).
78. "The Declining Performance of the Polish Economy: A Comment." In The Polish Economy
in the Year 2000. The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies (Pittsburgh,
PA: Center for Russian and East European Studies of the University of Pittsburgh, 1988).
77. “Poland's Debt Situation in Global Perspective." In Paul Marer and W. Siwinski (eds.),
Creditworthiness and Reform in Poland.- Western and Polish Perspectives
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988).
76. "What Role for the IMF and the World Bank in Poland?" In Creditworthiness and Reform in
Poland. Cited above.
23
1987
75. "Soviet-East European Economic Relations: A Historical Perspective.' In Paul Marer and
Pieter van Veen (eds.), East European Economic Trends and East-West Trade (Greenwich,
CT: JAI Press, 1987).
74. "East Europe's Balance of Payments Crisis and Consequences." In East European Economic
Trends and East-West Trade. Cited above.
73. "A muködö toke becsalogatása Magyaroszágra--nyugati szemszögböl [Attracting Western
Capital to Hungary--A Western Perspective]. Külgazdaság [Foreign Trade] (Hungary), Vol.
XXXI, No. 5 (May 1987).
72. "Economic Policies and Options for Eastern Europe." In Charles J. Bukowski and Mark A.
Cichock (eds.), Prospects for Change in Socialist Systems (New York: Praeger, 1987).
1986
71. "Economic System." In Klaus-Detlev Grothusen (ed.), Hungary: Handbook on South
Eastern Europe, Vol. V (Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1986).
70. "Hungary's Foreign Economic Relations in the Mid1980's: A Retrospective and Predictive
Assessment." In The Economies of Eastern Europe and Their Foreign Economic Relations
(Brussels: NATO Economics Directorate, 1986).
69. "Growing Soviet International Economic Isolation." PlanEcon Reports, Vol. II, No. 31
(July 21, 1986).
68. "Costs of Domination, Benefits of Subordination." Co-author. In Jan Triska (ed.),
Dominant Powers and Their Dependencies: The U.S. in Latin America and the USSR in
Eastern Europe (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1986).
67. "The Economics and Politics of Reform in Hungary." Co-author. International
Organization, Vol. 40, No. 2 (Spring 1986). Reprinted in Ellen Comisso and Laura Tyson
(eds.), Power, Purpose and Collective Choice: Economic Strategy in Socialist States
(Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1986).
66. "U.S. East-West Trade Policy, Focusing on Recent Legal Developments." In B. Csikós-
Nagy and D. Young (eds.), East-West Economic Relations in a Changing Global
Environment (London: Macmillan, 1986).
65. "Invited Statement and Testimony on Soviet Relations with Eastern Europe." In Soviet-East
European Relations and U.S. Policy. Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Europe and the
Middle East of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, October 2 and
7, 1985. (Washington, D.C.: U.S. GPO, 1986).
64. "The Image of U.S. Business Schools in Japan"), Hong Kong Journal of Business Mgmt.,
No. 3, 1985. Also in R. N. Farmer (ed.), Advances in International Comparative
Management, (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press); in Personnel Training (in Japanese).
24
1985
63. "East-West Commercial Relations and Prospects for East Europe and Yugoslavia" (in
French), Revue d'Études Comparatives Est-Ouest (France), Vol. XVI, No. 3 (9/1985).
62. "The Future of Hungary's Economic Reform." Wirtshaftsanalysen (Publication of the Die
Erste Osterreichische Spar-Casse-Bank, Vienna), December 1985.
61. "Economic Reform in Hungary: From Central Planning to Regulated Market." In East
European Economies: Slow Growth in the 1980's (Washington, DC: U.S. GPO, 1985).
Compendium of Papers Submitted to the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress.
60. "Alternative Estimates of the Dollar GNP and Growth Rates of the CMEA Countries." In
East European Economies: Slow Growth in the 1980's. Cited above.
59. "Economic Policies and Systems in Eastern Europe and Yugoslavia: Commonalities and
Differences." In East European Economies: Slow Growth in the 1980's. Cited above.
58. "Hungary's Balance of Payments Crisis and Response, 1978-1984." In East European
Economies: Slow Growth in the 1980's. Cited above.
57. "Economic Reforms in Hungary: A Summary View and Assessment." Sudost-Europa
(Federal Republic of Germany), Vol. 34, No. 6 (1985).
56. "Ungarns Wirtschaftsreform 1957-1985" [Hungary's Economic Reform, 1957-1985].
Europaeische Rundschau (Austria), Vol. 13, No. 1 (1985).
55. "Economic Reform in Hungary." In Morris Bornstein (ed.), Comparative Economic
Systems: Models and Cases. (New York: Richard D. Irwin, 1985) (fifth edition).
1984
54. "United States Market Disruption Procedures Involving Romanian and Other CPE
Products." In Marvin R. Jackson and James D. Woodson, Jr. (eds), New Horizons in East-
West Economic and Business Relations (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984).
53. "Management and Reform in Centrally Planned Economies." In Richard N. Farmer and John
V. Lombardi (eds.), Readings in International Business (Bloomington, IN: Cedarwood
Press, 1984).
52. "Hungary Moves Ahead with Economic Reforms." Wharton Centrally Planned Economies
Current Analysis, Vol. III, No. 39 (June 4, 1984).
51. "Hungary's 1981-85 Five-Year Plan: Further Economic Reforms, Policy Changes, and
Implications. In Béla K. Király, et al (eds.), The First War Between Socialist States: The
Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and Its Impact (New York: Brooklyn College Press, 1984).
25
50. "Intrabloc Economic Relations and Prospects." In David Holloway and Jane M. 0. Sharp
(eds.), The Warsaw Pact: Alliance in Transition? (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press,
1984).
49. "The Political Economy of Soviet Relations with East Europe." In Sara M. Terry (ed.),
Soviet Policy in Eastern Europe (New Haven: Yale, 1984). Reprinted in E. Hoffman and R.
Laird (eds.), Soviet Foreign Policy in a Changing World (New York: Aldine, 1986).
1983
48. "Invited Statement and Testimony on Trade Remedy Laws." In Options to Improve the
Trade Remedy Laws. Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Trade of the Committee on
Ways and Means, House of Representative (May 4 and 11, 1983). Washington, DC: U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1983.
47. “A Profile of the East-West Trade of the United States, 1970-83." United Nations,
Economic Commission for Europe, Review of Recent and Prospective Trends and Problems
in East-West Trade (Geneva, Switzerland: Document TRADE/R. 462/Add. 3).
46. Financing the Four Modernizations: China's Capital Investment Needs and the International
Capital Markets." In Daniel H. Bays (ed.), U.S.-China Trade Relations, 1983: Sex Essays
(Lawrence, KS: Center for East Asian Studies, the University of Kansas, 1983).
1982
45. "Exchange Rates and Convertibility in Hungary's New Economic Mechanism." In East
European Economic Assessment, Vol. 1. Cited above. An earlier version was published in I.
Dobozi and M. Simai (eds.), Világgazdaság, Keleti-Nyugati Kapcsolatok, Magyar és
Amerikai Gazdaság: A Mechanizmus és a Szerkezeti Alkalmazkodás Problémája. [World
Economy, East-West Relations, Hungarian and American Economies: Problems of
Adaptability of the Economic Mechanism and Structure] (Budapest: Hungarian Scientific
Council for World Economy, 1982).
44. "Economic Performance and Prospects in Eastern Europe: Analytical Summary and
Interpretation of Findings. In In East European Economic Assessment, Vol. 2. Cited above.
43. "CMEA Integration: Theory and Practice." Co-author. In East European Economic
Assessment, Vol. 2. Cited above.
1981
42. "U.S. Multinationals in Poland: A Case Study of the International Harvester-BUMAR
Cooperation in Construction Machinery." Co-author. In East European Economic
Assessment, Vol. 1. (Washington, DC: U. S - GPO, 1981.) Compendium of papers submitted
to the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress.
41. "Poland: What Should the United States Do?” Congressional Record, U.S. House of
Representatives, (H6453-54), September 21, 1981.
26
40. "Import Protectionism in the U.S. and Poland's Manufactures Exports." In Paul Marer and
Eugeniusz Tabaczynski (eds.), Polish- U.S. Industrial Cooperation: Findings of a Joint
Research Project (Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press, 1981).
39. "The Mechanism and Performance of Hungary's Foreign Trade, 1968-1979." In P. Hare, H.
Radice, N. Swain (eds.), Hungary: A Decade of Reform (London: Allen and Unwin, 1981).
38. "The Economies of Eastern Europe and Soviet Foreign Policy." In Seweryn Bialer (ed.),
Domestic Context of Soviet Foreign Policy. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1980).
37. "The Theory and Measurement of East European Integration." Co-author. In Paul Marer and
J.M. Montias (eds.), East European Integration and East-West Trade (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1980). Reprinted in Ali M. El-Agraa (ed.), International Economic
Integration (London: Macmillan, 1982, 1988).
36. "Western Multinational Corporations in East Europe and CMEA Integration." In Z.
Fallenbuchl and C. H. Macmillan (eds.), Partners in East-West Economic Relations: The
Determinants of Choice (New York: Pergamon Press, 1980).
35. "Dumping, Market Disruption and Other Safeguard Procedures in East-West Trade." In D.
Wallace, Jr. et al., Interface One: Conference Proceedings on the Application of U.S.
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Laws to Imports from State-Controlled and State-
Owned Enterprises (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Law Center, 1980).
1979
34. "Statement and Invited Testimony on Eastern Europe”. In U.S. Policy Toward Eastern
Europe. Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle East of the
Committee on International Relations, House of Representatives, September 7 and 12, 1978.
(Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1979.)
33. "So Foreign yet So Near: Foreign Investments in the U.S." Executive (Journal of the Grad
School of Business & Public Administration, Cornell University), Vol. 5, No. 3 (June 1979).
32. "The Future for Trade with China." Business Horizons, Vol. 22, No. 2 (April 1979).
31. "East European Economies: Achievements, Problems, Prospects." In T. Rakowska-
Harmstone and A. Gyorgy (eds.), Communism in Eastern Europe (Bloomington and
London: Indiana University Press, 1979). Revised chapter for the second edition
(1984).
30. “Import-protekcionizmus az USA-ban és Magyarország késztermék-exportjának növelése”
[Import Protectionism in the USA and the Expansion of Hungary's Manufactures Exports] -
In I. Dobozi and M. Simai (eds.), Gazdaságelmélet, Kelet-Nyugati Kapcsolatok, Magyar és
Amerikai Gazdaság [Economic Theory, East-West Relations & the Economies of Hungary
and America]. (Budapest: Hungarian Scientific Council for World Economy, 1979).
29. "U.S. Restrictions and Safeguarding Procedures: Imports from East Europe” In H. Giersch
(ed.), International Economic Development and Resource Transfer (J. C. B. Mohr: 1979).
27
1978
28. "Trade and the Centrally Planned Economies: Postwar Trends, Current Issues, Future
Prospects." In M.A. Martin and L. F. Dunn (eds.) The Competitive Threat from Abroad:
Fact or Fiction (W. Lafayette, IN: Purdue University, 1978).
27. "Commercial Dealings with Eastern Europe." In Joseph Berliner, et al., Winning Business in
the USSR (New York: Graham and Trotman, 1978).
26. "Toward a Solution of the Mirror Statistics Puzzle in East-West Commerce." In F. Levcik
(ed.), International Economics: Comparisons and Interdependence (Vienna and New York:
Springer-Verlag, 1978).
25. "U.S. -Romanian Industrial Cooperation: A Composite Case Study." In J. C. Brada and V.
S. Somanath (eds.), East-West Trade: Theory and Evidence. Indiana University,
International Development Institute, 1978.
1977
24. "Intra-COMECON Trade: Patterns of Standardized Trade Dependence." In COMECON:
Progress and Prospects (Brussels: NATO Directorate of Economic Affairs, 1977).
23. "U.S. Participation in East-West Industrial Cooperation Agreements." Co-author. Journal of
International Business Studies (Fall 1977).
22. "Economic Performance, Strategy, and Prospects in Eastern Europe." In Eastern European
Economies Post Helsinki. Washington: U.S. GPO, 1977. Compendium of papers submitted
to the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress.
21. "Prospects for Integration in the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (CMEA)."
International Organization, Vol. 30, No. 4 (1976). Reprinted in J. F. Triska and P.M.
Cocks (eds.), Political Development in Eastern Europe (New York: Praeger, 1977).
20. 'U.S.-CMEA Industrial Cooperation in the Chemical Industry." In C. T. Saunders (ed.),
East-West Cooperation in Business: Interfirm Studies (New York: Springer-Verlag, 1977).
19. Contributor to American Role in East-West Trade. (Written response to sixteen questions by
the Committee on Commerce, U.S. Senate, prepared at the request of Senator Warren G.
Magnuson.) Washington: U.S. GPO, 1977.
1976
18. "Has Eastern Europe Become a Liability to the Soviet Union? Economic Aspects." In C.
Gati (ed.), The International Politics of Eastern Europe (New York: Praeger, 1976).
17. "Hungary's Industrial Cooperation with the West: Achievements, Problems and Prospects."
Washington DC: U.S.-Hungarian Economic Council, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 1976.
28
16. "Tourism in Eastern Europe." In J. C. Brada (ed.), Quantitative and Analytical Studies in
East-West Economic Relations. Indiana University, International Development Research
Center, 1986.
1975
15. "Foreign Trade." In C. Mesa-Lago and C. Beck (eds.), Comparative Socialist
Systems: Essays on Politics and Economics (Pittsburgh: Univ. of Pittsburgh Press, 1975).
14. "Why the U.S. Should Grant Most Favored Nation Status and Sign the U.S.-Romanian
Trade Agreement." In United States-Romanian Trade Agreement: Hearings. Washington,
D.C.: U.S. GPO, 1975. Testimony before the Subcommittee on Trade, Ways and Means
Committee, U.S. House of Representatives, May 7, 1975.
1974
13. "Indebtedness, Credit Policies and New Sources of Financing East-West Commerce." In C.
Macmillan (ed.), Changing Perspectives in East-West Commerce (Lexington: D.C. Heath).
12. "Prospects and Policy for Trade between Eastern Europe and the U.S." Co-author. The
American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings. (May 1974).
11. "The Political Economy of Soviet Relations with Eastern Europe." In S. Rosen and J.
R. Kurth (eds.), Contemporary Economic Imperialism (Lexington, Mass.: D.C.
Heath).
10. "Commercial Relations between the United States and Eastern Europe." Co-author. In
Reorientation and Commercial Relations of the Economies of Eastern Europe. (Washington
D.C.: U.S. GPO, 1974). Compendium of papers submitted to the Joint Economic
Committee, U.S. Congress.
9. "Soviet Economic Policy in Eastern Europe." In Reorientation and Commercial Relations of
the Economies of Eastern Europe. Cited above.
8. "Tourism in Eastern Europe." Co-author. In Reorientation and Commercial Relations of the
Economies of Eastern Europe. Cited above.
7. “Foreign Trade in the East European Reforms". Co-author. In M. Bornstein (ed.), From
Planning Toward the Market (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1973.)
1971
6. "New Options for the United States in East-West Trade." Co-author. Studies in
Comparative Communism (April 1971).
5. "East-West Trade: Old Issues and New Prospects." Co-author. A Foreign Economic Policy
for the 1970's, Part 6. (Washington: U.S. GPO, 1971). Presentation before the
Subcommittee on Foreign Economic Policy, Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress.
29
1970 and Earlier
4. "Foreign Trade Prices in the Soviet Bloc. - ASTE Bulletin (Fall 1968).
3. "Economic Reforms in Hungary." Mercurio, Rome, Italy (March 1967).
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Book Reviews in
The Journal of Economic Literature
Journal of Comparative Economies
Business Horizons
Slavic Review
American Historical Review
Canadian-American Slavic Studies.
Manuscript Reviewer for
Editorial Board member, Palgrave MacMillan series on International Business
Acta Oeconomica
Journal of International Business Studies
Slavic Studies
Journal of Economic Literature
Soviet and East European Foreign Trade
Journal of Comparative Economics
International Studies Quarterly
Journal of Developing Areas
Business Horizons
International Organization
Review of Income and Wealth
Journal of Comparative Economic Studies
Journal of East-West Business
Other Publications
Contributor on East European economies, Business Week, World Economic Outlook, 4/27/1981.
Contributor on East European economies to Newsweek (international edition), Annual World Economic
Forecast, 1976, 1977.

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PM Long CV (August 2016)

  • 1. 1 PAUL MARER (Curriculum Vitae, August 2016) CONTACT INFORMATION Email: paul.marer@gmail.com Current residence: Budapest, Hungary Mobile: (36) 20-48-29-198 PERSONAL Place of birth: Budapest, Hungary. Citizenship: U.S. (1961) and Hungarian (reclaimed in 2000) EDUCATION 1968 University of Pennsylvania, Ph.D. in Economics 1962 University of Pennsylvania, M.A. in Economics 1961 Florida Southern College, B.A. in Economics and Accounting FULL-TIME POSITIONS CEU Business School, Budapest As of August 1, 2016: Emeritus Professor of Business 2009- 2016 Professor of Business, Coordinator, Academic Outreach 2006-2008 Professor and Associate Dean for Academics 2000-2004 Professor and Academic Director China Europe International Business School, Shanghai, China 2004 (Sept-Dec) and 2006 (Nov-Dec) Visiting Professor of International Business University of Trento, Trento, Italy 20005 (April-July) Visiting Professor of International Business Indiana University 1981-2000 Professor of International Business, Kelley School of Business 1981 and 1983-84 Chairperson of the International Business Department 1979-2000 Professor of Central Eurasian (formerly, Uralic and Altaic) Department (concurrently with full-time Business position) 1975-1981 Associate Professor of International Business 1971-1975 Senior Research Associate, International Development Institute and Visiting Associate Professor of Economics City University of New York 1968-1971 Assistant Professor of Economics, Lehman College 1965-1968 Lecturer (part time) Columbia University 1965-1968 Research Economist, Project on National Income in East Central Europe (full time), 1969-70 (part-time) Philadelphia Bulletin 1964-1965, Assistant to the Financial Editor & syndicated columnist, J. A. Livingston
  • 2. 2 Detailed CV - C o n t e n t s Personal, Education, Current and Previous Fulltime Positions ………………………………….. 1 Background and Career Highlights ………………………………………………………………. 3 Professional Societies ......................................................................................................................4 Distinctions ......................................................................................................................................4 National Service in the USA ……………………………………………………………………. 5 Research Consultancies ...................................................................................................................6 World Bank ................................................................................................................. 6 International Monetary Fund ...................................................................................... 7 OECD ........................................................................................................................ 7 United Nations ..............................................................................................................7 Hudson Institute .......................................................................................................... 7 U.S. Department of Commerce..…………................................................................................... 8 USAID ..................................................................................................................... 8 Other professional consultancies ………………………………………………….. 8 Research Grants ………….............................................................................................................. 8 International Experience..................................................................................................................10 Publications ................................................................................................................................... 11 Books, Monographs and Similar Works .................................................................... 11 Major Reports ……. ................................................................................................ 14 Cases …………………………………………………………………………………15 Articles and Chapters ................................................................................................. 16 Book Reviews in ........................................................................................................ 27 Manuscript Reviewer for ……….............................................................................. 29 Other Publications .................................................................................................... 29
  • 3. 3 Background and Career Highlights Background  Born in Hungary, immigrated to the USA in 1956. US citizen since 1961; dual US/Hungarian citizen since 2000.  M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania, concentrating on economics and business. Career Highlights  Professor, Business School of Central European University (CEU), Budapest; Academic Director (2000-2004; Associate Dean for Academics (2006-2008); Professor and Coordinator, Academic Outreach (2009 - 2016). Elected member of the CEU Senate. As of August 2016: Emeritus Professor  Visiting Professor of International Business, China Europe International Business School (CEIBS), Shanghai, 2004 and 2006 (fall semesters).  Visiting Professor, University of Trento, Trento, Italy (2005).  Twenty-five years at the Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business (1975-2000), promoted to full professor of international business.  Appointed by President George Bush in 1990, re-appointed by President Clinton in 1996 and by George W. Bush in 2001, to the Board of Trustees of the Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund. The Fund invests and monitors – like a private venture capitalist – the $78 million the U.S. gave to Hungary to promote private enterprise. Member, Audit Committee (1990-2006), when the Fund, mission accomplished, went out of business.  Served as principal architect and co-director of the Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission, a multi-year effort during 1989-90 to blueprint Hungary’s transformation to a market economy. Recruited and managed 100 experts from 11 countries and raised $1 million, working with Hudson Institute, Indianapolis, as a Senior Adjunct Fellow.  Repeated invited testimony before Congressional committees. During the 1970s and 1980s, briefed members of the US House and Senate and newly-appointed Briefing members of the U.S. House and Senate and newly-appointed US ambassadors to the countries of Central and Eastern Europe.  Consulting experience with the IMF, the World Bank, the UN, the OECD, USAID, Eli Lilly, Cummins Engine Co., and other firms.  Appointed by U.S. Secretary of Commerce to Advisory Board on East-West Trade.  Wrote or edited 24 books and more than 150 articles, chapters, and reports, mainly on the changing political, economic and business situation in Hungary, the other countries of Central and Eastern Europe, Russia and China. Currently working on linking Csikszentmihalyi’s famous theory of Flow with leadership practice.  Honorary doctorate from the Budapest University of Economic Sciences (renamed Corvinus University), 1999.
  • 4. 4 PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES Academy of International Business Association for Comparative Economic Studies American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies DISTINCTIONS Invited member: Hungarian Accreditation Agency (Magyar Akkreditacios Bizottsag), 2014-2015 Editor for North America, Economic Policy in Transition Economies (1998-2000). Business Alumni Achievement (Distinguished Graduate) Award, Florida Southern College (1998). Fulbright Scholar (Hungary 1997; Poland 1979) Member, Board of Trustees, Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund (appointed by President Bush, reappointed by President Clinton and then by George W. Bush) 1990-2006 Chairperson, Accreditation Committee, Budapest University of Economic Sciences (renamed Corvinus University), 1997-1998 Senior Adjunct Fellow, Hudson Institute, Indianapolis, 1989-1992 Fellow, Indiana Center for Global Business, Kelley School of Business, Indiana University, 1989-1997 IREX, grant award (1997); member, selection committee (1998-2000). The W. George Pinnell Award for Outstanding Service to Indiana University 1994. Distinguished Service Award of Indiana University, 1993. Indiana University's John Ryan Award for Distinguished Contributions to International Programs and Studies, 1992. Member, Board of Trustees, The National Council for Soviet and East European Research (nominated by the President of Indiana University), 1983-86. Executive Committee, Association for Comparative Economic Studies 1981-82. Board of Editors, Journal of Comparative Economics (1990-93); Journal of East- West Business (1994-96). American Council of Learned Societies, grant award, 1971-72, 1979, 1980. National Council for Soviet and East European Research, grant award, 1989-90. American Council of Learned Societies, Joint Committee on Eastern Europe, member, 1974-77. Advisory Committee on East-West Trade, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1974-75. Danforth Fellow, 1961-65. Omicron Delta Kappa.
  • 5. 5 NATIONAL SERVICE IN THE USA (1) Member of the Board of Trustees of the Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund (1990-2006). Board members volunteer their time. (2) Principal architect and Co-Director. Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. This was a one-year effort during 1989-90, while on leave from Indiana University, to design a comprehensive economic transformation program for Hungary. Approximately 100 experts from eleven countries were recruited to participate in the project. Had a similar role in Blue Ribbon Commission-2 (1991-95), which commissioned and debated studies on economic policy issues facing Hungary in its transformation to a market economy. A volunteer position that had involved considerable work during 1989- 95. (3) Faculty presenter and resource person, orientation for MBA Enterprise Corps (1992 and 1994). The MBA Enterprise Corps selects 50 to 100 outstanding MBA graduates a year from a consortium of 16 leading business schools to serve for a year as consultants to privatized firms in the transition economies of Central and Eastern Europe and the NIS. (4) Invited presenter and resource person at Aspen Institute conferences for members of the U.S. Senate and House, and European parliamentarians, on developments in, and U.S. relations with, Central and Eastern Europe and the USSR/Russia: Vienna, August 1992 and Prague, August 1990. (5) Member, Board of Trustees (1983-86), the National Council for Soviet and East European Research. The Council is a national organization that provides competitive research grants to scholars. Approximately 100 grant applications were evaluated each year. Member, IREX Selection Committee (1998-2001). Approximately 100 grant applications are evaluated each year. (6) Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress. Contributor to and advisory board member of the triennial volumes of expert studies on the economies of Central and Eastern Europe (1974, 1977, 1980-81, 1985, 1988-89, 1994). (7) U.S. Department of State: briefing new U.S. ambassadors to the Central and East European countries. Occasional lectures at the Foreign Service Institute; participant at conferences (1980-95). (8) Invited Testimony before Congressional Committees 1985:House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on Europe & Middle East. Topic: USSR economic relations with Eastern Europe and U.S. foreign policy. 1983:House Committee on Ways and Means, Subcommittee on Trade. Topic: Dumping laws on products imported from non-market-economy countries.
  • 6. 6 1978:House International Relations Committee, Subcommittee, Europe & Middle East. Topic: The economic situation in Eastern Europe and U.S. foreign policy. 1976:Senate Committee on Commerce. Topic: American role in East-West trade. 1975:House Ways and Means Committee, Subcommittee on Trade. Topic: Granting MFN status to Romania. 1970:Joint Economic Committee, Subcommittee on Foreign Economic Policy. Topic: East-West trade (9) Evaluating project proposals for the U.S. National Research Council, the Ford Foundation, the German Marshall Fund, the Canada Foundation, the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and other organizations (1976-1997). (10) Presenter at East-West trade conferences organized by the Department of Commerce for academic, business and government participants (1974-85). (11) Member, American Council of Learned Societies, Joint Committee on Eastern Europe, 1974-77. National grant competition in research focusing on Eastern Europe. (12) Appointed by Secretary of Commerce to Advisory Board on East-West Trade (only academic member) (1973-74). RESEARCH CONSULTANCIES World Bank (1) Invited presenter to the staff of the Foreign Investment Advisory Service (FIAS) in Washington D.C.; participant in a conference organized by FIAS in Paris on Foreign Direct Investment in Central and Eastern Europe (1994). (2) Socio-Economic Data Division and Transition Economies Division: coordinator of their joint project to prepare a Guidebook to Economic Statistics of the Historically Planned Economies (1990-92). Senior author of the resulting World Bank publication, 2nd ed. (3) Socio-Economic Data Division: Statistical research on transition economies (1989-92). (4) Country Programs Department, Europe, Middle East and North Africa Region: consultant on Hungary and member of a mission to the country (1983-84). (5) Economic Analysis and Projections Department: helped organize, coordinate, and serve as principal investigator of an 11-person project to evaluate and estimate the national accounts of eight centrally planned economies (USSR, Eastern Europe and Cuba), 1981-83. (Much of the work was done during a year's research leave from Indiana University). Single author of the resulting World Bank hard-cover book, Dollar GNPs of the USSR and Eastern Europe. (6) The World Development Report Core Group: prepared a background study on the role of the USSR and East Europe in the world economy (1980-81).
  • 7. 7 (7) Economic Development Institute: participated as a presenter on economic reforms in Eastern Europe, in the National Economic Management course for Chinese managers and officials, Shanghai, March 1980 and April 1981. International Monetary Fund Consultant on Hungary, June-September 1982, Washington D.C. (on leave from Indiana University). OECD (1) Helped plan and organize, wrote the background paper, served as rapporteur, and prepared the final report of an international conference in Paris on Trade Relations with Countries in Transition: Separating Fact from Fiction (1994-95). (2) External Examiner of OECD team to assess Hungary's science, technology, and innovation policies (1991-92). (3) Helped organize, served as rapporteur, and edited the proceedings of an international conference on Transition to a Market Economy in Central and Eastern Europe (1990-91). (4) Project to evaluate the impact of the transfer of Western technology to the East European countries (1981-84). United Nations (1) UNCTAD: instructor and resource person, orientation program for UNCTAD personnel assigned to the countries of Central and Eastern Europe and the NIS: Berlin, 1993. (2) Secretariat, Economic Commission for Europe: prepared study of the East-West trade of the U.S. (1 983). (3) UNCTAD: prepared study on tripartite industrial cooperation, focusing on joint projects involving U.S., centrally planned economies, and developing countries (1975). Hudson Institute (1) Senior Adjunct Fellow and Member, Advisory Council to the Institute's Center for Central European and Eurasian Studies, 1987-1992. Hudson served as US secretariat of the joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission (see National Service, item 2). (2) Co-author of Hudson Institute study, The Substitutability of Eastern Europe's Trade with Other Soviet Bloc Countries and with the West (1988). Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates: PlanEcon Research Reports; and Economist Intelligence Unit - Business International Occasional contributor to their current news analysis on centrally planned and transition economies and occasional presenter at annual world economic survey conferences.
  • 8. 8 U. S. Department of Commerce Initiated and coordinated several research projects for the Department's former Bureau of East-West Trade, the largest being a comprehensive survey of 110 U.S. corporations implementing or negotiating industrial cooperation agreements in Eastern Europe and the USSR (1973-76). Advisory Committee on East-West Trade (1974-77). USAID Co-author, Twenty Years of USAID Economic Growth Assistance in Europe and Eurasia (Washington D.C.: USAID, 2013. Principal investigator in $5 million project grant to Indiana University to help establish comprehensive business education programs at the Management Development Center of the Budapest University of Economic Sciences (renamed Corvinus University), 1995-1999. Organizational contributor and keynote speaker at USAID, East Europe Bureau’s Annual Regional Conferences on Competitiveness and Economic Growth, Kiev, Ukraine, June 2009; Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, June, 2010; Budapest, May 2011. Other Professional Consultations (1980-2000) Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE) Dow Europe Council on Foreign Relations Eli Lilly & Co. Multinational Strategies, Inc. Frost & Sullivan (Country Risk Service) Chemical Bank of New York Continental Illinois Bank Manufacturers Hanover Trust Cummins Engine Stanford Research Institute RESEARCH GRANTS (SINGLE OR SHARED RESPONSIBILITY) Total grants obtained during 1973-1997 for which I had principal or co-responsibility:$1.5 million. (1) Kelley School of Business, Indiana University, Competitive Summer Research Grant, 1999. (2) Indiana University Graduate School, Summer Faculty Fellowship, 1998. (3) IREX and Fulbright Scholar Awards to East and West Europe 1997 (travel). (4) CIBER Summer Research Award, 1996. (5) To support the work of the first and second joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon
  • 9. 9 Commission (working with Hudson Institute, East-West Forum, Nomura Research Institute, the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Budapest University of Economics), jointly raising approximately $1 million for BRC-1 and BRC-2 (1989-94). (6) To establish (in cooperation with Indiana University's Polish Studies Center and School of Business) a Young Professionals Abroad Program to teach "Culture and Entrepreneurship" and other courses at the American Studies Center, Warsaw University, Poland: $50,000 from USIA (1993-95). (7) IU School of Business CIBER travel/research grant of $2,000 to prepare case study of General Electric's manufacturing operations in Hungary (1994). (8) To organize and hold in Bloomington the Eleventh U.S.-Hungarian Economic Roundtable, in 1987 ($12,000). (9) To organize and hold an Indiana University-sponsored international conference on the Polish economy and debt, at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., 1985 ($8,000). (10) To assess the basic economic statistics of eight centrally planned economies with the help of a team of experts and to hold two workshops at the World Bank, 1981-82 ($110,000). (11) To help assess the impact of Western technology on Hungary, as part of a comprehensive OECD project on East-West technology transfer, 1981-84 ($9,600). (12) To organize U.S. participation in a joint Indiana University School of Business and University of Tilburg conference on East-West economic relations, held in Tilburg, The Netherlands, in 1983 ($2,000). (13) To organize in Bloomington a Midwest seminar on centrally planned economies, in 1982 ($5,000). (14) To hold an international conference in Bloomington on the Hungarian economy and East- West commercial relations, in 1982 ($10,000). (15) To hold an international conference in Bloomington on multinational corporations in Latin America and Eastern Europe, in 1981 ($10,000). (16) To implement during 1976-81 a collaborative research project between a seven-member team of U.S. and a seven-member team of Polish scholars on U.S.-Polish industrial cooperation. The research included several extended trips to Poland, interviews with U.S. and Polish firms and two large conferences, one in Bloomington, the other in Warsaw ($45,000). (17) To implement during 1977-80 a "Problem-Oriented Interdisciplinary Training and Research Program on Eastern Europe". The principal purpose of the project was to bring together faculty and graduate students from the School of Business, the Russian and East European Institute (REEI), and various disciplines in the College of Arts and Sciences in a cooperative teaching, training, and research effort centered upon contemporary problems relating to Eastern Europe and the USSR and their relations with the West ($110, 000).
  • 10. 10 (18) To hold an international conference in Bloomington on integration in Eastern Europe and East-West trade, in 1976 ($25,000). (19) To plan and implement at Indiana University's IDRC research proposals submitted to the U.S. Department of Commerce during 1973-75 ($150,000). INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE Since about 1980, involved in projects, presented papers, and gave lectures or courses: in Canada (5 occasions), the UK (3), Ireland (1), the Federal Republic of Germany (7), France and Finland (5 each), Italy (4), the Netherlands (3), Belgium and Norway (1 each), Austria (6), Hungary (very large number), Poland (7), Bulgaria (1), Romania (8), the Czech Republic (4), former Yugoslavia (4), the USSR/Russia (3), Ukraine (4), China (5), Israel (1), Turkey (1), Japan (1) and India (1). Have made a brief research trip to Hong Kong. International experience includes: (1) Professor (along with various administrative positions) at the CEU Business School, Budapest, 2000-2016 (with interruptions for shorter assignments in other countries). (2) Visiting Professor, Somaiya University Business School, Mumbai, India (Nov 2014.) (3) Teaching short MBA courses on international business at the Institute of International Business, Kiev, Ukraine (2008 and 2009) at GISMA (Hannover, Germany 2013, 2014, 2016), and Maastricht (the Netherlands, 2016). (4) Taught an intensive MA course on China, University of Economics, Prague (2009, 2010). (5) Visiting Professor at the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS), Shanghai (fall semesters in 2004 and 2006). (6) Visiting Professor at the University of Trento, Trento, Italy, Spring-Summer semester, 2005. (7) Sabbatical semester at Budapest University of Economic Sciences; Chairman of the Accreditation Committee of that University (Fall 1997). Served as faculty coordinator of Indiana U’s Management Training Cooperation Hungary (MATCH) Program (1997). (8) Resident Faculty Advisor for 37 Indiana University business undergraduates, University of Maastricht, The Netherlands (Spring 1997). (9) Taught a three-week (one-semester) course at the Helsinki School of Economics and Business, Helsinki and Mikkeli, Finland (1994, 1996, and 1997). Served as “opponent” at Ph.D. defense of faculty member (1996). (10) Co-organized meetings of the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission, held in Brussels, Vienna, Budapest, Indianapolis (see National Service, p. 2, item 2) (1989-95). (11) Co-organized and participated in four international conferences on Central and Eastern Europe and the NIS organized by the OECD in Paris (1991-95)
  • 11. 11 (12) USIA-sponsored lecture tours: Germany, Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria, and Hungary (1987). (13) Exchange professor at Wuhan University, China, under the IU School of Business faculty exchange program (6 weeks), including lectures at universities and research institutes in Beijing, Tiensin and Shanghai (1981). (14) World Bank-sponsored lecture series in Shanghai, China (1 week each in 1980 and 1981). (15) Fulbright professorship (5 weeks) at the Central School of Planning and Statistics, Warsaw, Poland (1979). (16). Member, U.S.-Hungarian Economic Roundtable. Annual conferences between U.S. and Hungarian economists, held in the respective countries (1978-1987). (17) U.S. State Department lectureship in Hungary and Poland (10 days each), with extensive contacts with academic and research institutes in the two countries (1978). (18) Member, U.S.-Romanian Economic Seminar. Four biannual conferences held in the respective countries (1974-80). PUBLICATIONS1 Books, Monographs and Similar Works 2015 24 Missing Link Discovered: Integrating Csikszentmihalyi’s Flow Theory into Managementl and Leadership Practice. (Los Angeles: ALEAS Simulations). Senior author. 2013 23. Twenty Years of USAID Economic Growth Assistance in Europe and Eurasia (Washington D.C.: USAID, 2013). Co-author; 171 pp. 2000 22. Enterprise Case Studies [Vallalati Esettanulmanyok], Vol. I: Logistics and Marketing; Vol. II: Strategy and Privatization; Vol. III: Information Technology and Commerce (in Hungarian). Co-editor. (Budapest: Aula, 2000), 206 pp, 190 pp, and 250 pp, respectively. 1996 21. Education for Transition to Market Economies in Countries of Central and Eastern Europe. Co-editor. (Warsaw, Poland: Polish-U.S. Fulbright Commission, 1996.) 221 pp. 1 Each set of publications--books, major reports, and articles and chapters--is arranged by year and is numbered sequentially, with the most recent publications showing the highest numbers.
  • 12. 12 20. Transforming the Core: Restructuring Industrial Enterprises in Russia and Central Europe. Co-author. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1996.) 315 pp. 1995 19. Trade Relations with Countries in Transition: Separating Fact from Fiction. Author. (Paris: OECD, 1995.) 29 pp. Published in English and French. 18. Financial Sector Reform and Enterprise Restructuring in Hungary. Policy Study No. 4 of the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Editor. (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1995.) 54 pp. 1994 17. Hungary's Welfare State in Transition: Structure, Initial Problems and Recommendations. Policy Study No. 3 of the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Editor. (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1994.) 73 pp. 16. Privatizing the Management of Temporary State Property. Policy Study No. 2 of the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Editor and co-author. (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1993.) 43 pp. 1992 15. Historically Planned Economies: A Guide to the Data. Senior author. (Washington, D.C.: The World Bank, 1992); second and revised edition in 1993. 264 pp. 14. Sustainable Forint Convertibility for Hungary: What Type, and When and How to Introduce It? Policy Study No. 1 of the joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Co-author. (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1992.) 86 pp. 1991 13. Transition to a Market Economy, Vol. 1: The Broad Issues (307 pp.); Vol. II: Special Issues. Co-editor (Paris: OECD, 1991.) 461 pp. 12. Foreign Economic Liberalization: Transformations in Socialist and Market Economies. Co-editor. (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1991.) 208 pp. Also appeared in Hungarian: Kulgazdasagi Liberalizalas: Nemzetkozi Tapasztalatok es Magyar Gazdasagpolitika (Budapest: KOPINT-DATORG and Kozgazdasagi es Jogi Konyvkiado, 1991). 1990 11. Hungary in Transformation to Freedom and Prosperity: Economic Program Proposals of the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission. Co-author. (Indianapolis and Budapest: Hudson Institute and Blue Ribbon Foundation, in English and in Hungarian, respectively, 1990.) 104 pp.
  • 13. 13 1988 10. Creditworthiness and Reform in Poland: Western and Polish Perspectives. Co-editor. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988.) 346 pp. 1987 9. East European Economic Trends and East-West Trade: U.S., West and East European Perspectives. Co-editor. (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1987.) 152 pp. 1986 8. East-West Technology Transfer: Study of Hungary 1968-1984. Author (Paris: OECD, 1986). (Published simultaneously in French.) 283 pp. 1985 7. Dollar GNPs of the USSR and Eastern Europe. Author. (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press for the World Bank, 1985.) 241 pp. 6. U.S. Polish Industrial Cooperation in the 1980's: Findings of a Joint Research Project. Co- editor (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1981.) 409 pp. 1980 5. East European Integration and East-West Trade. Co-editor. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1980.) 480 pp. 4. Annotated and Cross-Referenced Bibliography of East-West Commerce. Compiler and editor. (Bloomington: Indiana University, International Development Institute, 1977. 160 pp. Second and revised edition, 1980. 186 pp. 1975 3. U. S. Financing of East-West Trade: The Political Economy of Government Credits and the National Interest. Editor. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press for the International Development Research Center, 1975.) 442 pp. 1972 2. Soviet and East European Foreign Trade, 1946-1969: Statistical Compendium and Guide. Author. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1972.) 480 pp. 1. Postwar Pricing and Price Patterns in Socialist Foreign Trade (1946-1971). Author. (Bloomington: Indiana Univ., International Development Research Center, 1972.) 105 pp.
  • 14. 14 Major Reports2 2014 17. China's Growth Rates, 1978-2013: Believe It or Not? Working Paper of Indiana University's Research Center for Chinese Politics and Business. 100 pp. 2003 16. Business Case Studies: Preparation, Teaching and Learning. (Budapest: CEU Graduate School of Business). Co-editor. 257 pp. 2002 15. Economic Reform Support and Technical Assistance Programs to Yugoslavia, 2000-2002: Summary and Evaluation (Center for International Private Enterprise, CIPE), 40 pp. plus appendices. 1999 14. Center for International Private Enterprise in Hungary, 1989-1999: CIPE’s Contributions to Strengthening Private Enterprise and Building Democracy. Co-author. 39 pp. 1995 13. General Electric in Hungary (1989-94): Study of the Largest U.S. Investment in Central and Eastern Europe. Co-author. 73 pp. 1993 12. Foreign Direct Investment in Hungary: A Proposed Framework, Research Issues, Methods. Author. (Background study prepared for the Joint Hungarian-International Blue Ribbon Commission.) 61 pp. of text plus 100 pp. of appendices. 1992 11. Invest Hungary. Senior author and project leader of a set of printed brochures on Hungary's investment environment, privatization policies, business conditions, taxation, currency system, labor and social policies. Printed in 5,000 copies and used by Hungary's Ministry of International Economic Relations as well as by the State Property Agency to provide information to prospective foreign investors. 50 pp. 1991 10. The Hungarian Experiment: The Political Economy of Change in a Communist-Led Country. Final Report to the National Council for Soviet and EE Research. 1991. 85 pp. 2 Distributed, but not formally published as a book, article, or chapter.
  • 15. 15 1989 9. Implications for the USSR of Eastern European Economic Reforms. Co-author. Study of the Hudson Institute's Center for Soviet and Central European Studies (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1989.) 64 pp. 1988 8. The Substitutability of Eastern Europe's Trade with Other Soviet Bloc Countries and with the West. Co-author. Study of the Hudson Institute's Center for Soviet and Central European Studies (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1988.) 250 pp. 1984 7. Hungary's Price, Wage, Tax and Subsidy, Systems and Policies, and Their Effects on Its Economy. Author. Annex 1 to the Country Economic Memorandum, Hungary: Stabilization, Growth, and Structural Adjustment (Washington, DC: World Bank Report No. 5006-HU.) 122 pp. 1976 6. East-West Industrial Cooperation: The U.S. Perspective. Co-author. Report to the Bureau of East-West Trade, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1976. 340 pp. 5. The Mirror Statistics Problem in East-West Trade: Discussion of the Issues and a Pilot Reconciliation. Co-author. Unpublished report submitted on contract to the Bureau of East- West Trade, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1976. 160 pp. 1974 4. East-West Trade and Technology Transfer. Co-editor. Indiana University, International Development Research Center, 1974. 85 pp. 1971 3. Recent Developments in the Hungarian Financial System. Co-author. Columbia University for the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, 1971. 252 pp. 2. Selected Comparisons of the Financial Systems of the USSR, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland. Columbia University for the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, 1971. 70 pp. 1968 1. Foreign Trade Prices in the Soviet Bloc: A Theoretical and Empirical Study (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 1968).
  • 16. 16 Cases 2. "A Light in Hungary: GE Acquires Tungsram.” Co-author. Indiana University, CIBER Case Collection, 1996. Reprinted in the largest-selling IB textbook, Danel & Radabaugh, International Business (7th and 8th editions, 2000). 1. “U.S. & German Telecom Giants in Hungary.” Co-author. Indiana U MATCH, 1996.
  • 17. 17 Articles and Chapters (Single author, unless otherwise noted3 2016 145. “On the likelihood of the euro replacing the forint”, Budapest Business Journal, March. 144. “The Euro and Eastern Europe” in Bruno Dallago, Gert Guri and John McGowan (eds), A Global Perspective on the European Economic Crisis (Oxford: Routledge). 2015 143. “Neo-Transitional Economies: The Broad Context” International Finance Review, Vol 16, pp. 21-52. 2014 142. "The Eurozone Crises and Eastern Europe" in M. Kisilowski (ed.), Free Market In Its Thirties: Modern Business Decision Making in Central and Eastern Europe (Budapest: CEU Press, 2014). 2013 141. “Toward a New Growth Model in Eastern Europe” in P. Hare and G. Turley (eds), Handbook of the Economics and Political Economy of Transition (Oxford, UK: Routledge, March 2013). 2012 140. “Crises and Recovery in Central and Eastern Europe: Commonalities and Differences” in G. G. Gorzelak, C. C. Goh, and K. Fazekas (eds), Adaptability and Change: The Regional Dimensions in Central and Eastern Europe (Warsaw: W.N. Scholar). 2010 139. “A New Growth Model [for Emerging Europe].” Finance: The Executive Magazine for Emerging Europe. Autumn 2010. 138. “Global Economic Crises: Impacts on Eastern Europe.” Acta Oeconomica, January 2010. 2009 137. “A Vilagvalsag es Keleteuropa” [The Global Crisis and Eastern Europe]. Chapter in Istvan Magas (ed.), Chapter in Vilaggazdasagi Valsag 2008-2009: Diagnozisok es Kezelesek [Global Economic Crisis: Diagnoses and Prescriptions]. (Budapest: Aula Publisher). An article based on this essay has appeared in Kulgazdasag, No. 1-2, 2010. 3 Papers presented at conferences are not listed, if unpublished.
  • 18. 18 2007 136. “Tardos Marton: In Memoriam” [in Hungarian]. In Baratunk, Marci (Budapest: Penzugykutato). 135. “Governance Challenges and Their Implications for Management Development.” In Globalization and Its Implications of Management Development: Proceedings of the 15th CEEMAN Annual Conference (Istanbul, Turkey, September 27-29, 2007). 2006 134. “EU Expansion and Regional Policy.” In Bruno Dallago (ed.), Transformation and European Integration: The Local Dimension (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2006). 2000 133. “Business Cultures in Market and Transforming Economies”, In Society and Economy in Central and Eastern Europe (Journal of the Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration, Vol. XXII, No. 3 (2000). 1998 132. “Hungary’s Economic Transformation, 1990-98.” In Aurel Braun and Zoltan Barany (eds.), Dilemmas of Transformation: The Hungarian Experience (New York: Roman and Littlefield, 1999). 131. “Tungsram.” Co-author. In J. Brada and I.J. Singh (eds), Corporate Governance in Central Eastern Europe: Case Studies of Firms in Transition (Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1999). 130. “Economic Role of Governments: Global Comparisons and Trends.” The Global Connection (publication of Indiana University’s Global Business Information Network), Vol. 6, No. 1 (Fall 1998). 129. “Introducing Culture in Business Courses”. In International Teaching Resources for Business (Indiana University CIBER Newsletter), No. 12, Autumn 1998. 1997 128. “The Soviet Bloc as an Integration Model: Economic, Political and Military Aspects.” In A. Ban, I. Dioszegi, P. Marer and I. Romsics, Integration Attempts in Central and Eastern Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Budapest: Teleki Foundation, 1997.) In Hungarian. 127. “How Hungary Dialed Up a Privatization Success.” Co-author. The Wall Street Journal Europe, March 13, 1997. 126. “Foreign Investment Brings a Clash of Cultures.” Co-author. Transition (The World Bank), Vol. 8, No. 1 (February 1997).
  • 19. 19 125. "The Postwar Role of Germany in Central and Eastern Europe." In Roland Schönfeld (ed.), Germany and Southeastern Europe: Aspects of Relations in the Twentieth Century (Munich and Los Angeles, Südosteuropa Gesellschaft and UCLA, 1997). 1996 124. "International Finance and International Financial Institutions." In K. Cichocki and P. Marer (eds.), Education for Transition to Market Economy in Countries of Central and Eastern Europe (Warsaw: Polish-U.S. Fulbright Commission). 123. "Summing Up and Reflections on Education for Transition to Market Economy." In K. Cichocki and P. Marer (eds.), Education for Transition to Market Economy in Countries of Central and Eastern Europe (Warsaw: Polish-U.S. Fulbright Commission). 122. "GE Acquires and Restructures Tunsgram: The First Six Years (1990-1995)." Coauthor. Trends and Policies in Privatization, Vol. III, No. 1 (1996). An abbreviated version appeared in Hungarian in Vezetéstudomány, June 1996. 121. "Comparative Privatization and Restructuring in Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic, 1989-1995." In Ivan Berend (ed.), Long-Term Structural Changes in East Central Europe (Munich and Los Angeles, Südosteuropa Gesellschaft and UCLA). 120. “Foreign Economic Relations During Transition: Trade Policies and Developments Between the OECD and the Central and East European Countries and the NIS, 1989-1994, " Journal of Transition Management, 1/1996. 1995 119. "Hungary's Path Between 1989 & 1994" (in Hungarian), Külgazdaság, Vol. XXXIX, No. 5. 118. "Privatization in Transition Economies: Should Assets be Distributed or Sold?" Global Connection (publication of the Indiana Center for Global Business), October 1995. 117. "Hungary Five Years After Communism." Global Connection (publication of the Indiana Center for Global Business), January 1995. 1994 116. "Hungary During 1988-1994: A Political Economy Assessment." In East Central European Economies in Transition (Washington D.C., U.S. GPO, 1994). Compendium of invited papers by the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress. 115. "Privatizing the Management of State Property." Journal of East European Law (Columbia University), Vol. 1, No. 2. 114. “Economic Relations between Eastern, Central and Western Europe: An Historical Perspective." In Ivan T. Berend (ed.), Transition to a Market Economy at the End of the Twentieth Century. (Munich, Germany: Südosteuropa Gesellschaft, 1994).
  • 20. 20 113. Conceptual and Practical Problems of Comparative Measurement of Economic Performance of the East European Economies in Transition. "In Economic Statistics for Economies in Transition: East Europe in the 1990's (Washington: U.S. Dept. of Labor). 1993 112. "Economic Transformation in Central and Eastern Europe." In Shafiqul Islam and Michael Mandelbaum (eds.), Making Markets: Economic Transformation in Eastern Europe and the Post-Soviet States (New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 1993). 1992 111. "Central and Eastern Europe: An Economic Perspective. In Dick Clark (ed.), United States Relations with Central and Eastern Europe (Eleventh Congressional Conference) (Queenstown, MD: Aspen Institute, 1992). 110. "Growth without Inflation." Figyelö (in Hungarian), April 2, 1992. 109. "Non-Profit Organizations in the United States: Description and Relevance for Hungary." Aula (Quarterly Journal of the Budapest University of Economic Sciences). In English. Nov. 1, 1992. 108. "Soviet Reform Prospects." Two-part article, Tokyo Shimbun (one of Japan's largest circulation newspapers, in Japanese). June 28 and July 3, 1992. 107. "Transformation of a Centrally-Directed Economy: Ownership and Privatization in Hungary during 1990." Bruno Dallago et al., (eds.), Privatization and Entrepreneurship in Post- Socialist Countries: Economy, Law and Society (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992). 106. “Roadblocks to Changing Economic Systems in Eastern Europe." In William S. Kern (ed.), From Socialism to Market Economy: The Transition Problem (Kalamazoo MI: W. E. Upjohn Institute, 1992). 1991 105. "Reform in Eastern Europe: Comment on the Presentation of Lawrence Summers, Chief Economist of the World Bank." In Charles Wolf, Jr., (ed.), Promoting Democracy and Free Markets in Eastern Europe (Santa Monica, CA: Rand, 1991). 104. "Pitfalls in Transferring Market-Economy Experiences to the European Economies in Transition." In Paul Marer and Salvatore Zecchini (eds.), The Transition to a Market Economy (Paris: OECD, 1991). 103. "Models of Successful Market Economies." Transition to a Market Economy. Cited above. 102. "Hungary.” The Journal of Multinational Strategies, Vol. 1, No. 1 (Summer 1991). 101. "Foreign Economic Liberalization in Hungary and Poland." American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings, Vol. 81, No. 2, May 1991.
  • 21. 21 100. "The Transition to a Market Economy in Central and Eastern Europe." The OECD Observer, April-May 1991. 99. "Hungary: Reform and Transition." In Ilpyong Kim and Jane Zacek (eds.), Reform and Transformation in Communist Systems: Comparative Perspectives (New York: Paragon). 98. "Economic Liberalization in Eastern Europe and in Market Economies." Co-author. In Paul Marer and András Köves (eds.), Foreign Economic Liberalization: Transformations in Socialist and Market Economies (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1991). Also appeared as a refereed journal article, in Hungarian, in Külgazdaság, Dec., 1990 and, in German, in Südosteuropa Mitteilungen, Vol. 31, No. 1 (1991). 97. "Foreign Trade Strategies of Nations: A New Interpretation." Co-author. In Foreign Economic Liberalization: Transformations in Socialist and Market Economies. Cited above. 96. "Joint Ventures in Centrally Planned Economies." In Rose Marie Bukics and Bernard Katz (eds.), International Financial Management: A Handbook for Finance, Treasury and Accounting Professionals (Chicago: Probus, 1991) 95. "Foreign Trade Strategies in Eastern Europe: Determinants, Outcomes, Prospects". In Gary Bertsch and Steven Elliott-Gower (eds.), The Impact of Governments on East-West Economic Relations (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1991). 1990 94. “Hungary Joins the West." Challenge, Volume 33, No. 5 (Sept/Oc. 1990). 93. "Roadblocks to Economic Transformation in Central and Eastern Europe and Some Lessons of Market Economies. In Dick Clark (ed.), United States-Soviet and East-European Relations: Building a Congressional Cadre (Queenstown, Md.: Aspen Institute, 1990). 92. "Entrepreneurship and Reform in Communist Countries." In The Political and Social Environment for Entrepreneurship. (Washington, D.C.: George Washington, University., 1990). Proceedings of a conference. 91. "Reforms in the USSR and Eastern Europe: Is There a Link?" In Aurel Braun (ed.), The Soviet-East European Relationship in the Gorbachev Era: The Prospect for Adaptation. (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1990). 1989 90. "A Five-Point Definition of a Socialist Market Economy." Acta Oeconomica, Vol. 40, Nos. 3-4 (1989). 89. "Economic Reform and Privatization in the USSR and Eastern Europe." SPEA Review, Vol. 10, No. 2 (Spring, 1989).
  • 22. 22 88. "East Europe's Debt Situation in Global Perspective: Utopian versus Realistic Solutions." In H. W. Singer and Soumitra Sharma (eds.), Growth and External Debt Management (London: Macmillan, 1989). 87. "Hungary's Reform and Performance in the Kadar Era (1956-88)." In Pressures for Reform in the Eastern European Economies (Washington, DC: U.S. GPO, 1989). Compendium of invited papers by the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress. 86. "Reform and Membership of the Planned Economies in the GATT, the IMF, and the World Bank." Co-author. In Pressures for Reform in the Eastern European Economies. See above 85. "Hungary's Political and Economic Transformation (1988-89) and Prospects after Kadar." In Pressures for Reform in the Eastern European Economies. Cited above. 84. "Market Mechanism Reforms in Hungary." In Peter Van Ness (ed.), Market Reforms in Socialist Societies: Comparing China and Hungary. (Boulder, CO: L. Rienner, 1989). 83. "The Economies and Trade of Eastern Europe. "In William E. Griffith (ed.), Central and Eastern Europe and the West (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1989). 82. "Centrally Planned Economies in the IMF, the World Bank, and the GATT." In Josef C. Brada, Ed A. Hewett, and Thomas A. Wolf (eds.), Economic Adjustment and Reform in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union: Essays in Honor of Franklyn Holzman, (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1989). 81. "The Impact of U. S. Policy on Its Trade with the CMEA. In Jan K. Fedorowicz (ed.), East- West Trade in the 1980's: Prospects and Policies (Boulder, CO: Westview Press). 1988 80. "Ungarns Aussenhandel, Zahlungsbilanz und Schuldenentwicklung, 1970-1990" [The Development of Hungary's Balance of Payments and Debt, 1970-1990]. Europaeische Rundschau (Austria), Vol. 16, No. 3 (1988). 79. "Comparing the Foreign Economic Strategies of Market and Centrally Planned Economies." In Christopher T. Saunders (ed.), Macroeconomic Management and the Enterprise in East and West (London: Macmillan, 1988). 78. "The Declining Performance of the Polish Economy: A Comment." In The Polish Economy in the Year 2000. The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies (Pittsburgh, PA: Center for Russian and East European Studies of the University of Pittsburgh, 1988). 77. “Poland's Debt Situation in Global Perspective." In Paul Marer and W. Siwinski (eds.), Creditworthiness and Reform in Poland.- Western and Polish Perspectives (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988). 76. "What Role for the IMF and the World Bank in Poland?" In Creditworthiness and Reform in Poland. Cited above.
  • 23. 23 1987 75. "Soviet-East European Economic Relations: A Historical Perspective.' In Paul Marer and Pieter van Veen (eds.), East European Economic Trends and East-West Trade (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1987). 74. "East Europe's Balance of Payments Crisis and Consequences." In East European Economic Trends and East-West Trade. Cited above. 73. "A muködö toke becsalogatása Magyaroszágra--nyugati szemszögböl [Attracting Western Capital to Hungary--A Western Perspective]. Külgazdaság [Foreign Trade] (Hungary), Vol. XXXI, No. 5 (May 1987). 72. "Economic Policies and Options for Eastern Europe." In Charles J. Bukowski and Mark A. Cichock (eds.), Prospects for Change in Socialist Systems (New York: Praeger, 1987). 1986 71. "Economic System." In Klaus-Detlev Grothusen (ed.), Hungary: Handbook on South Eastern Europe, Vol. V (Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1986). 70. "Hungary's Foreign Economic Relations in the Mid1980's: A Retrospective and Predictive Assessment." In The Economies of Eastern Europe and Their Foreign Economic Relations (Brussels: NATO Economics Directorate, 1986). 69. "Growing Soviet International Economic Isolation." PlanEcon Reports, Vol. II, No. 31 (July 21, 1986). 68. "Costs of Domination, Benefits of Subordination." Co-author. In Jan Triska (ed.), Dominant Powers and Their Dependencies: The U.S. in Latin America and the USSR in Eastern Europe (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1986). 67. "The Economics and Politics of Reform in Hungary." Co-author. International Organization, Vol. 40, No. 2 (Spring 1986). Reprinted in Ellen Comisso and Laura Tyson (eds.), Power, Purpose and Collective Choice: Economic Strategy in Socialist States (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1986). 66. "U.S. East-West Trade Policy, Focusing on Recent Legal Developments." In B. Csikós- Nagy and D. Young (eds.), East-West Economic Relations in a Changing Global Environment (London: Macmillan, 1986). 65. "Invited Statement and Testimony on Soviet Relations with Eastern Europe." In Soviet-East European Relations and U.S. Policy. Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle East of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, October 2 and 7, 1985. (Washington, D.C.: U.S. GPO, 1986). 64. "The Image of U.S. Business Schools in Japan"), Hong Kong Journal of Business Mgmt., No. 3, 1985. Also in R. N. Farmer (ed.), Advances in International Comparative Management, (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press); in Personnel Training (in Japanese).
  • 24. 24 1985 63. "East-West Commercial Relations and Prospects for East Europe and Yugoslavia" (in French), Revue d'Études Comparatives Est-Ouest (France), Vol. XVI, No. 3 (9/1985). 62. "The Future of Hungary's Economic Reform." Wirtshaftsanalysen (Publication of the Die Erste Osterreichische Spar-Casse-Bank, Vienna), December 1985. 61. "Economic Reform in Hungary: From Central Planning to Regulated Market." In East European Economies: Slow Growth in the 1980's (Washington, DC: U.S. GPO, 1985). Compendium of Papers Submitted to the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress. 60. "Alternative Estimates of the Dollar GNP and Growth Rates of the CMEA Countries." In East European Economies: Slow Growth in the 1980's. Cited above. 59. "Economic Policies and Systems in Eastern Europe and Yugoslavia: Commonalities and Differences." In East European Economies: Slow Growth in the 1980's. Cited above. 58. "Hungary's Balance of Payments Crisis and Response, 1978-1984." In East European Economies: Slow Growth in the 1980's. Cited above. 57. "Economic Reforms in Hungary: A Summary View and Assessment." Sudost-Europa (Federal Republic of Germany), Vol. 34, No. 6 (1985). 56. "Ungarns Wirtschaftsreform 1957-1985" [Hungary's Economic Reform, 1957-1985]. Europaeische Rundschau (Austria), Vol. 13, No. 1 (1985). 55. "Economic Reform in Hungary." In Morris Bornstein (ed.), Comparative Economic Systems: Models and Cases. (New York: Richard D. Irwin, 1985) (fifth edition). 1984 54. "United States Market Disruption Procedures Involving Romanian and Other CPE Products." In Marvin R. Jackson and James D. Woodson, Jr. (eds), New Horizons in East- West Economic and Business Relations (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984). 53. "Management and Reform in Centrally Planned Economies." In Richard N. Farmer and John V. Lombardi (eds.), Readings in International Business (Bloomington, IN: Cedarwood Press, 1984). 52. "Hungary Moves Ahead with Economic Reforms." Wharton Centrally Planned Economies Current Analysis, Vol. III, No. 39 (June 4, 1984). 51. "Hungary's 1981-85 Five-Year Plan: Further Economic Reforms, Policy Changes, and Implications. In Béla K. Király, et al (eds.), The First War Between Socialist States: The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and Its Impact (New York: Brooklyn College Press, 1984).
  • 25. 25 50. "Intrabloc Economic Relations and Prospects." In David Holloway and Jane M. 0. Sharp (eds.), The Warsaw Pact: Alliance in Transition? (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1984). 49. "The Political Economy of Soviet Relations with East Europe." In Sara M. Terry (ed.), Soviet Policy in Eastern Europe (New Haven: Yale, 1984). Reprinted in E. Hoffman and R. Laird (eds.), Soviet Foreign Policy in a Changing World (New York: Aldine, 1986). 1983 48. "Invited Statement and Testimony on Trade Remedy Laws." In Options to Improve the Trade Remedy Laws. Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Trade of the Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representative (May 4 and 11, 1983). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1983. 47. “A Profile of the East-West Trade of the United States, 1970-83." United Nations, Economic Commission for Europe, Review of Recent and Prospective Trends and Problems in East-West Trade (Geneva, Switzerland: Document TRADE/R. 462/Add. 3). 46. Financing the Four Modernizations: China's Capital Investment Needs and the International Capital Markets." In Daniel H. Bays (ed.), U.S.-China Trade Relations, 1983: Sex Essays (Lawrence, KS: Center for East Asian Studies, the University of Kansas, 1983). 1982 45. "Exchange Rates and Convertibility in Hungary's New Economic Mechanism." In East European Economic Assessment, Vol. 1. Cited above. An earlier version was published in I. Dobozi and M. Simai (eds.), Világgazdaság, Keleti-Nyugati Kapcsolatok, Magyar és Amerikai Gazdaság: A Mechanizmus és a Szerkezeti Alkalmazkodás Problémája. [World Economy, East-West Relations, Hungarian and American Economies: Problems of Adaptability of the Economic Mechanism and Structure] (Budapest: Hungarian Scientific Council for World Economy, 1982). 44. "Economic Performance and Prospects in Eastern Europe: Analytical Summary and Interpretation of Findings. In In East European Economic Assessment, Vol. 2. Cited above. 43. "CMEA Integration: Theory and Practice." Co-author. In East European Economic Assessment, Vol. 2. Cited above. 1981 42. "U.S. Multinationals in Poland: A Case Study of the International Harvester-BUMAR Cooperation in Construction Machinery." Co-author. In East European Economic Assessment, Vol. 1. (Washington, DC: U. S - GPO, 1981.) Compendium of papers submitted to the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress. 41. "Poland: What Should the United States Do?” Congressional Record, U.S. House of Representatives, (H6453-54), September 21, 1981.
  • 26. 26 40. "Import Protectionism in the U.S. and Poland's Manufactures Exports." In Paul Marer and Eugeniusz Tabaczynski (eds.), Polish- U.S. Industrial Cooperation: Findings of a Joint Research Project (Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press, 1981). 39. "The Mechanism and Performance of Hungary's Foreign Trade, 1968-1979." In P. Hare, H. Radice, N. Swain (eds.), Hungary: A Decade of Reform (London: Allen and Unwin, 1981). 38. "The Economies of Eastern Europe and Soviet Foreign Policy." In Seweryn Bialer (ed.), Domestic Context of Soviet Foreign Policy. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1980). 37. "The Theory and Measurement of East European Integration." Co-author. In Paul Marer and J.M. Montias (eds.), East European Integration and East-West Trade (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1980). Reprinted in Ali M. El-Agraa (ed.), International Economic Integration (London: Macmillan, 1982, 1988). 36. "Western Multinational Corporations in East Europe and CMEA Integration." In Z. Fallenbuchl and C. H. Macmillan (eds.), Partners in East-West Economic Relations: The Determinants of Choice (New York: Pergamon Press, 1980). 35. "Dumping, Market Disruption and Other Safeguard Procedures in East-West Trade." In D. Wallace, Jr. et al., Interface One: Conference Proceedings on the Application of U.S. Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Laws to Imports from State-Controlled and State- Owned Enterprises (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Law Center, 1980). 1979 34. "Statement and Invited Testimony on Eastern Europe”. In U.S. Policy Toward Eastern Europe. Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle East of the Committee on International Relations, House of Representatives, September 7 and 12, 1978. (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1979.) 33. "So Foreign yet So Near: Foreign Investments in the U.S." Executive (Journal of the Grad School of Business & Public Administration, Cornell University), Vol. 5, No. 3 (June 1979). 32. "The Future for Trade with China." Business Horizons, Vol. 22, No. 2 (April 1979). 31. "East European Economies: Achievements, Problems, Prospects." In T. Rakowska- Harmstone and A. Gyorgy (eds.), Communism in Eastern Europe (Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press, 1979). Revised chapter for the second edition (1984). 30. “Import-protekcionizmus az USA-ban és Magyarország késztermék-exportjának növelése” [Import Protectionism in the USA and the Expansion of Hungary's Manufactures Exports] - In I. Dobozi and M. Simai (eds.), Gazdaságelmélet, Kelet-Nyugati Kapcsolatok, Magyar és Amerikai Gazdaság [Economic Theory, East-West Relations & the Economies of Hungary and America]. (Budapest: Hungarian Scientific Council for World Economy, 1979). 29. "U.S. Restrictions and Safeguarding Procedures: Imports from East Europe” In H. Giersch (ed.), International Economic Development and Resource Transfer (J. C. B. Mohr: 1979).
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