ABSTRACT

Providing a comparative analysis of Central and Eastern European economies, this book explores the economic impacts of populism in those countries in the region which have seen some form of populist rule. Populism has been thriving in the new member states of the EU ever since the outburst of the global financial and economic crisis, but unlike the cases of Latin America, Brexit or the Trump administration, the emphasis has not been on trade protectionism or unsustainable macroeconomic policies in these countries. This book demonstrates that studying macroeconomic variables such as fiscal balance or current account positions cannot tell the whole story of the economic consequences of populism. Instead, a more nuanced scrutiny of who gets what under populist rule is required. Adopting the ideational definition of populism, the volume shows that Central and Eastern European populists have heavily reshaped redistributive policies; yet, they have not neglected the budget constraint of the general government. Instead, there has been a tendency to disregard the institutional constraints of decision-making in the economy and, in turn, to redefine the regulatory framework and property rights structure of the respective economies. This innovative edited volume will be of interest to readers in political economy and political science who wish to better understand the impacts of populism.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Economic policy of populist leaders in Central and Eastern Europe

part |47 pages

Part I.

chapter 2|25 pages

Populism and economic policies

The implications of populism as a thin-centred ideology in the economy

part |212 pages

Part II.

chapter 4|21 pages

The (mis)use of unconstrained political power

The Hungarian economy

chapter 5|21 pages

Economic populism in Poland

New economic policies and their beneficiaries

chapter 7|23 pages

Populism in the making

The case of Slovakia

chapter 8|21 pages

Slovenia

The rise and fall of Janez Janša

chapter 9|25 pages

Opposition in government

The atypical case of Croatian Most/Bridge

chapter 10|20 pages

Macroeconomic populism in the Baltics

Real effective exchange rate, current account deficit and the economic consequences of populist rule

chapter 12|21 pages

Where populism has become the mainstream

The case of Bulgaria

chapter 13|19 pages

Taking stock

Populist governments and the economy in CEE