Verlag: Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2005
ISBN 10: 1403917124 ISBN 13: 9781403917126
Anbieter: Emile Kerssemakers ILAB, Heerlen, Niederlande
Wrappers (paperback) xiv,268 pp.; 22 cm. Text in English - Very good. 499g.
Verlag: Luiss University Press, 2006
ISBN 10: 888887772X ISBN 13: 9788888877723
Anbieter: Librodifaccia, Alessandria, AL, Italien
Zustand: Ottime. italiano Condizioni dell'esterno: Buone Condizioni dell'interno: Buone.
Verlag: Clarendon Press, USA, 1993
ISBN 10: 0198287488 ISBN 13: 9780198287483
Anbieter: Biblioteca di Babele, Tarquinia, VT, Italien
Zustand: BUONO USATO. INGLESE Traduzione a cura di John E. Powell. Sovraccoperta leggermente stanca alle estremità del dorso; presente strappo al piatto posteriore; risvolti leggermente ingialliti. Legatura con titoli dorati solo al dorso, in buone condizioni. Pagine ben salde alla cerniera, con ampio margine, lievemente ingialliti i tagli, con presenza di piccole macchie al taglio davanti. Numero pagine 258.
Verlag: Sydney University Press Sep 1993, 1993
ISBN 10: 0198287488 ISBN 13: 9780198287483
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - Italy has a huge and interventionist governmental economic policy: the general government spends over 50% of the Gross Domestic Product. Professor Padoa Schioppa Kostoris argues that much of this public action and regulation is irrational and counter-efficient. For example, the author analyses the role of taxes and subsidies, and concludes that these are accorded without any regard to their implications; illustrates that national wage equalization fails to allow the South to compete for industry on the grounds of lower labour costs; argues that private capital investment is often 'crowded out' by public money, and reveals inefficiencies in the provision of public services. Professor Padoa Schioppa Kostoris then argues that the Italian economy is also characterised by a large and efficient 'black market', and that much of the private sector already evades the command and control imposed by the state. Since de facto deregulation therefore exists to a large extent in the Italian economy, the author calls for legal deregulation and privatisation. She argues that a decrease in and an altered character of public action will enable the Italian economy to achieve higher rates of growth, and to reconcile the goals of efficiency and public interest.