Comparative assessments of private sector development and privatization measures in economics in transition and least developed countries of Asia and the Pacific : policies and institutions

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2001-01Contributor/ s
Pyakuryal, Bishwambher
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UN.ESCAP
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RT Generic T1 Comparative assessments of private sector development and privatization measures in economics in transition and least developed countries of Asia and the Pacific : policies and institutions A1 UN.ESCAP, YR 2001-01 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/7700 PB United Nations AB This paper analyses economic reforms in promoting the private sector in economies in transition and least developed countries, where their privatization policies and related issues are examined. The recent economic development, environment and the impact of institutions and market structures on privatization outcomes are analysed. Legal issues for promoting privatization are discussed. The linkage between SMEs and large enterprises is emphasized for higher productivity and expanded market access. The transfer of technology is inevitable for promoting competitiveness within the private sector. Skills development for local experts is needed to attract foreign investments. Problems and hurdles in making privatization a success are identified. OL English(30) TY - GEN T1 - Comparative assessments of private sector development and privatization measures in economics in transition and least developed countries of Asia and the Pacific : policies and institutions AU - UN.ESCAP Y1 - 2001-01 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/7700 PB - United Nations AB - This paper analyses economic reforms in promoting the private sector in economies in transition and least developed countries, where their privatization policies and related issues are examined. The recent economic development, environment and the impact of institutions and market structures on privatization outcomes are analysed. Legal issues for promoting privatization are discussed. The linkage between SMEs and large enterprises is emphasized for higher productivity and expanded market access. The transfer of technology is inevitable for promoting competitiveness within the private sector. Skills development for local experts is needed to attract foreign investments. Problems and hurdles in making privatization a success are identified. @misc{20.500.12870_7700 author = {UN.ESCAP}, title = {Comparative assessments of private sector development and privatization measures in economics in transition and least developed countries of Asia and the Pacific : policies and institutions}, year = {2001-01}, abstract = {This paper analyses economic reforms in promoting the private sector in economies in transition and least developed countries, where their privatization policies and related issues are examined. The recent economic development, environment and the impact of institutions and market structures on privatization outcomes are analysed. Legal issues for promoting privatization are discussed. The linkage between SMEs and large enterprises is emphasized for higher productivity and expanded market access. The transfer of technology is inevitable for promoting competitiveness within the private sector. Skills development for local experts is needed to attract foreign investments. Problems and hurdles in making privatization a success are identified.}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/7700} } @misc{20.500.12870_7700 author = {UN.ESCAP}, title = {Comparative assessments of private sector development and privatization measures in economics in transition and least developed countries of Asia and the Pacific : policies and institutions}, year = {2001-01}, abstract = {This paper analyses economic reforms in promoting the private sector in economies in transition and least developed countries, where their privatization policies and related issues are examined. The recent economic development, environment and the impact of institutions and market structures on privatization outcomes are analysed. Legal issues for promoting privatization are discussed. The linkage between SMEs and large enterprises is emphasized for higher productivity and expanded market access. The transfer of technology is inevitable for promoting competitiveness within the private sector. Skills development for local experts is needed to attract foreign investments. Problems and hurdles in making privatization a success are identified.}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/7700} } TY - GEN T1 - Comparative assessments of private sector development and privatization measures in economics in transition and least developed countries of Asia and the Pacific : policies and institutions AU - UN.ESCAP UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/7700 PB - United Nations AB - This paper analyses economic reforms in promoting the private sector in economies in transition and least developed countries, where their privatization policies and related issues are examined. The recent economic development, environment and the impact of institutions and market structures on privatization outcomes are analysed. Legal issues for promoting privatization are discussed. The linkage between SMEs and large enterprises is emphasized for higher productivity and expanded market access. The transfer of technology is inevitable for promoting competitiveness within the private sector. Skills development for local experts is needed to attract foreign investments. Problems and hurdles in making privatization a success are identified.Metadata
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ECONOMIC GROWTH/ INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT/ LEAST DEVELOPED COUNTRIES/ PRIVATIZATION/ DEVELOPING COUNTRIES/ INDUSTRIAL POLICY/ ECONOMIES IN TRANSITION/ INDUSTRIALIZATION/ ECONOMIC REFORM/ LEAST DEVELOPED COUNTRIES/ PRIVATE SECTOR/ SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES/ LARGE ENTERPRISES/ TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION/ PUBLIC SECTOR/ CAPACITY BUILDING/
Abstract
This paper analyses economic reforms in promoting the private sector in economies in transition and least developed countries, where their privatization policies and related issues are examined. The recent economic development, environment and the impact of institutions and market structures on privatization outcomes are analysed. Legal issues for promoting privatization are discussed. The linkage between SMEs and large enterprises is emphasized for higher productivity and expanded market access. The transfer of technology is inevitable for promoting competitiveness within the private sector. Skills development for local experts is needed to attract foreign investments. Problems and hurdles in making privatization a success are identified.