Working Papers
No. 145 - 2004-06
Fleischer Tamás: SUSTAINABLE-SETTLEMENT CRITERIA, ECO-CITIES AND PROSPECTS IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE
No. 144 - 2004-05
Zidek Libor : COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF COMPETITIVENESS: THE CZECH REPUBLIC AND HUNGARY - AN INSTITUTIONAL APPROACH
No. 143 - 2004-05
Szanyi Miklós, Buzás Norbert: CHALLENGES OF HUNGARIAN SCIENCE POLICY: THE EVOLUTION OF A KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY AND SOCIETY
No. 142 - 2003-12
Szalavetz Andrea: PERIPHERAL PARTICIPANTS IN GLOBAL PRODUCTION NETWORKS. CHANGING DYNAMICS IN THE TRANSFORMATION FROM INDUSTRIAL TO INTELLECTUAL CAPITALISM
No. 141 - 2003-12
No. 140 - 2003-11
Fóti Klára: POTENTIAL MIGRATION FROM HUNGARY TO AUSTRIA AFTER EU ACCESSION AND POSSIBLE IMPACTS OF THIS
No. 139 - 2003-09
No. 138 - 2003-07
Artner Annamária, Székely-Doby András, Bassa Zoltán, Hernádi András, Mészáros klára: FAR EASTERN RESPONSES TO GLOBALIZATION
No. 137 - 2003-07
Szigetvári Tamás, Ehrlich Éva: TRANSFORMATION AND HUNGARIAN REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT: FACTS, TRENDS, DILEMMAS AND OBJECTIVES
No. 136 - 2003-06
Dezséri Kálmán: BUSINESS-CYCLE DEVELOPMENT IN HUNGARY AND EUROPE: THE CONSEQUENCES OF EU AND EMU ACCESSION FOR HUNGARY'S LABOUR MARKET
No. 135 - 2003-06
Koyama Yoji : THE TRANSITION TO A MARKET ECONOMY IN THE SUCCESSOR STATES OF FORMER YUGOSLAVIA DIFFERENCES OF NORTH AND SOUTH
No. 134 - 2003-03
Szalavetz Andrea: 'TERTIARIZATION' OF MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY IN THE NEW ECONOMY
EXPERIENCES IN HUNGARIAN COMPANIES
No. 133 - 2002-12
Tiba Zoltán : FOOD AID FOR FOOD SECURITY?
TRENDS AND CANGES IN THE 1990S
No. 132 - 2002-11
Bekó Jani : FOREIGN TRADE FLOWS AND ECONOMIC ACTIVITY IN SLOVENIA: CAUSALITY PATTERNS FROM A TRANSITION EPISODE
No. 131 - 2002-10
No. 130 - 2002-10
No. 129 - 2002-10
Szalavetz Andrea: SOME NEGLECTED EFFECTS OF EU ENLARGEMENT RATIONALIZATION AND SPECIALIZATION
No. 128 - 2002-10
Vida Krisztina, Pyszna Dorota : THE MANAGEMENT OF ACCESSION TO THE EUROPEAN UNION IN POLAND AND HUNGARY
No. 127 - 2002-05
Farkas Péter: DEVELOPMENT THEORY ON RELATIONS BETWEEN THE STATE AND THE MARKET AND ON THEIR EFFECTS ON THE PERIPHERIES OF THE WORLD ECONOMY
No. 126 - 2002-05



