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Collective action and post-communist enterprise: the economic logic of Russia's business associations

William Pyle

No 19/2005, BOFIT Discussion Papers from Bank of Finland Institute for Emerging Economies (BOFIT)

Abstract: Drawing on a unique set of surveys, this article explores the question of whether Russia s post-communist business associations are generally antithetical to or supportive of the broad objectives of economic restructuring.Contrary to the most widely cited analysis as to the purposes of collective action in the business community, the survey evidence demonstrates that association members have embraced market-adapting behaviors at greater rates than non-members.The responses of both firms and associations, moreover, suggest that the associations themselves are, at least in part, directly responsible.These findings point to the conclusion that in contemporary Russia the net returns to collective action in support of market development are high relative to those for purposes that are less benign.

Date: 2005
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Related works:
Journal Article: Collective action and post-communist enterprise: The economic logic of Russia's business associations (2006) Downloads
Working Paper: Collective Action and Post-Communist Enterprise: The Economic Logic of Russia’s Business Associations (2005) Downloads
Working Paper: Collective Action and Post-Communist Enterprise: The Economic Logic of Russia’s Business Associations (2005) Downloads
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