Category: Essentials of Economics: Ch 13
With the news this month of the death of Boris Yeltsin, it has been an opportunity to look back at the economic legacy of the first democratically-elected President of Russia. Boris Yeltsin took over at a time when all goods were scarce and the industrial infrastructure was crumbling. He adopted policies of extensive privatisation and abandoned price controls. To what extent has this created the Russia of today and what is the legacy he has left behind?
Yeltsin’s moment The Economist (subscription) (26/4/07)
Yeltsin’s economic legacy BBC News Online (24/4/07)
Questions
1. |
Explain the reasoning behind the policies that were adopted by Boris Yeltsin in his early years in office. |
2. |
Discuss the extent to which those policies enabled the development of the Russian economy. |
3. |
Assess the current state of the Russian economy. |
In the Guardian article linked to below, Ashley Seager argues that the only way to reduce the extent of social exclusion is to tax the main asset of a large proportion of the population; their house. He argues that the massive increases in land values that have taken place with rising house prices have increased divisions in society and that a land tax is required to address this. It may be interesting to consider this issue along with News Item 4 about global wealth distribution.
A land tax is 200 years overdue Guardian (8/1/07)
Questions
1. |
Explain what is meant by a land tax and suggest different ways that this could be levied. |
2. |
Discuss the likely impact of a land tax, as proposed by Ashley Seager, on the major economic targets. |
3. |
Analyse possible alternative policies to reduce the levels of exclusion in UK society. |