Non-Series BooksStructural changes in Polish and Hungarian agriculture since EU accession: lessons learned and implications for the design of future agricultural policies
Authors:
N. Potori (ed.), P. Chmieliński (ed.), A. F. Fieldsend (ed.)
Date
2014
Place of Publication:
Budapest
Pages:
292
Format:
B5
ISBN:
978-9-634915-88-1
price:
free pdf version
Description: Highlights from the Foreword to the Book: “(…) Agriculture, as with the entire food sector, ranked among the sections of the national economy with the most complicated modernisation and restructuring processes. The resolution of acute social and economic problems in agriculture in the ‘new’ Member States was one of the most difficult challenges facing successive governments, and the assessment of such processes is a complex exercise. To meet this challenge, researchers from the Research Institute of Agricultural Economics in Budapest and the Institute of Agricultural and Food Economics – National Research Institute in Warsaw developed comprehensive, comparative analysis of the Hungarian and Polish food sectors during the period of adaptation to the single European market. The analyses of the differences and similarities in the two countries of agriculture, the food industry, agricultural extension and support policy make this publication a unique source of information from which universal conclusions that are useful for research, business practice and for future agricultural policy can be drawn.” Prof. dr hab. Andrzej Kowalski , Director, “(…)For Hungary an understanding of the workings of the food economy in Poland is particularly important because this country not only represents the largest market among the countries of the Visegrad Group but its food economy has developed remarkably in the decade since EU accession. Poland has evolved from being a net importer of agricultural and food products to a net exporter and in recent years Hungary has incurred its largest defi cit in agricultural and food exports in trade with Poland. This is the first publication that the Research Institute of Agricultural Economics, during its 60 years of existence, has produced in close cooperation with a foreign partner institution and it aims to give a detailed comparison of the food economies of the two countries. This book provides instructive and useful knowledge for researchers, stakeholders in the agrofood sector and agricultural policy decision makers (…)” Dr. Kapronczai István, Director,
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