The indicators published in recent months by the Russian Statistical Office – Rosstat are much more upbeat than those estimated and forecast several months ago.
A report by London-based economists at Japanese Nomura suggests that markets have been largely unaffected by the recent political turmoil in Hungary.
Over 25 years ago, for political, economic, social, and ethnic reasons, the breakup of Yugoslavia has happened. Before that Yugoslavia was considered the best developed of all communist states, today most former Yugoslav...
After the ‘Maidan revolution’ of 2014, the National Bank of Ukraine abandoned the exchange rate peg to the US dollar and switched to a flexible exchange rate, which was later formalized within the framework of a newly adopted...
In the years 2002-2016 Russia earned additional revenues amounting to approx. USD3 trillion from the export of fuel and other commodities. These funds could have changed Russia's monocultural economy.
World Bank warns Romania that it’s not making the most of potential gains from the digital economy, despite an advanced internet infrastructure that enables top broadband speeds.
The average salary in Serbia is the lowest in the region. Politicians are promising the increase but the Serbian GDP doesn’t grow fast enough.
Unorthodox economic policy is a term used not only by columnists to describe Hungarian government. Also the PM Victor Orbán uses it to describe his approach to the economy with out of the box solutions.
Europe is clearly divided into two speeds when it comes to the internet and its use by citizens, companies and governments.
Between 1990, when Poland finally said goodbye to the centrally planned economy, and 2015 Poland's GDP per capita increased 7.3 times – from USD1,731 (in then current prices) to USD12,500.