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Chapter 1: Introduction
European Comparative Economic Studies: Thirty Years After
Part 1: Political Economy in Comparative Studies
Chapter 2: The political economy of socialism revisited
Chapter 3: The development of thinking on the Czechoslovak economic transformation
Chapter 4: The hard budget constraint as the pillar of the economy
Chapter 5: Illiberal and "inward-looking" drives: What fuels them?
Chapter 6: The political economy of sovereign wealth funds
Part 2: Comparative Economics Still on the Tracks
Chapter 7: European higher education: Challenges and achievement
Chapter 8: Eurozone: Crisis, policies and reforms
Chapter 9: Brexit: The lure of the neoliberal thought collective
Chapter 10: The limits of Europe: Lessons from post-communist experience for the post-Brexit Union
Chapter 11: Eurozone membership and foreign direct investment
Chapter 12: Central Eastern European multinationals
Chapter 13: Non-observed economy vs. shadow economy and informal employment in Poland: A range of mismatching estimates
Chapter 14: The Yugoslav successor states: From self-management socialism to political capitalism
Chapter 15: Is (post-communist) China becoming a dominant economic power in South East Asia?
Chapter 16: The power of technology in the United States and China: A comparison
Part 3: New Extensions of Comparative Economic Studies
Chapter 17: Electronic commerce
Markets, competition, and social welfare: A clash with history of economic thought
Chapter 18: The economic determinants of the Olympics performance in Communist and post-Communist countries
Chapter 19: Introducing hard budget constraints without restricting entrepreneurs
The role of voluntary agreements in UEFA's club licensing and financial fair play regulations.

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