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Browsing Állam- és Jogtudományi Kar (ÁJK) by Author "Becsey Zsolt László"
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- ItemOpen AccessA keleti nyitás súlya a magyar külgazdaságban(2014) Becsey Zsolt László
- ItemOpen AccessA Közép-európai Szabadkereskedelmi Megállapodás jelentősége és az alapító visegrádi országok Európai Uniós csatlakozási folyamatában betöltött szerepe(Károli Gáspár Református Egyetem Állam- és Jogtudományi Kara, 2021) Becsey Zsolt László; Miklósné Zakar AndreaTanulmányunkban a kelet-közép-európai régió számára kiemelt fontosságú regionális együttműködéseknek, a Visegrádi csoportnak és az általuk megalapított Közép-európai Szabadkereskedelmi Megállapodásnak a szerepét elemezzük, amelyek hozzájárultak a vizsgált országoknak az európai integrációs folyamatba való bekapcsolódásához. A tanulmány kitér a közép-európai gazdasági kapcsolatok korábbi szerepére, majd a kapcsolatok rendszerváltás utáni újjáépítésére, a Visegrádi csoport és a CEFTA megalakulására, elemzi a CEFTA alapító tagok kereskedelmi integrációjának adatait egymás és az EU irányába, az országok mérlegét, és az árufőcsoportokat, amelyek fontos szerepet játszottak a visegrádi országok egymás közötti kereskedelmében. 1
- ItemOpen AccessA közlekedéspolitika belülnézetből(2016) Becsey Zsolt László
- ItemOpen AccessCentral European Preparation for the European Integration(2021) Becsey Zsolt LászlóIn addition to the author’s scientific work, the study -based on pragmatic experiences -analyses the factors that characterized Central European countries before the change of regime (1990) and then the foreign economic model through which Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia („Visegrád 4”) reached EU membership in 2004. The study highlighted that, with different depths, in all countries concerned economic policies were characterized by liberal bankruptcy regulations and strict conditions of competition, so that they could prove their ability to meet the condition of a functioning market economy for EU membership1. The export-oriented model, built on efficient inflow of foreign direct investment and high-tech in the early 1990s, was implemented by the late 1990s to demonstrate that these states were ready to meet another condition of EU membership, namely to meet the challenges of the internal market.2 This transformation represented a problem for the current account balance in the 1990s (mainly due to the loss of traditional national export capacities) only in the middle of the decade, and it was only at the end of the decade that trade balances showed surplus with the EU. The total external equilibrium of the Visegrád countries was maintained by the fact that the inflow of FDI had not yet started to conclude in the withdrawal of profits from recent investments in Central Europe, and the countervailing effect of EU net transfers, which began to arrive later parallelly with the start of the withdrawal of FDI dividends. The CEFTA co-operation concluded in 1992 followed the economic liberalization timetable of that of the Visegrád Four with the EU parallelly but did not go beyond its depth for political prudence, thus providing full opening to each other only after and through EU membership, more precisely the liberalisation in services or in sensitive agricultural trade. The CEFTA treaty was expanded to the Balkans after 1995 and has been and is still a good example for countries that do not want to stay in an ex-Soviet or ex-Yugoslav economic integration but is a good method for them to prepare for the earliest possible EU membership.
- ItemOpen AccessThe Situation of CEE Economies after the COVID-19 Crisis(De Gruyter, 2022) Becsey Zsolt LászlóWritten in late summer of 2022, this article aimed to provide an overview on the intra-EU cohesion of the EU Member States that transformed the communist system into a democratic market economy in 1988–90. The study analyses the economic background of these states for sustainable catching-up in the European Union. The result is a picture of a divided CEE area, where some states showed macroeconomic imbalances and economic growth, while others started to catch up with the solid background of the eurozone membership or its future perspective. In terms of most parameters, Hungary is in the first group but – together with Romania – is also facing serious macroeconomic difficulties.