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Review article

The Croatian Privatization as Initial Appropriation

Željko Ivanković ; Banka Magazin Zagreb, Hrvatska


Full text: croatian pdf 5.706 Kb

page 67-83

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Full text: english pdf 5.706 Kb

page 84-84

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Abstract

Privatisation survives as „original sin” of the Croatian transition. The process of the 1990s burdens reform efforts in the second decade of the 21st century. Data on the results of privatization are the subject of inconclusive discussion. This paper analyses the nature of the Croatian privatization and concludes that it had the character of initial appropriation of „no one’s” property. Initial appropriation is, by definition, one in which ownership is established unilaterally without the consent of other affected parties. It is completely controversial that so-called secondary privatization, which occurred in the second half of the 90s, after the initial allocation of shares according to the Law on conversion, in the process of consolidation of ownership, had the character of initial allocation, despite the fact that it was generally not illegal. The „market” where initial allocation developed into initial appropriation, also had controversial features. Initial appropriation, according to economic analysis leads to waste of resources. The
rhetoric that legitimized the initial appropriation is alive to this day.

Keywords

privatization; transition; Croatia; Slovenia

Hrčak ID:

184954

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/184954

Publication date:

1.12.2016.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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