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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] RE: Serbian political democracy reverses economic democracy?
David Erda wrote: to enforce contracts and to catch fraudsters I think that this is an important point to consider when viewing the entire piece of legislation in Serbia that reduced shares given to workers. The amount of fraud that entered privatization was enormous. If I understand correctly, then for a BMW and some wine, literally, an evaluator of company worth would significantly alter figures. The result would be that the buyers got a company worth more than they paid. Another problem to consider was coercion. A big problem faced in transition was that employees bought shares in a company, the director threatened employees who did not sell their shares to him, and the director enriched himself at the expense of the employees. A good question might be: Who were/are the directors? The answer could be that they were old friends of Milosovic. A method for overcoming both of these issues is to reduce self-purchasing in favor of an outside buyer. If the government wants the best bid and wants to reduce personal enrichment of one individual (or a small group of individuals), then they can do so by eliminating the very structure that enables it. Do I think that this is problematic in the long-run? Yes. Do I think that this new arrangement opens the doors to other, possibly worse, problems? Yes. Sincerely, Joseph Doggett
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