The Contemporary Spanish Economy: A Historical PerspectiveRoutledge, 2013 M11 5 - 400 páginas First Published in 2005. This title studies the 1981 insurrection of the Spanish 'Guardia Civil', motivated by political and economic factors. The politico-economic causes of the February incident have been succinctly summarized and traced the institutional causality which explains the peculiarities of contemporary Spanish development. Within are chapters on Spanish agriculture, policies, the industrial revolution, and the economic crisis. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 6-10 de 87
Página 15
... financial capital available for industrial investment and the even greater scarcity of native industrial entrepreneurs ... finance industrial development . Private banking did not become significant until the beginning of the current ...
... financial capital available for industrial investment and the even greater scarcity of native industrial entrepreneurs ... finance industrial development . Private banking did not become significant until the beginning of the current ...
Página 16
... financing of new industrial activity was undertaken by Credit Societies established in the 1850s . These were industrial investment banks which were funded and controlled by foreign interests . These Credit Societies financed the ...
... financing of new industrial activity was undertaken by Credit Societies established in the 1850s . These were industrial investment banks which were funded and controlled by foreign interests . These Credit Societies financed the ...
Página 23
... financial oligarchies have continued to oppose significant economic reforms and have not hesitated to claim that democracy in Spain was not desirable because the economic difficulties caused by the oil crisis of the 1970s , free unions ...
... financial oligarchies have continued to oppose significant economic reforms and have not hesitated to claim that democracy in Spain was not desirable because the economic difficulties caused by the oil crisis of the 1970s , free unions ...
Página 37
... financial matters in the hands of Jews . The great Moslem cities were converted into Christian towns through the forced eviction of their Moslem inhabitants ; the Moslem peasant , the mudéjar , was allowed to cultivate his land but had ...
... financial matters in the hands of Jews . The great Moslem cities were converted into Christian towns through the forced eviction of their Moslem inhabitants ; the Moslem peasant , the mudéjar , was allowed to cultivate his land but had ...
Página 41
... finance the foreign policy of the Catholic monarchs , another part of which was dissipated in the hands of the aristocrats and functionaries who were in charge of the embargo on the goods of those who fled or were expelled ... We find ...
... finance the foreign policy of the Catholic monarchs , another part of which was dissipated in the hands of the aristocrats and functionaries who were in charge of the embargo on the goods of those who fled or were expelled ... We find ...
Contenido
1 | |
20 | |
26 | |
50 | |
Agricultural Policy Since 1939 | 72 |
5 | 88 |
195470 | 94 |
The Long Road to Spains Industrial | 120 |
5 | 185 |
The Spanish Industrial Revolution of | 199 |
2 | 207 |
The Economic Crisis of the 1970s | 265 |
The Restoration of Free Trade Unions | 322 |
Quo Vadis Hispania? | 345 |
Bibliography | 360 |
Index | 366 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Contemporary Spanish Economy: A Historical Perspective Sima Lieberman Vista previa limitada - 2005 |
The Contemporary Spanish Economy: A Historical Perspective Sima lieberman Vista previa limitada - 2013 |
The Contemporary Spanish Economy: A Historical Perspective Sima Lieberman Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
able activity agrarian reform agricultural allowed average balance banks benefits capital century Community companies constituted continued costs country's cultivation decade decline decree demand domestic economic effects enterprises España española established exchange existing expanding exports farms finance firms followed force foreign foreign investment Franco given groups growth hectares imports improvement income increase industrial inflation institutions interests investment Italy labor land landowners limited Madrid major measures military million Minister obtain OECD organization owners participation payments peasants period pesetas Plan political population problems production protection rate of growth reduced regional relative remained represented Republic result rising rural sector shows social Socialists society Source Spain Spanish Spanish economy started strikes Table trade traditional unemployment unions United wages Western workers yearly