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Bulgarian Economy: Open Door to Communism


Bulgarian Economy: Open Door to Communism
A look at the negative effects of communism on the Bulgarian economy.
3,075 words (approx. 12.3 pages) | 9 sources | 2001 Bulgaria


Paper Summary:

A look at how Communism penetrated the Bulgarian economy through its poorly developed economy (agriculture-oriented) during the Ottoman presence. The author analyzes how this weakened the economy even more after the war period, between the first Balkan War and the Second World War.

From the Paper:

"When asked about the present state of Bulgarian economy, Bulgarians talk about forty-five years of Communism as if they were forced upon the state from outside. Some people get so extreme that they equate them to the five centuries of Turkish yoke. The modest truth, however, is that outside influence came later. Before that, Bulgaria offered grounds for the development of the regime. Communism penetrated the country through its poorly developed economy (agriculture-oriented), which weakened even more after the war period between the first Balkan War and the Second World War."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Bulgarian Economy: Open Door to Communism (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 13, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-Bulgarian-Economy-Open-Door-to-Communism/2271

MLA Citation:

"Bulgarian Economy: Open Door to Communism" 15 January 2012. Web. 13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-Bulgarian-Economy-Open-Door-to-Communism/2271>




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Published by:

koietam BG
Publisher Since:
Oct 14, 2001
AUBG has its doors in 1991 and its student body to approximately 700 students. In addition to Bulgarian students, AUBG enrolls students from Albania, Romania, Moldova, Yugoslavia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and the United States to name only a few. The faculty is predominantly American. However, an increasing number of scholars with experience in Western higher education are being recruited from Bulgaria and from other countries. AUBG has hosted numerous Fulbright scholars since its establishment, as well as visiting faculty from the United States, the United Kingdom and other Bulgarian universities. For more information visit www.aubg.bg.
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