Fülszöveg
Egon Matzner, born 1938 in Klagenfurt, is a socioeconomist. He received his academic education in Vienna, Harvard, Stockholm and Linz. From 1972 to 1998 he was full professor of public finance at the University of Technology in Vienna. He acted as director of research institutes in Berlin (at the Science Centre for Social Research) and in Vienna (at the Austrian Academy of Sciences). He also coordinated major research projects for the Federal Ministry of Finance, Vienna on the reform of the Finanzausgleich as well as for the Federal Ministry for Technology, Bonn on the employment effect of new technology. He also worked as a consultant for UNCTAD, Genova and OECD, Paris. At present he is research fellow at the Max Weber-Centre for Cultural Studies at the University of Erfurt, Germany.
Potential readers, students of
economics, political science,
contemporary history, and
applied epistomology, as well
as curious citizens are offered
essays which explain the silent...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
Egon Matzner, born 1938 in Klagenfurt, is a socioeconomist. He received his academic education in Vienna, Harvard, Stockholm and Linz. From 1972 to 1998 he was full professor of public finance at the University of Technology in Vienna. He acted as director of research institutes in Berlin (at the Science Centre for Social Research) and in Vienna (at the Austrian Academy of Sciences). He also coordinated major research projects for the Federal Ministry of Finance, Vienna on the reform of the Finanzausgleich as well as for the Federal Ministry for Technology, Bonn on the employment effect of new technology. He also worked as a consultant for UNCTAD, Genova and OECD, Paris. At present he is research fellow at the Max Weber-Centre for Cultural Studies at the University of Erfurt, Germany.
Potential readers, students of
economics, political science,
contemporary history, and
applied epistomology, as well
as curious citizens are offered
essays which explain the silent
revolution of 1989. They deal
with analyses of the Cold War,
the failure of centrally planned
economies and their transfor-
mation into market economies,
of international finances of
European integration and disin-
tegration as well as a new assess-
ment of the concept of Utopia.
Vissza