Ocena stopnia rozwoju infrastruktury łączności w Europie Środkowej i Południowo-Wschodniej
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to check how the different "starting" level to the
market economy in 1990 and a different pace of economic reform introduction
affect the level of development and use of communication infrastructure in former
European socialist countries in 1999. In their analysis, the Authors have
used six variables, as well as multifeature and monofeature classifications, and
ranking.
Four groups of countries with differentiated level of communication development
have been distinguished: Slovenia and Estonia (relatively well developed
communication); Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Lithuania, Latvia,
Poland, and Bulgaria (distinguished by good accessibility to telephones);
Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Yugoslavia, Macedonia, Moldova,
Romania, and Ukraine (the most visible feature is a low number of telephone
connections and a small number of hosts); Albania (with a very low level
of communication development).
As the result of ranking, the countries have been ordered from the countries
that have the best conditions and abilities of their inhabitants' communication to
the countries with the weakest conditions. The best situation in this respect is in
the wealthy Slovenia, and Estonia that intensively co-operates with the Scandinavian
countries. The second group comprises the remaining two of the wealthiest
communities in the region: the Czech Republic and Hungary. The worst
developed is communication in the countries that quite recently have been
inflicted by acts of war, or their governments have not started fast economic
reforms (Yugoslavia, Macedonia, Ukraine, Romania, Belarus, Moldova, Bosnia
and Herzegovina, and Albania). The medium developed countries compose the
last group, including Bulgaria, Slovakia, Croatia, Poland, Latvia, and Lithuania.
These all countries are the ones that potentially could belong to the first or the
second group, with a high level of communication development, but during the
last decade a mistake was made somewhere. In Poland, such a mistake is the
inconsistent policy of consecutive governments that have not carried out the
actual demonopolisation of the market of telephone services and access to Internet.
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