Why the economics factors and social/culture was important in the belarus and hungary nation??
Hungary Economic factor The Hungarian Economy continues to grow, and inflation is at a low level relative to the rest of the emerging markets in Central and Eastern Europe. Hungary has experienced a series of sweeping changes, which have transformed it from a Socialist country to a thriving market economy with its foot firmly in the door of the European Union.
There
are a number of solid reasons and indicators to suggest that Hungary's economy should continue to grow at current rates. Property investors can feel secure that there is still much more to gain from buying Hungarian property.
Belarus Economic factor Economic growth in the last nine years has been impressive, the report argues that maintaining the current growth strategy would lead to a gradual erosion of economic competitiveness Economic growth in Belarus has been broad-based and has been driven primarily by the improvements in labor productivity, increase in energy efficiency and capacity utilization.
Belarus The
growth structure in Belarus has been much more beneficial for labor. Growth in labor-incentive sectors coupled with wage and income policies have helped to ensure that the benefits from recent growth were rather broadly shared by population.
Hungary Culture factor’ The combined impact of World War II and the communist takeover in 1947 brought about great changes in the social structure. For more than a decade, the new communist government sought to create a classless society through various forms of social engineering.
The
pace of change slowed, and a social structure took shape that once again contained clearly stratified groups. In its new form, society did not display the extremes of wealth and poverty characteristic of the interwar period.
Belarus
Culture factor important in this nation’ Belarusian culture is the product of a millennium of development under the impact of a number of diverse factors. An early Western influence on Belarusian culture was Magdeburg Law--charters that granted municipal self-rule and were based on the laws of German cities. These charters were granted in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries by grand dukes and kings to a number of cities, including Brest, Hrodna, Slutsk, and Minsk.
During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, when Poland and Russia were making deep political and cultural inroads in Belorussia by assimilating the nobility into their respective cultures, the rulers succeeded in associating "Belorussian" culture primarily with peasant ways, folklore, ethnic dress, and ethnic customs, with an overlay of Christianity.