Development and Underdevelopment in the History of Economic Thought

Development issues in the history of Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian economic thought: local specificity and mutual influence

Maltsev Alexander, 1) Lomonosov Moscow State University; 2) Institute of Economics of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences; 3) University of Picardie

Session “Development issues in the history of Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian economic thought: local specificity and mutual influence” Chairperson: Alexander A. Maltsev (Lomonosov Moscow State Univerity; Institute of Economics of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences; University of Picardie) The proposed session will consider the following issues: 1) problem of development in the history of economic thought of Europe’s Eastern periphery; 2) little-known pages of East European development thinking; 3) originality of Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian development ideas as well as the interaction and mutual influence among East European scholars seeking to understand development issues; 4) specificity of practical recommendations arising from East European development notions; 5) principal features of the eastern European “style” of the development mindset. Participants: 1. Elena Kalmychkova (MSU, Moscow) "Ivan Pososhkov: the founding father of the Russian style of development thinking" Possible discussant: Danila Raskov (SPbU, Saint Petersburg); 2. Kseniia Lopukh (Kyiv National Economic University named after Vadym Hetman, Kyiv) "Problems of the economic development in M.Tugan-Baranovsky’s scientific heritage" Possible discussant: Rustem Nureev (Financial University under the Government of the Russian Federation, Moscow); 3. Tsvetelina Marinova (NBU, Sofia; CRIISEA, Amiens) "Cooperatives and socioeconomic development: the influence of Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky and Vahan Totomianz on the Bulgarian scholars during the 20th century" Possible discussant: Nikolay Nenovsky (CRIISEA, Amiens; HSE, Moscow)

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Keywords: Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian economic thought; East European development thinking; Ivan Pososhkov; Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky; Vahan Totomianz