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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 8 page paper discussing the business climate and culture in Russia. The bottom line as it exists today is that Russia still is full of promise as in the past, and positive changes are occurring. Business people from other cultures – particularly the US – should be cognizant and respectful of Russia's love for formality and tradition, but they also should be aware that both the Russian people and government also seek positive change in business and opportunity while retaining Russia's unique culture. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSbusCulRus.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
collapse of communism in the former USSR in 1991, Russias economy bore little resemblance to any working and sustainable model. The people warmly embraced the notion of Western capitalism
but had no experience in practicing it after 70 years of communist rule. Nevertheless, progress continued in building a market economy even though the government was largely inept and
crime was rampant. The Early 1990s Russias people are simply weary. They lived a drab and hopeless life under the rigors of
communism. The promises of a market economy brought hope but then proved to be unattainable - at least for the short term - after the onset of the Asian
currency crisis of 1997. The people of the nation have been through a series of extremes in the past decade that have left them numb at best. Few
remember the rich traditional culture of czarist Russia; now the future has been delayed. Russians are tough and resilient; they will survive. In the meantime, expatriots living in
Russia can expect to find conditions in which they are likely to need bodyguards, at least within the boundaries of Moscow. Outlying areas are much more sane but have
even less access to any goods and services other than those of the traditional culture. A class dichotomy quickly developed to separate the
most prosperous from the rest, particularly in Moscow. Nightclubs and restaurants sprung up, the trendy were highly expensive and outside the reach of most of the citys residents.
There were services and products available for this rising upper class that were unquestionable under communist control. Russia cannot be said to have been building a market economy, but
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