The socio-economic and spatial transformation of Polish cities after 1989

Jerzy J. Parysek
2004 Dela  
The aim of this paper is to present the socio-economic and spatial transformation of Polish cities after 1989. The Polish changes reached the structures of the three basic subsystems of the state: political (power), social (society), and economic (the economy). The systemic transformation that has taken place in Poland after 1989 is most readily visible in towns, although it was introduced in the country as a whole. For the development and transformation of towns, the most important were the
more » ... roduction of local government structures and the market model of the economy. The restitution of local government has ensured towns an authentic manager authorised to perform his function by the local community. The introduction of the market model to the economy has resulted in its privatisation and the appearance of enterprise and competition. Towns, especially the biggest cities, have become attractive locations for investment. Cities with a balanced economic structure and well-developed infrastructure had much better chances for growth to start with. Unfortunately, the transformation period has also had some detrimental effects, the most important being unemployment and all kinds of social deviance. However, Polish cities are certainly different today and resemble Western cities to a greater extent than did the so-called socialist towns built along theoretically beautiful but practically ineffectual ideological lines.
doi:10.4312/dela.21.8.109-119 fatcat:nai3khcu5faznjl7ytoubppxva