Abstract

The Maastricht Treaty criteria are becoming the criteria for Slovenian economic policy making too, although they are not considered as standards for a country about to join the EU. Certainly, they represent a pressure on economic policy and require coordination of policies. Change in policy making reflects change in the behaviour of the main policy decision makers as well as in the theoretical argumentation for policy decisions. Based on analysis of policy documents we argue that there is a great deal of vagueness in this argumentation.

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