Syria has been edging away from a centrally planned socialist economy to a "social market" one. "The last five years have been about deconstructing the socialist ideology in favour of the market," says an adviser to the government. "The next five will be about implementing it." That means big cuts in subsidies and painful belt-tightening for Syria's far-from-opulent masses. But will the government, seeing unrest simmer in the region in the wake of Tunisia's upheaval, hold its nerve?
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