Yugoslavia no longer exists as a country.
It has been many different types of country.
Yugoslavia was created in 1918, but from 1918 to 1929 it was called the the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
From 1929 to 1943 it was the Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Both were capitalist countries, but not very democratic.
From 1943 to 1945 Yugoslavia did not exist.
From 1945 to 1991 it was the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
This was economically socialist (communist), but was politically neutral and not a member of NATO or the Warsaw pact.
From 1991 to 2006 Yugoslavia gradually broke up.
At the same time Yugoslavia and the new countries formed from it converted to capitalist economies.
During the Cold War there were many neutral countries in Europe, neither members of the Warsaw Pact or NATO:
Albania, Austria, Finland, Ireland, Switzerland, Yugoslavia.
Neither: it is capitalist.
neither, they're theocratic.
A communist country is one where the government owns and controls means of production, and aims to achieve equality through redistribution of wealth. In contrast, a capitalist country is one where the economy is based on private ownership, market competition, and profit motive.
North Korea is communist South Korea is capitalist
Neither. Yugoslavia was a country but it no longer exists.
In a communist society the means of production are controlled by the state and not by private enterprise. However it should be noted that while certain country's describe themselves a s Communist states and others a s capitalist the aim of neither has ever come close to being reached.
Yugoslavia & Albania, neither were Warsaw Pact signatories.
Yes, in a sense that they have only a single party government, however they opened their economy to progress their commerce in a capitalist like manner.
NEITHER. Cuba is a Communist Autocracy.
south america is neither a communist nor a country
The People's Republic of China is officially a "People's Democratic Dictatorship" or a "People's Republic". Its government is run by the Communist party. Its economy is officially called a "socialist market economy" or "socialism with Chinese characteristics". Most economists and social scientists consider modern China to be a state capitalist or capitalist mixed economy.
It is a capitalist country: most companies are privately owned with some exceptions at key industries, namely oil and electricity.