Under Construction: No data has been updated yet for any of the Warsaw Pact countries.
The Warsaw Pact was an alliance drawn up by the Eastern European countries, essentially establishing a line of resistance to "Capitialist Imperialism", a line consisting of the NATO countries on the Western side, and the countries of the Soviet Union on the other.
This geo-political military alliance held little meaning for the individual countries however, since at the time of the signing of the Pact, the Soviet Union already had rolled their army units into each of these countries and set up housekeeping.
The line between the NATO countries of Western Europe and the Warsaw Pact's Eastern European countries became to be known as the "Iron Curtain" and thus began the "Cold War".
Upon the breakup of the former Soviet Union, and the independence of the satellite nations such as Hungary, Poland and Czechoslovakia, the Warsaw Pact has been negated.
However, economically, there is a huge difference between the western and eastern sides of the imaginary lines, and internal conflict in many of the nations of the former Warsaw Pact, make the area very unstable (Bosnia/Crotia/Serbia for instance).
Some nations, for example Poland, have embraced the Western world dramatically, and their economies are growing at impressive rates, while these countries build the infrastructures to support the new eastern capitalism.
We should also note that one of the fastest and most dramatic change occurred when East Germany combined with West Germany to that country which had been split since the end of World War II. The German nation is extremely strong, but is having social and economic problems as the two halves try to coexist. The problems are less ideological as economic however, and history has shown that economic pressures can just as strong, if not stronger than idealogical.