Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x24gv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-16T07:16:33.645Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Transformation of the Soviet Economy: Economic Reforms and Structural Crisis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Sergei Glaziev*
Affiliation:
The Central Economic-Mathematical Institute, USSR Academy of Science, Moscow

Abstract

This article analyses the current problems of the Soviet economy's reform process. The process of transition to a market economy in the Soviet Union, where an extreme degree of monopoly prevails, has been characterised by declining production and accelerating inflation. The rapid growth of the market sector in the situation of highly distorted and heavily regulated prices, dominance of state enterprises, and unclear property rights, leads to the concentration of entrepreneurial activity mainly in speculative operations involving the redistribution of state property, to the deterioration of the macroeco nomic situation and to the deepening of the structural crisis in the economy. In fact, the growth of the market sector is based mainly on hidden subsidies from the state enterprises.

The failure of four years of economic reforms is due to inappropriate economic policy based on mythical ideas about the market economy. Rapid, radical reforms, including large-scale privatisation on the basis of development of financial intermediates, are of crucial importance in overcoming the further deterioration of the economic situation and in preventing the collapse of the Soviet economy.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1991 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Chubais, A., and Vasiliev, S. (1990), ‘Privatisation in the USSR: necessary for structural change’, Economic Reform and Integration, Proceedings of 1-3 March 1990 Meeting. Ed. P.O.Aven, S.S.Shatalin, F.Schmidt-Bleck.-IIASA, CP-90-004.Google Scholar
Glaziev, S. (1990), Economic Theory of Technological Change, Nauka, Moscow [in Russian].Google Scholar
Glaziev, S. (1991), ‘Some general regularities of techno-economic evolution’, Communist Economies, vol. 2, no. 2.Google Scholar
Goskomstat, (1990a), ‘National Economy of the USSR in 1989’, Statistical Yearbook [in Russian].Google Scholar
Goskomstat, (1990b), ‘USSR Economy in 1990’, Ekonomika e Zhizn, No. 5, 1990 [in Russian].Google Scholar
Goskomstat, (1991), ‘USSR Economy in the first quarter of 1991’, Ekonomika e Zhizn, No. 17, 1991 [in Russian].Google Scholar
Kuznetsov, E., and Shirokov, F., (1989), ‘High Technology and conversion of defence industry’, JPRS-UKO-89-016,21 September 1989.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewandowsky, J., and Szomburg, J. (1989), ‘Property reform as a basis for social and economic reform’, Communist Economies, vol. 1, No. 3.Google Scholar
Lvov, D., Glaziev, S., Karimov, I., Kuznetsov, E. (1989), Perspective on Technological Diffusion Strategy, [in Russian], Moscow, TSEMI USSR AS.Google Scholar
Nuti, D. (1990), ‘Privatisation of socialist economies: general issues and the Polish case’, 1 st International Conference of the European Association for Comparative Studies, University of Verona, September 27-29, 1990.Google Scholar
Rassohin, V. (1985), ‘Mechanism of scientific innovations implementation’, [in Russian], Moscow, Nauka.Google Scholar
Yasin, E. and Tsapelik, V., (1988), ‘Socialist market problem and perspectives’, Ecyonomitcheskaya Gazeta, No. 26, [in Russian].Google Scholar