ABSTRACT

Economic Trends in Soviet Russia (1930) examines the economic position of the USSR a decade after the Revolution. It displayed the contradictions evident in an economy that had been isolated from the world economy while undergoing great changes, and where the government was taking control over all aspects of economic life. Huge factories had been established, yet the countryside remained pre-industrial; and while the economy was in theory entirely under State control, in practice currency crises, crises of production, gluts, crises of demand, pressed hard on one another’s heels, and were renewed again and again by the spontaneous play of economic forces.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter One|10 pages

Russian Economics Shortly Before the Great War

chapter Chapter Two|5 pages

Russian Economics During the Great War

chapter Chapter Four|13 pages

Present Condition of Russian Industry

chapter Chapter Six|21 pages

The Administration and Organisation of State Industry

chapter Chapter Seven|12 pages

Nationalisation of Industry

chapter Chapter Eight|15 pages

Present Condition of Russian Agriculture

chapter Chapter Nine|16 pages

Agriculture and the Market

chapter Chapter Ten|27 pages

Developmental Trends in Russian Agriculture

chapter Chapter Eleven|30 pages

Internal Trade

chapter Chapter Twelve|39 pages

Foreign Commerce, Commercial Treaties, Concessions

chapter Chapter Thirteen|29 pages

Currency and State Finance

chapter Chapter Fourteen|11 pages

The Housing Problem

chapter Chapter Fifteen|22 pages

Labour

chapter Chapter Sixteen|25 pages

Purposive Economics and State Regulation

chapter Chapter Seventeen|18 pages

Towards Socialism or Capitalism?

chapter Chapter Eighteen|13 pages

Economic Balance Sheet