ABSTRACT

The most comprehensive and contemporary source available on socialist economic systems, this book employs economic data from eight East European countries and Russia to provide readers with a thorough, accurate picture of formerly Communist economies. J. Wilczynski carefully analyzes the major focal points of socialistic economics: planning and market, profit, production and growth, accumulation, consumption, labor, land, pricing, money and banking, fiscal policy and control, domestic and foreign trade, and international economics.

The treatment of the subject is objective and constructive; when comparisons are made with capitalist economies both the strengths and weaknesses of socialism are brought out. This is not, however, a book on comparative economic systems but rather a complete discourse on the actual principles of socialist economics. Controversial issues such as the role of planning and the market, profit, rates of growth, the consumer's place, labor incentives, pricing, and controls are particularly well done.

This book can be used as a guide to the economics of formerly communist regimes and as text for courses in developmental economics and comparative economic systems. It is well written by a scholar intimate with the plans, policies, and failures of communist economies from the close of The Second World War to the demise of Communist rule in Eastern Europe.

chapter 1|12 pages

Background of Modern Socialist Economics

chapter 2|16 pages

Planning and the Market

chapter 3|11 pages

Profit

chapter 4|18 pages

Production and Growth

chapter 5|11 pages

Accumulation

chapter 6|10 pages

Consumption

chapter 7|15 pages

Labour

chapter 8|15 pages

Land

chapter 9|14 pages

Pricing

chapter 10|12 pages

Money and Banking

chapter 11|12 pages

Fiscal Policy and Control

chapter 12|10 pages

Domestic Trade

chapter 13|15 pages

Foreign Trade

chapter 14|17 pages

International Economic Co-operation

chapter 15|15 pages

Socialism v. Capitalism