ABSTRACT
The rapid changes in Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union are often bewildering, with many frequent, highly significant changes in the different sectors of the economy and the political system. There have been frequent changes of personnel in government and economic management and many changes have been reversed - and sometimes forgotten, or at other times reinstated. What happened when? Who was responsible for what? Did such a change in one sector precede or follow a particular change elsewhere? These are points not easily remembered. This book provides full details of the many changes, and enables sense to be made of what would otherwise be a confusing situation. Developments are arranged chronologically by sector, and the book is unusual in extensively chronicling both economic and political developments and the crucial connections between them. There is a generous introduction and overview to help the reader find his or her way around. The material covers the period up to late autumn 2000, and thus offers a valuable guide to policies in the Putin era.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |48 pages
Introduction and Overview
part One|256 pages
Economic Developments
chapter Chapter One|39 pages
The Transition From Command Planning to the Market
chapter Chapter Two|7 pages
Prices
chapter Chapter Three|13 pages
Foreign Trade
chapter Chapter Four|8 pages
Direct Foreign Investment
chapter Chapter Five|37 pages
The Private Non-Agricultural Sector
chapter Chapter Six|15 pages
Agriculture
chapter Chapter Seven|105 pages
Macroeconomic Stabilization
chapter Chapter Eight|13 pages
Foreign Debt and Aid Before the August 1998 Financial Crisis
chapter Chapter Nine|17 pages
Economic Performance, Health and the Environment
part Two|319 pages
Political Developments