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The Soviet Economic Associations: Some Problems of Legal Status and Organization after the 1973 Reform

The Soviet Economic Associations: Some Problems of Legal Status and Organization after the 1973... 129 The Soviet Economic ARTICLES Associations: Some Problems of Legal Status and Organization after the 1973 Reform* Stanislaw Pomorski* I. Introduction On April 3, 1973 the Soviet leadership announced a new major restructuring of state industry.' Two long and detailed statutes, the General Statute on the All-Union and Republican Industrial Associations of March 2, 1973 2 and the Statute on the Production Association (or Combine) of March 27, 1974,3 provide a general and flexible legal framework for the reform and reflect its basic ideas and policies. The first reaction to this new Soviet endeavor is: why reform again? Had not a major economic reform been started as recently as 1965 and not even been brought to completion? Is the 1973 reform intended to replace the 1965 reform? Have the goals of the latter now been abandoned ?4 There is no one sweeping answer to this question. It seems that neither the overall long-range goals nor basic policies of the 1965 reform have been abandoned. Improvement of industrial performance especially in such areas as quality of production, labor productivity, reduction of costs and development, and adoption of advanced technology still remains the major aim. At the same time reallocation http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Review of Socialist Law (in 1992 continued as Review of Central and East European Law) Brill

The Soviet Economic Associations: Some Problems of Legal Status and Organization after the 1973 Reform

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© 1976 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0165-0300
eISSN
1875-2985
DOI
10.1163/157303576X00148
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

129 The Soviet Economic ARTICLES Associations: Some Problems of Legal Status and Organization after the 1973 Reform* Stanislaw Pomorski* I. Introduction On April 3, 1973 the Soviet leadership announced a new major restructuring of state industry.' Two long and detailed statutes, the General Statute on the All-Union and Republican Industrial Associations of March 2, 1973 2 and the Statute on the Production Association (or Combine) of March 27, 1974,3 provide a general and flexible legal framework for the reform and reflect its basic ideas and policies. The first reaction to this new Soviet endeavor is: why reform again? Had not a major economic reform been started as recently as 1965 and not even been brought to completion? Is the 1973 reform intended to replace the 1965 reform? Have the goals of the latter now been abandoned ?4 There is no one sweeping answer to this question. It seems that neither the overall long-range goals nor basic policies of the 1965 reform have been abandoned. Improvement of industrial performance especially in such areas as quality of production, labor productivity, reduction of costs and development, and adoption of advanced technology still remains the major aim. At the same time reallocation

Journal

Review of Socialist Law (in 1992 continued as Review of Central and East European Law)Brill

Published: Jan 1, 1976

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