Full Employment and Proportionality of Factors in Socialist Production
The planned development of a socialist economy establishes the basis for the universality of labor and in so doing provides the basis for full employment. Full employment is understood to mean the maximum satisfaction of the requirement of society's able-bodied members for employment in the social labor sphere. Full employment also takes into account the objective inevitability that the employment of a certain part of the able-bodied population (for the most part, women) takes the form of work in the home, work on a personal household plot, or schooling.
Year of publication: |
1984
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Authors: | Kotliar, A. |
Published in: |
Problems of Economic Transition. - M.E. Sharpe, Inc., ISSN 1061-1991. - Vol. 27.1984, 2, p. 38-56
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Publisher: |
M.E. Sharpe, Inc. |
Saved in:
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