State Regulators of a Transitional Economy
The transition from an economy organized according to plan to a market economy must be viewed as a most complex, prolonged, and essentially contradictory socioeconomic process demanding qualitative changes in the productive forces and production relations and the formation of new forms of property that call a new structure of economic and management agents to life. There is a need here for a fundamentally new infrastructure, new cadres, and new systems of prices, finances, credit, and distribution relations. This structure cannot be called a market structure; it is mixed in many parameters and criteria. The mechanism for managing such a structure and its functioning cannot be an exclusively market mechanism or an exclusively plan-oriented mechanism. In order for market and nonmarket mechanisms, including plan-oriented mechanisms and regulators, to "work," it is necessary to know how to forecast the development of forms of property, their structures, and the bases of an incipient mixed economy. It is necessary to know how to foresee the course of development of such processes as privatization, destatization, demonopolization, the formation of new forms of management, the modernization of production technology, the supplying of production with financial, material, and labor resources, etc.
Year of publication: |
1992
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Authors: | Ivanchenko, V. |
Published in: |
Problems of Economic Transition. - M.E. Sharpe, Inc., ISSN 1061-1991. - Vol. 34.1992, 11, p. 87-94
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Publisher: |
M.E. Sharpe, Inc. |
Saved in:
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