The Economic System and Income Distribution in Yugoslavia


Book Description

This is the second volume in the author's ongoing inquiry into the extent of income inequality in the East European socialist countries and the effect of market-oriented reforms on patterns of income distribution. Although there has been remarkably little empirical research on this question (in part because of the problem of obtaining reliable data), both proponents and opponents of reforms voice strong views on this subject, with both sides, however, tending to grant the assumption that decentralization and the increased use of market mechanisms will increase inequality. In this study as in the preceding volume, "Economic Reform and Income Distribution: A Case Study of Hungary and Poland", Henryk Flakierski undertakes a study of the data in order to shed light on this question - this time with reference to the most decentralized of the East European economics and the one in which marketization of the economy has been most advanced.




Socialist Unemployment


Book Description

In the first political analysis of unemployment in a socialist country, Susan Woodward argues that the bloody conflicts that are destroying Yugoslavia stem not so much from ancient ethnic hatreds as from the political and social divisions created by a failed socialist program to prevent capitalist joblessness. Under Communism the concept of socialist unemployment was considered an oxymoron; when it appeared in postwar Yugoslavia, it was dismissed as illusory or as a transitory consequence of Yugoslavia's unorthodox experiments with worker-managed firms. In Woodward's view, however, it was only a matter of time before countries in the former Soviet bloc caught up with Yugoslavia, confronting the same unintended consequences of economic reforms required to bring socialist states into the world economy. By 1985, Yugoslavia's unemployment rate had risen to 15 percent. How was it that a labor-oriented government managed to tolerate so clear a violation of the socialist commitment to full employment? Proposing a politically based model to explain this paradox, Woodward analyzes the ideology of economic growth, and shows that international constraints, rather than organized political pressures, defined government policy. She argues that unemployment became politically "invisible," owing to its redefinition in terms of guaranteed subsistence and political exclusion, with the result that it corrupted and ultimately dissolved the authority of all political institutions. Forced to balance domestic policies aimed at sustaining minimum standards of living and achieving productivity growth against the conflicting demands of the world economy and national security, the leadership inadvertently recreated the social relations of agrarian communities within a postindustrial society.










O.T.A. Papers


Book Description




Yugoslavia, Adjustment Policies and Development Perspectives


Book Description

The report uses the start of the 1981-85 plan in Yugoslavia to provide an overall evaluation of performance and policies in the 1976-80 period, and the strategy proposed in the new plan. Part I deals with adjustment performance and associated policies at the economywide level, paying particular attention to trade and payments policy and investment policy and making extensive use of a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model of Yugoslavia. Part II deals with issues of a more developmental nature in the sectors of agriculture and industry, and in the areas of employment and regional policy. After identifying certain weaknesses in the policy regime in the 1976-80 period the report reviews the measures proposed by the Yugoslav authorities to address these in the new plan, particularly in the light of more restricted access to international capital markets. The sectoral discussion in Part II pays particular attention to the implications of slower growth for the less developed regions (LDR) of Yugoslavia. The need for better integration of the industrial sector in the LDR with the more developed regions (MDR) is stressed, as is the need for a more labor intensive industrial strategy for the LDR.




Workers' Management and Workers' Wages in Yugoslavia


Book Description

Study of workers self management in Yugoslavia, with particular reference to its impact on wage determination - examines the roots and economic theory of workers' management, discusses wage structures and their evolution, and analyses the determinants of interindustry wage differentials. Bibliography pp. 195 to 216, graphs, references and statistical tables.