Investment And Reindustrialization In The Soviet Economy

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26th CPSU Congress
A01=Boris Z. Rumer
amortization and retooling
Author_Boris Z. Rumer
Average Annual Increment
Basic Industrial Materials
Bridge Cranes
capital allocation strategies
Capital Coefficient
Capital Investment
Category=NH
Continuous Steel Casting Process
CPSU Central Committee
economic development
Energy Resources
Energy Source
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
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Existing Enterprises
Heavy Machine Building
Hydroelectric Stations
Industrial Construction
industrial modernization
Insufficient Retirements
Krasnoiarsk Krai
Machine Building Industry
Prefabricated Concrete
reindustrialization
Siberia
Siberian resource development
Soviet economic policy
Soviet investment policies
Soviet investment policy impact Siberia
spatial economic disparities
spatial polarization
Tiumen Oblast
Transportation Network
Unified Power System
USSR Gosplan
War Time
West Germany
West Siberia

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367019914
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 144 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Investment activity in the Soviet Union is presently undergoing a decline hitherto unknown in the history of the nation: The growth of capital investment has stopped, while levels of production have fallen. One important factor in this phenomenon is the Soviet policy of reindustrialization—shifting new investments into the expansion and improvement of existing facilities—which severely limits capital available for new construction. In this book, Dr. Rumer examines current Soviet investment policies and assesses their impact on economic development, especially in Siberia. Reindustrialization is intended to combine more rapid amortization for updating and retooling, growth in the volume of industrial output, and minimal capital investment. However, concludes Dr. Rumer, this investment pattern hinders the development of Siberia and thus reinforces the spatial polarization of fuel-energy and raw-material resources in the east of the country and the manufacturing industry in the west, with serious consequences for Soviet strategic/military vulnerability and for the Soviet economy.

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