Essays on the Political Economy of YugoslaviaRikard Lang, George Macesich, Dragomir Vojnić Center for Yugoslav-American Studies, Research, and Exchanges at the Florida State University, 1982 - Economic stabilization - 371 pages Compilation of essays on the economic policy of Yugoslavia - discusses historical and current economic and social development trends, workers self management, political development, economic planning, social planning, income distribution, price policies, monetary policies, fiscal policies, capital formation, regional development, trade, import dependence, trade policies, social policies, standard of living, agricultural development prospects, etc. Graphs, references and statistical tables. |
Contents
Rikard Lang Dragomir Vojnić | 29 |
ECONOMIC SYSTEM AND ECONOMIC POLICY | 45 |
Neven Mates Marijan Korošić | 65 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abroad agricultural allocation Associated Labour Act autonomous provinces basic organizations basis business units capital accumulation cent changes commodity communities of interest Constitution consumer units contributions developed countries direct import economic development economic policy economic system exports factors federal final consumption foreign exchange foreign trade forms function funds gross national product growth households import dependence income distribution increase individual institutions intermediary products investment labour and resources means of production monetary policy money creation nomic organizations of associated period personal incomes pooling of labour population possible principle realized regulation republics and autonomous revenue role SAP of Kosovo sector self-managed communities self-management agreements SFRJ SFRY significant social finances social ownership social planning social reproduction socialist self-management socio-economic socio-political communities sphere structure system of social targets tion underdeveloped republics University of Zagreb Vojnić workers Yugoslav economy Yugoslavia Zagreb