Bibliographie générale

List Resources

Displaying 1 - 1 of 1 (Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography)
Order by:

Ascending
Descending
Use all checked: 
Use all displayed: 
Use all in list: 
Šik, O. (1965). (sans titre). World Marxist Review, 8(3), 17–19.  
Added by: Dominique Meeùs 2012-08-09 06:18:21 Pop. 0%
      Until recently the connection between planning and the market was incorrectly understood and the concept of market was applied to a socialist economy in a sort of shamefaced way. It was held, wrongly, that planned social co-ordination, planned management of production, was the absolute antipode of orientation on the market, of utilising market levers. Planning was assumed to be an attribute of socialism alone, and production for the market a feature solely of capitalism. These tenacious theoretical premises brought much harm; because of them a system of planning and management was adhered to which meant that production could not be adequately geared to its proper aim—that of satisfying the home and foreign market demand—and consumers could not exert any direct influence on the producers… Socialist planned production should consistently seek to satisfy the market demand, and sales of goods on the market should be the main criterion of the social usefulness of labour expended in the production process.
wikindx 6.2.0 ©2003-2020 | Total resources: 1310 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: American Psychological Association (APA) | Database queries: 24 | DB execution: 0.00935 secs | Script execution: 0.03235 secs