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Soviet Workers and Perestroika: The Soviet Labour Process and Gorbachev's Reforms, 1985-1991: 93 (Cambridge Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies, Series Number 93)

Soviet Workers and Perestroika: The Soviet Labour Process and Gorbachev's Reforms, 1985-1991: 93 (Cambridge Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies, Series Number 93)

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Donald Filtzer
Cambridge University Press, 8/21/2008
EAN 9780521056533, ISBN10: 0521056535

Paperback, 320 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2 cm
Language: English

Soviet Workers and and the Collapse of Perestroika is a comprehensive analysis of the role of labour policy in the development and ultimate collapse of Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms. Drawing on a wide range of sources, Filtzer argues that initially perestroika was designed to modernize the Soviet economy while keeping the existing political and property relations of society intact, which required a thoroughgoing restructuring of the labour process within Soviet industry. When ultimately this policy failed, the regime in mid-1990 opted to move to a full-scale restoration of capitalism, a task which could not be fulfilled so long as the traditional work practices and work relations within industry remained unchanged. Filtzer argues that the collapse of the USSR has brought the solution to this problem no nearer, and that post-Soviet capitalism is rooted in corruption and speculation and cannot ensure long-term economic growth.

Introduction
the roots and limits of perestroika
1. Attempts to create a labour market
employment, unemployment, and the labour shortage
2. Economic incentives
the disintegration of the 1986 wage reform
3. Political incentives
enterprise 'democratization' and the emergence of worker protests
4. 'Market mechanisms' and the breakdown of economic regulation
5. The labour process under perestroika I
the politcal economy of working conditions
6. The labour process under perestroika II
the failure of restructuring
Conclusion
the demise of perestroika and the emergence of class conflict.