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Index
Cover Title Page About this book Introduction
Why is social democracy inadequate? In what sense was the USSR socialist? What can be learnt from the failure of Soviet socialism? What is the theoretical basis for a new socialism? Synopsis of the book
1. Inequality
Sources of inequality
Exploitation
Table 1.1: Calculating the rate of exploitation, 1982 Further breakdown of banking and financial services:
Unemployment Infirmity and old age Women’s economic subordination
Summary
2. Eliminating inequalities
Benefits of income redistribution
How much would one hour’s labour produce?
Table 2.1: Value created by an hour’s labour in 1987 Figure 2.1: Actual earnings versus egalitarian pay, 1987
Equality more effective than growth
Inequalities of labour
Differential payment for education/skill? Specific labour shortages Differential payment for ‘personal qualities’ ?
Skilled labour as a ‘produced input’ Comparison with historically existing socialism Appendix: Illustrative calculation of skilled labour multiplier
3. Work, Time and Computers
Economies of time
Table 3.1: Two ways of digging a ditch
Objective social accounting Defining labour content
Table 3.2: A simple input–output system
The problem of scale
The idea of complexity Simplifying the labour value problem
High tech and intermediate tech solutions
4. Basic Concepts of Planning
Planning and control
Figure 4.1: Crude controller Figure 4.2: Intelligent controller
Capitalist goals second order What would be first-order goals? Levels of planning
5. Strategic Planning
Planning the industrial structure The environment and natural resources The time dimension of production
Figure 5.1: Effects of discounting at 9% on costs of two power schemes millions of hours
Market and non-market distribution
Rights of citizenship Freedom of choice Coping with scarcity Costs of metering
Agriculture
6. Detailed Planning
Figure 6.1: Control mechanism Figure 6.2: Structure of planning Table 6.1: portion of an input–output table Planning in the USSR Detail planning and stock constraints A new plan-balancing algorithm
The harmony function
Figure 6.3: Stylised neural net Figure 6.4: Harmony function
Stages of the algorithm
Economic cybernetics in Chile
7. Macroeconomic Planning and Budgetary Policy
Macro accounting in labour-time Household saving and credit
Interest on savings?
Tax policy
Ground rent Excise tax Taxation and Accumulation
8. The Marketing of Consumer Goods
Market-clearing prices
Table 8.1: Market prices and rationing
Consumer goods and the macro plan Comparison with capitalist markets Conclusion
conc1
9. Planning and Information
Information and property Requirements of a statistical service
Product coding Unified stock control Standardised message formats Obtaining technical coefficients
Information: social problems
Information, performance measures and incentives Evaluating the performance of enterprises Statistical assessment for producer goods enterprises Against monopoly
Rewards and sanctions?
10. Foreign Trade
Figure 10.1: International production possibilities Technology and trade patterns Low wage and high wage economies Advantages of trade deficits International trade in context of socialism
State demand for foreign currency Alternatives to foreign exchange
Table 10.1: Labour-time balance of payments
Exchange rates, tourism and black markets
Figure 10.2: Exchange rate and revenue
Policy instruments
Unsold Exports Improved terms of trade
11. Trade Between Socialist Countries
Trade and property Less developed countries What we advocate Significance of national sovereignty
12. The Commune
The activities of urban communes
Housing Food preparation Childcare Some leisure activities Helping senior citizens
Basic rationale in terms of efficiency Systems of payment and external trade
Table 12.1: Illustrative set of commune accounts
Distribution of tasks The legal status of communes Public policy
13. On Democracy
Democracy and parliamentarism Direct democracy or soviet democracy?
Institutions of classical democracy ‘Democratic centralism’—a dead end
Is democracy possible today? Democracy and planning The acephalous state
14. Property Relations
Who owns what?
Encoding property rights
Table 14.1: Exhaustive enumeration of possible property rights
What can be owned?
Pure capitalism and mixed capitalism The Soviet model
Table 14.3: Property rights in the Soviet system
The enterprise as focus of contradictions
The proposed communalist model
Individual property rights Rights of Planning and economic projects Self-employment Property in land
Digression on the Ricardian theory of rent
Table 14.4: Soils of different productivities Table 14.5: Rents with grade 3 land in cultivation Ownership of natural resources Separation of control from benefit
15. Some Contrary Views Considered
Distribution, values and prices Market socialism?
Diane Elson: the socialised market? Aganbegyan: administrative and economic methods
Bibliography
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