Perestroika and Production : Management's Response to Reform

Perestroika and Production : Management's Response to Reform

PERESTROIKA AND PRODUCTION : MANAGEMENT'S RESPONSE TO REFORM Susan J . Lin z Michigan State Universit y Working Paper #5 7 March 198 9 Data for this study were produced by the Soviet Intervie w Project . The current Working Paper Series is supported b y Contract No . 804-13 from the National Council for Soviet and Eas t European Research, James R . Millar, Principal Investigator . International Programs and Studies of the University of Illinoi s Urbana-Champaign and the Institute for Sino-Soviet Studies o f George Washington University have also provided support that i s much appreciated . The analysis and interpretations in this stud y are those of the author, not necessarily of the sponsors . Copyright 0 Soviet Interview Project NOTE * This paper was distributed at the NATO Annual Economic s Colloquium in March, 1989 and has therefore been in the hands o f most Government specialists since that time . It contains : (a) A concise summary of Soviet economic reform in the firs t three years of Gorbachev's reign, already somewhat dated by event s since, but a useful reminder to the specialist of evolution an d contradictions, and a valuable account and reference for th e general reader . (b) An analysis of whether enterprise management, o r management training, has been a constraint on the effort t o accelerate economic growth, raise the technological level o f industry, and improve the quantity and quality of consumer goods . This analysis includes : (c) The results of surveys reported in the Soviet press t o gauge management's response to perestroika, as contrasted wit h evidence from intensive interviews with recent emigrants who hel d responsible positions in the Soviet economic bureaucracy . (d) An examination of management as a factor of productio n and the kinds of decisions Soviet managers make, and the element s which affect these decisions . (e) An analysis of management's response to new economi c conditions produced by perestroika, which concludes that Wester n analysts would be wise to question the view prevailing in th e Soviet press that Soviet managers are incapable of working in a competitive environment . Rather, rational managers will b e reluctant to alter their decisions in light of intrinsi c inconsistencies and partial implementation of reform . ---------- -------------------------------- - *Prepared by the staff of the National Council . Perestroika and Production : Management's Response to Reform Susan J . Lin z Associate Professo r Department of Economic s 101 Marshall Hal l Michigan State Universit y East Lansing, Michigan 48824-1038 (517) 353-796 1 This paper was prepared for the Annual Economics Colloquium at NATO (March 1989) . Perestroika and Production : Management's Response to Reform The economic reforms proposed in the first three years of Mikhai l Gorbache v ' s tenure as General Secretary have been impressive, embracing nearl y every sector of the economy and providing for changes in the economic syste m that most western experts previously thought would never be seriousl y considered by Soviet leaders .1 Reform rhetoric is not unique to the curren t leadership, however . Gorbachev's emphasis on reform stems in part from th e tradition in Soviet society of the political leadership seeking to improve th e performance of the economy through organizational changes, policy change s (investment, wage, or price level changes, for example), and changes in th e criteria by which economic performance is measured . So frequent have been th e reform efforts in recent decades that Gertrude Schroeder describes the Sovie t economy as trudging on a "treadmill" of reforms . 2 The tradition of reform is only part of the explanation for Gorbachev' s ambitious program for socioeconomic reconstruction . Perhaps more importan t are the complex problems the current leadership faces ; a "pre-crisis " situation which Gorbachev has argued could end catastrophically unless radica l measures are implemented . 3 Economic factors -- stagnating growth rates , rising energy costs, declining productivity, lagging technology, a growin g foreign trade deficit, regional labor shortages, a rising military burden , poor agricultural performance -- tended to dominate early discussions of th e need for reform . Social and political factors have since become equall y powerful motivating factors in the call for change . 4 In an effort to jump-start the Soviet economy and circumvent th e impending crisis, Gorbachev initially relied on "traditional" measures to improve economic performance . Labor discipline, anti-corruption, an d anti-alcohol campaigns, plus the wholesale replacement of administrativ e personnel, were implemented in 1985-1986 to reverse declining labo r productivity . 5 A capital modernization program, based on an increase i n total capital investment by 5 percent annually from 1986 to 1990, was t o permit the reconstruction, re-equipping, and retooling of existing industria l facilities . Gorbachev called for the replacement of over one-third of th e total capital stock by 1990 (doubling the retirement rates for capita l assets), and placed a greater emphasis on quality -- 90 percent of al l machinery was to meet "world standards" by 1990, compared to about 20 percen t in 1985 . 6 Finally, organizational changes were introduced in an effort t o streamline the economic bureaucracy by consolidating or eliminatin g administrative positions . 7 These traditional reform measures were t o generate sufficient productivity gains to achieve the economic growth rat e targeted by the Twelfth Five-Year Plan . Gains in economic performance achieved in 1986 by traditional refor m measures were insufficient to meet Gorbachev's goals of uskoreniye (acceleration in the growth of output), intensifikatsiya (improved efficienc y in resource utilization), and perestroika (restructuring the economi c bureaucracy) . 8 Rather than drop these goals, Gorbachev pushed forward i n mid-1987 with a series of "radical" reform measures to fundamentall y restructure the Soviet economy . 9 Central to this version of reform is th e decentralization of economic decision-making by curtailing central directiv e planning and expanding the rights and responsibilities of industria l enterprises over production and distribution . The components of the radica l reform package directed toward decentralizing decision-making include : (i) the law on state enterprise, (ii) the joint venture decree, and (iii) the laws o n cooperatives and leasing . Under the Law on State Enterprise, Soviet industrial firms are grante d more responsibility for formulating annual plans and acquiring the necessar y inputs by direct contracting . 10 Managers and workers' collectives ar e accorded more autonomy in production decisions, and are to be guided in thei r decision-making by improved performance criteria and enhanced materia l incentives . Improvements in the performance criteria are to include a comprehensive revision of wholesale and retail prices, profit as the primar y success indicator, and performance-based pay for workers . The law encourage s managers to negotiate all aspects of production and exchange, with the righ t to mutually determine selected prices . Firms are permitted to reinvest a portion of their profits on a self-directed basis to facilitate industria l expansion and technological advance . Firms also are granted the right t o allocate ruble credit balances to alternative uses . 11 Firms unsuccessful i n generating profitable production under the new conditions face bankruptcy . Gorbachev proposed the legalization of joint ventures as a secon d measure to decentralize decision-making in the economic bureaucracy . A decre e approved by the USSR Council of Ministers on 13 January 1987 authorized Sovie t and foreign firms to form limited liability companies, with foreign control o f up to 49 percent of the equity . Joint ventures represent a devolution o f Gosplan ' s control over the economic bureaucracy because these firms have th e right to make decisions regarding production and distribution independent o f Gosplan's material balance planning . Planners perceive potential benefit s that outweigh the loss of direct control over these firms -- an opportunity t o gain access to Western technology and managerial and technical training, t o increase exports of Soviet manufactured goods and obtain hard-currency, to generate additional investment, and to produce domestically what previousl y had been imported . Despite a rather adverse economic environment, 30 0 applications for joint ventures were submitted to the Ministry of Financ e within the first year, of which 50 were registered . 12 To accelerate th e formation of joint ventures with Western producers, the Soviet governmen t proposed new regulations, effective January 1989, that (i) allow Western firm s to own the majority of equity, (ii) make profit repatriation easier, (iii ) reduce the joint venture ' s tax liability, and (iv) lower tariffs on equipment brought into the USSR.13 As a consequence, Serge Raslovleff reports 25 2 joint ventures registered as of February 1989 . 1 4 The producer and consumer cooperatives allowed by the Law o n Cooperatives, approved by the Supreme Soviet in May 1988 and put into effect 1 July 1988, 15 are an important component of Gorbachev's efforts t o decentralize decision-making and accelerate the production of consumer good s and services in the Soviet economy . At the same time, however, cooperative s and leaseholding arrangements have been one of the most

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    37 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us