Planned Economies

Their Lessons for Developing Countries

Price: 1495.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780198990529

Hardback

336 pages

216x140mm

Price: 1495.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780198990529

Hardback

336 pages

Dipak R. Basu & Victoria W. Miroshnik

  • Offers key learnings on the theoretical background of central planning and the lived experiences of the Soviet Union, China, Hungary, Yugoslavia, and India
  • Is one of the first books to cover management of planned economies, quantitative analyses, and country-specific evaluations
  • Provides relevant insights to counter the global discourse against planning and the Soviet system

Rights:  World Rights

Dipak R. Basu & Victoria W. Miroshnik

Description

A response to the ongoing global discourse against planning and the Soviet system, Planned Economies: Their Lessons for Developing Countries focuses on the experiences that the Soviet Union and several other economies had with planning and the lessons therein. In the first part of the book, Basu and Miroshnik discuss national economic planning aimed at maximizing the welfare of the people, as it was in the Soviet Union. In the second part, they focus on the management issues of the Soviet Union and several other planned economies to explore how organizations should be managed to maximize efficiency and effectiveness for public welfare. The third part elaborates upon the experiences of countries such as Hungary, Yugoslavia, China, and India, specifically, how they developed and the crises they underwent. As income inequality creates social tensions, potentially leading to war and conflict, the main objective of a planned economy is the equal distribution of income. Combining macroeconomic welfare maximization and microeconomic efficiency maximization approaches, Basu and Miroshnik analyse the underlying philosophical dimension of these problems, as well as their practical applications, to provide insights relevant to the future of developing countries.

Dipak R. Basu, Emeritus Professor in Economics, Nagasaki University, and Victoria W. Miroshnik, Professor in Business Administration, Reitaku University

Dipak R. Basu is an Emeritus Professor in Economics at Nagasaki University, Japan. He has a PhD from the University of Birmingham. Previously, he was a Research Officer at the Department of Applied Economics, University of Cambridge, and a Lecturer in Econometrics at the Institute of Agricultural Economics, University of Oxford.

Victoria W. Miroshnik is a Professor in Management at Reitaku University, Japan. She has a graduate degree from the Moscow State University and a PhD from the University of Glasgow. Previously, she was a Professor at Jindal Global University, New Delhi, India, and an Associate Professor at the American University, Dubai; Tsukuba University, Tokyo; and Ritsumeikan University, Beppu.

Dipak R. Basu & Victoria W. Miroshnik

Dipak R. Basu & Victoria W. Miroshnik

Dipak R. Basu & Victoria W. Miroshnik

Dipak R. Basu & Victoria W. Miroshnik

Description

A response to the ongoing global discourse against planning and the Soviet system, Planned Economies: Their Lessons for Developing Countries focuses on the experiences that the Soviet Union and several other economies had with planning and the lessons therein. In the first part of the book, Basu and Miroshnik discuss national economic planning aimed at maximizing the welfare of the people, as it was in the Soviet Union. In the second part, they focus on the management issues of the Soviet Union and several other planned economies to explore how organizations should be managed to maximize efficiency and effectiveness for public welfare. The third part elaborates upon the experiences of countries such as Hungary, Yugoslavia, China, and India, specifically, how they developed and the crises they underwent. As income inequality creates social tensions, potentially leading to war and conflict, the main objective of a planned economy is the equal distribution of income. Combining macroeconomic welfare maximization and microeconomic efficiency maximization approaches, Basu and Miroshnik analyse the underlying philosophical dimension of these problems, as well as their practical applications, to provide insights relevant to the future of developing countries.

Dipak R. Basu, Emeritus Professor in Economics, Nagasaki University, and Victoria W. Miroshnik, Professor in Business Administration, Reitaku University

Dipak R. Basu is an Emeritus Professor in Economics at Nagasaki University, Japan. He has a PhD from the University of Birmingham. Previously, he was a Research Officer at the Department of Applied Economics, University of Cambridge, and a Lecturer in Econometrics at the Institute of Agricultural Economics, University of Oxford.

Victoria W. Miroshnik is a Professor in Management at Reitaku University, Japan. She has a graduate degree from the Moscow State University and a PhD from the University of Glasgow. Previously, she was a Professor at Jindal Global University, New Delhi, India, and an Associate Professor at the American University, Dubai; Tsukuba University, Tokyo; and Ritsumeikan University, Beppu.