Hearings, Reports and Prints of the Joint Economic Committee

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U.S. Government Printing Office, 1960

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390. lappuse - Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, and Yugoslavia) accounted for 13.8 percent ($423 million) of Soviet imports in 1955 and 16.9 percent $667 million) in 1957, a growth of 59.8 percent in the period. These same countries bought 15.3 percent ($532 million) in Soviet exports in 1955 and 16.8 percent ($735 million) in 1957, an increase of 38.2 percent. On the other hand, the underdeveloped countries with whom the Soviet Union trades (Afghanistan, Argentina, Burma, Cuba,...
471. lappuse - We are living not merely in a state but in a system of states and the existence of the Soviet Republic side by side with the imperialist states for a long time is unthinkable. One or the other must triumph in the end. And before that end supervenes, a series of frightful collisions between the Soviet Republic and the bourgeois states will be inevitable.
471. lappuse - As long as capitalism and socialism exist," Lenin wrote, "we cannot live in peace: in the end, one or the other will triumph — a funeral dirge will be sung either over the Soviet Republic or over world capitalism.
470. lappuse - In short, the Communists everywhere support every revolutionary movement against the existing social and political order of things. In all these movements they bring to the front, as the leading question in each, the property question, no matter what its degree of development at the time. Finally, they labor everywhere for the union and agreement of the democratic parties of all countries.
207. lappuse - It will not be enough to meet the problem grudgingly or with a little more money. The nation's need for good education is immediate; and good education is expensive. That is a fact which the American people have never been quite prepared to face.
31. lappuse - birth deficit" is merely a handy reference for the difference between the actual number of births in a given period when fertility is low and the number which would have been expected under "normal" rates of reproduction. 1 See Frank Lorimer, "The Population of the Soviet Union," League of Nations, Geneva, 1946, pp.
347. lappuse - ... pushers." The table of organization does not provide for this occupation, yet so great is the need that firms manage somehow to employ these people. The chief job of the expediter is to make sure that his enterprise gets the materials it needs and when it needs them. Accordingly he spends most of his time on the road, visiting his enterprise's suppliers, handing out little gifts here and there to assure that his orders are well-handled,19 picking up supplies of one kind or another that his firm...
354. lappuse - The point I wish to make is that when American management finds itself in a position approximating that of Soviet management they tend to react in ways similar to those of their Soviet counterparts. Sutherland's unique study notes many aspects of American managerial practice that are astonishingly similar to those one might find in the literature on Soviet management. "These crimes are not discreet and inadvertent violations of technical regulations. They are deliberate and have a relatively consistent...
158. lappuse - The problem of working changes through that many different balances is a formidable one for any bureaucracy. Thirdly, all this was and is done without the aid of electronic computers. The method of material balances, in the form in which it exists, is not amenable to computer technology. But we need not rely solely on deductive reasoning in this matter. In a recent book, the director of the Economic Research Institute of Gosplan stated, that it was rare for even three or four iterations to be performed...
338. lappuse - Soviet women told me, in reply to my question, that this was why she never went on to college. She is not a very good illustration of my point, however, for she went on to say that she really wasn't very smart anyhow. The second group that is largely lost from America's pool of potential managerial manpower is the Negro and some other racial minorities. It may well be that the proportion of college graduates among some of the Soviet national minorities is smaller than for the Slavic nationalities;...

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