Lost opportunity : why economic reforms in Russia have not worked /

Undaunted by the potholed road the Russians are traveling towards a market economy, Marshall Goldman here explains not only what has happened under Boris Yeltsin, but also what is likely to happen next in the most enigmatic nation in the world.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator: Goldman, Marshall I.
Format: Book
Language:English
Imprint: New York : W.W. Norton & Co., 1994.
Subjects:
Description
Summary:Undaunted by the potholed road the Russians are traveling towards a market economy, Marshall Goldman here explains not only what has happened under Boris Yeltsin, but also what is likely to happen next in the most enigmatic nation in the world.
Trenchant analysis combined with first-person reporting is a Goldman hallmark; in Lost Opportunity he provides the clearest picture yet of how Boris Yeltsin took on the task of reforming the Russian economy. Unlike Mikhail Gorbachev, Yeltsin was won over to the idea of shock therapy, administered by Yegor Gaidar, a young economist eventually appointed acting prime minister. Gaidar did not push economic reforms alone.
He was encouraged and supported by Western economists, including some who had advocated similar tactics in the former Soviet satellites. But as Goldman starkly reveals, the Russian economy, beset by supply blockages that left goods scarce and prices high, lurched from one unsuccessful quick fix to another.
Apparatchiks intent on becoming power brokers in the new state, profiteers, and the notorious Russian mafia further exploited the confusion, opening the way for a strong showing of nationalist extremists in recent elections.
In contrast to the Russian experience, alternative lessons of history from the post-Second World War revivals of Japan and Germany to the gradualist approach to a free economy in China and Hungary come under close review. In a stunning summing-up, Goldman shows the clash between economics and history that has dogged Russia through the centuries from the revolution in 1917 to the present. Lost Opportunity is a sure-footed account of a slippery period.
Combining trenchant commentary with first-person reporting, Marshall I. Goldman provides the clearest picture yet of how Boris Yeltsin took on the task of reforming the Russian economy and what happened along the way. Goldman has added a new chapter for the paperback edition on recent developments.
Physical Description:xii, 290 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 277-280) and index.
ISBN:0393037002
9780393037005
Author Notes:Marshall Irwin Goldman was born in Elgin, Illinois on July 26, 1930. He received a bachelor's degree from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in 1952 and received master's and doctoral degrees in economics from Harvard University. After being drafted and serving as a teacher in the Army, he joined the faculty at Wellesley College in 1958 and remained there until he retirement in 2002. He was also the associate director of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University from 1975 to 2006.

He was an authority on the Soviet economy. He diagnosed deficiencies in Moscow's economic policies and was among the first Kremlinologists to predict the downfall of Mikhail S. Gorbachev. He wrote several books including U.S.S.R. in Crisis: The Failure of an Economic System, Gorbachev's Challenge: Economic Reform in the Age of High Technology, and Petrostate: Putin, Power and the New Russia. He died from complications of dementia on August 2, 2017 at the age of 87.

(Bowker Author Biography)