Law on Cooperatives - Wikipedia The Law on Cooperatives was a major economic reform implemented in the Soviet Union during General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev 's perestroika and glasnost reforms
Cooperatives – Seventeen Moments in Soviet History In 1985, the cooperative sector of the Soviet economy was comprised of some 26,000 collective farms with 12 7 million workers, housing cooperatives that accounted for about eight percent of all housing construction, and assorted garden, dacha-construction, consumer, and handicraft cooperatives
The role of new cooperatives in the Soviet economyl The social character of cooperative ownership lies in the fact that members' entitlement to participation in income and decisions ends with the cessation of cooperative employment; thus members do not have a claim on enterprise capital financed out of undistributed value added, nor on any increment in the present value of the enterprise
Cooperative Movement in the Soviet Union: History and Future Prospects Cooperatives in Russia have a long though highly uneven history, and their fortunes have fluctuated with political currents since the 1917 revolution The cooperative movement in rural Russia began to develop only at the end of the 19th century, thirty years after the abolition of serfdom
Cooperatives, Law on - Encyclopedia. com Private economic activity, embodied in organizations called "cooperatives," quickly evolved beyond the provisions of the 1987 Law, and the new Law was intended to reflect the reality of the growing cooperative movement
SOVIET CO-OPERATIVES - A FORCE FOR MAJOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (18313 The Soviet Union had a viable cooperative bank serving a strong cooperative enterprise system in the 1920s This bank was eliminated about 1926 along with the elimination of the cooperatives as pan of the restructuring of the economy at that time
Law on Cooperatives - Seventeen Moments in Soviet History Under the conditions of the USSR’s political and economic systems and given the leading role of the state (nationwide) form of ownership, the comprehensive development of the cooperative movement is aimed at making fuller use of the potential and advantages of socialism, at augmenting social wealth, at saturating the market with high-quality goo
The Soviet Union: Facts, Descriptions, Statistics — Ch 16 THE co-operative organizations of the Soviet Union play a big part in the economic scheme Their membership was close to 35,000,000 in 1928, their annual turnover had risen to about $11,000,000,000 in 1928
Kolkhoz - Wikipedia As a collective farm, a kolkhoz was legally organized as a production cooperative The Standard Charter of a kolkhoz, which since the early 1930s had the force of law in the USSR, is a model of cooperative principles in print