
Overcentralization in Economic Administration (Oxford, 1959) was the first book written by an Eastern European and published in the West that openly criticized socialist central planning. In this work the distinguished economist János Kornai begins a lifelong study of the economic organization of centrally planned economies.Professor Kornai's aim in this book was to observe the reality of the working socialist system, and to draw conclusions that were not distorted by the laws of Marxist political economy. He provided a lucid and coherent account of conditions, along with normative recommendations which influenced the Hungarian reform process, culminating in the economic changes of 1968. Professor Kornai identified several systematic failures of the centrally planned economy and gave a prescient account of weak economic performance and eventual disintegration. His argument for radical rather than partial change makes this book essential reading for those interested in the economics of transition in Eastern Europe.
This work investigates the systemic failures inherent in centrally planned economic administration by analyzing the practical realities of the Hungarian light industry. János Kornai, a distinguished economist, utilizes his direct observations of the socialist system to bypass the theoretical constraints of Marxist political economy. He presents a coherent framework that identifies the structural weaknesses of central planning and advocates for radical economic reform to address chronic performance issues.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this text as a foundational critique of socialist economic planning that significantly influenced the Hungarian reform process of 1968. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and its historical importance as the first Eastern European critique published in the West.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2023-09-29
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192894420
ISBN-13:
9780192894427
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