Description

Book Synopsis
Money did not become obsolete under Communism. The ruble remained a key feature of Soviet life. After World War II, money became an essential tool of the Soviet government. A strong ruble represented the nation’s promise of future prosperity, but its failure to deliver improved purchasing power undermined popular confidence in Communism.

Trade Review
Ironside contests the view that money had limited value in the Soviet system. She demonstrates that Soviet postwar governments were very concerned with increasing the ruble’s purchasing power as a means to economic growth and eventual abundance. This goal, however, remained unfulfilled. By examining political leaders’ beliefs, economic experts’ debates, and citizens’ complaints to the authorities, Ironside shows how a variety of economic policies introduced in the decades after World War II repeatedly led to the accumulation of unspendable money in the hands of the people. -- Maria Lipman * Foreign Affairs *
A brilliant piece of research, equally useful for historians and economists…It offers a path-breaking narrative that expands on established economic models of central planning such as soft budget constraints, shortages and slacks, worker behavior under socialism and economic coordination…A must read for economists ready to take risks in interdisciplinary research and for historians willing to undertake cutting-edge research interactions with quantitative social science. -- Theocharis Grigoriadis * H-Net Reviews *
Fascinating…Ironside’s highly original book fills in so many important gaps in the scholarship and offers so many insights into Soviet politics and economics that it deserves to be read by all serious students of the postwar USSR. -- Julie Hessler * Soviet and Post-Soviet Review *
[This] excellent new study is informed by deep research in former Soviet archives…Ironside explores complex matters of economic policy with dexterity and clarity. Her facility with social history and sensitivity to the tangled politics of the period keeps the book lively and engaging. This book is recommended for specialists, graduate students, and advanced undergraduates interested in economic history, socialist economies, and modern Russian and European history. -- James W. Heinzen * Journal of Modern History *
Even in an overwhelmingly state-owned, price-controlled economy [like the Soviet Union], it was hard to get [Modern Monetary Theory]-like policies to work, and even their successes came at high cost to consumer welfare, labor productivity and public opinion. [Ironside] has done a great service in illuminating this little-known experience. It should be required reading for anyone contemplating MMT. -- Kent Osband * Central Banking *
A masterful account of Stalin’s and Khrushchev’s lost battle to bring prosperity to the Soviet people and state through the strengthening of the ruble. -- Elena Osokina, author of Stalin’s Quest for Gold: The Torgsin Hard-Currency Shops and Soviet Industrialization
As Ironside shows so convincingly in this highly original account, Soviet leaders and experts saw the politics of the ruble and the role of money as crucial to their efforts to engineer a better society. An excellent, exciting contribution to the new history of political economy, with implications for other welfare states and the history of inequality far beyond the Soviet Union. -- Vanessa Ogle, author of The Global Transformation of Time: 1870–1950
How should socialists deal with money? In A Full-Value Ruble, Kristy Ironside examines the dilemmas posed by money in the postwar Soviet Union. Though Bolshevik leaders promised that communism would produce universal abundance, the postwar Soviet Union faced severe scarcity. So money decided who got what. From prices to pensions, from bread allowances to savings bonds, Ironside shows how monetary debates were fundamental to defining the Soviet social and economic order. A Full-Value Ruble revolutionizes our understanding of Soviet political economy. And in doing so, it poses profound questions about the meaning of money in our society, too. -- Chris Miller, author of Putinomics: Power and Money in Resurgent Russia
An important entry in the literature on the economic history of the Soviet Union, charting post–World War II efforts by Stalin and then Khrushchev to offer Soviet citizens a kind of consumer prosperity after years of economic upheaval and total war…Impressively researched. -- David Woodruff * Business History Review *
Kristy Ironside is the author of a series of seminal articles on Soviet monetary and tax policy during and just after World War II…The present superbly researched and explicated book is an extension of that work; it looks at Soviet attempts during the late Stalin and Khrushchev periods to stabilize and enhance the purchasing power of the domestic currency. -- Donald Filtzer * American Historical Review *

A FullValue Ruble

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    A Hardback by Kristy Ironside

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      View other formats and editions of A FullValue Ruble by Kristy Ironside

      Publisher: Harvard University Press
      Publication Date: 01/06/2021
      ISBN13: 9780674251649, 978-0674251649
      ISBN10: 0674251644

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Money did not become obsolete under Communism. The ruble remained a key feature of Soviet life. After World War II, money became an essential tool of the Soviet government. A strong ruble represented the nation’s promise of future prosperity, but its failure to deliver improved purchasing power undermined popular confidence in Communism.

      Trade Review
      Ironside contests the view that money had limited value in the Soviet system. She demonstrates that Soviet postwar governments were very concerned with increasing the ruble’s purchasing power as a means to economic growth and eventual abundance. This goal, however, remained unfulfilled. By examining political leaders’ beliefs, economic experts’ debates, and citizens’ complaints to the authorities, Ironside shows how a variety of economic policies introduced in the decades after World War II repeatedly led to the accumulation of unspendable money in the hands of the people. -- Maria Lipman * Foreign Affairs *
      A brilliant piece of research, equally useful for historians and economists…It offers a path-breaking narrative that expands on established economic models of central planning such as soft budget constraints, shortages and slacks, worker behavior under socialism and economic coordination…A must read for economists ready to take risks in interdisciplinary research and for historians willing to undertake cutting-edge research interactions with quantitative social science. -- Theocharis Grigoriadis * H-Net Reviews *
      Fascinating…Ironside’s highly original book fills in so many important gaps in the scholarship and offers so many insights into Soviet politics and economics that it deserves to be read by all serious students of the postwar USSR. -- Julie Hessler * Soviet and Post-Soviet Review *
      [This] excellent new study is informed by deep research in former Soviet archives…Ironside explores complex matters of economic policy with dexterity and clarity. Her facility with social history and sensitivity to the tangled politics of the period keeps the book lively and engaging. This book is recommended for specialists, graduate students, and advanced undergraduates interested in economic history, socialist economies, and modern Russian and European history. -- James W. Heinzen * Journal of Modern History *
      Even in an overwhelmingly state-owned, price-controlled economy [like the Soviet Union], it was hard to get [Modern Monetary Theory]-like policies to work, and even their successes came at high cost to consumer welfare, labor productivity and public opinion. [Ironside] has done a great service in illuminating this little-known experience. It should be required reading for anyone contemplating MMT. -- Kent Osband * Central Banking *
      A masterful account of Stalin’s and Khrushchev’s lost battle to bring prosperity to the Soviet people and state through the strengthening of the ruble. -- Elena Osokina, author of Stalin’s Quest for Gold: The Torgsin Hard-Currency Shops and Soviet Industrialization
      As Ironside shows so convincingly in this highly original account, Soviet leaders and experts saw the politics of the ruble and the role of money as crucial to their efforts to engineer a better society. An excellent, exciting contribution to the new history of political economy, with implications for other welfare states and the history of inequality far beyond the Soviet Union. -- Vanessa Ogle, author of The Global Transformation of Time: 1870–1950
      How should socialists deal with money? In A Full-Value Ruble, Kristy Ironside examines the dilemmas posed by money in the postwar Soviet Union. Though Bolshevik leaders promised that communism would produce universal abundance, the postwar Soviet Union faced severe scarcity. So money decided who got what. From prices to pensions, from bread allowances to savings bonds, Ironside shows how monetary debates were fundamental to defining the Soviet social and economic order. A Full-Value Ruble revolutionizes our understanding of Soviet political economy. And in doing so, it poses profound questions about the meaning of money in our society, too. -- Chris Miller, author of Putinomics: Power and Money in Resurgent Russia
      An important entry in the literature on the economic history of the Soviet Union, charting post–World War II efforts by Stalin and then Khrushchev to offer Soviet citizens a kind of consumer prosperity after years of economic upheaval and total war…Impressively researched. -- David Woodruff * Business History Review *
      Kristy Ironside is the author of a series of seminal articles on Soviet monetary and tax policy during and just after World War II…The present superbly researched and explicated book is an extension of that work; it looks at Soviet attempts during the late Stalin and Khrushchev periods to stabilize and enhance the purchasing power of the domestic currency. -- Donald Filtzer * American Historical Review *

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