Western technology and Soviet economic development
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Western technology and Soviet economic development
(Hoover Institution publication, 76,
Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, Stanford University, 1968-73
- [v. 1] : 1917 to 1930
- v. 2 : 1930 to 1945
- v. 3 : 1945 to 1965
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[v. 1] : 1917 to 1930332.38||Su840010775369,
v. 2 : 1930 to 1945332.38||Su840010775377, v. 3 : 1945 to 1965332.38||Su840010775385 -
[v. 1] : 1917 to 1930IVB//Su84w//7000050447606,
v. 2 : 1930 to 1945IVB//Su84w//7100050447614
Note
Vols. 2-3 have imprint: Stanford, Calif. , Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University
Includes bibliographies
Description and Table of Contents
Description
THIS is the second volume of an empirical study of the relationship between Western technology and entrepreneurship and the economic growth of the Soviet Union.
The continuing transfer of skills and technology to the Soviet Union through the medium of foreign firms and engineers in the period 1930 to 1945 can only be characterized as extraordinary. A thorough and systematic search unearthed only two major items--SK-B synthetic rubber and the Ramzin 'once-through' boiler--and little more than a handful of lesser designs (several aircraft, a machine gun, and a motorless combine) which could accurately be called the result of Soviet technology; the balance was transferred from the West.
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