Matthias’s Reviews > Building a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform > Status Update

Matthias
Matthias is on page 83 of 288
Man, everybody who's somebody in this story is someone's son-in-law. Obviously not surprising, from a comparative perspective, and these aren't necessarily failsons (a lot of them are clearly very smart.) Elites passing on positions and privileges to sons-in-law is interesting insofar as it's less strictly nepotistic than sons but more than blind advancement - a bit like Roman adoption practices, maybe.
Jun 27, 2024 08:37AM
Building a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform

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Matthias’s Previous Updates

Matthias
Matthias is on page 83 of 288
Man, everybody who's somebody in this story is someone's son-in-law. Obviously not surprising, from a comparative perspective, and these aren't necessarily failsons (a lot of them are clearly very smart.) Elites passing on positions and privileges to sons-in-law is interesting insofar as it's less strictly nepotistic than sons but more than blind advancement - a bit like Roman adoption practices, maybe.
Jun 27, 2024 08:37AM
Building a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform


Matthias
Matthias is on page 62 of 288
Feygin points out the irony that during the Khruschev thaw the economists with more radical policy proposals re: embracing markets came from a more orthodox Marxist background, while the ones whose reform proposals centered around more rationalized, actually-comprehensive central planning used non-Marxist frameworks. But this isn't surprising at all: all the categories of Marxian economics are capitalism-specific!
Jun 27, 2024 07:26AM
Building a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform


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