TY - BOOK AU - Varga,Eugen AU - Arnot,R.Page TI - Two systems: Socialist economy and capitalist economy AV - HC 335 .V35 1939 U1 - 338 PY - 1939/// CY - New York PB - International Publishers KW - Socialism KW - Soviet Union KW - Communism KW - Capitalism KW - Economic policy KW - Economic conditions KW - 1917-1945 KW - Social conditions N1 - The author's name is spelled incorrectly on the title page; Includes bibliographical references (p. 243-268); Introduction -- I. Capitalist accumulation and socialist accumulation -- II. Development of the material forces of production under capitalism and in the Soviet Union -- III. Industrial production under capitalism and in the Soviet Union -- IV. Non-utilisation of fixed capital under capitalism; Complete utilisation of productive plants in the Soviet Union -- V. Output of labour under capitalism and in the Soviet Union -- VI. Chronic mass unemployment under capitalism; Full employment of all labour forces in the Soviet Union -- VII. The intensification of the market problem under capitalism and its disappearance in the Soviet Union -- VIII. Agrarian crisis under capitalism; Growth of agriculture in the Soviet Union -- IX. Depreciation of currency under capitalism; Strengthening of Soviet currency -- X. Tendencies of capitalist economy to decline; Systematic construction of socialist economy -- XI. The regulation of economy under capitalism; Planned economy under socialism -- XII. The impoverishment of the proletariat under capitalism; Improvement of workers' conditions in the Soviet Union -- XIII. Mass ruin of peasants under capitalism; their rise to material and cultural well-being in the Soviet Union -- XIV. National and colonial oppression under capitalism; Freedom and equality of all nations in the Soviet Union -- XV. From bourgeois democracy to fascism; From tsarist absolutism to true democracy -- Conclusion -- Postscript to the English translation -- Reference notes N2 - "The irreconcilable, unbridgeable antagonism in principle between capitalism, based on private ownership of the menas of production and the exploitation of the workers, and socialism, based on common property and excluding exploitation, leads to a general struggle between the two systems embracing the whole world... The contradiction between productive forces and productive relations becomes more acute. Capital is no longer in a position either to utilise the productive forces it has created or to give the proletariat opportunity for work." -- From the introduction UR - https://archive.org/details/twosystemssocial0000varg ER -