Abstract

The Twenty-sixth Congress and subsequent plenums of the CPSU Central Committee noted that the problem of increasing the return on the existing production potential and using fixed capital and new capacities to the fullest merits our most serious attention. Only highly productive technology, writes K. U. Chernenko, multiplied by the general economic interest in its application, can make an overdue economic breakthrough a reality, can couple two revolutions—the scientific and technological revolution and the social revolution, and can with new vigor reveal the advantages of the socialist organization of production.1

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