Abstract

The working class was, at least formally, a formative basis of the former Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). The transformation of the system from the Communist to the capitalistic one led to its alienation, poverty, and social exclusion. This transformation, as part of the neoliberal globalisation, occurred through the introduction of the so-called 'shock therapy' measures: liberalisation, privatisation, and stabilisation. Large industrial complexes and leading stateowned companies in the SFRY were the subject of, often dubious, privatisation processes. Through such processes, workers, who were once owners and motors of companies they worked at, are now stripped of the ownership and the opportunity to work at the same companies. The majority of research on postCommunist economic transformation focuses on changes to the system, on economic aspects of privatisation processes, and on introduction of market economy. Yet, there are few research focusing on the privatisation and transformation from a workers' perspective. This paper attempts to fill in this gap by providing a different angle to the current studies of transformation of the SFRY and its successor states. Through interviews with former workers of privatised and/or closed factories and industrial complexes (using the local company of 'Rudi Čajavec' as an example), the research presented in this paper analyses workers' attitudes and sentiments towards the labour in the Communist Yugoslavia and the labour today, as well as towards the privatisation processes accompanying the latter.The research gives a voice to the workers, and, by looking at the past, gives a worker-centred approach to imagining labour in the future.

Highlights

  • The transformation from socialist self-management into an open market economy was characterised by several key turns in the internal socio-economic arrangement of Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY), and largely affected by a global economic and financial crises, as well as a push from different international factors

  • Workers, who were once owners and motors of companies they worked at, are stripped of the ownership and the opportunity to work at the same companies

  • The majority of research on postCommunist economic transformation focuses on changes to the system, on economic aspects of privatisation processes, and on introduction of market economy

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The transformation from socialist self-management into an open market economy was characterised by several key turns in the internal socio-economic arrangement of SFRY, and largely affected by a global economic and financial crises, as well as a push from different international factors. In her seminal work, Susan Woodward (1995) gave a detailed account of transformation of the socio-economic system in the former Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY) in the period of 1945-1990. Three basic dimensions through which the financialisation is enrooted in the former Yugoslav countries are: a fixed system of exchange rates, financial liberalisation and privatisation (Živković, 2015: 52-57)

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call