The September Plenary Meeting of the CPSU Central Committee discussed the questions of improving management, planning, and economic incentives in industry. But its resolutions have great and fundamental importance for construction as well. The specific features of this branch of the economy will, of course, find reflection in the system of plan indicators, in the formation of profit, in the organization of economic work, but the basic directions charted by the Plenary Meeting for improving the planning and economic stimulation of production growth also apply here. And this is only natural. For builders are also confronted in full measure with these tasks: to introduce the latest achievements of science and technology as rapidly as possible; to increase the efficiency of production; to improve the quality of work; to reduce outlays of living and materialized labor; and to achieve a more rational use of fixed production assets. Here too, as in the national economy as a whole, economic factors such as profit, finance, credit, prices, and material incentives are called upon to play an important role.