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CHAPTER 17 – SECTION 2 TEKS: 1A, 5A, 5B, 6A, 10A, 11B, 14A, 15A, 16B, 18B, 18D, 21A, 21C, 22B, 22C THE STRUGGLE FOR REFORM

The Struggle for Reform

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The Struggle for Reform. Chapter 17 – Section 2 TEKS: 1A, 5A, 5B, 6A, 10A, 11B, 14A, 15A, 16B, 18B, 18D, 21A, 21C, 22B, 22C. Steps toward capitalism. 1992 – Price controls were removed. Government started privatization – selling government-owned businesses to individuals. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Struggle for Reform

C H A P T E R 1 7 – S E C T I O N 2T E K S : 1 A , 5 A , 5 B , 6 A , 1 0 A , 1 1 B , 1 4 A , 1 5 A , 1 6 B , 1 8 B , 1 8 D , 2 1 A , 2 1 C , 2 2 B , 2 2 C

THE STRUGGLE FOR REFORM

Page 2: The Struggle for Reform

STEPS TOWARD CAPITALISM

• 1992 – Price controls were removed.

• Government started privatization – selling government-owned businesses to individuals.

• Those with advantages during Communism got advantages during the switch.

Page 3: The Struggle for Reform

OBSTACLE – DISTANCE DECAY• Long distances have made

transportation/communication of goods difficult – known as distance decay.• The country stretches across 11 time zones.Eight large districts formed, each with its own governor-general.

Page 4: The Struggle for Reform
Page 5: The Struggle for Reform

SO….WHAT IS RUSSIA’S GOVERNMENT?

It’s a republic – with some areas similar to U.S.Most ministries and federal services report directly to the prime minister, who then reports to the presidentHigh criticism from the public over policies and rules.

Page 6: The Struggle for Reform

OBSTACLE – RUSSIAN MAFIA

• When Communism ended, mobsters took advantage.• In the late 1990s, the

mafia controlled:40% of private

companies60% of state-owned

enterprises