Photo shows: between interviews singer Edna Lev entertaining the public.
המידע אודות התצלום נמסר על ידי יוצר האוסף, מר דן הדני
File Record
Photo shows: between interviews singer Edna Lev entertaining ...the public.
The information about the photograph was provided by the creator of the collection, Mr. Dan Hadani
File Record
Photo shows: between interviews singer Edna Lev entertaining the public.
File Record
המידע אודות התצלום נמסר על ידי יוצר האוסף, מר דן הדני
Od 15. do 19. septembra 1970. godine održano je u Lincu šesto, već tradicionalno, međunarodno savjetovanje istoričara radničkog pokreta (Internationale Tagung der Historiker der Arbeiterbewegung - ...ITH).
In 1968, about 2.8 to 3 million people, or 14—15 per cent of Yugoslavia’s total population, took an organized part in physical training inside or outside schools. It is presumed that in the same year ...another 5—10 per cent of the population occasionally took part in some kind of sport for recreational purposes. (Table I).
The development of tourism in 1967 and 1968 showed a slowdown in the growth of foreign tourist traffic (9.4 and 6.8 per cent) and a stagnation in domestic tourism (—1.3 and 1.4 per cent)1. These ...trends were the result of unfavorable conditions on the international tourist market (unfavorable economic movements, currency devaluation in some countries, the events in the Middle East, etc.), and of the effect some measures of the Economic Reform had on domestic tourist traffic. The year 1969 saw a new upsurge both in domestic and foreign tourist traffic, with the number of domestic tourist nights increasing by 17 per cent and of foreign tourist nights by 30 per cent over the 1968 figures. (Table I).
Care for women’s health, and especially maternity care are among the most important branches of the health service. They include facilities for women during the whole period of pregnancy and ...confinement (about 400,000 women a year) and health care for all women of child-bearing age, i. e. between the ages of 15 and 49 years (one fourth of Yugoslavia’s total population).
The development of the pulp and paper industry was very intensive before 1965, but suffered a sudden slowdown from 1965—1969. The average annual growth rate of production decreased from about 14 per ...cent in 1957—1961 and close on 28 per cent in 1962—1965, to a mere 8 per cent in the 1965—1969 period, with the growth rate of consumption decreasing almost in the same ratio. There were even greater changes in financial effects. In 1964, the pulp and paper industry had one of the highest rates of capital formation of all branches of industry, but as early as 1965 its business effect began to decline and in subsequent years the whole branch found itself in a very difficult situation with many large enterprises operating at a loss. This recession was primarily due to a slowdown in general economic growth and the resulting relative decrease in paper consumption, and also to the very high increase recorded by the industry in the preceding period, which has been taken here as a basis for comparison.
TOTAL LABOR FORCE. In the sixteen-year period (1952—1968) here under survey, the number of those employed in the socialist and private sectors in Yugoslavia increased by 1,853,000 and was in 1968 ...double the figure recorded in 1952. The annual growth of employment in that period averaged 116,000 or 4.7 per cent. In the same period, Yugoslavia’s total population rose by 3,356,000, or at an average annual rate of 210,000 or 1.3 per cent. Whereas, despite a lower growth rate, the total population had a higher annual increment than the total labor force, the population of the working age had in the same period a much smaller annual increment and a much lower growth rate than total employment, viz. it grew at an average annual rate of about 86,000, or of only 1.0 per cent.
The assets of socio-political communities used for financing investment have ever since the war been very important for the expansion of production in the country. With regard to the way they have ...been generated and are utilized, and especially the amount they represent in the structure of sources for financing capital investment, the entire postwar era can be divided into three periods: — The period of rigid investment programs when investment funds collected through taxation went into the federal budget and were reallocated to specific projects; — The period of social investment funds; and — The period of transition to the present system of financing capital investment under which enterprises are the basic factors in investment decision-making.
Although the first, modest foundations of the aluminium industry in Yugoslavia were laid as early as 1937, it is only in the postwar period, especially in the last ten years, that major progress has ...been made in this sector. It is characteristic to note that in all postwar development plans the targets for this industry were set too high and could not be fully attained, primarily because of inaccurate estimates of the essential preconditions for its expansion. There was always one or another essential factor missing, making it impossible to realize the planned estimates. The most important among these factors were a lag in the generation of hydroelectric power, the industry’s shortage of capital for large initial investment outlays, the cancellation of already contracted foreign loans on the part of foreign creditors, etc. Because of all this the expansion of the aluminium industry has not reached the level warranted by the country’s natural potential.