Soviets were not buying wheat en masse until 70s. There was one wave in 1963-66, but that's it. Grain imports became systematic after 1972. At that point Soviets were already selling oil.
I'm not actually persuaded that gold reserves were relevant to anything. It implies that Soviets had no other trading going on. I.e. flawed premise.
I'm quite certain that gold reserve could've been increased easily enough. For example, it went from ~400 to ~700 during Andropov-Chernenko period. That's 100 tons of gold per year.
I don't think amount of gold would've changed anything. The problem was that USSR was not overcoming anything during Perestroika. It was creating difficulties.
Even if Gorbachev had 700,000 tons of gold (instead of 700), it would've meant USSR lasted a few months longer.
Decentralization of Planning primarily. We should have a proper thread on /marx/, I think. With sources and stuff.
For what? Specifics on Soviet Computers?
That's another thread-worthy question.
And this is the one point I'll need to find sources for too (don't have any on hand). Share of black market was negligible, IIRC.
You present it as if Socialism (i.e. economic structure of USSR) was inferior to the West in 1986. Or 1989. Or 1991.
It was not.
Yeltsin/Gorbachev were a consequence of mismanagement (by population) caused by insufficient understanding of politics (yes, Marxsim included) by Soviet population at large, coupled with immense complacency. Nobody believed that USSR could actually fall. Socialism doesn't fail, if works economically, they thought.
Btw, you are making the same mistake, when you think that economic structure alone defines if state would live or die.
No. It doesn't. And this is a third thread. Let's call it "Aggravation of Class Struggle under Socialism and the myth of State Capitalism".
That's too retarded to even argue about. Do I really have to?