Nikolai Talyzin Politician

Nikolai Vladimirovich Talyzin (Russian: Никола́й Влади́мирович Талы́зин) (born 28 January 1929 - 23 January 1991) was a Soviet statesman, economist and head of the Gosplan, or the State Planning Committee.Talyzin was Chosen by Mikhail Gorbachev in October 1985 to help start the program of economic change known as perestroika, after serving five years as the Soviet representative at Comecon, the Eastern European trade bloc. He was appointed head of the State Planning Commission, or Gosplan, when almost every sector of the Soviet economy was still firmly under state control. He became one of the three First Deputy Premiers at this time, as well as a non-voting member of the Communist Party Politburo.The planning commission's task shifted from setting production targets to mapping out economic strategy, as Gorbachev pushed his economic reforms. Talyzin came under strong criticism, and moved to the post of head of the Bureau for Social Development in 1988, blamed for slowing reforms. In September 1989, with perestroika failing to produce the promised results, he was dismissed. along with many other conservatives in Nikolai Ryzhkov's government, whom he blamed for slowing the pace of reforms.

Personal facts

Birth dateJanuary 28, 1929
Birth place
Russian Empire
Date of deathJanuary 23, 1991
Place of death
Moscow , Soviet Union

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Office holder

office
First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union
Minister of Communications
Chairman of State Planning Committee of the Soviet Union
party
Communist Party of the Soviet Union
successor
Vasily Shamshin
Vsevolod Murakhovski

Nikolai Talyzin on Wikipedia