Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism: The Shipyard “Uljanik” in Pula in the 1970s and 1980s
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Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism: The Shipyard “Uljanik” in Pula in the 1970s and 1980s
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BV046251991
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Brunnbauer, Ulf
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2019
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IOS-Mitteilungen
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69
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https://www.dokumente.ios-regensburg.de/publikationen/mitteilungen/mitt_69.pdf
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https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-65464-7
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Arbeitsbereich Geschichte
IOS Mitteilungen
No. 69 November 2019
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism:
The Shipyard “Uljanik” in Pula in the 1970s and 1980s
Ulf Brunnbauer *
Pula. Bildquelle: Ulf Brunnbauer
*
Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, Regensburg.
Landshuter Straße 4
D-93047 Regensburg
Telefon: (09 41) 943 54-10
Telefax: (09 41) 943 54-27
E-Mail: info@ios-regensburg.de
Internet: www.leibniz-ios.de
ISSN: 2363-4898
Contents
Abstract .................................................................................................................................... v
Introduction .............................................................................................................................. 1
A brief Look back .................................................................................................................... 5
Global Business Cycles and the Ensuing Yugoslav Economic Malaise ................................ 12
Muddling Through and Building Ships .................................................................................. 17
Export vs. Domestic Orientations .......................................................................................... 22
Starring into the Abyss: the 1980s ......................................................................................... 31
Conclusions ............................................................................................................................ 43
iii
Abstract
This paper analyses business strategies to survive the economic crisis of late socialism in
Yugoslavia. It takes one of Yugoslavia’s flagship exporter enterprises, the shipyard “Uljanik” in
Pula as a case study. It argues that the most widespread response to growing economic difficulties
in the 1970s and 1980s was a strategy of muddling-through. Yugoslavia, while aiming to become
an exporter of industrial goods, never actually managed to adapt its domestic economic institutions
to that goal. “Uljanik”, like the other shipbuilders in Yugoslavia, produced mostly for export yet
failed to earn profits. Domestic conditions and the political over-determination of industry
prevented the implementation of measures to increase efficiency. “Uljanik”, for example, expanded
capacity and hired new workers even at a time when the global demand for ships was depressed
after the 1974 oil-price shock. Employment and other social functions turned out to be more salient
than any business rationale. Since the mid-1970s this made “Uljanik” dependent on customers, such
as the Soviet Union or Third World countries that did not pay in hard currency, or did not pay at
all. Frequent illiquidity was the consequence. The paper present the ship-building industry as a case
in point for the increasing tensions between Yugoslavia’s institutional set-up and its integration in
the international economy, and for the unwillingness of policy-makers to affect structural change.
The country failed to build resilience for mediating the outfall of global economic crisis.
Research for this article was supported by the German Research Foundation, DFG (project grant
BR 2937/17-1, “Transformations from Below”). Research travel support was also provided by the
DAAD (PPP Croatia 2018–2019).
v
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Introduction
In October 1990, the Uljanik shipyard in the town of Pula (Croatia/Yugoslavia)
commissioned the international consulting firm PriceWaterhouse to help drawing up a
strategic plan for the forthcoming years. The plan outlined measures to increase profitability
based on a candid analysis of the status quo. “Until recently, our main objectives were
employment and social security, whereas profitability was secondary.”1 PriceWaterhouse’s
SWOT analysis of Uljanik consisted of many weaknesses and few strengths.2 Actually, the
consultants managed to identify only five advantages of the shipyard: long experience in the
building of special-purpose ships, good reputation for the quality of the vessels, convenient
location (weather-wise), “strong informal relations”, and the “willingness of the government
to support shipbuilding”. The much longer list of weaknesses pictured an enterprise, which
lacked organization and purpose, never delivered ships on time, worked with outdated
technology and machinery, had no marketing to speak of, did poor accounting, suffered from
low labor discipline and high overhead costs, did not care for work safety, had little money
and produced high losses. In a word: the consultancy’s assessment confirmed all suspicions
that one might have from a typically socialist enterprise of that time – but not necessarily
from a firm that produced for the world market and enjoyed name recognition; so, how can a
firm be both sides of this coin at the same time?
PriceWaterhouse suggested that in the future the shipyard should focus its business on
earning money. This was certainly a good idea but easier said than done, as became clear almost
30 years later. At the time of writing (end of 2019) the shipyard stands idle because a regional
court has opened bankruptcy procedures in May 2019, after it had turned out that the firm was
illiquid and in deep debt. Since the beginning of 2018, work on unfinished ships had all but
ceased because the shipyard could pay neither its workers nor its suppliers. The increasingly
desperate search for a “strategic investor” has so far yielded no results, not least because the
costs of getting the shipyard going again were increasing by the day.
Local newspapers, usually sympathetic to the shipyard, started to present “Uljanik” as an
remnant of socialism, which suffered from its legacy of mis-management. While this would be
a gross simplification, it is true that today’s problems of the shipyard have their roots in the
past: this paper argues that they have to be located in the 1970s. The 1970s are often described
1
“Uljanik Brodogradilište Strateški plan, 1991.–1996”. Transl. from the English original “Uljanik Shipyard
Strategic Plan for 1991–1996”, PriceWaterhouse /IKO, May 1991, in: Archive of the (former) Croatian Funds for
Privatization (HFP), p. 3.
2
Ibid., p. 16A–17A.
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IOS Mitteilung No. 69
as the “golden age” of Yugoslav socialism when livings standards and incomes were rising and
people enjoyed a decently good life.3 Yet, this was also a time of momentous shifts in the way
how the Yugoslav economy operated because of two major developments, which per se were
unrelated: on the one hand, the constitutional reforms of 1974 substantially transformed the
way how business was organized (or dis-organized) and to which extent the state supported it
or not. On the other hand, the oil price shock and the ensuing recession in the West changed the
international economic environment, into which the Yugoslavs had increasingly integrated
themselves since the 1950s. The conjuncture of these two developments stimulated responses
by economic organizations which in the long term produced new problems, while at the same
time creating state-business ties that would survive the end of communist rule and greatly
deflect the post-socialist vector of economic reform. Firms such as Uljanik learnt survival
techniques in the 1970s and 1980s that came handy in the difficult 1990s, but ultimately
prevented them from becoming resilient enough to withstand global competition once the
government stopped acting as a shield.
While this full story is yet untold, this paper has a narrower focus: the question it asks is how –
despite all odds – “Uljanik” managed to survive the last decade of socialism even though its
business case became increasingly unviable in the 1980s. This is linked to the larger question of
the economic – and political – outfall of Yugoslavia’s export orientation. The contradictions
between self-managed socialism and integration into the international division of labor were not
immediately obvious. Yet, for a company, which almost exclusively produced for export, they
were. Uljanik and Yugoslav shipbuilding in general represent, on the one hand, an idiosyncratic
industry because no other sector of Yugoslavia’s industry depended so much on foreign customers
as this one (in the 1970s, about 90 percent of the Yugoslav built tonnage went abroad). On the
other hand, idiosyncrasy can make things clearer: in shipbuilding, important structural problems
of the Yugoslav economy crystallized earlier than elsewhere because of its direct exposure to the
world market.4
The specific problems of this industry in the 1970s manifested unintended consequences of
the earlier decision of Yugoslav policy makers (in the late 1950s and 60s) to seek increased
integration into the global economy whose rules were mainly set by capitalist powers. The basic
conundrum was the question how to pacify the requirements of the market with the premises of
3
Also other autors stress that behind full shop windows, the economy began to fall apart in the 1970s: MarieJanine Calic: “The Beginning of the End. The 1970s as a Historical Turning Point in Yugoslavia”, in: Marie-Janine
Calic, Dietmar Neutatz, Julia Obertreis (eds.): The crisis of socialist modernity. The Soviet Union and Yugoslavia
in the 1970s. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2011, p. 66–86.
4
On these contradictions and Yugoslavia’s economic policy making in that period more generally see especially
Vladimir Unkovski-Korica: The economic struggle for power in Tito’s Yugoslavia. From World War II to nonalignment. London, New York: I.B. Tauris, 2016.
2
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
self-managed socialism. Very similar to the famous Gastarbeiter migration from Yugoslavia –
another major process of integrating Yugoslavia into the international division of labor –, it
appears that participation in the world economy, while alleviating some problems on the short
term, only helped to make the shortcomings of Yugoslavia’s self-managed socialism more
evident and to intensify its inherent contradictions.5 Shipbuilding was affected by these trends
already in the 1970s which meant that it entered the even more difficult 1980s, when the whole
Yugoslav economy declined, in an already pretty poor shape.
Some of these developments must have puzzled the Yugoslavs. Their shipbuilders, while
embracing the international market and exploring a language of competitiveness, were forced
to learn capitalist double-speak the hard way. After 1974, when Yugoslavia embarked on
dismantling the state and reducing the government’s economic role in favor of selfmanagement, West European and especially East Asian countries massively subsidized their
shipbuilders. It was thanks to state support that many of them managed to wither the outfall of
the 1974 oil shock, which led to a lasting drop in the global demand for new ships. 6 The
geography of “soft budgetary constraints” can sometimes shift. 7 Actually, to “soften”
constraints by lobbying the government was one of the paramount purposes of the association
of large shipbuilders in Yugoslavia, the opaque Poslovna Zajednica (PZ) “Jadranbrod”. Its
main function was to help finding a solution for the financing difficulties of shipbuilding, to
coordinate the operations of the shipbuilders and to act as their representative vis-à-vis the
government. They never tired of pointing out to the government the obvious irony that West
European and capitalist Asian countries provided more state support – at least in the view of
Jadranbrod – to their shipbuilding industries than socialist Yugoslavia.
So, Uljanik and the other major shipbuilders in Yugoslavia first had to survive late
socialism before they could even think of how to survive post-socialism. The strategies and
tactics used by Uljanik to negotiate between demands arising from international competition
and from the technic peculiarities of shipbuilding on the one hand, from the constraints and
opportunities of self-managed socialism on the other, were quite illustrative for creative but
often also futile business practices in Yugoslavia at that time. These involved complex
interactions between different levels of decision making, coalitions and antagonisms between
different groups of actors, and deals with questionable legitimacy. The details of securing
financing for building ships alone opens up a vivid picture of the problems plaguing the wider
5
On the case of labor migration this argument was made by Carl-Ulrik Schierup: Migration, socialism and the
international division of labour. The Yugoslavian experience. Aldershot: Avebury, 1990.
6
Hugh Murphy: “Appendix 1: The effects of the oil price shocks on shipbuilding in the 1970s”, in: Raquel Varela,
Hugh Murphy, Marcel van der Linden (eds.): Shipbuilding and ship repair workers around the world. Case studies
1950–2010. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2017, p. 665–673.
7
János Kornai: “The Soft Budget Constraint,” Kyklos, 39(1), 1986, 3–30.
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IOS Mitteilung No. 69
Yugoslav economy. The case of Uljanik shows that the prevailing conditions nourished tactics
of muddling through. These muddling-through techniques would proof useful also in the
1990s and 2000s but the came with a major price: they helped to eternally postpone structural
reforms – until it was too late. As an appreciative participant in one of the negotiations
between the Croatian republic and the Yugoslav federal government about state support for
shipbuilding recognized already in 1979: “We always search ad-hoc-solutions, in constant
danger of the problem to persist and not to be solved.”8
8
“BILJEŠKA o vodjenim razgovorima članova delegacije Sabora SRH”, 25 May 1979, in: HDA (Croatian State
Archive, Zagreb), f. 280, kut. 174, br. 481.
4
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
A brief Look back
The acute liquidity problems plaguing Uljanik since the mid-1970s and throughout the 1980s
were a direct result of the global slump of the demand in ships but also of the firm’s peculiar
response to it. Yet, this raises the question why this shipyard in a socialist country was so
exposed to world market developments. The reasons for this were connected with decisions
taken in the two decades earlier, when Uljanik and the other large Yugoslav shipbuilders
embarked on an ambitious strategy to become export-oriented while still operating under the
constraints of a socialist system. To enter the world market seemed a smart move in the mid1950s and aligned well with Yugoslavia’s hyperactive foreign policy, which helped to open up
market opportunities across the globe, especially in the “Third World” but also the West.
Uljanik started to espouse the world market with optimism: in 1960, when the global postwar
boom in the demand for new ships came to an end, Uljanik struck a self-confident tone. Its
company journal “Uljanik”, launched in 1960, informed its readers about the correct way to
respond to the world market challenge: “We could either prepare for the struggle of competition
or reduce capacity. Naturally, we took the first way.”9 With huge investments from the state,
Uljanik indeed managed to become an internationally well-known brand; but it also grew
dependent on export – a dependency that proved difficult to square with the specific conditions
of a self-managed country especially when the global market turned sour.
From 1969 to 1975, Uljanik delivered zero ships to Yugoslav customers, whereas as many
as 25 went to foreign owners. This was a source of pride for the shipyard, also given the low
post-war starting point of the company. It seems natural that neither management nor workers
wanted to question the export-oriented business strategy. Had they not also repaired and
refurbished Tito’s official yacht, Galeb, another source of pride? In 1947, when Yugoslavia
gained control over Pula, Uljanik looked like an improbable success story. The shipyard,
founded by the Austrians in 1856 and flourishing until World War One, had become a shade
of its former self during the interwar period, when Istria belonged to Italy. Under Italian rule,
it did not get commissions for any new constructions and was reduced to repair and
dismantling work. The workforce of Cantiere Navale Scoglio Olivi as the shipyard was
known during Italian times did not surpass a couple of hundred workers (in Austrian times,
up to 7,000 people worked on it).10 To make matters worse, the shipyard suffered from heavy
bombardment by Allied raids on Pula during the Second World War because the Italian and
9
“U borbi za opstanak jači pobjeduju”, Uljanik, no 10, 1960, p. 22.
Tone Peruške: “Historijat “Uljanika” do 1947 godine,” in: Pomorski zbornik, vol. 2. Zadar: Društvo za
proučavanje i unapredenje pomorstva Jugoslavije u Rijeci, 1964, p. 408.
10
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IOS Mitteilung No. 69
German navies used the port. 70 percent of the shipyard’s buildings and 30 percent of its
machinery were destroyed.11 The only worthwhile legacy from the Italian period was the
memory of labor unrest by the workers, which helped to solidify Pula’s antifascist
credentials.12
The political situation after the end of the war was not conducive to business either. Istria
was claimed by both Yugoslavia and Italy, and Pula first became an exclave of the Italian
administered Zone A in the Yugoslav Zone B. Effectively, it was controlled by an AngloAmerican military mission. At the beginning of 1947, before Yugoslavia and Italy agreed on
the ownership of Pula, the sound of the passing bell to the shipyard could be heard when its
Italian owners prepared to move the remaining machinery to Italy. This provided the scenery
for another heroic act of workers defense – so, at least, was the official communist storyline:
“(…) the workers, although dismissed, organized ‘workers guards’ and watched over the
machinery.”13 When it became clear that Pula would belong to Yugoslavia, the owners of
the shipyard, the Trieste based Cosulich family (which owned also the Monfalcone shipyard
until its nationalization, today’s Fincantieri) agreed to sell the shipyard to the Yugoslav
government, allegedly for 64 million lire. Here is how the communist-time narrative
describes what followed next: “On March 10, 1947, the workers choose their management
who were prominent workers and trade union activists. On the following day the shipyard
was reopened and 168 new workers were employed.” 14 Cantiere Navale Scoglio Olivi
became Uljanik – both names derive from the name of the Olive Island in the Bay of Pula,
which forms the center of the shipyard. September 16, 1947, when the Anglo-American
forced left the city, became the day of the second liberation of Uljanik and the starting point
of spectacular post-war growth:
“(…) that was the final day of its [Pula’s] liberation. As far as the shipyard was concerned it was
the beginning of a period distinguished by great transformation and progress, during which history
has become interlaced with the reality we are still living through.”15
11
Hrvoje Markulinčić, Armando Debeljuh (eds.): Uljanik 1856–2006. Pula: Arsenal design, 2006, p. 97. In the
whole of Pula, only 26% of all buildings remained unscathed (Darko Dukovski: Povijest Pule. Deterministički
kaos i jahači apokalipse. Pula: Istarski ogranak društva hrvatskih književnika, 2011, p. 201).
12
The archive of the Italian prefecture of Istria contains interesting information on workers’ protest and
defiance, see: DAPA (State Archive in Pazin), f. 55: Prefettura dell’Istria di Pola (Prefektura Istre u Puli). For
a brief summary of the communist official account see Josip Iskra (ed.): Brodograđevna industrija Uljanik. Pula
1986, p. 17–8.
13
Iskra, Brodograđevna industrija Uljanik, p. 19.
14
Ibid., p. 19.
15
Ibid., p. 19.
6
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Indeed, after the takeover by the Yugoslav government, rehabilitation began quickly and
employment numbers increased, from 436 at the end of 1947 to 2,513 by the end of 1953.16
However, the trajectory to become an export-oriented enterprise that embraced market
competition was far from pre-ordained. On the contrary, during the early post-war years Uljanik
looked destined to become a ‘typical’ socialist factory: large, inefficient, oriented towards the
domestic market, and dominated by the party-state. Until 1953, Uljanik such as other Yugoslav
shipyards was controlled by the Central Shipbuilding Administration of the Ministry of
Defense, which assigned to Uljanik the task to build large ships.
The party committee in the shipyard showed the usual obsessions like those harbored by
party committees in factories across the Soviet bloc. 17 From the – very long – minutes of
Uljanik party committee meetings in the late 1940s and early 1950s, it transpires that the
communists at Uljanik considered their main task to execute orders coming from above. The
party cells were to act as a transmission belt translating decisions taken by the Central
Committee into local action. The goal was to achieve rapid, state-led industrialization, which
was the central economic policy objective at that time. 18 The committee minutes speak of
socialist competition and shock workers, of the brigade organization of labor and of the
mobilization of workers, of norm overachievement, work discipline and the never-ending
struggle to “raise productivity”. In a word, the party tried to control the enterprise and its
workers and promoted ideas typical of Stalinist shopfloor politics.
The surviving documentation of Uljanik party committee meetings also point to the fact that
these initiatives suffered a similar fate like those in other socialist countries. Workers found
ways how to evade mobilization and to subvert party control. Discipline remained slack and
productivity low.19 One party official concluded in August, 1951, that “discipline is dreadful
and cannot get worse. The authority of foremen and department heads is at zero.”20 Labor
fluctuation was high, absenteeism as well because many workers called in sick. The
organization of production was haphazard. It frequently happened that some workshops stood
idle whereas others did overwork. All this sounds similar to workers’ tactics of evasion across
16
Ibid., p. 23.
These documents are kept in the regional state archive of Pazin (Istria), DAPA, f. 390/2.3 (Gradski komitet
Saveza komunista Hrvatske Pula).
18
More on communist economic policies in Yugoslavia see Susan L. Woodward: Socialist unemployment. The
political economy of Yugoslavia, 1945–1990. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press, 1995; Vladimir UnkovskiKorica: The economic struggle for power in Tito’s Yugoslavia. From World War II to non-alignment. London,
New York: I.B. Tauris., 2016.
19
“Program rada partijskog komiteta pri poduzeće “Uljanik” za period august-septembar 1951 g.,” in: DAPA
(State Archive in Pazin), f. 390/2.3, kut. 29.
20
“Zapisnik sa sastanka Tvorničkog Partijskog Komiteta održanog dana 28.8.1951 god.,” in: DAPA, f. 390/2.3,
kut. 29.
17
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IOS Mitteilung No. 69
the socialist bloc in the years of Stalinism. 21 By the mid-1950s, the local party committee
apparently lost its hope to effect radical change. A 1954 report stated that the party had not
succeeded in becoming a political factor in the shipyard.22
A reason why the party accepted defeat was one of the most important pieces of legislation
in Yugoslavia’s incremental departure from Soviet orthodoxy: the “Basic Law on the
Administration of State Enterprises” in June 1950, which introduced workers’ selfmanagement in state-owned enterprises. Uljanik belonged to the pioneering 215 major
industrial enterprises, for which the new law stipulated the creation of a workers’ council.23
This law was one of two important legislative changes that greatly supported the
transformation of Uljanik into a dynamic, export-oriented enterprise. The second innovation
was the abolishment of the state monopoly over foreign trade in 1952. While the long-term
economic effects of the two laws were not immediately obvious and the changes required
some time to become social reality, they would soon create new opportunity structures but
also impose new constraints. Eventually, business would be done in a very different way as
compared to the mixture of government micro-management cum Stalinist mobilization efforts
characteristic for the late 1940s and early 1950s.
Why did the two laws transform business practices? Self-management – regardless of the
contested question, how much power blue-collar workers really wielded in enterprises – led to
the concentration of decision making on the enterprise level. It brought about a strong coalition
between management and workers, mediated through skilled and white-collar workers who
dominated the workers councils. Workers councils at least offered an opportunity to put
pressure on directors. While the party committee in the shipyard had spent much time on
discussing broader political questions and international relations, the workers’ council focused
on bread-and-butter issues, such as workplace safety and salaries.24 Previously, such concerns
had been denounced as “social-democratic attitudes” by party activists. 25 Now they were
considered perfectly legitimate and helped to turn workers into stakeholders in the success of
their factory.
21
Good starting points for a comparative exploration are two important edited collections: Peter Hübner, Christoph
Kleßmann, Klaus Tenfelde (eds.), Arbeiter im Staatssozialismus: ideologischer Anspruch und soziale Wirklichkeit.
Cologne, Vienna, Weimar: Böhlau, 2005; Marsha Siefert (ed.): Labor in State-Socialist Europe, 1945–1989.
Contributions to a History of Work. Budapest: CEU Press, 2019.
22
“Referat sa konferencije Saveza Komunista ‘Uljanik’, 28.4.1954,” in: DAPA, f. 390/2.3, kut. 29.
23
The first workers’ councils was created in December 1949 in a cement factory in the town of Solin, near Split.
Igor Stanić: “Što pokazuje praksa? Primjer funkcioniranja samoupravljanja u brodogradilištu Uljani 1961.–1968.
godine,” Časopis za suvremenu povijest, 46(3), 2014, p. 455.
24
Stanić, “Što pokazuje praksa?”, p. 461.
25
“Zapisnik sa sastanka partijske jedinice „Uljanik-a“, 31.1.1949“, in: DAPA, f. 390/2.3, kut. 29; 2.3.2.2.
8
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
The workers’ council understood well that if it helped the shipyard to earn money, all
workers would benefit; it awarded, for example, bonuses to workers showing exemplary
commitment and discipline on the workplace.26 At the same time, the management knew that
however strong their actual influence in the workers’ council was, they needed the consent of
workers – especially skilled ones – in order to keep things running. Working in tandem,
management and workers representatives managed to emancipate the enterprise from the
party. As Goran Musić has observed in his detailed account of shopfloor relations in two
factories in Slovenia and Serbia, “the introduction of self-management (…) created distinct
local identities.”27
At the same time, workers’ councils helped enterprises entering market-based relations
with each other because they limited vertical control by political bodies outside of the factory.
Decision-making on business issues was increasingly concentrated on the enterprise level.28
Self-management turned enterprises from a department of a state ministry into a company
that would increasingly – although never exclusively – follow a business rationale. Of course,
the economy in Yugoslavia was always more than ‘just’ the production of profits and never
became fully separated from state and government – but where is this really the case?
Business is embedded in wider social relations, thus its functioning is always also a function
of the prevailing social fabric.29 Still, market liberalization and the liberalization of foreign
trade had significant consequences for the shopfloor.30 Efficiency was not only an ideological
catchphrase any more but a practical necessity for entering the international market.
Shipbuilding became one of the export industries through which the government hoped to
earn much needed hard currency. This gave the management of shipyards like Uljanik
bargaining power vis-à-vis the government: on the one hand, the management could reject
overtly partisan interventions by stressing that party instructions would harm international
competitiveness. On the other hand, the strong export position was a convenient argument
whenever the enterprise asked for state support – which, after 1974 would become a state of
permanence, then showing the downside of the reliance on export.
26
Stanić, “Što pokazuje praksa?,” p. 461.
Goran Musić: The self-Managing Factory after Tito. The Crisis of Yugoslav Socialism on the Shop Floor. PhD
dissertation, European University Institute, Florence, 2016, p. 55.
28
Vladimir Unkovski-Korica: “Worker’s Councils in the Service of the Market: New Archival Evidence on the
Origins of Self-Management in Yugoslavia 1948–1950,” Europe-Asia Studies 66(1), 2014, p. 108–34.
29
See Mark Granovetter: “Economic action and social structure: the problem of embeddedness”, The American
Journal of Sociology 91(3), 1986, p. 481510. DOI: 10.1086/228311.
30
Musić, The self-Managing Factory after Tito.
27
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IOS Mitteilung No. 69
Uljanik flagship projects of the 1950s indicated the shift away from the domestic to the
international market. The first success was the finishing of the fundamental repairs of the ship
Galeb (Seagull), which Tito would frequently use for his journeys abroad. In 1956, the first
newly built large ship, the cargo ship Uljanik, was delivered to the Yugoslav shipping company
Jugolinija (seated in Rijeka). Tito was present at the christening of the ship. Yet, the future lay
somewhere else, as manifest in the next big project: in 1958, the first cargo ship for a foreign
owner was completed, Al Mokattan for Egypt. 31 The new, more conducive conditions for
foreign business made it easier for Uljanik also to buy and use foreign technology and supplies.
This was essential for producing ships for international customers. In 1953, for example,
Uljanik signed a license agreement with the Copenhagen-based diesel engine maker Burmeister
& Wain, which helped turn Uljanik into a supplier of diesel engines for other Yugoslav and
even foreign shipyards.32 The number of workers in the shipyard in the meantime reached 4,000
by 1959.33 A party committee session in February 1957 stroke a completely different tone from
those in the early 1950s: now, optimism and satisfaction of what has been achieved shined
through its minutes, which boasted of the enterprise’s “great results.” Thanks to that, Uljanik
had become an essential part of the social fabric of the municipality of Pula: in 1956, it
contributed 436 million dinar in contributions to local self-government bodies.34
Uljanik, such as the other main shipyards in Yugoslavia, benefitted from the unprecedented
worldwide boom in shipbuilding after the end of the Second World War. It was greatly
supported by the government, which invested more than 4 billion dinar in the shipyard from
1948 until the late 1950s.35 This expansion of capacity was much more than the home market
could absorb, which is why the export orientation came almost naturally.36 In order to meet the
growing international demand, Uljanik planned to invest further nine billion dinar in the 1960–
65 period in order to build up new capacity.37 Accordingly, output was greatly increased with
a clear emphasis on export. Out of fifty ships delivered by Uljanik in the 1960s, thirty-six were
31
Iskra, Brodograđevna industrija Uljanik, p. 24.
Željko Šesnić: “Posljednjih 60 godina Brodogradilišta Uljanik”, in: Bruno Dobrić (ed.): Stotinu i pedeset
godina brodogradnje u Puli. Zbornik radova s međunarodnog skupa prigodom 150. obljetnice osnutka C.kr.
pomorskog arsenala (Pula, 8. prosinca 2006.) Pula: Društvo za proučavanje prošlosti C. i. kr. Mornarice "Viribus
unitis, 2010, p. 244.
33
Markulinčić, Debeljuh, Uljanik 1856–2006, p. 107; “Razvoj brodogradilišta,” Uljanik 1(4–5), 1960, p. 12.
34
“Zapisnik održane konferencije organizacije SK ‘Uljanik’ , 10.2.1957,” in: DAPA, f. 390/2.3, kut. 29; 2.3.2.2.
(2.3.2.2.1. Zapisnici sastanaka, izvještaji TK SKH brodogradilišta “Uljanik”).
35
“Deset godina uspjeha,” Uljanik 1(7), 1960, p. 3.
36
Michael Palairet: “Croatian shipbuilding in crisis, 1979–1995”, in: Srećko Goić (ed.): Enterprise in Transition.
Proceedings. Fourth International Conference on Enterprise in Transition, Split-Hvar, May 24–26, 2001. Split:
Faculty of Economics, 2001, p. 759 [CD Rom].
37
“Preko devet milijardi dinara za proširenje i modernizaciju pogona,” Uljanik 1(9), 1960, p. 2.
32
10
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
for foreign owners.38 The government supported such exports, when they went to hard currency
countries or to developing countries; such export subsidies covered between 20 and 33 percent
of the call price, depending on country of delivery. In case of clearing and barter, though, no
export support was provided by the state. 39 Yugoslav shipbuilding became heavily geared
towards export markets: almost 90 percent of built tonnage between 1964 and 1975 was for
foreign purchasers. 40 Shipbuilding became the most export-oriented sector of Yugoslavia’s
industry. No other shipbuilding nation had such a high export percentage like the Yugoslav one
(from 1969 to 1978, 93 to 100 percent of the annual deliveries went abroad).
The list of Uljanik’s customers reflected Yugoslavia’s foreign policies: they included
friendly ‘Third World’ countries, especially non-aligned ones, such as Egypt, Sudan, and India,
but alo Western countries (Norway, Sweden), and countries of the Soviet Bloc after relations
with them had been normalized. The single most prolific purchaser was the Soviet Union
through its import organization Sudoimport. Western costumers, such as Greek ship-owners,
were ‘hidden’ behind flags of convenience (Liberia, Panama). The largest ship Uljanik anytime
built – the tanker Berge Istra with almost 230,000 dwt – went to Norway. In the 1970s, Uljanik
became practically exclusively focused on exports: only two out of forty-two newly built ships
in the 1970s were delivered to domestic customers.41
38
“ULJANIK Group reference list”, https://uljanik.hr/images/reference/ULJANIK_Group_reference_list.pdf (last
accessed 8 October 2019).
39
Jadranbrod: “Sadašnje stanje, eknomski položaj i problemi razvoja brodogradnje” (Zagreb, 1980), in: HDA,
f. 1398, kn. 6.
40
Ante Bulić: “Razvojni tok jugoslavenske brodogradnje od početka do danas”, Brodogradnje 36(1–2), 1988, p. 63.
41
“Preko devet milijardi dinara za proširenje i modernizaciju pogona,” Uljanik, 1(9), 1960, p. 2.
11
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
Global Business Cycles and the Ensuing Yugoslav Economic Malaise
“Seaborne trade is the backbone of the world economy. About 90 per cent of world trade is
transported by ships,” stresses the introduction of a pioneering volume on shipyard labor.42 Yet,
the inverse relationship is also true: as an internationally competitive industry, the cycles of
shipbuilding closely follow those of international trade, usually with a time lag of few years.
Yugoslav shipbuilding was not spared this lesson either: it was hugely affected by the slump in
the demand for new ships after the 1973 oil price shock. However, in contrast to capitalist
countries, Yugoslavia did not restructure its shipbuilding during the long stagnation of demand,
nor was employment cut. Uljanik is a case in point: it reached peak employment in the late
1980s, with more than 8,000 workers, at a time when the company constantly struggled with
illiquidity, and when its international competitors cut costs.
The global economic crisis after the oil price shocks of 1973 and 1974 ended the long-lasting
expansion of international shipbuilding in the 1950s and 1960s, which had been driven by
booming demand for oil tankers. In the early 1970s, more than 80 percent of the vessels in the
world’s order books were tankers.43 The average size of vessels had increased greatly, also as
result of the blockade of the Suez Canal after 1956. Ship-owners sought to compensate the
longer journey around Cape Horn by increasing tonnage. After 1974, the demand for new ships
collapsed as less oil was traded and international trade in general collapsed: in 1976, the
worldwide annual volume of new orders for ships was 46 percent of the 1974 level.44 The price
for newly built ships declined by 40 percent in 1975.45 Many customers cancelled orders, even
though they had to pay high penalties, or renegotiated the term of their contracts or flatly refused
to accept deliveries. The second oil price shock of 1979–80 again reduced demand for new
ships. It took twenty-seven years to reach again the 1974 peak of new launches in terms of
tonnage, which was 36.4 mgt. Between 1978 and 1991, world output was less than half of the
1974 level and did not start to grow consistently again until 1989–90.46
Governments all around the world came to help and supported their struggling shipbuilders
with subsidies and import restrictions. According to information provided to the Croatian
government, Western countries covered 20 to 30 percent, in Great Britain allegedly even up to
50 percent of the prices of ships, allowing shipyards to survive by selling ships for deflated
42
Marcel van der Linden, Hugh Murphy, Raquel Varela: “Introduction”, in: ibid. (eds.): Shipbuilding and ship repair
workers around the world. Case studies 1950–2010. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2017, p. 15.
43
Murphy, “Appendix 1”, p. 667.
44
Ibid., p. 667.
45
“Zapisnik od proširene sjednice Republičkog odbora sindikata radnika proizvodnje i prerade metala SR
Hrvatske”, Rijeka, 14.11.1975, in: HDA, f. 1398, kn. 1, p. 8.
46
Anthony Slaven: British Shipbuilding 1500–2010. A history. Lancaster: Crucible, 2013, p. 212.
12
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
prices on the world market. 47 In Sweden and Great Britain, governments nationalized
shipbuilding in the late 1970s (in bother countries, this would not prevent the fatal decline of
the industry). Western shipbuilders also delivered the majority of launches to domestic
customers, benefitting from protection of the domestic market and government support for shipowners to renew their fleets. Yugoslavia, in contrast, had no functioning system of supporting
a specific industry hit by external shocks – a fact, which even the federal ministry of finance
had to admit.48
At the same time, Western shipbuilders greatly reduced capacity, by restructuring, closing
wharfs, and downsizing their workforce. West Germany’s shipbuilding industry, for example,
retained in 1990 only 32 percent of its 1975 employment level. 49 At the same time, it
increasingly moved towards the construction of cruise ships, where profit rates were higher.
The leading producer worldwide, Japan, reduced capacity by more than a third and cut the
shipbuilding workforce even by two thirds until the late 1980s.50 One notable exception to
capacity reduction was South Korea, where massive state aid stimulated the emergence of new,
large-scale shipbuilding companies. Hyundai, which built its first large tanker in 1973, became
the world’s largest shipbuilder by the early 1980s.51 South Korea climbed to second place in
the world’s ranking of shipbuilding nations behind only Japan by the mid-1980s. It would
become number one in the 2000s, before being overtaken by the PR of China. In the meantime,
European shipbuilding was marginalized, its global market share falling into the low single
digits. 52 European shipyards increasingly concentrated on special fabrications while
conventional large ships, such as tankers and bulk carriers, were built by the Asian producers.53
However, South Korea was not the only producer not reducing capacity: Yugoslavia also
refrained from it in the 1970s and 1980s – but with much less success than South Korea.
The shift of production towards East Asia was the major trend in global shipbuilding after
World War Two, and it was greatly accelerated by the 1970s crisis. Great Britain, which for
decades had dominated shipbuilding, experienced an unstoppable decline. In 1930 it had
launched half of the total tonnage in the world, in 1964 ten percent, three percent in 1980, and
47
Jadranbrod: “Stanje, ekonomski položaj i problemi nezaposlenosti kapaciteta brodogradilišta” (Zagreb, June
1980), in: HDA, f. 1398, p. 19; SRH, IVS: “Platforma za rješenje problema brodogradnje i brodarstva”, 14.7.1977,
in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 108, br. 979,
48
“BILJEŠKA o vodjenim razgovorima članova delegacije Sabora SRH”, Zagreb, 25.5.1979, in: HDA, f. 280,
kut. 174, br. 481.
49
Murphy, “Appendix 1”, p. 672.
50
Ibid.; Slaven, British Shipbuilding, p. 214.
51
van der Linden, Murphy, Varela, Introduction, p. 20.
52
Slaven, British Shipbuilding, p. 214.
53
“Jučer, danas, sutra – naše brodogradnje”, Brodogradnje, 34(1), 1986, p. 6.
13
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
less than one percent in 1990.54 At the same time, Japan rose to global predominance: its share
of the world market of constructed volume grew from less than five percent in the mid-1950s
to more than fifty percent in the 1970s.55 Many European shipyards did not survive Asian
competition and closed, while others shifted to more profitable, specialized segments of the
market.
For Uljanik and the other large Yugoslav shipbuilders, 1974 was a turning point not only
because of the start of the long global recession, but also because of domestic developments:
the new constitution of that year greatly transformed the conditions for business. One major
change concerned the further decentralization of economic policies, as the powers of the
republics were strengthened and the federal government weakened. This included
decentralization of banking. In the end, the 1974 constitution and subsequent legislation
increased antagonisms between the territorial units of Yugoslavia, because the republics and
autonomous provinces ended up with widely diverging economic interests. The veto power of
republic leaderships also hamstrung the federal government, especially when it tried to
implement economic reforms in the 1980s.
Another major development was the expansion of self-management culminating in the 1976
Act of Associated Labor, which run to 671 articles. 56 Officially, enterprises did not exist
anymore. The 1974 constitution and the 1976 law did not speak of “firm” (poduzeće). The 1976
law split enterprises in smaller units, so called Basic Organizations of Associated Labor (in
Serbo-Croatian abbreviation OOUR). These were organized around certain production tasks
and were supposed to be the fundamental economic organizations; several OOURs formed an
Organization of Associated Labor (Serbo-Croatian OUR) or a Work Organization (radna
organizacija, RO), which in turn could form a so-called Complex Organization of Associated
Labor (SOUR) and a Business Community (poslovna zajednica). These overarching
organizations were legally thought as purely coordinating bodies, while decisions should be
taken on the basis. By 1978, 19,000 OOUR’s existed throughout Yugoslavia. Uljanik was split
into five work organizations with a total of 12 OOUR’s.
Obviously, these reforms increased complexity, made decision-making even more difficult,
and impeded efficiency. The flourishing of self-management bodies led to higher transaction
costs, manifest in the rise of the share of administrative employees and the inflation of directors.
54
Hugh Murphy: “Labour in the British shipbuilding and ship repair industries in the twentieth century”, in: Raquel
Varela, Hugh Murphy, Marcel van der Linden (eds.): Shipbuilding and ship repair workers around the world.
Case studies 1950–2010. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2017, p. 61, 78, 103.
55
van der Linden, Murphy, Varela, “Introduction”, p. 20 (table 1.1).
56
John R. Lampe: Yugoslavia as history. Twice there was a country. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1996,
p. 310.
14
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
n Uljanik, for example, the share of blue collar workers allegedly declined from more than 50 percent
to some 30 percent in the second half of the 1970s.57 OOURs often charged each other higher prices
than external suppliers. Instead of market relations, so called “social compacts” and “selfmanagement agreements” should direct allocation of capital, production and distribution.58 For
Uljanik – and the other shipbuilders – such a fundamental reorganization could not come at a
worse time. It compounded their problems from the outfall of the decline in global demand for
new ships. Uljanik – it appears from company documents and newspaper reporting – struggled
for years to adapt the new organizational principles. In 1978, for example, the enterprise
magazine deplored that “the constitutional transformation is still under progress” and not all
self-management stipulations have been implemented.59 These organizational complications
increased the time it took to build a ship up to almost twice as long as for comparable vessels
in Western shipyards.
Uljanik’s struggle to survive the ensuing global shipbuilding crisis illustrates the effects of
these constitutional changes on business, and the strategies developed by an enterprise – which
formally was not anymore an enterprise – to “muddle through”. One of the major problems was
the volatile nature of regulations which often changed. Aside from that, the overall economic
outlook continued to darken in Yugoslavia. Economic actors, therefore, lacked security and
predictability which greatly impeded long-term, strategic planning. Yugoslav shipbuilders did
not struggle only with a hostile international market but also with opaque domestic conditions.
Such a situation made short-termism and ad-hoc-solutions the strategy of choice, as Uljanik’s
struggle to stay afloat shows. Yugoslavia’s shipbuilding industry fell into crisis earlier than
other branches of the economy – overall, annual GDP growth rates still averaged more than
five percent in the 1970s.
Shipbuilding is closely tied to many other industries: it has linkages to heavy industry, from
which it gets its steel and machinery, and with a myriad of suppliers. It is also directly affected
by changes in the exchange rate of the domestic currency to the US-dollar, the currency of the
international ship market.60 In a way, shipbuilding thus acted like a seismograph for general
economic developments, and its crisis fed back to domestic suppliers of equipment and services.
Hence, Uljanik and the other Yugoslav shipyards were neither isolated from global nor from
domestic economic trends. This meant a double punch because by the mid-1970s, the structural
shortcomings of the Yugoslav economy became ever more evident, even before the economy
57
I “Pucaju zidovi koji su zaklanjali vidike”, Novi list, 18–19.10.1980, p. 5.
For a concise treatment of these reforms and their impact, see Lampe, Yugoslavia as history, p. 309–312.
59
“U »Uljaniku« je tek oko svaki drugi radnik nagrađen prema stvarno izvršenom radu”, Uljanik, no 24, May
1978, p. 5.
60
van der Linden, Murphy, Varela, “Introduction”, p. 15.
58
15
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
began to contract in the 1980s. Marie-Janine Calic called the 1970s the “beginning of the end”,
when the post-war boom fizzled out but the government did not manage to transform the
economy towards a new, intensive growth pattern. 61 The crisis in shipbuilding, therefore,
anticipated the forthcoming general economic malaise. It also connects the 1970s and 1980s
with the time after 1991, when Croatia became independent.
Facing growing economic difficulties the government did not embark on structural reforms
but tried to borrow its way out in order to maintain investment into industry and consumption
and to finance the country’s current account deficit. Foreign liabilities of the state increased
from 4.6 billion to 21 billion US-$ between 1973 and 1981.62 At that point, Yugoslavia could
not service its debt anymore and reached a stand-by-agreement with the IWF. As usual, aid
from the IWF was conditional on austerity programs, which intensified economic contraction
in Yugoslavia and made access to credit more difficult.63 While living standards had been
growing for many years, citizens now started to feel the economic squeeze in their own pockets.
Real wages declined by 34 percent between 1980 and 1984.64 Inflation grew incessantly: the
annual price increase of industrial goods reached 57 percent in 1984 and 82 percent in 1985,
with further increases in the coming years.65 Interest rates as well reached three-digit figures by
the late 1980s imposing severe difficulties on business to finance its operations. All this heavily
affected shipbuilding as an industry in which the production of its output, i.e. ships, was mainly
financed by credits, due to long production cycles with high material costs and substantial fixed
expenses; the costs of materials made up a large part of the production costs. Domestic inflation
and the dinar’s devaluation against West European currencies increased the real costs of
supplies from abroad.
61
Calic, “The Beginning of the End”.
Ibid., p. 73.
63
Milica Uvalić: The rise and fall of market socialism in Yugoslavia (DOC Research Institute, 2018). Online:
https://doc-research.org/2018/03/rise-fall-market-socialism-yugoslavia/, last accessed 27 August 2018, p. 10.
64
Ibid., p. 21.
65
Mladen Kmetić: “Zaostajanje američkog dolara u odnosu na valute zemalja Zapadne Evrope i inflaciju u zemlji
ima za posljedicu sve nepovoljniji poslovni rezultat u brodogradnji”, Brodogradnje 34(4), 1986, p. 303.
62
16
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Muddling Through and Building Ships
Thus, both international and domestic economic conditions were not exactly fortunate for
Yugoslav shipbuilders since the mid-1970s. The crisis would prove to be persistent and
actually go on – it seems forever (at least judging from the standpoint of today). The breakup
of Yugoslavia in 1991, the ensuing war and general economic decline certainly aggravated
these problems but they did not cause them. They rather crystallized them and made evident
that despite near-constant debates on the republican and federal level, no structural solution
to the problems of Yugoslav shipbuilding had been found in the 1970s and 1980s. What we
see are stopgap measures, ad-hoc-solutions and desperate efforts to find money in order to
fill liquidity holes. Decision makers embraced a strategy of muddling-through – a strategic
non-strategy, actually, or in de Certeau’s words a tactic, not a strategy. This was mainly
caused by the unwillingness of the ruling communists to question the basic pillars of Yugoslav
socialism, such as social ownership – which implied opaque ownership terms –, selfmanagement, state interventionism, and their monopoly of power. Actually, some of their
economic reforms even restricted the functioning of the market, when the opposite was
warranted. Milica Uvelić wrote about the economic reforms in response to the demands by
the IMF in the early 1980s:
“The resulting economic reforms were slow, inefficient, and did not bring any effective changes
in the functioning of the Yugoslav economic system. As those in the past, they did not touch upon
the most fundamental features of the Yugoslav economic system (…).”66
The problems of shipbuilding highlighted several structural shortcomings of the Yugoslav
economy and its political framework: first, shipbuilding faced peculiarly pressing financing
issues because of the nature of its business – but illiquidity would become a perennial problem
of the whole economy; this was directly related to the inefficient banking system. The archive
of the Executive Council of the Sabor (parliament) of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (the
government of the republic) registers repeated debates about “financial difficulties” and the
“problem of financing” of shipbuilding.67 It contains frequent requests from the shipbuilders
for financial support – any extraordinary event, such as a fire destroying the equipment of a
newly built ship, could jeopardize their fragile liquidity.
The shipbuilding industry’s fate manifests the Yugoslav economy’s systematic
preference for imports, while exporters were disadvantaged – in contrast to official rhetoric
that encouraged producers to export. An joint open letter by the League of Communists’
66
67
Uvalić, The rise and fall of market socialism, p. 10.
HR-HDA-280: Izvršno vijeće Sabora.
17
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
and the Trade Unions’ Economic Committees in Rijeka in 1975 drily made this point: it
demanded to “stop treating domestic shipbuilders like foreigners in their own country and
to give them the same rights such as foreign shipbuilders.”68 Yugoslav economists at that
time asserted that it was more profitable to sell at home than to export; Robinson and
Tyson’s CGE based analysis of Yugoslavia’s trade and the effects of export incentives
corroborated this finding. 69 Uljanik’s long term director, Karlo Radolović, constantly
complained that the government did not value the specific needs of this emblematic export
industry. As the mentioned research shows, this was not only a self-interested lament but
grounded in ‘hard’ facts of economic policy. The government wanted industries like
shipbuilding to earn hard currencies, which it needed to balance its account, but this did not
translate into a preferential treatment.
Consequently, three issues dominated the frequent debates at all government levels in
regard of the crisis of shipbuilding: first, how to design export incentives in a way that they
made Yugoslav shipbuilders competitive abroad? Second, how to enable domestic shipping
lines to buy ships from domestic producers, instead of importing them? Third, how to
guarantee sufficient funds for the long production cycles of shipbuilding, where customers
paid most of the price only upon delivery, while production costs had to be financed by the
shipyard from its cash flow? To spoil suspense: policymakers failed to solve any of these
problems, despite the sense of urgency nourished also by frequent press reports about the
crisis of shipbuilding. Pula’s local newspaper Glas Istre, for example, ran articles in 1976 on
“Shipbuilding in deep water” or “Idle shipbuilding”, highlighting the lack of money and the
dearth of new orders.70
Apart from eminent political impediments to structural reform, problem solving was also
thwarted by entrenched competition between different industries and administrative units.
Shipbuilding is another example showing the many unintended side effects of de-centralization
on the ability of strategic policy-making. To put it bluntly: Istria and Dalmatia, where the large
shipbuilders were located, did obviously not wield the same sort of leverage in industrial policy
like other regions of Yugoslavia.
When all these crises culminated in the second half of the 1970s, the promising beginning
of the decade turned into distant memory for the shipbuilders in Uljanik. It had been in the late
1960s, when Uljanik finally entered the then booming market for large oil tankers. This lifted
68
Glas Istre, no. 12, 17 January 1975, p. 3.
Sherman Robinson, Laura D’Andrea Tyson: “Foreign trade, resource allocation, and structural adjustment in
Yugoslavia: 1976–1980”, Journal of Comparative Economics 9(1), 1985, 46–70. Online: https://doi.org/10.1016/
0147-5967(85)90004-6, p. 65.
70
Glas Istre, no. 252, 26 October 1976, p. 3; no. 301, 24 December 1976, p. 3.
69
18
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Uljanik from its crisis of the late 1960s, when it hardly earned money and even had experienced
a strike (in 1967).71 At the beginning of 1970, the company feared to end the year with a loss,
after it had completed only 50 percent of its 1969 plans and had to pay substantial penalties on
late deliveries. Glas Istre called it a “wounded lion”.72 Orders for large tankers and freight
carriers, therefore, seemed to come as a rescue just at the right time. On February 14, 1970, in
Stockholm, the director of Uljanik, Alfred Foskio, signed a contract with the Swedish shipping
company Grengsberg for the delivery of two ships with 265,000 dwt and more than 330 meters
long – by far the largest ships Uljanik had ever built. At that time, newspapers called these
orders the biggest successes of Yugoslav shipbuilding.73 In 1973, the new general director of
Uljanik, Karlo Bilić, called the “Mammoths” the future of Uljanik, not only because of the
global demand for such ships but also because these ships were paid in cash: “With these ships,
we actually finance ourselves.”74 The shipyard invested around 300 billion dinar in extending
its capacities to be able to build even 400,000 dwt carriers.75
Only two years later, though, Glas Istre reported about the “End of the Era of ‘Mammoths’”.
It turned out that this had not been a particularly successful era: instead of “wealth”, the large
ships brought “large losses”. The newspaper concluded that the fickle world market,
“apparently showed its teeth”.76 A last, ninth, mamut, was delivered in July 1976, for a Liberian
customer. At that time, global demand for large tankers had totally collapsed.
The construction of these large ships also showed the technical limits of Uljanik. The hull
had to be built in two separate halves before these were united.77 The vessels required more
steel than Yugoslav steelmakers would provide, so Uljanik had to purchase steel abroad which
amounted to delays and payments in direly needed hard currency. Large ships generally meant
more supplies from abroad and, therefore, more tariff payments. The mamuti were an oversized micro-cosmos of Uljanik’s and the other large Yugoslav shipbuilders’ structural
difficulty: to operate as export-oriented enterprises in an economic system geared towards
import substitution and towards producing social welfare. Uljanik, for example, for years
continued to struggle with high debts because of the loan requirements to finance the building
71
On the strike, see Stanić, Igor: “‘Jedan od najtežih dana u Uljaniku!’ Štrajk u brodogradilištu Uljanik 1967.
godine”, Sjeverni Jadran 15, 2016, 73–95. DOI: 10.21857/9xn31cvkzy.
72
Glas Istre, no. XX, 4 February 1970, p. 3.
73
“Serija kolosa iz ‘Uljanika’”, Vjesnik, 25.02.1970.
74
“‘Mamuti’ budućnost ‘Uljanika’” [interview with Karlo Bilić], Glas Istre, no. 162, 14–15 July 1973, p. 3.
75
Novi list, 18 January 1975.
76
“Nastaje era ‘mamuta’”, Glas Istre, no. 13, 18–19 January 1975, p. 5.
77
See e.g. “Dva porinuća jednog broda – ‘Uljanikova’ ideja”, Vjesnik, 1 September 1969; “Mamut – brodovi na
dva djjela”, VUS, 7.8.1974. There was an interesting twist to this construction idea, which had been suggested by
a Croatian engineer. Uljanik was sentenced by Croatia’s highest court to pay the engineer indemnity because they
had not paid him a fee (Vjesnik, 9 February 1975).
19
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
of ships for foreign customers, and these large ships posed particular risks if a client would
fail to heed its commitments.78 In the crisis of the 1970s, this problem became even worse as
customers cancelled orders or asked for discounts.
Therefore, no solution to the problems of Yugoslav shipbuilding seemed more obvious than
re-orienting it towards domestic customers. International demand from purchasers who would
pay in real, that is, convertible money had anyway all but evaporated. Secondly, the Yugoslav
government wanted to expand its merchant shipping fleet so that a higher share of Yugoslav
exports would be transported by domestic firms, rather than by foreign ship owners. The
Yugoslav merchant fleet was also in the urgent need of replacing outdated vessels with new ones.
Could not an international crisis be used as a chance to give the domestic market a boost? As the
following section will show this apparently so self-evident solution, though, would never work,
despite frequent high-level policy debates and constant lobbying by the Yugoslav shipbuilders.
An event in another of the major shipbuilders, “3rd of May” in Rijeka, from 1975 can
illustrate the underlying tensions. In mid-January 1975, extraordinary sessions of the League of
Communists’ committee and the trade-union in this shipyard passed a protest note to the
Jugolinija shipping company (seated a couple of hundred meters to the east of the shipyard on
the Rijeka shoreline), and also made this letter known to the republic and federal governments.
The shipyard representatives fiercely denounced the recent signing by Jugolinija of a contract
with the East German shipyard Warnowerft in Rostock for the purchase of four container
vessels priced 52 million US-$.79 Jugolinija had not even waited until the expiration of the
deadline of the announced tender, so that Jadranbrod even could not file an offer. The protest
letter drily stressed that all this was especially unacceptably because for years, there had been
talks about the purchasing of ships by domestic shipping lines from domestic suppliers. The
director of the shipyard in Rijeka, Aldo Žefran, demanded that “We need to end, once and for
all, the situation unique in the global economy that we [the shipbuilders] are strangers in our
own house.”80 What was the problem? For domestic shipping companies, it was cheaper to buy
from abroad. Could that not be changed? As the next section will show, the answer was no; in
1986, ten years after its conclusion, the program for building ships for Yugoslav ship-owners
still waited for solid financial foundations.81
78
“‘Uljanik’ – teškoće zbog duga”, Vjesnik, 2.7.1972; “‘Mamut’ pokrio mamustki gubitak”, Novi list, 4 September 1974.
“Protest riječkih brodograditelja. Protiv još jednog ugovora o gradnji domaćih brodova u inozemstvu”, Glas
Istre, no. 12, 17 January 1975 p. 3. See also the protest letter by the shipyard’s management, 16 January 1975, to
the republic and federal governments, in: HDA, f. 280, Kut. 30; br. 1010 (“Izgradnja brodova za domaće brodare
u našim brodogradilištima. Prigovor na rješenje Saveznog deviznog inspektorata”).
80
“Izgradnja brodova za domaće brodare u našim brodogradilištima. Prigovor na rješenje Saveznog deviznog
inspektorata”, in: HDA, f. 280, Kut. 30. br. 1010.
81
“Jučer, danas, sutra – naše brodogradnje”, Brodogradnje 34(1), 1986, p. 9.
79
20
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Ultimately, Yugoslav shipyards would construct ships for Yugoslav shipping companies
though not exactly in the way one would have expected from a socialist country. On April 11,
1987, high officials from Belgrade and Zagreb came down to Pula attending the launching
(porinuće) of the new 177 meters long container ship “Koper ekspres”. The president of the
Yugoslav parliament (skupština) was here, Ivo Vrandečić, who previously had been head of
Jadranbrod, the main industry body; he was joined by the head of the Federal Executive
Council, Branko Mikulić, and the head of the Executive Council of the Croatian Sabor, Anton
Milović. On the surface, it seemed that, finally, a Yugoslav shipyard had built a large ship for
a Yugoslav costumer, as the ship was to enter into service of Rijeka based Jugolinija. This was
probably the reason why high officials attended the launching of an otherwise ordinary ship.
However, Jugolinija was neither costumer nor owner: the ship was delivered to an owner in
Panama, from whom Jugolinija would lease it.82 Such arrangements – delivery to a foreign
owner, lease by a Yugoslav shipping line – were apparently common at that time. In 1987 alone,
Uljanik delivered at least three more ships to foreign owners (one each in Lebanon, Panama
and Liberia) – all notorious flags of convenience), that then went into the service of Yugoslav
shipping lines (Splošna plovba, Jugolinija, Jugotanker).
From the existing documentation, not the full business logic can be reconstructed. There
were rumors about strawmen, shell forms and kickbacks for the participants, which naturally
left no trace in the business documentation. What is sure is that Uljanik enjoyed export subsidies
and tariff exemptions for exporting to a “developing country” such as Liberia. 83 Yugoslav
shipping lines apparently at that time had already switched to the wide-spread practice to lease
rather than purchase ships in order to keep fixed capital ratios low. There were also tax breaks
for the import of ships. These practices not only point to the business acumen of Yugoslav
managers but also to the fact that the government, by promoting the reorientation of Yugoslav
shipbuilders towards domestic customers, had initiated new unintended practices. These helped
shipbuilding to survive the 1980s without restructuring. This was another example for the
political economy setting incentives that favored a strategy of muddling through.
82
83
“Vjesti i zanimljivosti iz brodogradnje”, Brodogradnje, no. 2–3, 1987, p. 135.
See Palairet, “Croatian shipbuilding in crisis”.
21
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
Export vs. Domestic Orientations
The necessity to do something for shipbuilding became obvious to the government soon after
the beginning of the global crisis of shipbuilding after the 1973 oil price shock. Jadranbrod,
as the main lobbying organization of Yugoslavia’s shipbuilders did not fail to hammer down
this message to various government bodies. Beginning in 1975, there were frequent debates
on the republic level, and sometimes also on the federal one, about the “Construction of ships
for domestic shipping companies in our shipyards.”84 This program built on earlier, though
fruitless efforts starting in 1969 to stimulate production of ships for domestic costumers.
Despite many high-level meetings, no solution had been found so far. The problem was – and
continued to be – that domestic production was simply more expensive than imported ships,
and neither the government nor the banks had been ready to pay up for the price difference.
Yugoslav shipping lines were also not keen to purchase ships more expensively than
necessary. 85 Now, with global demand rapidly collapsing, the idea of domestic ships for
domestic ship-owners gained new urgency. The involved stakeholders now undertook more
systematic efforts to realize it, although ultimately in vain.
The effort to support shipbuilding be reorienting it towards domestic demand was based on
sanguine analyses of its current problems. In early 1975, the Ministries (sekretarijat) for Energy,
Industry and Crafts, and for Shipping, Transport and Communication of the Socialist Republic
of Croatia produced a joint, detailed report on the “Problems of Shipbuilding and Shipping”
together with recommendations for their solution.86 The report noted that recently, “there were
a lot of discussions about the situation of shipbuilding and shipping”, such as in the federal
government and the Croatian government. Shipbuilding deserved special attention because,
first, it was a major industrial employer with 24,000 employees and at least 20,000 subcontractors (kooperanti). Second, it was Yugoslavia’s industry with the “most beneficial
currency effect”: during the last four years, shipbuilding had earned 16 billion Dinar in currency
income, while its outflow – mainly for materials from abroad – was only 7.6 billion.87 In an
economy that was constantly short of hard currency, this was a major reason why this industry
enjoyed sympathy by the government.
84
For a first such discussion see “Izgradnja brodova za domaće brodare u našim brodogradilištima”, in: HDA,
f. 280, kut. 30, br. 1010.
85
See the report “Kronologija akcija oko gradnje brodova za domaću trgovačku mornaricu u domaćim
brodogradilištima, 25.4.1977”, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 93, br. 569.
86
Republički sekretarijat za energetiku, industriju i zanatstvo / Republički sekretarijat za pomorstvo, saobraćaj i
veze: “Informacija o prolematici brodogradnje i brodarstva s prijedlogom mjera”, Zagreb, January 1975, in: HDA,
f. 280, kut. 33, br. 1140.
87
Ibid., p. 2–3.
22
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Yet, as the report made clear, shipbuilding was in a major crisis. As the main reasons the
ministries identified the slump in demand on the world market, just after Yugoslav shipbuilders –
like their peers in other countries – had increased capacity. Yugoslav shipbuilders were especially
undercut by Japanese competitors, who offered ships for dumping prices; aside from that, the
report noted that Western governments began to heavily subsidizing their shipbuilding industries
or supported it through military contracts. Subsequent documents deplored that subsidies in
Western countries such as France, the FR Germany, Norway, Sweden and the UK, amounted to
25–35 percent of the ship’s price, allegedly much higher than in Yugoslavia.88 As a result, there
were hardly any new orders from Western consumers for Yugoslav ships. The situation was a bit
better in the developing countries, especially the oil producing ones, but there Yugoslav
shipbuilders faced competition by the heavily subsidized, and more efficient West European and
Japanese shipyards. The only bright spot was the Soviet Union, which was sparred the recession
of the 1970s and expanded its oil industry. However, pricing modalities with the Soviets, who did
not pay in hard currency, were a cause of concern (see below).
As result of adverse market conditions, the report projected substantial idle capacity for the
forthcoming years.89 The solution of shifting production to domestic customers had so far not
been taken because of the specific Yugoslav system of export subsidies. Exporters got support
in cash and tax deductions, while domestic shipping lines would have to pay high prices for
ships from domestic shipyards and faced high interests on loans taken for that purpose.90 The
report concluded:
“It thus follows that shipbuilding and shipping, both of which work exclusively for the world
market should not be subjected to the ruling regulations valid for the domestic market, if certain
negative consequences for the whole system are to be avoided.”91
Not all difficulties were foreign made, though: the 1975 report also highlighted the
decreasing competitiveness of Yugoslav shipbuilders, which suffered from outdated
technology and a lack of capital. Low efficiency translated into high prices: data from the late
1970s indicate that Yugoslav ships were on average between 31 and 38 percent more
expensive than world market prices for the same kind of vessels.92 The price difference was
88
IVS, Juni 1979: “Stanje, ekonomski položaj i problemi nezaposlenosti kapaciteta brodogradilišta”, in: HDA,
f. 280, kut. 174, br. 481, p. 2.
89
“Informacija o prolematici brodogradnje i brodarstva s prijedlogom mjera”, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 33, br. 1140,
p. 4–5.
90
Ibid., p. 6–7.
91
Ibid., p. 12.
92
Jadranbrod: “Sadašnje stanje, ekonomski položaj i problemi razvoja brodogradnje”, Zagreb, June 1980, in:
HDA, f. 1398, kn. 6, p. 9.
23
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
even higher if price subsidies by Western governments were accounted for. The high prices
of Yugoslav ships, which impeded their international competitiveness, were also caused by
the fact that primary products of Yugoslav origin were 50 percent more costly than
comparable materials supplied from the world market.93 Material inputs amounted to almost
two thirds of the costs of a vessel – and domestic supplies alone around 45 percent –, thus
this difference in the price of supplies was hugely consequential.
Here, one of the structural problems of Yugoslav economic policy became evident:
exporters were politically forced or at least pressured to procure as much as possible from
domestic suppliers, even if these asked higher prices than international ones and often
provided only inferior quality. The government considered the export sectors, such as
shipbuilding, to be responsible for helping other, non-competitive industries to become
indirectly integrated in the world market.94 Shipyards were, for example, compelled by the
government to use steel from a steel mill in Skopje, although it was of low quality and often
delivered with delays – if at all –, and more expensive than foreign steel (for a Suez-max ship,
18,000 tons of steel were needed).95 Minutes from a meeting between delegates from the
Croatian Sabor and the federal government on shipbuilding in May 1979 show that the
participants were well aware of these problems but never followed through with respective
measures. Producers in shipbuilding, it was said,
“can exert minimal influence on the price of their product because into its production go materials,
whose price is mainly determined by state organs, and which embody low productivity, weak
organization and aged technology, which then are built into the ship.”96
As government experts put it: shipbuilding was the “finalizer (finalizator)” of a chain of
industrial supplies by the domestic industry. This also meant that “in shipbuilding,
contradictory interests of many domestic producers and domestic customers of these products
collide”, as one participant in these debates asserted.97 Hence, it became evident that a shipyard
could hardly maintain international competitiveness, if it sits on top of a chain of inefficient
suppliers. Shipbuilders, by the way, although unhappy with this arrangement, often used their
role as a “climactic” producer to justify their demands for money from the state.
93
Ibid., p. 6; “Materijalni položaj jugoslavenske brodogradnje: Društvenom podrškom premostiti teškoće,”
Brodogradnje 28(1), 1980, p. 12.
94
Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 762.
95
Ibid., p. 772–3.
96
“BILJEŠKA o vodjenim razgovorima članova delegacije Sabora SRH”, 25.5.1979, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 174,
br. 481.
97
IVS, Juni 1979: “Stanje, ekonomski položaj i problemi nezaposlenosti kapaciteta brodogradilišta”, p. 1, in:
HDA, f. 280, kut. 174, br. 481, p. 1.
24
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Yet, to change such arrangements was politically too sensitive that it was almost out of
question. The government favored supply chains across republics for reasons of regional policy,
even if their economic rationale was questionable. Neither did policy makers and industry
representatives ponder about possible capacity reduction as a way forward to adapt to reduced
global demand (in contrast, for example, to the Japanese who combined massive state support
with substantial reduction of capacity). The trade union was also strongly opposed to any
reduction of capacity, as this would have implied lay-offs. The idea of converting some capacity
to other production purposes, or to reduce the number of shipyards, both also often floated, was
strongly rejected by the industry. Ivo Vrandečić, then still head of the industry body Jadranbrod,
made that clear in a discussion with the metalworkers’ trade union in October 1976. Discussing
the problems of shipbuilding, he maintained that “to fire workers is, to my mind, out of
question.”98 Hence, there were only two possible ways forward for the Yugoslav shipbuilders:
becoming less export oriented and/or finding new markets.
In the second half of the 1970s, experts and policy-makers as well as people from the
industry turned their attention mainly to the question of how to make Yugoslav shipping lines
buy ships from Yugoslav shipyards. In the wake of the catastrophic slump on the world market
and the ensuing glut in shipping capacity, Yugoslav shipbuilders and shipping-lines, together
with government bodies managed to sign a so-called self-management agreement for that
purpose in the Slovenian coastal town of Piran in June 1976. Its goal was to facilitate the
production of ships for Yugoslav shipping companies by Yugoslav shipyards. Before that, as a
representative of the metalworkers’ trade union had declared in February 1976, “support [for
this solution] had been only orally”, without practical consequences – now there was a
contract.99
The so-called Piran Agreement would become a mantra that never materialized. It
envisioned the building of sixty-two ships with 429,000 BRT, and a value of 7.7 billion Dinar,
by Yugoslav shipyards for Yugoslav owners in the period 1976 to 1980.100 Its realization,
though, was dependent on two conditions that themselves were not part of the agreement: the
shipping companies demanded that someone – most likely the government – had to cover the
difference between world market and domestic prices, since the latter were around 30 percent
higher. The shipyards only promised to give a discount of two percent on their call price. The
agreement also urged banks to cover 50 percent of the financing costs of the production of
ships (the rest would be covered by the companies involved). A bit counter-intuitively, the
shipping companies also demanded a reduction of the tariff on imported ships from 21 to
98
“Zapisnik sa sjednice Republičkog odbora”, Split (Brodosplit), 16.10.1976, in: HDA, f. 1398, kn. 2 (1976), p. 10.
“Program rada za 1976. godinu”, Zagreb, January 1976, in: HDA, f. 1398, kn., (1976), p. 10.
100
For an analysis see also Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 767.
99
25
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
9 percent because they would also in the future import ships.101 For Croatia, as both the major
producer and user of ships, the cost difference that had to be covered was estimated at almost
1.5 billion dinar, more than 860 million of which the government was supposed to pay. The
municipalities where the shipyards were located were also called to provide money. In the
case of Pula, the city was expected to give 15 million Dinar, mainly in form of tax rebates to
Uljanik.102
These financing conditions would prove to be the obstacle preventing the full, or even half
implementation of the plan. The partners had made their calculation especially without the
banks, which proved reluctant to foot the bill and never fully signed up. 103 The federal
government as well appeared to be reluctant to come forward with significant help. While the
program to build ships for domestic customers by domestic shipyards became the mantra of
policy-making in this area, the reports from relevant authorities equally frequently stressed,
“the Piran Agreement is not implemented as had been envisioned.”104 By mid-1978, only five
out of an agreed number of forty-eight ships envisioned until that year were built.
One of the difficulties was the unresolved question who would pay the price difference
between ships sold to domestic and those to foreign customers. The Republic of Croatia did pay
more than 850 million dinar to its shipbuilders between 1978 and 1981. In 1981 and 1982 alone,
Uljanik received state subsidies to the amount of 254 million dinar – far more than the other
large shipyards (on second place came Split with 148 million).105 The City of Pula paid its share
as well. While Jadranbrod continued to complain about a lack of support by the government,
the government accountants might have begged to differ because a substantial amount of
taxpayer money was flowing into the shipyards – laying down a tradition that would survive
into the 2000s.
101
Information on the content of the Piran Agreement is available in “Rep. Sekr. za energetiku, industriju i
zanatstvi; Rep. Sekr. za pomorstvo, saobračaj i veze: Informacija o sadašnjem stanju problematike gradnje brodova
u domačim brodogradilištima, 24.3.1977”, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 88, br. 442.
102
Radna grupa Republičkog sekr. za energetiku, industriju i zanatstvo/Republičkog sekr. za pomorstvo, saobraćaj i
veze /“Jadranbrod”, 26.10.1977: “Informacija o provodjenju mjera iz ‘Platforme za rješenje problema brodogradnja
i brodarstva’”, in: HDA, f. 280, Kut. 108, br. 979. The municipality followed through on its committments, as press
reporting indicates (Vjesnik, 24 November 1977).
103
Jadranbrod, letter to IVS: “Predmet: ‘Prijedlog ‚Društvenog dogovora o osiguravanju i usmjeravanju sredstava
za plasman domaće opreme i brodova u zemlji’”, 16.12.1986, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 337, br. 618.
104
Rep. Sekr. za energetiku, industriju i zanatstvo: “Informacija o realizaciji ‘Dogovora o osnovama Društvenog
plana Jugoslavije za razvoj strojogradnje i brodogradnje u razdoblju od 1976. do 1980. godine’”, May 1978, HDA,
f. 280, kut. 145.
105
Jadranbrod: “Izvještaj o raspodjeli i upotrebi sredstava prikupljenih u razdoblju od 1.1. do 31.12.1982
po osnovi obveza Republike preuzetih Platformom za rješenje problema brodogradnje i brodarstva”, 22.2.1983,
in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 250, br. 272; Jadranbrod: “Izvještaj o rasprodjeli i upotrebi sredstava”, Zagreb, 23.2.1982,
in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 232, br. 251.
26
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Yet, the banks did not follow up. Therefore, the crisis could not be solved. The interested
parties, such as Jadranbrod, the ship-owners, the Chamber of Commerce in Zagreb, and
concerned government organs in Croatia even formed the informal “Platform for the Solution
of the Problems of Shipbuilding and Shipping”. The platform continued to hold meetings, to
produce white papers and to lobby the federal government. Yet, the problem with the
commercial banks persisted. A 1983 analysis about the under-exploitation of capacity in
shipbuilding stressed that the commercial banks did not give enough credit, nor had they signed
the agreement between shipbuilders and ship-owners to support domestic production. Despite
repeated calls by the Croatian Sabor, leading Croatian banks would not join the agreement,
which is why eight billion dinars lacked for the domestic fleet renewal program.106
In the course of the second half of the 1980s, when inflation constantly increased and the
whole Yugoslav finance system got close to a complete meltdown, a more forthcoming
response of the commercial banks could not be expected. Regional banks in Istria, Rijeka and
Dalmatia who worked most closely with the shipyards, functioned almost as outlets of the
shipyards. Already a 1979 report by Jadranbrod stressed that those few banks, which gave
money to shipbuilding, such as Riječka banka and Istarska banka, faced almost depleted coffers
so that they could not provide sufficient credit to shipbuilding.107 In the 1980s, when these
banks faced increasing difficulties to re-finance themselves from the National Bank or from the
government, their financial potency was further reduced. Because of their particularly high rate
of export and the practice of getting payed in instalments, shipbuilders faced high demand for
credit in hard currency, which was particularly challenging for ‘their’ banks. Shipyards
sometimes used their own funds to finance their exports, risking illiquidity.108 Inland banks
were anyway loath to engage with the shipbuilders, for understandable reasons given their
frequent liquidity problems.109 Only fourteen out of 168 Yugoslav banks actually worked with
shipbuilding and supported their exports.
Taking loans abroad was no solution because it was not allowed to enterprises. The difficult
credit situation in the 1980s was compounded by the gradual decline of Yugoslavia’s export
finance bank, JUBMES, which less and less covered the needs left uncovered by commercial
banks. JUBMES (Jugoslavenska banka za međunarodnu ekomosmku suradnju) had been
established by federal law in 1978 as a specialized financial organization to support foreign
106
Republički komitet za energetiku, industriju, rudarstvo i zanatstvo: “Informacija o problemima u poslovanju
brodogradnje”, September 1983, in: HDA, f. 280, Kut. 263, br. 1181.
107
Jadranbrod, letter to IVS: “Traženje povoljnije kreditne politike za brodogradnju u 1980. godini”, 11.12.1979,
in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 181, br. 627–693.
108
Jadranbrod, letter to IVS: “U skladu sa zaključcima”, 26.3.1987, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 366, br. 743.
109
“Rekorder pred bankrotstvom”, Večernje novosti, 31 October 1987.
27
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
business of Yugoslav entities.110 Its main instruments was the refinancing of export credits by
commercial banks, to the amount of 65 to 70 percent of their value. However, since its
establishment the gap between the banks’ capabilities and the financing needs of Yugoslav
exporters continued to grow, so that JUBMES could less and less meet their demand.111 In
December 1982, for example, shipbuilding asked forty billion dinar export loans but JUBMES
could provide only six billion.112 The state helped repeatedly by turning short-term liabilities of
JUBMES into long-term credits, but such stopgap measures did not alter the structural problem:
JUBMES did not have enough money, or sufficient drawing rights, to meet the demand from
the export industries. Neither a stable co-financing arrangement with the commercial banks nor
a sufficient source of funding for JUBMES were achieved.113 At the end of the 1980s, JUBMES
was supposed to finance 80 percent of the price of exported capital goods, such as ships, the
remaining 20 percent coming from commercial banks.114 Yet, the commercial banks failed to
pay their share, and JUBMES lacked the resources for its own.
At the same time, and almost miraculously, the shipyards continued to build ships. Some of
these went to domestic customers, but the majority continued to be exported. In the second half
of the 1970s, shipbuilding accounted for seven percent of Yugoslavia’s exports. 115 Only
eighteen out of ninety-one ships launched by Yugoslav shipyards in the 1975–79 period went
to domestic clients – less than four percent of the assembled tonnage. Uljanik is a good example:
from 1975 to 1989, that is, during poor years on the global ship-market, Uljanik managed to
deliver sixty-nine ships, of which only ten went to domestic customers (and these were
relatively small vessels, of 16,000 to 19,000 dwt).116 One reason for continuous production, and
the non-reduction of capacity, was the readiness of shipyards to sell ships cheaply, as long as
the government was somehow able to foot the bill. At the depth of the global shipbuilding
depression Uljanik accepted prices that hardly covered costs – and when inflation subsequently
increased and the dinar lost value, they made a loss on each ship at the time of delivery.117
110
For an analysis see Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, 783–4.
“Nacrt zakona o pretvaranju kratkoročnih kredita danih Jugoslavenskoj banci za međunarodnu ekonomsku
suradnju dugoročne kredite za namjene dopunskog kreditiranja izvoza opreme, brodova i izođenja investicijskih
radova u inozemstvu” (AS-715), in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 329, br. 195.
112
Skupština SFRJ AS Br. 137/1: “Nacrt zakona”, Dec. 1982, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 235, br. 1338.
113
Mladen Rakelić: “Izvoz na kredit bez prave podrške”, Brodogradnje 34(3), 1986, p. 146.
114
Jadranbrod: “INFORMACIJA o problemima u poslovanju brodogradnje i prijedlozi rješenja”, Zagreb, 20.3.1987,
in: HDA; f. 280, kut. 366, br. 743.
115
“Djelatnost koja svojom svestranom i dinamičnom aktivnošću snažno utječe na razvoj sveukupne jugoslovenske
privrede”, Brodogradnje 28(1), 1980, p. 6; “Položaj brodogradnje u privrednom sistemu: Dugoročno dohodovno
povezivanje”, Brodogradnje 28(1), 1980, p. 20.
116
Markulinčić, Debeljuh, Uljanik 1856–2006, 57–8.
117
“Stenografski zapisnik sa sajedničke (proširene) 10. sjednice”, 1.7.1980, in: HDA, f. 1398, kn. 6.
111
28
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
The government helped the shipyards to find new clients. A report by the Secretary of Energy,
Industry and Trades of the Socialist Republic of Croatia from April 1977, for example, details
the steps taken by the government and the Chamber of Commerce to land foreign contracts.
Yugoslav trade delegations including a representative of Jadranbrod visited, and sometimes
negotiated with potential clients, Algeria, France, Iran, Cuba, India, the USSR, Morocco,
Uruguay, Venezuela, Columbia, Egypt, Syria, Somalia, Nigeria, the Gabon, Congo, the
Solomon Islands, all countries of the Arab Peninsula, Romania, Bulgaria and Turkey in the
mid-1970s. While only few contracts came out of these activities at a time when global
shipbuilding hit its nadir, the Yugoslavs at least managed to keep a foothold in these markets
and remind potential customers of their brand. 118 Western markets, however, remained
practically closed since the mid-1970s, as these countries put up protectionist barriers and
massively subsidized their own producers.
At that time, the customer of last resort was
not any of the Yugoslav shipping lines but the
Soviet Union. The Soviets were relatively
unaffected by the global recession of the 1970s
and continued to increase their oil output and
their foreign trade, for which they needed new
ships for transport. Orders from the Soviet
Union played an important role in keeping
Uljanik and the other shipyards in Croatia
afloat. Ships were delivered based on longterm bilateral economic agreements between
Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union.119 Uljanik
delivered twelve ships to the Soviet Union (out
of fifty-five deliveries in total) in the 1980s.120
Uljanik workers even put in extra-hours to
fulfill the so-called “Soviet Program”. One of
its flagship ships was a railway ferry that
carried 108 railcars; according to Uljanik’s
director, Karlo Radolović, it was the largest
such ship ever built anywhere.121
Source: Brodogradnje 34(3), 1986
118
Rep. Sekr. za energiju, industriju in zanatstvo: “Kronologija akcija oko nudjenja brodova za izvoz koje su povezane
sa akcijama Jugoslovenske vlade i Republičkih Privrednih komora”, 24.4.1977, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 93, br. 569.
119
Ibid.
120
Markulinčić, Debeljuh, Uljanik 1856–2006, p. 58.
121
“Prenosimo” [Interview with Karlo Radolović], Brodogradnje 34(3), 1986, p. 179.
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IOS Mitteilung No. 69
There was just one problem: Uljanik (and the other shipbuilders serving the Soviet market)
did hardly earn money with these contracts because the Soviets did not pay in hard currency,
if they paid in money at all. Business with the Soviets was usually based on barter trade or on
payments in non-convertible currency. This posed a serious financial burden on the shipyards:
from their deliveries to the Soviets, they eventually earned dinars but they had to purchase
many primary products that went into the ships from suppliers in the West who naturally were
paid in hard currency. The head of Jadranbrod, Ivan Vrandečić, once said in a trade union
meeting that even “a conjuror” could not earn money by doing business with the Soviets.122
The Soviets were also conscious of their strong negotiating position because of the
international recession in shipbuilding. In 1977, they insisted that in the future the full price
of a vessel should be paid upon delivery, whereas previously 40 to 50 percent of the price
was paid during the construction of the ship.123 This, of course, further increased the financing
difficulties of the shipyards.
Another problem was caused by Yugoslavia’s export support system: exporters received
subsidies from the state, such as a refund of taxes and tariffs, only if they exported to the
convertible currency area or to ‘Third World’ countries, but not to countries practicing clearing,
such as the Soviet Union. From the late 1970s, there were near constant attempts by the Croatian
government, pushed by its shipbuilders and the shipbuilding association Jadranbrod, to
convince the federal government to extend export subsidies also for deliveries to COMECON
countries, but to no avail. 124 The Croatian delegates in the federal parliament were left to
articulate their frustrations about the intransigency of the federal authorities, which saw this
flatly as a Croatian only problem. They kept pointing out that shipbuilding was a crucial
industry that employed (in 1976) almost 28,000 workers in Croatia, which was the second
largest number for any industrial sector in the republic.125
122
Zapisnik sa sjednice Republičkog odbora, Split, 16.10.1976, in: HDA, f. 1398, kn. 2.
Jadranbrod, an IVS: “Traženje povoljnije kreditne politike za brodogradnju u 1980. godini”, 11.12.1979, in:
HDA, f. 280, kut. 181, br. 627–693.
124
E.g. Delegacija Sabora SRH u VRP Skupštine SFRJ: “INFORMACIJA o rezultatu vodjene rasprave tokom
1978. i 1979. godine, STROGO POVJERLJIVO”, 1979, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 174, br. 481.
125
HDA, f. 1398.
123
30
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Starring into the Abyss: the 1980s
The 1980s continued in a similar way like the 1970s had ended: the shipbuilders lobbied
the government for support, the Croatian government sought help from the federal
government, the federal government hoped that things would fall in line by themselves; and
at the same time, the structural problems of shipbuilding – such as those of other industries
in Yugoslavia – went unaddressed. The involved organs continued to try to fulfill the Piran
Agreement and indeed in the 1980s, more ships were constructed for domestic customers
than in the previous two decades. Yet, the planned numbers as laid down in the Piran
agreement were not met by a wide margin.
The large shipbuilders continued to be heavily dependent on exports for employing their
capacity, yet these export deals often were loss making. Uljanik, as one of the biggest loss
makers, was always on the brink of illiquidity in the 1980s. At least three times, in 1980, 1981
and again in 1987, its bank accounts were blocked for many months as it could not service its
debts and liabilities. Uljanik, of course, suffered from the second oil crisis (1979–80), which
led to another slump in the demand of ships, such as shipyards across the globe. These
external difficulties were compounded by homemade shortcomings. The darkening clouds on
the overall Yugoslav economy – rapidly rising inflation and an ensuing debt crisis, which
brought the country to the brink of default by the late 1980s – did not help to improve the
situation of shipbuilding, as an industry closely related to overall economic trends at home
and abroad.
The findings of a 1979 government report on the “economic situation and capacity
exploitation problems of the shipyards” could have been repeated each year. It started, as
usual, with the assessment that “shipbuilding is an industry of special and common interest
for the whole of associated labor of our country”126 (an argument probably made by all other
industries searching for government protection as well). The report highlighted that since
1977, fifteen new ships for domestic customers could be contracted but forty-six for foreign
ones, thirty-eight of them in developing countries. In terms of value, the newly concluded
contracts with domestic clients were valued at 37 million dinar but 381 million dinar with
foreign clients – so much for the intended reorientation towards the domestic market! Among
the developing countries, the PR China was the most prolific customer (fifteen ships),
followed by Nigeria (eight), Sudan (six), India and Liberia (four each), and one ship for
Bangladesh between 1977 and 1979.
126
VS: “Stanje, ekonomski položaj i problemi nezaposlenosti kapaciteta brodogradilišta”, June 1979, in: HDA,
f. 280, kut. 174, br. 481.
31
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
As the report made clear shipbuilding produced a substantial share of Yugoslavia’s export
earnings (6 percent) and even a fifth of Croatia’s. It employed more than 22,000 people and
gave work to more than 4,000 sub-contractors.127 However, at a huge cost: the shipbuilders
were loss making and projected further losses of more than 1 billion dinar in 1980 and a
whopping 2.5 billion in 1981. The losses were so steep that the shipbuilding industry even
could not work out a five-year development plan, as was required from all industries. 128
Uljanik worked at a loss as well – in 1980, almost half a billion dinar –, which they could
cover only partially from their own resources. The losses at Uljanik were caused not only by
the global crisis in demand for ships but also by insufficiencies in the organization of work
between its individual OOURs. This led to delayed completion of orders, and subsequent
penalty payments; lack of coordination also resulted in disadvantageous contracts for new
constructions.129
The crisis at Uljanik attracted national interest: the communist daily Borba for example
published a very critical piece in 1979, highlighting organizational problems and mentioning
rumors that director Bilić was about to resign.130 The national daily Politika stressed that the
global depression in the demand for ships “only made all the weaknesses of unorganized selfmanagement relations visible” and that the Uljanik shipyard had organizationally not adapted
to its reorientation from super-sized ships towards smaller vessels. The newspaper suggested
that the managers of the shipyard should not run from responsibility by resigning, but finally
take self-management classes. 131 Uljanik was also criticized for its bloated administration,
which – according to press reports – made up 40 percent of its staff while only 36 percent of
employees worked in production. 132 The cooperation between OOURs was described as
“insufficient” and “un-synchronized.”133 It appeared that the implementation of the 1974 and
1976 organizational reforms had led to un-coordinated relations between the constitutive
elements of the shipyard, to unclear responsibilities, and to a lack of forward planning, resulting
in low productivity and high transaction costs.
127
Ibid., p. 5.
“Stenografski zapisni 9. sjednice Republičkog odbora”, 5.6.1980, in: HDA, f. 1398, kn. 6.
129
“Izlaz u drugim proizvodima”, Novi list, 11 July 1979; “Pucaju zidovi koji su zaklanjali vidike”, Novi list,
18–19 October 1980, p. 5.
130
“Kriza na svjetskom tržištu”, Borba, 29 August 1979.
131
“Ničiji brod”, Politika, 5 August 1979.
132
“Graditi brodove koji će donositi dohodak”, Vjesnik, 11 June 1980; “Karlo Radolović”, Start, 31 May 1986, p. 12.
133
“Pucaju zidovi koji su zaklanjali vidike”, Novi list, 18–19 October 1980, p. 5. See also “Taškoće savladati
vastitim snagama”, Novi list, 13 November 1980.
128
32
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
In 1980, Uljanik’s deputy director Karlo Radolović was appointed new director, and he
surrounded himself with a team of youngish managers. He took over at a difficult moment:
in June 1980, Uljanik’s bank account with more than 473 million dinar was frozen because
of outstanding liabilities of 900 million. A major reason for the dire financial state of the
shipyard was the fact that for most ships contracted, the purchase price just covered the
production expenses: all these ships had been contracted during the depth of the shipbuilding
depression when shipyards had accepted almost any price. Some ships did not even have an
owner because the initial customers had cancelled or had went out of business, so Uljanik
built them completely on their own costs.134 The freeze of the bank account made the internal
problems of Uljanik visible to the public and forced the local municipality and its party
committee to tackle the issue.135 The local, regional and republic governments came forward
with a 280 million dinar loan injection; two regional banks also provided support by making
credit conditions more lenient. The devaluation of the dinar also helped Uljanik servicing its
domestic liabilities.136
Yet only a year later, in 1981, Uljanik’s bank accounts were frozen again because it could
not service loans received from banks. Its liabilities now stood at some two billion dinars, more
than half of it owed to Riječka banka in Rijeka; the bank itself faced difficulties because of
Uljanik’s near default. It duly declined financing the four ships currently under construction,
for which there was now a financing gap of more than 770 million dinar. On top of that, in June
1981 Uljanik had liabilities in hard currency to the amount of more than 20 million US-$, which
was not nothing for a Yugoslav enterprise at that time.137 One of the reasons why Uljanik and
the other shipyards struggled to earn money was the international price war for ships. In order
to remain competitive on the global scale, they had to accept below-production-cost prices
because West European and Japanese shipyards were not only more productive but also enjoyed
more subsidies from their governments. Eastern Bloc shipyards also undercut the Yugoslavs.
Uljanik director Karlo Bilić in a 1979 interview with Borba complained, “not rarely, we build
ships that don’t bring us any profits.”138
This also affected the realization of the domestic program because for Yugoslav shipping
lines, the opportunity costs of buying from domestic shipyards increased, as the world market
prices for ships kept falling, while the Yugoslav ones increased because of the high level of
inflation in the country. The shipbuilders could not roll on price increases of materials (e.g. of
134
“Graditi brodove koji će donositi dohodak”, Vjesnik, 11 June 1980.
“Pucaju zidovi koji su zaklanjali vidike”, Novi list, 18–19 October 1980, p. 5.
136
Ibid.
137
Jadranbrod: “U vezi za ranije dostavljenim materijalima”, 30.6.1981, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 218, br. 516.
138
“Kriza na svjetskom tržištu”, Borba, 29 August 1979.
135
33
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
steel) on their customers. Domestic ships were more than 30 percent more expensive than
imported ones. Neither the government nor the Yugoslav banks were ultimately ready, or able,
to fully finance this gap; the banks faced increasing constraints on refinancing given the dire
state of Yugoslavia’s current account.139 On top of that, Slovenia and Montenegro even failed
to live up to the committed purchases of domestic ships. These two maritime republics seemed
to regard shipbuilding as a mainly Croatian problem, given the location of the shipyards. As a
result, Yugoslav shipbuilding continued to be export-dependent at a time, when its international
market position continued to worsen. Talks about a partial re-orientation of production to
something other than ships never turned into a reality.
Reports from Uljanik and from government authorities indicated that none of the
mentioned problems was solved during the 1980s. Instead, the shipyard feverishly tried to
find purchasers. Yet, exporting to the Soviets and to countries in the Third World was fraught
with additional risks. In the early 1980s, for example, Uljanik delivered ten ships to Sudan
and Liberia and was not paid in due time. Such delays in payment impeded its cash flow and
thus threatened the construction of new ships, as their production was to be funded by the
earnings from already delivered ships. In case of the Soviets, the Yugoslav shipbuilders had
to accept barter as part of the payment. They did not barter directly, though, but through
central bodies on the federal level responsible for the distribution of the in-kind exchange
from abroad. So, from the 200,000 tons of steel sent by the Soviets annually in exchange for
ships and other products from Yugoslavia, the shipbuilders got only a small share which
satisfied just 8 percent of their total demand of steel.140 A 1979 government report had already
stated, “so far, the export of ships to the USSR resulted in losses because no export stimuli
came to application.” 141 This continued in the 1980s, not least because the ship-makers
needed to buy materials from Western suppliers with hard currency, while the earned only
dinars (or less) from the trade with the Soviets. According to Palairet’s analysis newly built
ships for the Soviets had as large an import component as ships delivered to convertible
currency countries.142
Nevertheless, in the pursuit of keeping capacity busy, the Yugoslavs agreed on another
package with the Soviet Union that envisioned the delivery of eighty-eight ships between 1981
and 1985. Uljanik director Karlo Radolović also endorsed the Soviet program and negotiated
139
VS, Juni 1979: “Stanje, ekonomski položaj i problemi nezaposlenosti kapaciteta brodogradilišta”, in: HDA,
f. 280, kut. 174, br, 481, 8. See also “Izlaz u drugim proizvodima”, Novi list, 11 July 1979.
140
Rep. komitet za energetiku, industriju, rudarstvo i zanatstvo: “Informacija o problemima u poslovanju
brodogradnje” (September 1983), in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 263, br. 1181.
141
IVS, Juni 1979: „Stanje, ekonomski položaj i problemi nezaposlenosti kapaciteta brodogradilišta“, in HDA,
f. 280, kut. 174, br. 481, p. 10.
142
Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 769.
34
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
with the Soviets in order to secure orders for his shipyard.143 One reason for this was the lack
of progress on the domestic program. The most important Croatian banks still refused to sign
the Self-Management Agreement on the Financing of Ships for Domestic Customers built by
Domestic Shipyards. In 1983, there was, therefore, a hole of eight billion dinars in this program,
despite repeated calls by the Sabor to the banks to support the deal.
The orders from the Soviets and from developing countries nonetheless helped Uljanik to keep
its capacity employed, and even to increase its workforce to more than 8,000 employees in 1986
(from 6,500 at the end of 1980) – at a time when West European and Japanese shipyards reduced
capacity. Uljanik and the other Yugoslav shipbuilders pursued a strategy to fill their order books
in order to maintain high employment levels, “without proper regard to profit and loss.”144 A full
order book became almost a goal in itself (another tradition that survived until recently). On basis
of a full order book and many new launches, Uljanik’s director, Karlo Radolović boasted of a
successful turn-around (“sanacija”) from near extinction to new flourishing in a 1986 newspaper
interview. Export earnings were increased from 60–70 million US-$ per year to 200 million, and
annual production to six ships.145 Radolović qualified the deliveries to the Soviets as a success
and stressed that a time, when the international market was depressed, required creativity. Uljanik
accepted, for example, special conditions for contracts with Sudan: they would train people from
Sudan, “their whole fleet”, in Radolović’s words.
Radolović also found a creative solution to the problem of clients forfeiting ordered sips:
when in 1987 three ordered ships became owner-less because the intended purchasers went
bankrupt, Uljanik decided to exploit these ships on their own, as nobody else wanted to buy
them.146 This would earn them 200,000 to 300,000 US-$ per ship and year. Out of nothing the
shipping line Uljanik plovidba was born (to the disappointment of the existing Yugoslav
shipping lines that suffered from a lack of modern ships).147
To his credit Radolović – characterized by Palairet as a “tough and able” manager –
implemented structural changes and cost-cutting measures as well. 148 The new director
managed to bring order into the “Complex Organization of Associated Labor” named Uljanik
by streamlining the twelve individual OOURs and implementing rationalization measures, so
that nine ships per year could be built. He re-established central coordination and control by
143
On the importance of the “Soviet Program” in the 1980s see Jadranbrod, “Predmet: Međudržavni sporazum
između SIV-a, Skupštine SFRJ i Vlade SSSR-a o međusobnim isporukama brodova i brodske opreme u periodu
1986–1990. god.”, 9.10.1984, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 291, br. 947.
144
Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 765.
145
“Karlo Radolović”, Start, 31 May 1986, p. 12–6.
146
“Osnovali vlastitu brodarsku kompanjiu”, Politika, 19 September 1988.
147
“Bankrot-brodovi”, Nedjeljna Dalmacija, 19 October 1986, p. 7.
148
Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 777.
35
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
making clear to the OOURs that in case they did not accept his decisions, they would have to
find other customers for their products and services, which was of course nearly impossible.149
Instead of five independent supply divisions (for each Work Organization), joint provision was
established again. Radolović forced the workers’ council to accept overtime work and the
cancellation of vacations in order to finish ships on time and avoid penalty payments. Such
measures apparently led Uljanik out of is existential crisis and on to a new course of expansion:
in November 1986, it was announced that the shipyard would add 1,250 workers over the
forthcoming five years.150 The shipyard’s bosses claimed that in terms of productivity, Uljanik
now was better than most of its European competitors. In general, the Yugoslav shipyards were
said to be more efficient – measured in working hours spent for the production of 1 grt – than
the South Korean ones, and even more than 50 percent more than the Italians. They lagged
behind the industry leader, Japan, by around 30 percent, and the most productive West
European producers by 10 to 25 percent.151
The press was equally ebullient. Vjesnik ran a story in 1986 praising Uljanik’s export
prowess and calling it not only the “leading Yugoslav”, but even “one of the most important
global shipyards.”152 The shipyard was said to fully embrace the principle “export or die”, in
view of the fact that “for years no satisfying solution for the construction of ships for domestic
clients” had been found. The “internationalization of operations and the extension of activities
from the national to the world market” are the fundament of Uljanik’s existence.153 Between
1981 and 1985, 79 percent of all Uljanik produced ships went to foreign customers. For 1986,
the launching of seven ships was planned of which only two would remain in the country.154 In
January 1987, Glas Istre called Uljanik built ships the “Rolls Royce of shipbuilding.”155 Uljanik
specialized in complex, purpose built ships, with flexible adaptations to the purchaser’s wishes.
This earned it a good name in the world – on which it could capitalize until very recently – but
it was not tantamount to earning money.
By the mid-1980s, the whole of Yugoslav shipbuilding seemed to have withered the global
crisis: while shipyards in other countries struggled and greatly cut capacity, the Yugoslavs in
the early 1980s recorded an increase of orders. In terms of orders for new ships, they climbed
to number three globally in 1986 (behind only Japan and South Korea), with orders for more
149
“Karlo Radolović”, Start, 31 May 1986, p. 13.
“Posao za 1250 brodograditelja”, Vjesnik, 25 November 1986, p. 7.
151
Petar Milat: “Društveno-ekonomska opravdanost razvoja brodogradnje u SFRJ”, Brodogradnje 36(1–2), 1988,
p. 6, table 2.
152
“Za sva mora svijeta”, Vjesnik, 10 December 1986, p. 8.
153
Ibid.
154
“Pozicija izvoznika uvijek je ugrožena”, Privredni vjesnik, 7 April 1986, p. 22.
155
“‘Rolls Roycevi’ brodogradnje”, Glas Istre, no 22, 21 January 1987, p. 4.
150
36
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
than one million dwt, priced at around one billion US-$.156 Almost six percent of the globally
ordered tonnage stood in the order books of the Yugoslav producers. In terms of launches,
Jadranbrod became the tenth largest producer of ships worldwide.157 In no other country but
South Korea was the share of export of ships as high as in Yugoslavia. 58 percent of orders
were for convertible currency markets, 35 percent for clearing markets and only 7 percent for
domestic clients.158 Jadranbrod head Ivo Vrandečić, just before he was elected president of the
federal parliament, boasted in a 1986 interview that in the preceding five-year plan period,
Yugoslav shipbuilding “realized very good results and especially in the last two years achieved
records in the production for export.”159
However, the export ‘success’ was not necessarily a strength because it also meant an extremely
high exposure to the vagaries of the global market, which at that time was clearly a buyers’ market.
Aside from this, Yugoslavia’s rise in the share of orders was also due to the global decline of orders,
thus, pointed more to relative than to absolute growth. In October 1986 global orders stood at 35
million dwt while at their peak, at the beginning of 1975, they had been 205 million dwt, while the
Yugoslav order declined ‘only’ by 50 percent.160 Yugoslav shipyards also signed contracts on
“ruinous terms”, just to fill their order books.161 Industry specialists calculated that world market
prices would have to increase by 15 to 20 percent so shipyards can break even.162
Only ten months after Uljanik was proclaimed to be the Rolls Royce of shipbuilding, in October
1987, the mood soured again: Glas Istre ran an article on “Shipbuilding in the ‘Bermuda Triangle’”,
when the shipyard’s account experienced another freeze imposed by the banks.163 How was such a
turn-around to the worse possible? As Michael Palairet has noted the “impression of a thriving
industry was deceptive.” 164 It appeared that the mentioned success was based on very shaky
financial foundations. It took one important customer to default on its liabilities to Uljanik to reveal
the lack of financial resilience and to push the shipyard again into deep financial distress.
156
“Naši pomorski uspjesi”, Glas Istre, no 71, 26 March 1987, p. 3; “Jučer, danas, sutra – naše brodogradnje”,
Brodogradnje 34(1), 1986, p. 6; Ivan Adum: “Tržišna orijentacija – stabilizirajući element u našoj brodograndji”,
Brodogradnje 34(1), 1986, p. 11 (on the situation at the end of 1985).
157
Ivan Adum: “Godina iskušenja”, Brodogradnje 35(1), 1987, p. 7; Boris Dušić: “Mogućnosti plasmana
proizvoda naše brodogradnje u svjetlu globalne tržišne situacije u svijetlu”, Brodogradnje 34(1), 1986, p. 79.
158
Boris Dušić: “Mogućnosti plasmana proizvoda naše brodogradnje u svjetlu globalne tržišne situacije u svijetlu”,
Brodogradnje 34(1), 1986, p. 80.
159
“Jučer, danas, sutra – naše brodogradnje”, Brodogradnje 34(1), 1986, p. 5.
160
Ivan Adum: “Godina iskušenja”, Brodogradnje 35(1), 1987, p. 7–8.
161
Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 781.
162
Boris Dušić: “Mogućnosti plasmana proizvoda naše brodogradnje u svjetlu globalne tržišne situacije u svijetlu”,
Brodogradnje 34(1), 1986, p. 82.
163
“Brodogradnja u ‘Bermudskom trokotu’”, Glas Istre, no 231, 3–4 October 1987, p. 3.
164
Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 762.
37
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
This story started in 1983, when the Sudan Shipping Line failed to pay the full price for
three ships from Uljanik (the same happened to 3rd of May, from which they had also
commissioned ships).165 Sudan Shipping Line had ordered six freight container carriers from
Uljanik and from 3rd of May in 1977. It was a well-known customer to them, that had started
to buy ships from Yugoslavia already in 1960 and previously had paid them in due time.
Now, payments for the second delivery of the ships ordered in 1977 were delayed. Uljanik
and its Sudanese client negotiated the payment in four installments until 1982, but the
Sudanese would not heed the arrangement and instead asked for a payment moratorium,
which Uljanik refused. When it had transpired that the Sudanese would not pay, Uljanik and
3rd of May wanted to stop the delivery. Yet, they were told by the government to go ahead
because Sudan was a developing country, which Yugoslavia sought to support. Now, with
50 million US-$ outstanding receivables, Uljanik asked JUBMES and the government to step
in. After some round of negotiations in Belgrade, the Sudanese suggested to pay in kind –
with cotton, to which the shipbuilders in general agreed. However, by 1987 they still had not
seen any money from this barter trade and again asked for government intervention. One of
the problems was the fact that Yugoslav cotton importers actually got their stuff from other
sources, with whom they had already concluded contracts, so would not be able to turn
additional cotton from Sudan into money. The “Sudan program” turned into the “Sudan
problem”, commented Vjesnik.166 A delegate from the shipyard Split in the Assembly of
Associated Labor in Croatia commented drily on the question whether such a business
arrangement was beneficial for the country:
“Of course it is, but only if you pay for it with a drastically lower standard for the workers in these
enterprises, who also cannot be sure whether, at around the tenth of each month, they will receive
their salary from the last month.”167
International solidarity and an ambitious foreign policy, it appears, did not come for nothing.
In the meantime, Uljanik (and 3rd of May) had run out of money and had their bank accounts
blocked in 1987. Thus, the default of one customer on its bills “brought Uljanik and 3rd of May
in a situation of total illiquidity so that they have no opportunity to continue their work.”168
Financing the building of new ships was, as shown above, always on the edge, which is why
the default even by one client could have severe consequences. The delay of new constructions
165
Jadranbrod, for SIV: “Predmet: Nenaplaćena potraživanja “Uljanika” i “3. Maja” iz Sudana”, 30.3.1987, in:
HDA, f. 280, kut. 366, br. 743.
166
“Neizvjesnost na navozima”, Vjesnik, 14 October 1988.
167
“Velikodušnost po glavi brodograditelja”, Glas Istre, no 267, 14–15 November 1987, p. 3.
168
Jadranbrod, for SIV: “Predmet: Nenaplaćena potraživanja “Uljanika” i “3. Maja” iz Sudana”, 30.3.1987, in:
HDA, f. 280, kut. 366, br. 743.
38
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
would make the hole even bigger because of penalties for delayed deliveries. Delays were not
always caused by insufficiencies in Uljanik’s production process but also by late deliveries
from domestic suppliers.169 The mechanisms for export support being increasingly in disarray,
Uljanik and the other shipyards struggled to pay for the necessary inputs from abroad, which
was another reason for frequent delays of deliveries. The shipyards complained, for example,
that export subsidies and JUBMES loans were paid out too late. 170 Because of all these
impediments, Yugoslav shipbuilders needed on average of 24 months to finish a ship, which
industry specialists regarded as too long.171
For Uljanik, the 1987 crisis and the freeze of its account for almost two years was a neardeath experience. From an extraordinary joint meeting of Pula’s municipal council and the
district party committee at the end of October 1987, it became known that the shipyard had
substantial liabilities: almost 20 billion dinar in unpaid taxes and fees and more than
130 billion dinar debts with banks; they also owned 52 million US-$ to foreign creditors and
suppliers. The local newspaper called the shipyard a “Teetering Diva.”172 In a meeting on
October 29, 1987, the City of Pula and the local SKJ organization called for urgent
government help, in view of the shipyard’s 8,000 workers and 6,000 sub-contractors as well
as “at least as many” employees in social services that were mainly funded by Uljanik. Since
Uljanik could not make any payments, local social services faced a huge shortfall in
revenues.173 Večernje novosti even asked whether the shipyard stood before bankruptcy.174
Politicians and journalists struggled to explain how it was possible that a shipyard with full
order books, which in 1986 was Yugoslavia’s record exporter with 200 million US-$ realized
export earnings, could end up in such a dire situation.
A few days later, on November 6, 1987, the parliament of the Socialist Republic of Croatia
debated this issue. The head of Jadranbrod, Ivo Vrandečić, stressed again the high export incomes
earned by the shipyards – but their success was put under question by illiquidity. Uljanik lacked
43 billion dinar until the end of the year to keep its operation going and to unblock its bank
account.175 The representatives of the shipyard put the primary responsibility for their illiquidity
on external factors, such as currency risks, failing customers, and inconsistencies in Yugoslavia’s
169
As said by the vice-director of Uljanik, Blaž Rocek, in an interview: “Pozicija izvoznika uvijek je ugrožena”,
Privredni vjesnik, 7 April 1986, p. 22.
170
“Rasprava u Vijeću udruženog rada Sabora o aktualnim problemima poslovanja brodograđevne industrije u SR
Hrvatskoj (5.11.1987): Podrška zahtjevima brodogradnje”, Brodogradnje 35(4–5), 1987, p. 163.
171
Boris Dušić: “Mogućnosti plasmana proizvoda naše brodogradnje u svjetlu globalne tržišne situacije u svijetlu”,
Brodogradnje 34(1), 1986, p. 81.
172
“Blokirani navozi”, Glas Istre, no 253, 29 October 1987, p. 3.
173
“Zabrinuta cijela Pula”, Večernji list, 30 October 1987.
174
“Rekorder pred bankrotsvtom?”, Večernje novosti, 31 October 1987.
175
“Nelikvidnost potapa brodogradnju”, Glas Istre, no 260, 6 November 1987, p. 3.
39
IOS Mitteilung No. 69
export support system. After months of handwringing, government support and depleting the last
own resources allowed Uljanik to overcome temporary illiquidity again – but not to solve the
underlying problems. Actually, the situation continued to get worse because there was no money
for investments, as everything was spent on day-to-day survival. Director Radolović complained
that there was “no investment in new technology or the improvement of technology, simply
because there are no sources (…). We need to survive.”176
It was therefore no surprise that Uljanik and most other Yugoslav shipbuilders operated at a
loss, similar to their peers in the world. 1987 was the nadir of the international depression on the
markets for ships.177 In the first half of 1987, the accumulated loss of the Yugoslav shipbuilders
was 37 billion dinar, to which Uljanik contributed ten billion. Financing the construction of a ship
became an ever more daunting task. Depending on the country where the buyer was located, the
shipyards had to find 85 to 90 percent of the purchase price from banks or other sources of
financing. With inflationary pressures raising and interest rates at more than 100 percent (in 1987),
the financing costs skyrocketed and amounted to roughly half of the purchase price. Attempts by
the Yugoslav National Bank to reign in the free granting of credits by the many commercial banks
in Yugoslavia, because many of these loans were bad, only made finding credit more difficult.
Calls by the shipbuilders that JUBMES should extend its credit lines went unheeded as well
because JUBMES faced increasing re-financing difficulties.
Another of the shipbuilders’ ideas was to change the accounting rules. Their argument was
that they had to pay for the materials they needed for building a ship in the current year but
would realize the earnings from this construction only two to three years later, which is why
contracted ships should already be included in their annual income statement – it appears that
Yugoslav accounting did not account for future receivables. 178 An additional problem was
currency risks. In the mid-1980s the US dollar lost value against other Western currencies, and
the dinar lost value against both of them: from 1984 to 1985, the exchange rate of the dollar
towards the dinar increased by 48 percent, that to the major West European currencies by 74 to
90 percent. This worsened the balance of payment for the shipbuilders: they were paid – if at
all – in dollars but had to buy many of the required materials in hard European currencies,
usually German Mark, which had appreciated against the dollar. The price of supplies increases
more than the price of ships. Depreciation of the dinar also affected interest payments as loans
were based on the initial dollar price.179
176
“Brod – za sve vremena”, Nedeljna Dalmacija, 8 February 1987.
Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 764.
178
“Prijedlozi mjera za otklananje uzroka bitnog pogoršanja uvjeta poslovanja brodogradnje u 1987. godini”, in:
HDA, f. 280, kut. 366, br. 743.
179
“Prenosimo” [Interview with Karlo Radolović], p. 180. For a detailed analysis: Mladen Kmetić: “Zaostajanje
američkog dolara u odnosu na valute zemalja Zapadne Evrope i inflaciju u zemlji ima za posljedicu sve
nepovoljniji poslovni rezultat u brodogradnji”, Brodogradnje 34(4), p. 301–5.
177
40
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
In a word, the mess in which Uljanik and the other shipbuilders found themselves got
messier by the year, and their proposals more desperate. From the responses – and nonresponses – of federal authorities to the requests by the shipbuilders and by the Croatian
government on their behalf it transpires that the government in Belgrade usually processed
them in a dilatory way. 180 That is, nothing was decided. Almost ritually, the federal
government would refer to a comprehensive future solution that allegedly was in preparation.
With deep frustration, Jadranbrod summarized the catastrophic situation for the Croatian
government in October 1987:
“Until today, no substantial measures were taken to stop the galloping growth of illiquidity of
the shipyards, so that all shipyards have fallen under blockade, all payments have been stopped,
all suppliers stopped deliveries and the shipyards are in a situation of complete cessation of
production, even in danger not to be able to deliver those contracted ships due by the end of
this year.”181
It is hardly surprising that such assessments did not increase the readiness of commercial
banks to lend to shipbuilding. In 1989, JUBMES sank into “moribundity” and tightening
monetary policies by the federal government made access to credit even more difficult.182 In
principle, the shipyards should have been in a better starting position than other enterprises
that had been shielded from international competition, when the government introduced farreaching, liberalizing economic reforms in 1989. 183 Yet, years of underinvestment would
make it difficult for them to capitalize on this advantage. Uljanik entered post-socialism in a
situation of deep crisis: they had plenty of work but little money, as the financial director
complained in the fall of 1989.184 With no trustworthy export guarantees, after Yugoslavia’s
export support finally had collapsed, the shipyard found it increasingly harder to find
purchasers for their ships. What the Uljanik management and workers did not know yet, was
that the 1990s would become even more difficult to survive than the 1980s. But at least hey
had learnt how to muddle through.
180
See for example SIV. Komisija za planiranje, tekuću ekonomsku i socijalnu politiku, 26.5.1987: “Izveštaj”, in:
HDA, f. 280, kut. 366, br. 743. This Commission admits that most federal organs did not even bother to comment
in time on the materials sent out by the SIV.
181
Jadranbrod: “U svibnju tekuće godine”, 29.10.1987, in: HDA, f. 280, kut. 366, br. 743. Italics in the original.
182
Palairet, “Croatian Shipbuilding in Crisis”, p. 789.
183
“Koliko koštaju zakoni po ‘hitnom’ postupku?”, Komunist, 30 June 1989.
184
“Blokada, deblokada”, Uljanik, no 105–106, 15 September 1989, p. 11.
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Source: Uljanik, no 105-106, 15 September 1989, p. 11
42
Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
Conclusions
The director of Uljanik, Karlo Radolović, and other leading representatives of Yugoslav
shipbuilders never tired of complaining about the lack of appreciation of their industry by
government and society. They quoted the high export earnings of their shipyards – omitting
their losses, though. Radolović claimed that Uljanik gave much more to society than it received
from it. While the world cherishes the value of Yugoslav shipbuilding, the domestic
government fails to recognize its vital importance:
“If we, in Pula, Split, Rijeka, and then in Zagreb and Belgrade would start believing in the
shipbuilding industry, and would orient ourselves accordingly, everything would be much easier.
There always have been problems, and there always will be; but their solution is much easier if
one believes in what one is doing and why.”185
He did not demand any special treatment by the government; only that “Yugoslavia needs
to resolve its problem with exports and with the stimulation (propulzija) of the sector, and
there won’t be any problems anymore.”186 Such claims show a business tendency at work
that János Kornai has identified as being typical for economic systems with soft budget
constraints:
“The attention of the firm’s leaders is distracted from the shop floor and from the market to the
offices of the bureaucracy where they may apply for help in case of financial trouble. (...) If,
however, the budget constraint is oft such productive efforts are no longer imperative. Instead,
the firm is likely to seek external assistance asking compensation for unfavorable external
circumstances. The state is acting like an overall insurance company taking over all the moral
hazards (...).”187
Uljanik’s behavior, though, does not only confirm that the Yugoslav economy was
typically ‘socialist’ in terms of the prevalence of soft budget constraints but it also points
to the contradictions created by international integration. As the literature on the economy
of Yugoslavia already has suggested, the country’s integration in the world market was
always fraught with tensions. The friction worked both ways: exposure to the international
market created tensions at home, and domestic contradictions impeded the smooth operating
on the international market where the rules of demand and supply, and of capitalist
185
“Brodogradnja zaslužuje povjerenje” (Interview with Karlo Radolović), Glas Istre, no 305, 31 December 1987/
3 January 1988, p. 3.
186
“Kako ostati treći? Intervju: Karlo Radolović”, Večernji list, 25 October 1987, p. 5.
187
Kornai, “The Soft Budget Constraint”, p. 10.
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IOS Mitteilung No. 69
ruthlessness – and not of self-management, or Brotherhood and Unity – were paramount.
Vladimir Unkovski-Korica argued in his study of economic policy making in the 1950s and
1960s that
“the deeper the integration of the economy in the world market (…) the more directly the latter’s
competition logic became expressed within Yugoslavia, and the more it caused friction on the
shop-flor, bringing into question the legitimacy of the governing apparatus.”188
The shift towards export-led growth in the early 1960s increased the “pressures on the
system as a whole.”189 Yet, did the country really “eventually succumb to the competition logic
dominant in global capitalism”, and did the export orientation “necessitate a different mode of
organizing the workplace and the polity” as argued by Unkovski-Korica? 190 The case of
shipbuilding at least suggests that tensions were produced both ways: decentralization and selfmanaged socialism caused frictions for enterprises operating in the international market.
Yugoslavia’s decision to enter the world market posed the question of the reorganization of its
institutional structure as well as of its class relations. The country became increasingly
dependent on integration into the global economy and on loans from the West. This ultimately
proved corrosive for the Yugoslav system of self-management. Exposure to the world
strengthened internal contradictions and made them more visible, while at the same time the
government refused to give up its aim to build socialism. The domestic institutional set up and
the incentives it created for economic actors did not correspond to what world market
integration required. This reminds of Schierup’s assertion that because of the peculiarities of
Yugoslav socialism, Yugoslav enterprises were in a “particularly unfavourable bargaining
position” on the international scene.191
The stakeholders in the Yugoslav shipbuilding industry did not ‘succumb’ to the
competitive logic of the international market, on the contrary: against any business logic they
kept expanding the industry, when global trends suggested to cut back on capacity. To
paraphrase the perceptive Karlo Radolović: “Only in socialism is [the persistence of failing
companies] possible because it is not known, how such a large organization can be
liquidated.”192 Despite their constant complaints, Uljanik and the other shipbuilders operated
under conditions of soft budgetary constraints and were repeatedly, in one way or the other,
bailed out by the government. Their main purpose was not so much making a profit but
188
Unkovski-Korica, The economic struggle for power in Tito’s Yugoslavia, p. 3.
Ibid., p. 6.
190
Ibid., p. 231–2.
191
Schierup, Migration, socialism and the international division of labour, p. 169.
192
“Prenosimo”, Brodogradnje 34(3), 1986, p. 179. Radolović spoke of Uljanik in its miserable years 1980–81.
189
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Building Ships and Surviving Late Socialism
employing people, subsidizing vital – and not so vital – social services in Pula, and also
earning hard currencies. Thanks to government support, Uljanik survived late socialism – but
only just.
The story of Uljanik in the 1970s and 1980s confirms a point made by Carl-Ulrik Schierup
in his analysis of the connection between labor migration and institutional development. The
1974 and 1976 reforms did not increase but reduced the role of market forces, and thus
reversed a trend set by market-oriented economic reforms of the first half of the 1960s. They
reinforced “bureaucratic conceptions” of economic development. “Market criteria for judging
the success of plants and enterprises, or the level of workers’ wages, became increasingly
irrelevant.” He also stresses, “informality and diffuseness of the bureaucratic control, which
became especially obvious after 1974, gave the economy an extremely fragmented and
arbitrary character.”193 This pattern helps to explain why the different layers of government
were not able to formulate a concise strategy for the most export-exposed industry of the
country, which suffered from a global depression not of its making. The reason was not a lack
of knowledge – Yugoslavia possessed excellent shipbuilding experts, who knew about global
developments, as becomes evident from the pages of the industry journal Brodogradnje; but
there was a lack of political will and coordination. The decentralization had led to a system
in which organizational units looked only after themselves, defining their interests in a narrow
way and thus making it next to impossible to create legitimacy for systemic solutions.
Muddling through was the best option available.
Uljanik, and it peers, were exposed to international market conditions more than any other
Yugoslav industry. For them, this was a source of pride – and a convenient argument to mobilize
government support. However, Yugoslavia’s political economy and institutional mechanisms
were not really set up in a way to help economic units adapting to the vicissitudes of the market.
Firms such as Uljanik faced many other, not primarily economic expectations by powerful
actors – such as securing employment and welfare and serving Yugoslavia’s foreign policy.
Hence, the management had to navigate between very different rationales. It tried to achieve
fundamentally incompatible goals. Schierup and Unkovsi-Korica are right when they stress the
contentious nature of Yugoslavia’s economic integration into the world. However, UnkovsiKorica over-estimates the power of the international market to shape domestic relations. The
shipyards and their workers suffered from a global depression in the products they produced.
Yet, they also suffered from the political over-determination of business and the incoherence
of decision making in the unwieldy self-management system that prevented enterprises to take
restructuring measures in order to build long-term resilience.
193
Schierup, Migration, socialism and the international division of labour, p. 234.
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Instead of unilinear causalities, a picture of ambiguity and hybridity emerges. This allowed
space for individual ingenuity, as was the case when Uljanik, under Karlo Radolović, set out to
specialize on purpose-built, customer-fit vessels that became known for their quality. Yet, these
conditions did not produce systematic incentives to reward business reforms. The relevant
stakeholders failed miserably in tackling underlying problems such as over-capacity, lack of
credit financing, and insufficient protection from external shocks. Self-management’s in-built
tendency towards strengthening local fragmentation widened the room of maneuver of
institutional actors but also often limited it to ad-hoc and beggar-my-neighbor solutions. This
was good enough for securing the survival of Uljanik and all the other major Yugoslav
shipyards – something, many foreign shipyards could not claim – but at the price of forgoing
innovation. Ultimately, it was taxpayers and politically less well-connected branches footing
the bill – and they will be asked to do so in the forthcoming decades when the Croatian economy
was presumably capitalist.
Pula. Bildquelle: Ulf Brunnbauer
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