The Assembly takes note of the conclusions of the Budapest conference, which suggest a policy to be followed by the countries of Central and Eastern Europe in order to adapt their economies to meet the requirements of the market economy and world trade. It proposes that the sovereign states concerned take account thereof in so far as this policy is compatible with their own interests and pursue the following principles and objectives in reforming their economies :
6.1 to recognise the strong interdependence of the various elements of a market economy designed to be socially just and environment-friendly, bearing in mind that it is not possible to achieve success by perpetuating the old system alongside the new one ;
6.2 to introduce as a matter of priority the right to private property, and a price system which adequately reflects the market situation for goods and services, thereby giving appropriate indications to producers and consumers, and encouraging an efficient allocation of society's resources ;
6.3 to give priority, in so doing, to a reduction of inflation, the establishment of a banking system facilitating sufficient investment and means to encourage savings ;
6.4 to encourage a freely initiated industrial dialogue for the purpose of determining wages -through collective bargaining, for example -and foster the creation of new jobs by relying on small and medium-sized businesses, in particular, and removing obstacles to labour mobility ;
6.5 to ensure that the privatisation of state-owned enterprises is carried out according to precise legal rules and careful, duly verified financial estimates, on the understanding that a statutorily specified proportion of the capital of privatised enterprises may be set aside for popular capitalism ;
6.6 to try and ensure as much competition among producers as possible, so that they seek to improve and render their services or products less costly ;
6.7 to strive -in co-operation with the industrialised market economies -for as complete an integration as possible into the world economy, by introducing currency convertibility, gradually deregulating foreign trade and payments, reducing trade barriers, building up market organisations in countriestargeted for export and providing a friendly, stable environment for foreign investment, including sound, internationally recognised accounting standards ;
6.8 to achieve a reduction in price-distorting subsidies, create truly independent central banks and introduce an effective tax collection system ;
6.9 to reform their education and training systems, permitting the latter to provide broad-based, multidisciplinary qualifications capable of being used in a variety of professions in a rapidly changing market place or as a basis for further education ;
6.10 to reduce the economic role of the state to that of ensuring macroeconomic control, of creating an institutional and legislative framework for an ecologically sustainable market-oriented economy, and of establishing and managing an adequate system of social security ;
6.11 to share out the fruits of growth and ensure that resources set aside for social purposes are used to help vulnerable groups directly rather than via general consumer subsidies ;
6.12 to involve trade unions and other interest groups in the planning and implementation of economic and social reforms in order to ensure public support for the necessary changes.