CONCLUSION ON CHAPTER I
Over the years, at the initiative of the society, thirty-five volumes and about twenty documentaries, including various works of Uzbekistan, have been published in both private and museum collections. Each published cover cover has 500 or more pluses and lots of descriptions. The books will not be sold, but will be donated to schools, libraries and other participating events in Uzbekistan, as well as to museums and universities around the world.
It is currently developed in the fields of textiles, manuscripts, miniatures, calligraphy, sculpture, ceramics and metallurgy of different periods of culture in Uzbekistan. Works of art range from the Bronze Age to Hellenistic, Buddhist, Sogdian, medieval Islamic and Timurid masterpieces. Additional volumes cover the art of the 19th century khanates and the first documentary and artistic photography in Uzbekistan.
CHAPTER II
BENEFITS OF NATIONAL AND CULTURAL HERITAGE TO THE STATE ECONOMY
2.1. The role of national wealth in the state economy
The development and foundation of a nationally rich human society consists of ancestral and intellectual natural resources.
National wealth can be conditionally divided into three parts:
1. Material wealth.
2. Intangible wealth.
3. Natural wealth.
Material wealth is ultimately the result of production, productive labor. It leads to the accumulation of energy from the current consumption of the product in the production process and grows. But it would be wrong to think of material wealth as the sum of the annual gross domestic product over a number of years. Because part of this wealth is lost and renewed every year (manufacturing, consumer goods). As a result, production is accumulated at the same time as only a fraction of the total - packaged wealth. This means that the growth of the fund and material wealth is at the expense of the gross national product.
National wealth takes the form of financial assistance for human labor and includes a material structure:
- capital on the right of production (funds);
- fixed capital (funds) in non-production;
- working capital (funds);
- material part of work in progress;
- material resources and conformities;
- property accumulated in the homes, farms and farms of the population.
The following are some common types of wealth growth:
labor productivity growth;
increase in production;
increase in the rate of accumulation in national income.
The results and conditions of the production of material wealth are being carried out. This means that, on the one hand, in the movement from the product to the national wealth, there is a coverage of the consumed part of the wealth and its appearance. On the other hand, the material conditions of the production of national wealth have its material and technical basis. In this case, the growth rate and scale of national production will depend on the quality of the use of wealth.
The rest of the national wealth is involved in the production of natural resources, its conditions and the organizational environment of human activity. The basis of natural resources is the product of nature, and although it is based on the laws of nature, its loading also depends on the development of society. Mineral resources, forests, water and land resources are naturally present, but are actively involved in production.
The gifts of nature are natural resources in their own right, in which case they are not part of the social wealth that is the result of human activity. This means that natural resources are potential resources for society. They become real wealth due to the impact of human labor.
National wealth is created in the spheres of material production. Part of it is created in the intangible spheres of production and is the intangible wealth of society. In the intangible sector, consumption values are formed that are not related to the material form. They will also be necessary for the livelihood of the population directly, to increase the activity of the manufacturing sector. Such wealth includes intangible assets created in the fields of education, health, science, culture, arts, and sports. its features, historical monuments, architectural monuments, unique works of literature and art have a special place.
The material wealth of a society reflects the level of production of culture and arts, the level of scientific and intellectual knowledge accumulated by members of society, the level of specialization and qualification of workers, the level of health, education and sports.
Thus, national wealth is much broader than material wealth and natural resources, and includes the intangible values of society.
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