'GOST' refers to a set of technical
standards maintained by the Euro-Asian Council for Standardization, Metrology and Certification (EASC), a regional
standards organization operating under the auspices of the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).
History

Cover page of a GOST standard
GOST standards were originally developed by the government of the
Soviet Union as part of its national standardization strategy. The word 'GOST' (
Russian: ГОСТ) is an acronym for ''gosudarstvennyy standart'' (Russian:''государственный стандарт''), which means ''state standard''.
The history of national standards in the USSR can be traced back to 1925, when a government agency, later named
Gosstandart, was established and put in charge of writing, updating, publishing, and disseminating the standards. After
World War II, the national standardization program went through a major transformation, which provided the necessary methodological, logistical, and technological support for the long economic expansion that lasted into the early 1980s. The first GOST standard, GOST 1 ''State Standardization System'', was published in 1968. Over the years, the collection of actively used GOST titles grew to over 30,000 documents in 1991, at the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The GOST standards, which were the cornerstone of the standardization reform, played a crucial role in standardizing and optimizing every facet of the design, production, and distribution of goods produced in the USSR. Virtually everything--from needles to shoes and from bicycles to
intercontinental ballistic missiles--was
mass-produced by government-owned enterprises in compliance with applicable GOST standards. For example if an electronics factory produced a tape recorder, nearly every component in that tape recorder would have been manufactured according to a specific GOST standard.
The greatest economic benefit of having a nationally enforced set of mandatory standards was the level of
compatibility and, to some extent,
interchangeability of domestically produced parts and components previously unachievable by any single nation. While the total or near-total standardization of the national economy may have helped the Soviet Union become an industrial superpower, it also created problems, which the
centrally planned Soviet economy was unable to fix. Although the GOST standards established uniform quality and safety requirements for the goods produced, the government's effort to use the standards as a tool of
quality assurance had only limited success. The prescriptive nature of the GOST standards did not provide enough flexibility and did not encourage innovation and creativity. This contributed to most Soviet manufacturers' unwillingness to modernize their product lines or improve quality of their products. For decades they remained mediocre at best, most notably in such sectors as the consumer goods and housing construction.
The present
After the disintegration of the
USSR, the GOST standards acquired a new status of the ''regional standards''. They are now administered by the
''Euro-Asian Council for Standardization, Metrology and Certification (EASC)'', a
standards organization chartered by the
Commonwealth of Independent States.
At present, the collection of GOST standards includes over 20,000 titles used extensively in conformity assessment activities in 12 countries. Serving as the regulatory basis for government and private-sector certification programs throughout the
Commonwealth of Independent States, the GOST standards cover energy, oil and gas, environmental protection, construction, transportation, telecommunications, mining, food processing, and other industries.
The following countries have adopted GOST standards in addition to their own, nationally developed standards:
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Because GOST standards are adopted by Russia, the largest and most influential member of the
CIS, it is a common misconception to think of GOST standards as the national standards of
Russia. They are not. Since the
EASC, the organization responsible for the development and maintenance of the GOST standards, is recognized by
ISO as a ''regional
standards organization'', the GOST standards are classified as the ''regional standards''. The national standards of Russia are the
'GOST R' standards.
Related standards
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GOST R
Examples
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GOST 10859 - A 1964 character set for computers, includes non-
ASCII/non-
Unicode characters required when programming in the
ALGOL programming language.
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GOST 16876-71 - a standard for
Cyrillic-to-Latin transliteration[1]
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GOST 28147-89 block cipher - commonly referred to as just ''GOST'' in
cryptography
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GOST 7396 - standard for power plugs and sockets used in
Russia and throughout the
Commonwealth of Independent States
Notes
1. Replaced by GOST 7.79-2000 in 2002
See also
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Gosstandart official web site
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Euro-Asian Council for Standardization, Metrology and Certification (EASC) -
Website (in Russian)
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Commonwealth of Independent States