From 1975 to 1990, Pylypchuk was a member of the Communist Party and left the Communist Party a year before the State Committee of the State of Emergency. In the early 80's he was the deputy Ostrog District Council of People's Deputies (Rivne region). Pylypchuk was one of the organizers of the socio-political organization of the
People's Movement of Ukraine (Rukh) in 1989 and a member of the Economic Board and a member of the Great Council of
Rukh, the head of the Rukh's cell in the Ukrainian Institute of Engineers of Water Management, and the head of Rivne regional organization People's Movement of Ukraine. He had not discontinued his membership of Rukh. After the disintegration of Rukh in protest against these processes, he had not joined any party (including the "fragments" Rukh). In 1990 Pylypchuk was elected to the Rivne Regional Council of People's Deputies, but later gave up power due to the election of Chairman of the Permanent Commission of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. Pylypchuk was sworn into
Ukrainian parliament in 1990. As an
MP, he was the Member of the Presidium of
Verkhovna Rada and the Chairman of the Standing Committee on economic reforms and national economy management. In May 1995, Pylypchuk was elected to the second
convocation of the
parliament and served his mandate until May 1998. The Commission (in Soviet times) led by Pylypchuk organized the development of the
hryvnia design, the calculation of the amount of currency in circulation and the determination of the structure of denominations. He was an initiator of the creation in Ukraine of the production capability for the manufacture of new nation currency. As an
MP of the 1st convocation, he was the co-legislator and the initiator of the development by the Commission on economic reforms and management of the national economy of 196 bills (114 of them were passed by Verkhovna Randa) there he participated in the finance and banking work group. These bills have focused on the sovereignization of Ukraine's economy and its simultaneous transformation to a market economy. The following are the most important: •
Declaration of State Sovereignty of Ukraine • The Concept and Program of Ukraine's transition to a market economy; • Resolution of the
Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine on the introduction of the national currency - the
hryvnia; • The Law of Ukraine "On economic independence of Ukraine"; • Law of Property Act; • The Law of Ukraine «On entrepreneurship»; • The Law of Ukraine «On Securities and Stock Exchange»; • The Law of Ukraine «On Banks and Banking Activity»; • The Law of Ukraine «On Auditing»; • Bankruptcy Law; • The Law of Ukraine "On Pledge" (property); • The Law of Ukraine «On rental property»; • The Law of Ukraine «On Companies»; • The Law of Ukraine "On concessions"; • The Law of Ukraine «On Foreign Economic Activity»; • The Law of Ukraine «On Protection of Foreign Investments». Commission under Pylypchuk's leadership developed all anti-monopoly legislation, laws on the development of competition, anti-dumping and customs legislation. Prepared by Volodymyr Pylypchuk Draft Law of Ukraine on privatization by subscribing to the property via a unified computer network that excluded the voucher privatization scheme, interference in the privatization process and abuse during her realization was not supported. He was a member of the People's Council, the Minority (the structure of opposition to the ruling Communist "239 group") in the Verkhovna Rada of the 1st convocation. Pylypchuk was nominated twice for the post of Prime Minister of Ukraine by the People's Council and the double candidature of Volodymyr Pylypchuk did not find the necessary number of votes. From 1992 to 1994 he was a Member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE PA), the PA OSCE parliamentarians were twice elected vice-president of the OSCE PA General Committee on Economic Affairs, Science, Technology and Environment. He played on the PA OSCE reports at the Prague Economic Forum, at the Summit of Ministers of Economy of the EU in Edinburgh, at meetings of senior officials of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and European leaders in Malta at the General Committee of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly in Budapest, Jack (Malta), Vienna and Helsinki. Served as an expert "of seven" in Tokyo. The aims of foreign policy efforts of Pylypchuk were: recognition of Ukraine as an equal partner in international law, introduction a "climate" for Ukraine's integration into the international political and financial structures, removal of Ukraine discriminatory restrictions in the international division of labor and getting her preferences. As deputy to the 2nd convocation of the Verkhovna Rada, Volodymyr Pylypchuk independently developed the 28 draft laws, including 3 programs aimed at surmounting the economic crisis. After retiring, Pylypchuk continued to engage in analytical activities of ongoing economic and political situations in Ukraine. He was well known as the author of a large number of analytical articles. Pylypchuk published more than 250 scientific papers and publications on macroeconomics and microeconomics, more than 30 times he presented reports at international conferences, including Harvard, Yale, Indianapolis, Toronto Universities, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as well as scientific and research institutions of Japan, France, Britain, Germany and Canada. Areas of research: "macro- and microeconomics." Sphere of scientific interests: the stability theories of the economy. ==Personal life and death==