Soviet Economic Growth Under Stalin
http://mars.acnet.wnec.edu/~grempel/courses/stalin/lectures/EconDev.html
Since the late 1920's Soviet economic planners almost obsessively
concentrated on the development of heavy industry. They did this for the
sake of developing more heavy industry--especially the expansion of
steel production.
Under the First Five-Year Plan Soviet steel production (5.9 million
tons) fell far short of the prescribed target of 10 million tons: but
large-scale industrial production more than doubled, new blast furnaces
were constructed and old ones modernized, and the foundations were laid
for a Ural iron and steel center at Magnitogorsk and a western-Siberian
one in the Kuznetsk basin (Kuzbas).
The Second Five-Year Plan brought a spectacular rise in steel production
more than 17 million tons, placing the Soviet Union not far behind
Germany as one of the major steel-producing countries of the world. As
was the case with the other five-year plans, the second was not
uniformly successful, failing to reach the recommended production levels
in such crucial areas as coal, oil, and cement production.
The first two years of the Third Five-Year Plan proved to be even more
of a disappointment in terms of proclaimed production goals. Even so,
the value of these goals and of the coordination of an entire economy's
development of central planning has been undeniable. For the 12% to 13%
rate of annual industrial growth attained in the Soviet Union during the
1930's has few parallels in the economic history of other countries.
What is more, this high rate of growth was resumed after World War II
and continued into the early fifties, after which it has gradually
declined.
The collectivization of agriculture seems to have been a necessary
prerequisite for the launching of the First Five-Year Plan. In 1928 80%
of approximately 150 million Soviet citizens were engaged in
agriculture. By the late twenties the peasant population, which was
broken up into 25 million families, had greatly improved its relative
position in Soviet society as a result of the Revolution and NEP.
Peasants were no longer forced to surrender a large part of their
surplus income to the state, as they had been during tsarist times, in
order to finance the government's industrialization program; and they
lived better and consumed a greater part of their own agricultural
production than ever before.
In 1928 the peasants demonstrated their ability to organize effective
resistance when the Soviet state tried to collect grain forcibly and at
prices unfavorable to the peasants. Collectivization was calculated to
eliminate effective peasant opposition to the policies of the Soviet
state by reducing the number of separate units in the agricultural
population from 25 million independent families to several hundred
thousand collective farms.
Although state control over these collective farms was by no means
complete, it was effective enough to assure the delivery to the state of
compulsory quotas of agricultural products and to oblige the peasants to
accept the discriminatory taxation and the low prices for agricultural
products Soviet leaders considered necessary in order to finance rapid
industrialization. Furthermore, after 1928, the lowering of the
peasants' standard of living and the tightening of political control
over the peasant community produced conditions that made life in the
country less attractive than before and, therefore, helped to increase
the rate of migration into towns.
Between 1929 and 1935, 16.6 million former peasants left the countryside
and moved to urban centers, where they became part of the expanding
labor force of Soviet industry. This was, of course, a highly desirable
development from the point of view of the Communist elite which ruled in
the name of the "dictatorship of the proletariat."
In the thirties collectivization proceeded rapidly but in the face of
bitter and costly peasant resistance. By Jan. 1930, 21% of peasant
households had been collectivized, a percentage that dramatically rose
to 58% in March as a result of the intensified application of force and
coercion by overzealous local party officials during the late winter of
that same year.
Stalin temporarily called a halt to forcible collectivization with his
famous ''Dizziness with Success'' article of March 2, 1930, but massive
peasant abandonment of collectivization during the ensuing months led to
renewed administrative pressure and violence against ''kulaks,'' the
term then indiscriminately used to label all peasants who opposed
collectivization.
In mid-1931 53% of the peasants once again lived on collective farms.
After this the same combination of persuasion and coercion that had been
applied earlier steadily raised the percentage of peasants on collective
farms until it reached 94% in 1938. In many cases military units were
called on to subdue unruly peasants, and decrees for the protection of
socialist property sanctioned the shooting of thousands of peasants for
stealing such trifles from kolkhozes as rope or sheaves of straw or for
the ''hoarding of small coin.'' Hundreds of thousands of other peasant
households were deported to Siberia or other remote areas of the Soviet
Union.
When the peasants retaliated by destroying crops and killing their
animals, the Soviet state confiscated foodstuffs the peasants needed to
feed themselves. A particularly serious crisis developed in the Ukraine
and northern Caucasus during the famine winter of 1932-1933, when
apparently millions of peasants starved to death. The exact human toll
resulting from collectivization is not known, but estimates run as high
as 5 to 10 million. A recent study by Robert Conquest suggests the real
figure is closer to 20 million.
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