Collectivisation Flashcards
1
Q
What was collectivisation?
A
- Moving agriculture to large
farms where peasants
worked together to meet
quotas. - There were three types of
collecvtive farm Kolkhoz,
Sovkhoz and Toz
2
Q
Why did Stalin force peasants into collectivisation?
A
- Larger units of land would
allow machinery and more
modern methods. - Machines meant fewer
peasants needed so rest
could more to towns. - Easier to procure grain
- It fitted with socialist
ideology.
3
Q
What problems did Russian agriculture face?
A
- Scissors crisis of 1928-9
highlighted the ability of
peasantry to disrupt food
supply to towns and cities. - Peasantry was seen as
backward and out of
control of Communists
4
Q
Who carried out collectivisation?
A
- Stalin enlisted an army of
25,000 urban party
activists. - OGPU and the military
were used to suppress any
resistance
5
Q
What methods were used?
A
- Force – Villages were
‘persuaded’ to sign a
register demanding to be
collectivized. - Terror – ‘Kulaks’ or those
who resisted were
rounded up and shot,
imprisoned or deported. - Propaganda – Anti-kulak
and promoting collectives
6
Q
How did peasants resist?
A
- Riots and armed resistance: Large numbers of party officials were
killed - Sabotage: Burned crops, tools and houses. Slaughtered animals and
gorged on them (25-30%) - Women’s revolts: All-female revolts were more successful as soldiers
were less likely to take action - Flight: By 1939 about 19 million peasants had migrated to towns (1 in
4)
7
Q
How were rebels and Kulaks dealt with?
A
- In 1929-1930 alone about 15% of peasant households were destroyed
- An estimated 10 million peasants died as a result of resistance or
effects of deportation
8
Q
Why was there a famine from 1932 to 1934?
A
- Despite poor harvests in 1931 and 1932 state procured more than
double 1928 levels of grain and continued to export. - Huge amounts of animals had been slaughtered as part of resistance
- There was a drought in 1931
- Some have claimed Stalin/Communists deliberately caused the famine
to punish areas of resistance like Ukraine
9
Q
How severe was the famine?
A
- Robert Conquest has estimated that as many as 7 million died as
result of the famine. - Areas which were usually the best for grain producing such as
Ukraine, and Kazakhstan were particularly badly hit, highlighting the
man-made nature of the famine.
10
Q
How was output affected?
A
- Grain output did not achieve pre-collectivisation levels until 1935
- Livestock took until 1953 to reach pre-collectivisation levels
11
Q
What impacted output?
A
- Sabotage by peasants
- Too few tractors and animals to pull ploughs
- Collectives were poorly organised
- Party activists had poor knowledge of farming
- Many of best farmers were killed during dekulakisation
12
Q
How quickly were farms collectivised?
A
- By March 1930 58% of peasant households were collectivised but
this reduced to just 20% by October after Stalin relaxed measures
on the back of complaints and resistance. - Once crops had been sown in 1931 collectivisation was brutally
enforced again so that by 1934 70% of households were in
collective farms. - 100% of peasant households were collectivised by 1941
13
Q
How was it a success economically?
A
- It allowed the government to
procure much more grain than the
NEP - The government procured 10.8
million tonnes of grain in 1928 - This rose to 22.6 million tonnes in
1933 - Exports also rose from less than 1
million tonnes to 5 million tonnes
from 1928 to 1931
14
Q
How was it a failure economically?
A
- Soviet agriculture recovered
slowly from the disruption of
collectivisation - Grain harvests were regularly
smaller than they had been in the
best years of the NEP - Collective farms were generally
less productive than private farms
15
Q
How did it benefit Stalin politically?
A
- Stalin was able to gain control over
the countryside - The party didn’t want a sizeable
sector of the economy to be
dominated by a private market of
peasants - The party didn’t have to bargain
with peasants anymore - They established a system of
controlling the countryside and
making agriculture serve the
towns and workers