Decision to collectivise Flashcards
What was collectivisation?
The process in which smaller farms were merged into larger farms and the land and resources were taken over by the state
What was Bukharin’s view?
Helping peasants was key to success and prices should be allowed to rise so that peasants with produce more
What did those that opposed Bukharin say?
They wanted faster modernisation and growth of industry and the peasants were an obstacle
What are the factors that drove collectivisation?
Grain crisis 1927-8
The need for increased food supply to support workers
Right socialist path to follow
Where did S focus his attention?
Siberia and Urals where the harvest was generally good however grain production was 1/3 what it was the previous year
How did S take action in Siberia?
He sent officials and police to close free markets to stop speculation and seize grain by force
How did collectivisation prove to be more popular in 1929?
The CC sent 25,000 industrial workers to the countryside to accelerate the development of farms
What was introduced in December 1929
Forced collectivisation to “smash kulaks as a class”
What were Kulaks?
Russian peasants wealthy enough to own a farm and hire labour
What was voluntary collectivisation?
Persuading peasants on the benefits of working communally through posters, leaflets and films. This has limited effect.
What was the attitude to collectivise by 1929?
Less of 5% of all farms had been collectivised and Stalin believed that some of the brain procurement problems were as a result of Kulaks holding back supplies. Stalin wanted to ‘annihilate the Kulaks’.
What was the first stage of collectivisation?
The government began the campaign with new procurement of quotas, with punishments for peasants who did not keep up with deliveries. A deliberate propaganda campaign was waged against the Kulaks in attempts to create a rift within the peasant class between poor and better off farmers.
What was forced collectivisation of 1929?
Peasants were driven into collectives by local party members with the support of the OGPU and the Red Army.
Why did Stalin hate Kulaks?
They had to be ‘liquidated as a class’ as they were not permitted to join collectives
What was the role of the OGPU and Red Army in the first stage of collectivisation?
They were used to identify, execute or deport kulaks who represented 4% of peasant households. It was not always easy to distinguish the different peasant classes and in practice around 15% of all peasant households were destroyed and 150,000 peasants force to migrate from north and east to poorer land.
By March 1930 how many households had been collectivised?
58% due to peasant and force
What intention of his did Stalin announce in January 1930?
25% of grain farming areas were to be collectivised that year
What did Stalin believe about the speed of collectivisation?
Local officials were being too rigorous and confrontational in their methods and were becoming dizzy with success.
What was the impact of the speed of early collectivisation?
There was a brief return to voluntary collectivisation until the harvest had been collected that year- peasants were allowed to leave collectives and had their livestock returned to them- this was only a temporary tactic
By October 1930 how many farms were actually collectivised?
20%
In what year were 100% of farms collectivised?
1941
What was a kolkhoz?
A type of collective farm created by combining small individual farms into one larger farm in a cooperative structure
What did the average Kolkhoz compromise of?
Around 75 families and their livestock e.g. cattle, sheep, goats, pigs and chickens