RUSSIA Agriculture Flashcards
Why did Soviet agriculture need to be far more efficient and productive?
To support industrialisation
How would the improvement of agriculture help the industrialisation of the Soviet Union?
Food surpluses needed for growing population and foreign exchange; mechanisation of agriculture would provide labour for the new industrial centres
What was the political case for collectivisation?
Would help extend socialism to countryside
Since when had support for the Party in the countryside been declining?
Tambov Rising 1921
How much of farmland was collectivised by 1925?
Less than 1%
Kulaks
Richer peasants who seemed to benefit from the NEP; started to be applied to any peasant who refused to join the collectives
What appealing opportunity did collectivisation provide for the Party?
To get rid of the kulaks
When did arguments in the Party over agricultural production come to a head?
1928
When did the Party decide on a programme of voluntary collectivisation?
Fifteenth Party Congress December 1927
When was forced requisitioning of grain carried out as a temporary emergency measure due to food shortages?
1928
‘Ural-Siberian’ method
Forced requisitioning of grain as a temporary emergency measure; used increasingly as the pace of collectivisation accelerated
Russian name for a collective farm
Kolkhoz
Machine and Tractor Stations (MTS)
Government-run centres that supplied farm machinery to the collectives; provided advice on farming techniques and political lectures
What happened once enough peasants had signed up to join the collectives?
Collective could seize animals, grain supplies and buildings in the village as its property
What happened to the kulaks once they had been classed as ‘class enemies’?
Deported to Siberia and the Urals
Which areas of Russia in particular protested violently about the implementation of collectivisation?
Ukraine; Caucasus region
What did many kulaks do rather than hand over their property to the state?
Set fire to their farms; slaughtered their animals
Dekulakisation squads
Sent into the countryside to force the peasants into collectives, eliminating the kulaks in practice
Which organisation was also used to round up the kulaks and other refusers, deporting them to remote regions of the USSR, often labour camps?
OGPU
Which organisation was used occasionally to deal with extreme opposition to collectivisation?
Red Army- some troublesome villages were bombed out of existence
What did the peasant opposition to collectivisation result in temporarily?
A backing down by Stalin, who in March 1930 issued his article, ‘Dizzy with Success’, blaming overzealous local Party officials for ‘excesses’
How long did Stalin’s slowdown in the process of collectivisation last?
Only long enough to ensure that the peasants sowed the new year’s crop
What concessions were offered to the peasantry?
Members of the collectives were allowed to have some animals and a small garden plot for their own use
How many peasant households had been collectivised by 1932?
62%