The economic development of the PRC 1952-62 Flashcards
What steps were taken towards collectivisation in 1951?
Mutual-aid teams grouped together up to 10 peasant households to share labour, tools and animals. Only
poorer peasants were allowed to participate.
What steps were taken towards collectivisation in 1952-53?
Agricultural Producers’ Cooperatives grouped together 30-50 peasant households to share land and labour.
This enabled peasants to increase yields and share the costs of new machinery. Private ownership of land
within the APCs were retained by peasant families, with profits for the year shared on the basis of ‘land share’ and ‘labour-share’. This meant wealthier peasants profited the most.
What steps were taken towards collectivisation in 1955?
‘Higher stage’APCs were introduced, grouping between 200-300 households. In the distribution of profits,
‘land-share’ was reduced and ‘labour-share’ was increased.
How many peasant households belonged to APCs in July 1955?
17 million households.
How many peasant households belonged to APCs in January 1956?
75 million households - 63% of the peasant population.
What were the 3 main results of collectivisation 1952-57?
1) CCP control in the countryside was strengthened.
2) Between 1953-57, agricultural production only grew 3.8%.
3) By the end of 1956, only 3% of peasant households farmed privately. Mao proclaimed collectivisation had
been achieved 15 years ahead of schedule.
Why was industrial development essential for China?
In order to fully achieve self-sufficiency and build socialism within China.
How did China aim to achieve industrial development?
By following the Soviet model of Five Year Plans, with China planning to use 3 across 15 years.
When did the First Five Year Plan take place?
1953 - 1957.
What did the First Five Year Plan aim to achieve?
To increase the production of heavy industry, such as iron, steel, energy, transport, communications,
industrial machinery and chemicals.
How was the First Five Year Plan funded?
Through patriotic savings campaigns, where the CCP would encourage saving in State banks. The CCP
limited the supply of consumer goods, to further stimulate saving.
How successful was the First Five Year Plan?
The plan set ambitious targets, however by 1956, most of the targets had been exceeded.
What metrics exceeded the targets of the First Five Year Plan (7), and by how much (%)?
1) Coal (115% of the target).
2) Steel (129.8% of the target).
3) Cement (114.3% of the target).
4) Electrical power (121.6% of the target).
5) Machine tools (220.1% of the target).
6) Bicycles (211.5% of the target).
7) Trucks (187.5% of the target).
What metrics did not meet the targets of the First Five Year Plan (2), and by how much (%)?
1) Locomotives (83.5% of the target).
2) Insecticide (87.1% of the target).
What were the 5 drawbacks to the First Five Year Plan?
1) Many of the new workers were illiterate and ill-trained. This meant a lot of new equipment was not
installed or maintained properly.
2) An emphasis on quantity over quality.
3) State planners were ignorant of basic procedures, leading to bureaucratic delays and bottlenecks in the
production, distribution and supply processes.
4) Competition for scarce resources between industries and between State and private enterprises.
5) Part of the cost was paid for by Soviet loans, which had to be repaid in food exports, with high interest.
When was the Great Leap Forward launched?
January 1958.
What slogan was the Great Leap Forward launched under?
‘More, faster, better, cheaper’.
What was the aim of the Great Leap Forward?
To transform China into a leading industrial power in record time, through the mass mobilisation of the
people and correct CCP leadership. China aimed to leapfrog Great Britain in 7 years, and the USA soon after.