theme 2: industrial and agricultural change 1917-85 Flashcards

1
Q

The Land Decree

A

October 1917
abolished private ownership of land, in the hands of ‘the people’
pleased the peasants

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2
Q

The Decree on Workers’ Control

A

November 1917

Placed control of the factories into the hands of the industrial workers

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3
Q

all private banks nationalised

A

December 1917

all private banks merge the People’s Bank of the Russian Republic

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4
Q

detrimental effect of the early decrees on the economy

A

power to the workers and peasants
Workers’ councils voted to give themselves huge pay rises -> lead to inflation
Managers were often dismissed (sometimes violently) as an act of workers seeking revenge for being treated badly -> lack of skilled people running factories

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5
Q

how did the bolsheviks tackle the economic problems caused by the early decrees

A

the Supreme Council of the National Economy (Vesenkha) was set up in December 1917 to provide greater supervision over the economy

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6
Q

when was war communism in place

A

during the Russian civil war

1918 - 1921

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7
Q

why was war communism introduced

A

to ensure the Red Army was supplied with enough food and resources to win the civil war

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8
Q

when was the Bolshevik nationalisation of all industries with 10 or more workers

A

June 1918

Sooner than expected -> made necessary by civil war

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9
Q

key features of War communism

A
  • nationalisation of all industry (10+ workers) without compensation
  • All industry placed under state control (Vesenkha)
  • military stye discipline in factories
  • private trading banned (black market grew)
  • money banned
  • forcible requisitioning of food
  • rationing
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10
Q

examples of the harsh military style discipline introduced in factories during war communism

A

Death penalty for strike
Unemployed join ‘Labour Armies’ –> projects like road building.
Workers expected to volunteer for unpaid work on ‘Communist Saturdays”

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11
Q

when was the NEP introduced

A

1921
New Economic Policy
Lenin

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12
Q

why was the NEP introduced (brief reasons)

A
  • economic considerations
  • unpopularity of war communism
  • the Tambov rising
  • the Kromstadt mutiny
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13
Q

economic reasons for introducing NEP

A

1921: industrial production 1/3 of 1913 levels

widespread famine: food production 1/2 1913 level.
20 million died from famine and diseases in the 1920s

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14
Q

the Tambov rising

A

1920
caused by resentment building up in the countryside in relation to the forcible requisitioning of food and the plans to get rid of the mir.
uprisings in Tambov where peasants formed a green army and reacted violently to requisitioning troops.
Revolt was only put down when 50,000 red army troops were sent in

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15
Q

what was the mir

A

the village commune

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16
Q

Kronstadt Mutiny

A

1921
Revolt by sailors at naval base outside, previously supported the bolsheviks
approximately rebels 1000 were killed

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17
Q

key features of the NEP in agriculture

A

peasants allowed to sell crops for profit (10% of excess crops taken as tax)
Bolsheviks announced there would be no forced programme of collectivisation, and that the mir would remain as the self-regulating body

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18
Q

key features of the NEP in industry

A

Allow small scale private industry –> ‘NEPmen’
wages & bonuses reintroduced
Legalisation of private trade (stop black market)

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19
Q

how did Lenin view the NEP

A

short term remedy before moving to socialism

“one step backwards, two steps forwards”

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20
Q

success of the NEP statistics

A
grain(million tonnes): 1921 = 37.6 vs 1926 = 76.8
pig iron(million tonnes): 1921 = 0.1 vs 1926 = 2.4
electricity(million kWh): 1921=0.5 vs 1926 b= 3.5
cotton(million meters): 1921=105 vs 1926=2286
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21
Q

bad aspects of the NEP

A

corruption through black market
rise in prostitution
imbalance between industrial and agricultural goods lead to the “scissors crisis” –> government began price regulation in 1923

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22
Q

what was the aims of the five year plans

A

“Stalin’s revolution”

aimed to make the USSR into an industrial superpower

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23
Q

years of the first five year plan

A

1928-32

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24
Q

years of the second five year plan

A

1933-37

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25
Q

years of the third five year plan

A

1938-41 (interrupted by WW2)

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26
Q

years of the fourth five year plan

A

1946-55

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27
Q

years of the fifth five year plan

A

1951-55

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28
Q

first five year plan (1928-32):
aims
methods
results

A

A) rapid growth in coal, steel, oil, and iron (targets much higher than anything done by the USSR before)
M) making more efficient use of existing factories + equipment, slave labour, and putting workers under extreme pressure to meet targets
R) didn’t make much impact until 1934. Magnitogorsk population went from 25 in 1929 to 250,000 in 1932. Quality often sacrificed to reach targets

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29
Q

second five year plan (1933-37):
aims
methods
results

A

A) same as first + consumer goods, however rise of Hitler in the 1930s made heavy industry the top priority
M) develop industrial centres both old and new, moved industrial areas to more remote locations to be safe from invasion
R) 1928-41 saw a 17% industrial growth rate

30
Q

third five year plan (1938-41):
aims
methods
results

A

A) military production became top priority (to fight Hitler)
M) relocate factories to rural mountains as to avoid invasion
R) interrupted due to WW2, USSR managed to fight off the Nazi invasion December 1941

31
Q

fourth five year plan (1946-55):
aims
methods
results

A

A) economic reconstruction, rebuild industrial plants
M) convert factories back to making civilian goods, use control over Eastern Europe to increase production, redirect wartime labour to reconstruction, 2 million slaves used from gulags to help reconstruct, trade agreements made with the eastern bloc
R) initial production recovered quickly, targets were over fulfilled, there still was a lack of new technology and chemicals

32
Q

fifth five year plan (1951-55):
aims
methods
results

A

A) continuing growth from the previous plan but t a slower rate, preparing for possible nuclear war (Cold War)
M) increased defence spending, collectivising farms, prestige projects (cater to Stalins ego)
R) urban areas recovered almost fully (rural areas took longer), Soviet Union now a nuclear power

33
Q

when was the decision made to abandon the NEP

A

1927

34
Q

reasons for collectivisation

A

NEP = agriculture unchanged since revolution
link with industry: fear of foreign invasion, urgent need to industrialise
economic: large plots are more efficient
political: extend socialism into countryside, useful since control of the party in countryside weakened after Tambov 1921

35
Q

evidence to show optional collectivisation (policy before 1928) never worked

A

1925: less than 1% of farmland was collectivised

36
Q

process of collectivisation

A

december 1927: 15th party congress decides on voluntary collectivisation
1928: food shortages lead to requisitioning (‘Ural-Siberian’ method, sped up collectivisation). movement from limiting kulaks to ‘liquidating’ them.

37
Q

which areas opposed collectivisation the most

A

Ukraine and Caucasus

38
Q

how many party members made up the dekulakisation squads

A

25,000

39
Q

evidence to show how much farmland got collectivised

A

1932: 62% peasant households collectivised
1937: 93% collectivised

40
Q

results of collectivisation

A

economically awful.
Slow supply of machinery, most collectives without tractors until mid 30s.
removal of kulaks removes most productive farmers.
1928: 73.3 million tonnes of grain vs 1934: 67.6 million tonnes of grain
people began resenting the party -> 1941 some peasants cheered invading German forces

41
Q

evidence to show opposition to collectivisation (killing animals)

A

1928-33: 50% of cattle killed (shortage of milk and meat)

cattle numbers did not recover until 1953

42
Q

causes of 1932-33 famine

A

fall in grain production + more grain requisitioned

Government prioritised army/town

43
Q

effects of 1932-33 famine

A

4 million peasant deaths in 1933 alone
some resorted to cannibalism
worst areas: Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Caucasus region

44
Q

how many kulaks were ‘liquidated’ in the collectivisation process

A

estimated between 5-10 millions

45
Q

successes of collectivisation:

A

managed to re-instate heavy state control over a reluctant group of people
1930 - mir is abolished and replaced with the kolkhoz administration

46
Q

German invasion of the USSR (dates)

A

22nd June - 5th December

1941

47
Q

impact of WW2 on soviet economy

A

strain of resources

centralised economy was effective in wartime

48
Q

proof for shift of focus to military production (WW2)

A

1943-45: over 73,000 tanks and 94,000 aircrafts produced
Moscow children’s bike factory switched to produce flamethrowers
had to import normal goods (e.g. tinned meat) from Britain (Lend-Lease scheme)
Factories relocated to the mountains in the east so the germans couldn’t easily take over industry

49
Q

proof of Nazi occupation damaging industrial production

A

1940: 18 million tonnes steel, 29 million tonnes oil
1945: 12 million tonnes steel, 19 million tonnes oil

50
Q

effects of war on agriculture

A

most able-bodied men conscripted from collectives into the army + farm machinery and animals requisitioned by red army = reduced food production.

1940: 95 million tonnes grain
1942: 30 million tonnes grain

51
Q

social effects of the war

A

1945 (end of war)
25 million people homeless
1,700 towns and 70,000 villages classified as ‘destroyed’

52
Q

example of Stalin’s prestiges projects

A

The White Sea Canal - 141 miles long, 10000 slave deaths, too shallow to be actually useful (iced over in the winter months) but lined with statues of Stalin.

53
Q

years of good economic performance under Khrushchev

A

1956 - 58

however from 1959 growth slowed, and by 1969 the economy was stagnant

54
Q

how did Khrushchev plan to incentivise farmers?

A

paid higher prices for food

1952-56 farm incomes increased 250%

55
Q

Khrushchev’s investment into agriculture

A

planned to make farming more efficient by investing in artificial fertilisers (production increased 40%) and tractors (production increased 30%)
investment in agriculture from soviet budget grew from 3% in 1954 to 12.8% in 1959

56
Q

the virgin lands scheme

A

1956-63
Khrushchev wanted to increase the amount of land that was being farmed
new farms on the ‘virgin lands’ of the northern Caucasus, Kazakhstan, and Western Siberia

57
Q

problems with the virgin lands scheme

A

done in areas not normally fertile -> needed expensive irrigation systems that often didn’t work. High cost and low yield
although pay for farmers had increased, it was not enough to incentivise young workers to live in these harsh conditions
central planning meant farmers didn’t always get the right fertilisers (wasted money and lower yield)

58
Q

statistic to show technology in Soviet agriculture in 50s and 60s was far behind the USA

A

soviet agriculture still highly labour intensive
50% of soviet population worked in agriculture and still only produced half as much as the 5% of Americans who worked in agriculture

59
Q

Khrushchev repeatedly reformed the ministries that were dealing with agriculture, what negative impacts did this have?

A

contradictory reforms lead to administrative confusion

60
Q

how Brezhnev changed the Soviet approach to agriculture

A

1964-85
abandoned Khrushchev’s attempted reform, swathed back to the system Stalin had set up.
instead of attempting to make agriculture more productive, he authorised large-scale grain imports from the west (keep food prices low)

61
Q

how did Brezhnev afford to buy grain imports from the west

A

selling the USSr’s oil

High oil prices in 1970s, oil sales made up most of soviet export

62
Q

how did Khrushchev want to modernise industry

A

investing in light industry in order to produce more consumer goods

63
Q

main industrial problems of the 50s and 60s

A

Military spending: arms race (Cold War) lead to high levels of military spending, little to spend on other things
Command economy: Stalin’s command economy was good at providing large quantities of basic goods (e.g. concrete) but not for complex light industry (Khrushchev’s aim)
Inefficiency: command economy is very inefficient, lots of wasted resources

64
Q

when was Khrushchev’s 7 year plan launched

A

January 1959 - 1966

65
Q

aims of Khrushchev’s 7 year plan

A

increase production of consumer goods

increase production of chemical fertilisers to support his agricultural policies, such as the corn campaign

66
Q

results of the 7 year plan

A

there was increase, but it was moderate
production of consumer goods was still 5% below target
production of chemicals still 20% below target
1966: 0.5% of soviet citizens own cars vs 20% UK

67
Q

reasons for failure of 7 year plans

A

Khrushchev introduced contradictory reforms e.g. in 1957 he decentralised economic planning, then from 1958-64 he re-centralised
Khrushchev increased targets in 1962 (harder to reach)

68
Q

reasons for economic decline under Brezhnev

A

refusal to change: all economic reform stopped after 1964, meaning long term problems such as inefficiency were never solved
Brezhnev also increased military spending, less money to invest back into industry
By 1980 the economy was stagnant

69
Q

what was Khrushchev’s vision

A

Khrushchev wanted the Soviet Union to reach communism by 1980. Under communism; he believed that housing, transport, and food would all be available freely

70
Q

how did Brezhnev continue the promise for better living standards when abandoning Khrushchev’s vision?

A

subsidising prices: government kept prices of consumer goods low (lead to a shortages as goods were in higher demand than supply due to bad industry)
a second economy: Brezhnev accepted the growth of the black market (or ‘second economy’), allowing citizens to buy goods illegally

71
Q

Andropov’s reforms

A

attempted to fix long term economic problems: ‘Operation Trawl’ . KGB crack down on drunkenness and absenteeism
1983: 25% of average family income spent on vodka + making their own moonshine
campaign was short lived, didn’t solve underling issues