Today’s objectives
- Define: collective farms, and how they were supposed to work
- Discuss: why collectivization was so difficult in practice
- Deconstruct: how collectivization laid foundation for collective punishment and mass repression
Agriculture |
Grain requisitioning |
Grain taxation |
Heavy industry |
Nationalization |
Nationalization |
Light industry |
Nationalization |
De-nationalization |
Private property |
Forbidden |
Small private enterprise allowed |
Private trade |
Forbidden |
Permitted |
Foreign trade |
State monopoly |
State monopoly |
Banks |
State monopoly |
State monopoly |
Economic goals |
Mobilize resources for war |
Stop economic crisis |
Political goals |
Establish party dictatorship |
Maintain party dictatorship |
Discussion:
In what ways was NEP an economic success, but ideological failure?
Results of NEP
- Industry, agriculture recovers
- output returns to prewar levels
- But couldn’t reap full benefits of capitalism or socialism
- no employment expansion beyond what market allows
- no incentive for peasant communes to consolidate, fully feed urban industrial class
- Ideological divide in party
- leftists see NEP as heresy
- NEP creates new “class enemies” (NEPmen, kulaks)
Agriculture |
Grain taxation |
Collectivization |
Heavy industry |
Nationalization |
Nationalization |
Light industry |
De-nationalization |
Nationalization |
Private property |
Small private enterprise allowed |
Forbidden |
Private trade |
Permitted |
Forbidden |
Foreign trade |
State monopoly |
State monopoly |
Banks |
State monopoly |
State monopoly |
Economic goals |
Stop economic crisis |
Rapid industrialization |
Political goals |
Maintain party dictatorship |
Consolidate Stalin’s rule |
Collectivization and Industrialization
How collective farms worked
Why collectivize?
Problem:
How to fuel mass industrialization in cities?
Solution:
- transform small private farms into large, high-yield cooperative farms
Types of collective farms
- Sovkhoz (Soviet argo enterprise)
- state farm
- on state-owned land
- farmers had salaries/wage labor
- government-funded investment, more mechanized than kolkhoz
- Kolkhoz (collective argo enterprise)
- cooperative farm
- on formerly private land
(former communes)
- revenues divided between members of cooperative
Three types of kolkhozy in 1918
- kommuna (commune)
- everything communally owned
(no private gardening)
- proceeds distributed “to each according to his needs,”" not proportional to labor/investment
- artel’ (cooperative farm)
- means of production communally owned (livestock, equipment, etc)
- private property includes home, garden for household consumption
- tovarishchevstsvo (association)
- only land, labor in communal use
- proceeds distributed in proportion to labor, investment
artel’ became main form of collective farm
How kolkhozy were organized
- Membership
- everyone over 16 (except kulaks)
- Governing body
- Head of farm
- in theory: chairman, elected by general assembly
- in practice: directors were often urban workers sent from cities
How kolkhozy operated
- farms got rigid, non-negotiable quotas
- surrender all grain to state, keep only surplus above quota
- no cushion for bad weather, crop failure
- failure to meet quota \(\to\)
higher quota next harvest \(\to\)
black list (everything confiscated)
Pre-1928: collectivization was voluntary
- incentives:
- 0% interest loans
- government-financed farm machinery
- tax benefits
Post-1928: mass, forced collectivization
Discussion:
Why the switch?
Would collectivization have been possible in a democratic state?
Would collectivization be possible today?
Did collective farms work?
How successful was collectivization in fueling industrialization?
Not very, according to data from NEP days
- in 1926, 47% of farms were collectives
- they accounted for 1.7% of production
Post-NEP: agricultural surplus was negative (sales to industry \(<\) purchases from industry)
- decline in livestock (need machinery)
- unfavorable terms of trade (low agro prices, high manifacture prices)
- limited state-funded capital investment
Problems before collectivization
- small, subdivided land holdings
- reliance on manual labor,
very little mechanization
- production not scalable
Problems after collectivization
- gigantomania: emphasis on large agricultural enterprises, big acreage
- low mechanization: dependence on manual labor (sickles still dominant technology of harvest)
- low crop yield: grain rots before it is collected, processed and shipped
- monocultures: plant same crop over large plot, no diversification
why were these “problems” problematic?
Dekulakization and Famine
Kulaks
Who were the kulaks?
- in theory: wealthy peasants who used hired labor and engaged in rural usury
- in practice: peasants (broadly defined)
Dekulakization: “destroy kulaks as a class”
- Politburo order, Jan 30, 1930
- arrest kulaks, confiscate their property
- sentencing quotas:
- 60,000 to concentration camps
- 150,000 resettled to remote areas
- death penalty for kulaks in “counterrevolutionary core”
Who was “dekulakized”? (data from Memorial NGO)
- Occupation
- 93.7% farming
- 5.9% services
- 0.4% other
- Nationality
- 76% Russian
- 9% Ukrainian
- 2.5% Tatar
- 12.5% other
- Party affiliation
- 48% no party
- 6% Communist
- Education
- 47% none/illiterate
- 52% primary
- 1% secondary
- 0.2% higher
Holodomor
Explanations for 1933 Ukrainian famine
- Bad weather
- unusually cold, wet spring
- unusually hot, dry summer
- early frost in fall
- disrupted sowing, germination
- Bad policies
- collectivization
- rural brain drain due to dekulakization
- punitive production quotas
- confiscation of grain, livestock
- internal passports
- use of hunger as punishment
- Ethnic discrimination
- punitive measures stricter in Ukraine than in other regions
- more excess fatalities in Ukraine than in other regions
Discussion:
How could famine have been avoided?
- reduce pace of industrialization?
- reduce quotas?
- reduce exports of grain?
- return to market system?
- go easy on the kulaks?
- accept foreign aid?
NEXT MEETING
Forced Labor and the Gulag (Tu, Sep. 26)
- mass bondage machine
- things to consider:
- what parallels and difference do you see between the
Gulag and other forced labor institutions we’ve covered?
- what came first: demand for forced labor, or supply of
forced laborers?