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Page 1: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change
Page 2: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Background By 1928 production in

the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.

The NEP had served a useful purpose.

Why did Stalin decide to change course?

Page 3: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Was it ideological? A vast increase in

production was needed for the transition from Socialism to Communism.

Was Stalin trying to rush the process?

Was he trying to turn the population into a vast proletariat that would form the social base necessary for this transition?

Page 4: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Was it a reaction to a perceived threat from without?

In 1931 Stalin said: “We must cover this distance in ten years. Either we do this or they will crush us.”

But in 1931, there was no substantial outside threat.

Page 5: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Perhaps the it had its roots in the political infighting that continued even after Stalin had come to dominate the party.

The strongest proponents of the NEP were, after all, Rykov and Bukharin – Stalin’s most recent adversaries.

Page 6: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Stalin’s Method: The Five-Year Plans

“We are fifty to a hundred years behind the advanced countries. Either we make good this difference in ten years or we shall be crushed”.

“The fundamental task of the Five Year Plan is to convert the USSR from an agrarian and weak country dependent on the caprices of the capitalist countries, into an industrial and powerful country, fully self-reliant and independent of world capitalism”.

In your own words, summarise what the main objectives of the Five Year Plans

appear to be.

Page 7: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Whatever the case, 1928 was a pivotal year. Stalin announced two goals:

Collectivization of Agriculture – Stalin wanted to destroy the private farm and impose an industrial model on the countryside.

Massive Industrialization – Production would be stepped up enormously and, in doing so, he would destroy the power and influence of opposition within the Party.

The Vehicle for change in the countryside and the cities would be the First Five Year Plan. Centralized planning would determine everything.

Two Goals

Page 8: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Collectivization

The Party had an inherent bias against the countryside.

Its ideology was based on proletarian interests.

Stalin now accused the farmers of not doing their bit.

Chief among his targest were the kulaks – the wealthier farmers.

Page 9: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Collectivization There really were not very

many wealthy farmers.

Stalin was really just reversing Lenin’s policy of allying with the peasants.

Now the agrarian problem would be solved through the destruction of the peasantry in their current form.

Page 10: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Collectivization Any farmer

could be accused of being a kulak – even entire villages were so-labeled.

As “class enemies” they could be destroyed.

Page 11: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Farmers were called upon to sign up for membership on two kinds of farms. They might join a Sovkhoz – a state

farm, where they would serve as labourers on a state owned farm.

They might join a Kolkhoz, a collective farm, which involved some sort of joint ownership on the part of the membership.

Collectivization

Page 12: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Collectivization. On January 20, 1930

there were a little over 4 million collective farm peasants.

By March 1, 1930 there were over 14 million.

The result was not improved agriculture, but disaster.

Page 13: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Collectivization. Most went only

unwillingly. Once signed up,

there was often no organization ready for them.

Stalin made his “Dizzy from success” speech, where he called for a slowing down to let organization catch up.

Page 14: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Collectivization

By May 1, 1930, the number dropped to 6 million.

Yet the goal remained unchanged. This was delay, not retreat.

By the end of 1932, 60% of peasant families were collectivized. At a huge cost to the peasantry.

Page 15: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Collectivization Collectivization

sometimes resembled civil war.

One OGPU (security police) colonel told a foreign journalist: “I am an old Bolshevik. I

worked in the underground against the Tsar and then I fought in the Civil War. Did I do all that in order that I should now surround villages with machine guns and order my men to fire indiscriminately into crowds of peasants? Oh, no, no.”

Page 16: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Collectivization Agricultural production

dropped substantially. In 1933 the number of

horses in the USSR was less than half of the 1928 figure.

In 1937, per capita production of all farm products was below the pre-1928 level.

Cattle numbers fell by 1/3, sheep and goats by half.

Horses could be replaced by tractors; nothing could replace other animals.

Page 17: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Famine As many as 5 million

peasants died in the campaign and the 1932 famine – a disaster every bit as bad as that of 1921, but this time there could be no outside help as Stalin would not even admit there was a problem.

Page 18: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Historian JP Nettle, The Soviet Achievement, notes: “…the squeeze and the Five Year Plan based on it were

not relaxed. Agricultural production fell substantially in the early period of collectivization, but the quota of compulsory food deliveries to the state was maintained almost intact – the first commandment – as Stalin called it. The difference was made up in the kitchens and hearths of the collective households.”

The Farmers of the Soviet Union would be made to pay the vast cost of industrializing the country. The money could not be raised voluntarily within the USSR, nor could it be borrowed abroad. It was plied from the pockets of the peasants.

Collectivization

Page 19: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

The first five year plan was adopted in April, 1929.

Priority was given to heavy industrial, not consumer goods. Total output was to increase 250%. Heavy Industrial output was to grow 330%. Pig iron output was to increase 300%. Coal production by 200%. Electrical production by 400%.

Industrialization

Page 20: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Industrialization When some party

leaders challenged the figures, Stalin had them raised – eventually calling for the completion of the plan in four, not five years.

Page 21: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Industrialization Targets were

impossible. Supply and

distribution problems arose. Buildings were put up

and no equipment provided.

Equipment rusted because it was delivered to a place with no building to house it.

Page 22: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Industrialization Shoddy products were

produced that could not function – just to reach production targets.

Sometimes transportation facilities didn’t move products to their final destinations.

Page 23: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Despite the problems, Stalin remained unmoved.

Economic goals must have been secondary to Stalin. What he wanted was a transformation of

Soviet society. All were to be made subservient to the

state. It worked.

Industrialization

Page 24: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Labour Changes After 1928, with the

increase in labour demand, a system of “organized intake” was arrived at.

Collective farm chairmen could send workers into factories when agreements were reached with industrial managers.

Piece rate wages replaced fixed salaries.

Page 25: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Labour Changes The Marxist slogan

“from each according to his ability, to each according to his need” was replaced with “from each according to his ability, to each according to his work.”

Page 26: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

Labour Changes In 1931 and

1932, legislation was passed forcing workers to go wherever the authorities sent them.

In 1932, workers guilty of one day’s voluntary absence from a job were dismissed and deprived of their housing.

Page 27: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

The New Soviet Citizen

While politics and economics had been somewhat separated during the NEP period, now they were inextricably linked.

To fail to produce one’s quota was not just an industrial failing, but a political failing too.

Newspapers were full of stories of industrial heroes – models for all Soviet citizens to copy.

Page 28: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

The New Soviet People in all areas

had their work allotted them.

Even writers, film-makers and artists had to conform to “Soviet Realism” – a new conformity.

The days of experimentation were over.

Page 29: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

When it ended, after 4 years, the 1st 5 year Plan was a failure in terms of reaching its targets – in agriculture and industry.

It did produce a new society. The Soviet pattern of big enterprises was

established. All workers were subservient to the state. Money for foreign purchases was expropriated

from NEPmen (those who profited under the NEP) and farmers.

Central Asia and Siberia were opened for development.

The First Five Year Plan

Page 30: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

The Stalin Revolution

Overshadowing the Second Five Year Plan was a far more important event – or series of events – which makes its achievements and failures dim in comparison – The Great Purge.

Page 31: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

The Second Five Year Plan

Announced in 1933, it was to be completed in 1937.

It aimed to “eliminate completely the capitalist elements” in the USSR. Though by this time,

private businesses and trade had disappeared – except for the products of market plots – and, of course, the black market.

Page 32: Background  By 1928 production in the USSR once again reached 1914 levels.  The NEP had served a useful purpose.  Why did Stalin decide to change

The Second Five Year Plan

In this plan, the focus was on producing better quality goods, since those of the first plan were terrible.

Wage differences grew. In agriculture, at last,

tractors arrived at the new Motor Tractor Stations.