Introduction: During the years 1928-34 Stalin established a totalitarian dictatorship where he controlled everything. Stalin brought in Economic Policies and introduced the idea of "The Planned Economy".
Stalinism
Stalin by 1928 began the process that was to establish a totalitarian dictatorship. Terror was used, both to revolutionise the economic and social system and to consolidate his own personal power.
Stalin's power was based on three institutions:
Economic Policies 1928-41
The mixed system of private and state owned enterprises, introduced by Lenin as the New Economic Policy, in 1921, was abolished. The introduction of the first five-year plan, to run from 1929-33, changed the path of the USSR to the path of a centralised economic policy. The second five-year plan followed between 1933-37, while a third (1937-42) was disrupted by the outbreak of WWII. The Overall aim of these policies was to match and to surpass, in the shortest time possible, the economically superior Western Capitalist states. Gulags (prison camps) were used to intimate those who resisted CPSU control of their employment and to encourage everyone to work harder for the good of the State.BR>
The main tool of the government in theses tasks was to be the central planning committee (GOSPLAN)
In industry; the planned economy meant an expansion in output, an improvement in communications and the discovery and exploration of new resources to predetermined quotas.
In Agriculture it meant, not only the forced grain quotas of 1928-29, but also a fundamental change in the Agrarian life of the USSR.
The way out of Russia's agrarian backwardness, Stalin declared to the Party in December 1927, "is to turn the small and scattered peasant farms into large united farms based on collectivisation of the land in common.
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The Planned Economy: Agriculture No branch of the Soviet economy was as sensationally affected by the policy of centralisation, as was agriculture. Food requisitions might do in the short term but Stalin believed collectivisation to be the real answer: that is, peasants' land would be taken from them to make up huge mechanised farms (Kolkhozes). Collectivisation, Stalin hoped would serve a number of purposes:
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Was against the countryside
Collectivisation in the countryside has been described as a 'war between the peasants' Stalin sent agents into the countryside to stir up hatred against the 'kulaks'. With the aid of Party officials, police and the Army a class war was waged against the countryside between late 1928 and March 1930, involving the dispossession, deportation and often murder of those designated as 'kulaks'.
The ruthless elimination of the private farmer continued. In 1938, the Soviet Union boasted 242,000 collective farms (kolkhozes). Ninety percent of the produce that a kolkhoz produced was to be sold to the state. The remaining 10% was used to feed the members of the collective.
Results
These were mixed. There were certain failures as well as a degree of success
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The Planned Economy: Industry The aim of the First Five Year Plan, commenced in 1929 was nothing less than to lay the foundations for the transformation of soviet society into a industrial workforce comparable to the United States. Its main emphasis, therefore, fell upon the production of energy, construction material, coal, oil, electricity, iron, steel and cement. Increases of around 20% were hoped for, but this was highly unrealistic. However, machinery output increased four times, oil production doubled, and electrical output in 1932 was 250% of the 1928 figure. One major problem that prevented the targets being met was that many soviet workers were inefficient. The most effective solution was to encourage workers to complete against one another - called 'Stahhmovites' (Star) workers, who were rewarded with extra pay and privileges.
The Second Five Year Plan (1933-37) avoided some of the mistakes of the first. The second plan concentrated more upon the improvement of soviet communications. This Plan produced some Soviet "show pieces" such as the Moscow-Volga canal and, most famous of all, the palatial Moscow Metro. | ![]() |
Results