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Remember that there was no unemployment too, it was a crime to be unemployed. Stalin had everyone working, something that can be seen to be a good thing.Chew me:) said:1544 words
Evaluate the view that Stalin produced positive changes for soviet society (until 1939)
In 1924, Stalin’s position of General Secretary gave the opportunist an upper hand in gaining power. After gradually doing so, Stalin had one essential aim, the modernisation of the Soviet Union, and two essential methods, collectivisation and industrialisation. Through the use of force, brutality and ruthlessness, Stalin used collectivisation as a means of gaining more control over the peasantry who would consequently work as labour in industries. Afterward, he used the idea of five-year plans to aid the process of industrialisation and to quicken its pace. Until 1939, Stalin did achieve, to an extent, modernisation, however, at the suffering of millions of innocent people.
Russia is commonly described as an economically backwards country in the early 20th century. However, when Stalin gained most of the power in the USSR through his position of General Secretary in the Politburo, he introduced collectivisation of large-scale farms (kokhozee) on December 27, 1929. This meant that, ideally, peasants would voluntarily hand over their privately run small farms to the Central Committee in order for collectivisation. It was then assumed that modern agricultural methods would create a surplus of labour that would then be employed in the factories, thus beginning industrialisation. However, the Central Committee was faced with a vast amount of resistance, in which peasants and the Kulaks in particular, sold off their grain cheaply, destroyed their implements, and slaughtered their animals. This led to the quickening of the pace of collectivisation, where “techniques became compulsory, forced, and brutal.” Okay but why did the peasants resist? There's a great quote about Stalin and Churchill chatting about how Stalin thought that collectivisation was harder than the second world war. Why? Because the peasants are resistant to change.
“Kulak” had traditionally been a derogatory term in Russia and had Instead of two "and"s link the ideas together using "with" instead of the first "and".connotations of exploitation and misery. Any peasant who was against the forced requisitioning and collectivisation was branded a “Kulak”. They were either deprived of their land, sent to Siberia or shot. Deported Kulaks often took weeks to reach Siberia, and as a result of being unfed and subject to sub-zero temperatures, many died on their way. The gulag.Those that did reach their destination were put in camps and used as slave labour. In eliminating the Kulaks, Stalin had deprived his country of its most productive farmers. The bulk of the other peasants were in no mood to apply themselves for the interests of the state. This meant that seeds went unsown and crops went unharvested, thus leading to “the first purely man-made famine in history” according to historian Isaac Deutscher.
Unrealistic quotas were demanded in villages and regions, which, if not met, Officials would swarm over the region and collect all the food they could find. Stalin’s plan was to starve the peasantry into submission, and ff "if"necessary, sentence them to death by hunger. People were desperate for food to the extent that they stood by railway tracks in the hope that food might be thrown from the passing trains. One of the main centres of resistance was in Ukraine, as one woman claimed that it was “a war in which the weapons were not tanks, machine guns or bullets – but hunger”. This shows that through methods of collectivisation, Stalin was allowing soviet society to endure greater pains and losses.
The confiscated grain was either exported to earn foreign currency, or was simply allowed to rot. None was released to feed the starving masses and consequently, an estimated 10-15 million people died as a result of the famine. The result of collectivisation was that, by 1937, the output from the privately owned plots was greater than that of the collectives. Grain production was 73.3 million tonnes in 1928 yet fell to 69.5 in 1931 and rose to 75.0 in 1935. This shows it took a full seven years before grain production recovered to reach 1928 levels. On the other hand, the number of tractors and combine harvesters available increased considerably. This show the positive changes, which resulted from collectivisation, yet at a high cost, socially.
Although agricultural output did eventually increase sufficiently to support industrial growth, “Collectivisation was in effect a civil war unleashed by the Party on the peasant population” as, stated by Alan Wood in “Stalin and Stalinism”. The famine, which was avoidable, outweighs the agricultural output, which returned to the level recorded for Tsarist Russia in 1913, thus proving that Stalin slightly produced positive changes for Soviet Society, but at a large cost.
As a result of making industrialisation the country’s first priority in 1927 through collectivisation, Stalin produced the first five-year plans, where damns, dams. iron and steel, automobiles, tractors, railroads and armaments were of high priority. Officially launched in 1928, the five-year plans “were intended to bring about an economic miracle by transforming the Soviet Union into an advanced, industrialised socialist state in ten years.” The plan was backed by a system of rewards, such as additional pay, extra allowances of food, and improved housing and punishments, which consisted of the forfeit of pay and food to which workers were normally entitled. Although workers were forced to work extremely long hours for limited rewards, the majority were consciously enthusiastic as they helped modernise their country. John Scott, an American who witnessed the events first hand, points this out in his book Behind the Urals: An American Worker in Russia’s City of Steel; “…Soviet Youth found heroism in working in factories and of construction sites…”. This shows that through the peasants’ enthusiasm, Industrialisation was seen as quite possible, as opposed to collectivisation.