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Overview: Russia in Historical Perspective

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1918 - 1921: War Communism. 1921 - 1928: New Economic Policy (NEP) ... Communism Resurgence? Planned versus Managed Economy ... War Communism: Establishment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overview: Russia in Historical Perspective


1
Overview Russia in Historical Perspective
  • Igor Lukashin
  • ECN 365/ ECN 394 Lecture

2
Legacy A Timetable
  • 1917 - 1991 Building socialism
  • 1918 - 1921 War Communism
  • 1921 - 1928 New Economic Policy (NEP)
  • Late 20 Industrialization debate, start of
    rapid industrialization and collectivizaiton
  • 30s - purges, five-year plans
  • 40s - Great Patriotic War, rebuilding
  • 50s - Stalin/Khrushchev

3
Legacy A Timetable, Continued
  • 60s - 70s Brezhnev, stagnation
  • 80s - Andropov, Chernenko, Gorbachev need for
    a change
  • Gorbachev Perestroika, Glasnost
  • 1991 - coup detat, old guard and Gorby out
  • Break-up of the Soviet Union into independent
    states - former republics
  • 90s - Yeltsin, Transition to market, reforms

4
Why Study Planned (Command) Economy
  • Apparently locally Stable system
  • Widely used on a smaller scale within firms
  • A viable alternative mechanism for decision
    making
  • Path-dependent transition past affects mentality
    and infrastructure now Influences decisions for
    tomorrow
  • Communism Resurgence?

5
Planned versus Managed Economy
  • Soviets utilized ad hoc techniques gt managed
  • 5-year plans
  • Command larger resource reallocations possible
    gt rapid industrialization, winning WWII,
    sputnik, nuclear weapons

6
Transition Where do we go?
  • West Infrastructure real/mentality
  • Sweden No high income to afford efficiency
    losses
  • Russian Way ??

7
Models of Transition
  • Tsarist economy
  • Too long ago
  • Creates revolutionary situations
  • NEP
  • war ended
  • stable currency
  • small private businesses
  • proportional tax
  • Doomed by crisis, lack of economic growth

8
History of Economic Performance before 1917
  • Previous experience with market economy
  • Determined the economic base for Soviets
  • Measurement of Performance
  • Important economic issues/events
  • Modern Economic Growth Framework
  • Industry Agriculture Levels
  • Statistical Structural Changes
  • Problems availability accuracy of data, formed
    stereotypes

9
Industrial Growth Under Tsars Peter The Great
  • Westernized Russia gt military superpower
  • Reinforced serfdom as an economic resource
  • Gap in development vis-à-vis the west widens with
    successive rulers

10
Industrial Growth Under Tsars Late 19th century
  • Witte Railroads from 2k to 70k in 50 years
  • Role of State in Development
  • Guarantor of bonds gt attracting foreign capital
  • Conservative monetary policy Gold Standard
  • Development of heavy industry through
  • Tariffs Compare Under Soviets
  • profit guarantees
  • tax reduction/exemption
  • key element of military strategy

11
Industrial Growth Formation of Entrepreneurial
Class
  • Tsars signature required on charter of every
    joint-stock company
  • Start through state subsidies or preferred state
    orders
  • Bribery - routine cost bureaucratic intervention
    - commonplace
  • Entrepreneurial associations lobby for
  • For less restrictions on themselves
  • For more restrictions on foreign competition

12
Accelerated Growth After 1880
  • Natural consequence of market forces, or
  • Direct State Intervention
  • Relative Backwardness the larger the gap, the
    stronger the tension prompting for change

13
Agriculture Under Tsars
  • Serfdom
  • Virtual slavery sale military service work
    lords land give to lord from own crop churchs
    10
  • 1861 - emancipation of slaves
  • To prevent revolts and keep the status quo
  • Allotments of land for peasants redemption
  • Communal agriculture retained
  • Cant leave until debt-free internal passports

14
Agrarian Crisis (1880s)
  • Tax arrears, Peasant unrest gt Stolypin reforms
  • Consolidation of land
  • Cancellation of peasant debt
  • Allowed to withdraw from communes
  • Was there a crisis?

15
Growth/Development
  • Extensive growth (increase in inputs, same
    technology)
  • Human Capital Investment Literacy rates
  • Population Growth (Explosion) Endogenous
  • Facilitated by infrastructure growth (railroads)

16
Foreign Investment
  • No domestic saving gt jump-start development
  • Imported technology
  • 1913 - domestic production of capital equipment
    limited
  • Foreign Capital 40 of industry investment,
    15-20 of total investment
  • Russia - largest debtor, 15 of world debt

17
Bolshevik Revolution
  • 7 Nov 1917 The Great October Socialist
    Revolution
  • Land Decree 11/8/1917
  • Nationalization of all land
  • Peasant distribution of land
  • Reinstalled mir, created selsovet
  • Industry Strategic Nationalization

18
Civil War and Foreign Intevention
  • White army (old regime) foreigners (Germans,
    English, French
  • Red Army held 25 territory, 10 coal supplies,
    25 iron foundries, 50 grain
  • Cut in Real GDP
  • No Tax Base
  • War expenses up
  • No foreign aid

19
War Communism Establishment
  • 1917 -21 8000 times price increase gt market
    breakdown (unstable currency)
  • Barter, naturalization of the economy
  • War Communism
  • Money Eliminated
  • Workers militarized, paid equal wages
  • Farm output requisitioned

20
War Communism Policies
  • Forcible requisitioning - Cheka
  • Prodrazverstka - May 9, 1918 gt no incentives for
    peasants
  • Nationalization
  • Ideological
  • Lacking control
  • Lacking central direction gt premature
  • Abolition of private trade
  • Black market gt what did they trade in?

21
Warm Communism Policies Continued
  • Labor Policy
  • Semi-military controls
  • Restriction on movement
  • Compulsory labor for all able-bodied
  • Distribution of income
  • Class rations
  • Four gradations from heavy work to the unemployed

22
Effectiveness of War Communism
  • Estranged peasants gt drop of production,
    hoarding
  • No coordination in industry
  • Economic collapse (20 of 1913 levels)
  • Wage disincentives gt lack of labor supply gt
    outflow from cities to rural areas
  • Electrificatin GOELRO
  • War is over, people not happy gt NEP

23
NEP
  • Combination of market and socialism
  • Government retained commanding heights
  • Rural gt market trade for grain

24
NEP Policies
  • Prodnalog proportional agricultural tax of about
    10 on average
  • Allowed
  • Lease land
  • Hire help
  • Sell to anybody in the market
  • Money reintroduced, Chervonets - stable currency
    backed by gold
  • Savings Encouraged anti-confiscation law

25
NEP Policies Continued
  • Public Industry
  • Decision making still decentralized
  • Aggregation into trusts with little government
    control
  • Lack of coordination
  • Foreign Trade
  • Slow growth due to prior foreign debt repudiation
  • Actively granting/ seeking concessions

26
NEP Results and End
  • Agriculture successfully recovered
  • Industry recovery reached limits
  • Contrary to ideology
  • Growing threat of prosperous peasants (kulaks)
  • Scissors crisis What was it?
  • Failure to appreciate market economy, inflation
    pressures, opportunity costs, price floors, labor
    allocation incentives
  • State the main ideas youll be talking about

27
Topic One
  • Details about this topic
  • Supporting information and examples
  • How it relates to your audience

28
Topic Two
  • Details about this topic
  • Supporting information and examples
  • How it relates to your audience

29
Topic Three
  • Details about this topic
  • Supporting information and examples
  • How it relates to your audience

30
Real Life
  • Give an example or real life anecdote
  • Sympathize with the audiences situation if
    appropriate

31
What This Means
  • Add a strong statement that summarizes how you
    feel or think about this topic
  • Summarize key points you want your audience to
    remember

32
Next Steps
  • Summarize any actions required of your audience
  • Summarize any follow up action items required of
    you
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