Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Collectivisation
- Traditionally, peasants had
worked on small farms with little
technology. Stalin planned to
merge all farms into collective
farms ‘Kolkhoz’
- The farm was to be farmed as
one unit and peasants could
keep up to one acre for
themselves
- Once the quota had been met,
peasants could sell any surplus at
local markets
- Collective farms had to deliver
quotas of grain which the state sold
to towns
- 50-100 households would be put together and all tools, land and animals combined
- The state would provide tractors and fertilisers
which would help modernise production
- MTS Stations: Machine Tractor Stations
- They hired and maintained machinery
- MTS stations also had a political
department to spy on the peasants and to
ensure order
- Liquidation of the Kulaks- Dec 1929
- Dukulakisation – poorest peasants would be able to use Kulak’s resources
- Collectivisation = loss of independence and loss of £
- Peasants rebelled, destroying grain and
livestock rather than giving it to the
Communists
- Collectivisation Stops- March 1930
- Disregarded human suffering caused
- ‘Dizzy with success’ – Pravda – so good it would
be suspended
- Kulak’s and families either shot or herded
into trucks and exiled to Siberia
- Chaos in
agricultural
economy
- Hostility and sabotage
- Collectivisation Resumes- 1931
- Unrealistic goals
- Severe punishment for sabotage
and failing to meet targets
- All grain confiscated
- International offers of
aid rejected
- Famine as a result of government
policy
- 10million deaths during
famine
- Grain sat in barns rotting
- Pay
- Workers received no wages but
were given ‘workdays’
- At the end of the year, the profits of the farm were
calculated and divided up according to the number of
workdays
- Most made little profit so peasants relied on
selling what they produced on their private plots