1 / 12

New Economic Policies 1921-1929

New Economic Policies 1921-1929. Effects of Civil War and War Communism (1917-1920). Decline of industry and agriculture Social leveling – landowners and the better-off flee Peasants got the land and retreated to a communal lifestyle Still subject to taxes and expropriations of grain

Télécharger la présentation

New Economic Policies 1921-1929

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New Economic Policies1921-1929

  2. Effects of Civil War andWar Communism (1917-1920) • Decline of industry and agriculture • Social leveling – landowners and the better-off flee • Peasants got the land and retreated to a communal lifestyle • Still subject to taxes and expropriations of grain • Great suffering by workers, who made up the armies • Factories closed, industries wiped out • Workers returned to the countryside and the farms • Bolsheviks in charge but remain paranoid, feel enemies are waiting to pounce • 1920 Bolshevik “Democratic opposition” – objections to bureaucratization, demands for democracy within the party and for worker control of the workplace • 1921 Kronstadt uprising – sailors demand soviets without Bolsheviks, free elections, freedom for workers and peasants • 10th. Party Congress: Far-reaching decision to outlaw factions within the Party • Reaching out to minorities: Stalin becomes Commissar of Nationalities

  3. 1921: NEP begins; Partybecomes all-powerful • Abandon war communism • Government enterprises must show a profit • Free trade in grain; tax rather than expropriation • Encourage small-scale private enterprise • Mining, banking, foreign trade under govt. control • Primacy of the Party • Government subordinated, soviets lose influence • Central Committee makes all major decisions • Party controls key citizen organizations • Labor union branches at every workplace • Komsomol, the Communist youth league • Lenin uses show trials to repress dissidence and demonstrate “correct” line • Arrested and imprisoned members of Cadet Party • 1922 - two dozen Socialist Revolutionaries placed on trial • Gregory Pyatakov sat as chief judge • Central committee members were sentenced to death. But all the sentences were commuted.

  4. A quasi-capitalist economy • Russia imported most of its heavy equipment,including railroad engines, and most machinery • Expense drained domestic budget • Wild fluctuation in industrial and agriculturalprices; high inflation • Economy stabilized by 1924. Currency based on gold. • Private enterprise accounts for more than 50% of national income • Social class distinctions; wealth amidst poverty • “NEPmen,” traders who sold goods to farmers and produce to city dwellers (above photograph) • Citizens free to change jobs; skilled much better pay than unskilled • Opportunities for the better-educated in government work • Wages low, unemployment major factor • Large rural population too large – 80 percent of Russians live on farms • People from countryside flock to cities for jobs

  5. Agriculture during NEP • Weak Government authority outside cities • Farmers isolated, farming is primitive • Farms small, land has been excessivelydivided • Primitive growing practices • Use food for their own needs, sell what’s left to the cities • Bolshevik ideology clashes with peasant practices • Enraged by peasants pricing based on supply & demand • Exaggerated view of class distinctions. Kulaks (“wealthy” farmers) are compared to NEPmen (photo shows Kulaks being dispossessed) • Kulaks feared for their political power • Bolsheviks want more efficient, large-scale communal farming • Two obstacles: insufficient machinery and a hostile rural population

  6. Society during NEP • Bolsheviks appalled at Russia’s backwardness,anxious to advance culture: • Material aspects, including hygiene and electrification • Science, engineering and the arts • Scientists and professors highly valued • They establish laws of nature, much like Marx established laws of society • Writers, musicians, painters valued because they can help spread the gospel • Censorship relatively light-handed • Commissariat for Enlightenment had lists of banned books • Many artists fled, but those who remained got remarkablyfree rein; the Avant-garde flourished (graphic part of 1905-1930 Russian Avant-garde exhibit) • Exception: Newspapers and writings by competing socialist factions – Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries – are strictly censored

  7. Socialist legality • Criminal Code of 1922 formalizes the“revolutionary justice” of war communism • Art. 45: “socialist conception of justice” • Art. 46: “crimes…against the regime” • Art. 47: “harm to the interests of the Stateor the toilers [even when not directed at either] • Art. 58-1 “…directed towards the overthrow, undermining or weakening of the Workers’ and Peasants’ Soviets…” • Art. 58-7: “…undermining of state industry…by working against their normal activities…” • Art. 58-13: “Any act or active struggle against the working class • Heaviest penalties for “counter-revolutionary” rather than ordinary crimes • Concept of “wrecking”

  8. 1922: Stalin or Trotsky?A question of succession • 1922 – Lenin incapacitated (dies in 1924) • Stalin, Zinoviev and Kamenev in ruling “troika” (triumvirate) • But real struggle is between Stalin and Trotsky • Trotsky • War hero, popular with military, lower levels of bureaucracy, students • Abrasive, doctrinaire • Backs leftist economics, pushes to tax peasants and force industrialization • An “internationalist” – Communism first requires a world revolution • Stalin • Commissar for Nationalities • 1922 – Chairman of Communist Party Central Committee, in charge of Party bureaucracy • Excellent politician, coalition builder, practical-minded • Counseled by Bukharin to go easy on peasants and workers • Sees world revolution as wildly premature • Championed “socialism in one country” – Russia can go it alone

  9. 1923-1924: Trotsky & Stalinstruggle for supremacy • 1923 – “Left Opposition”: Trotsky, Serebryakov,Piatakov, Smirnov, Radek... • Circulates “Letter of the 46” • Criticizes bureaucratization, lack of democracy within the Party, top-down decision-making • Claims regime farther away from “worker’s democracy” than before • 1923 – Trotsky calls for purge of bureaucrats • Hostile reception by triumvirate and others: is Trotsky splitting the Party? • 1924 – 13th. Party Conference – majority condemns Left Opposition • Stalin and Zinoviev attack Trotsky for factionalism • Trotsky Contradicts NEP, argues against Stalin’s “Socialism in one country.” • Demands more pressure on “kulaks” and “capitalists” • Endorses forced industrialization • Criticizes Zinoviev and Kamenev in 1917 (they said Revolution premature) • Left Opposition censured, Trotsky booted from post as War Commissar

  10. 1924-25: Leftist opposition to Stalin • 1924 – Full members of Politburo (top of the Party Central Committee) • Stalin, Bukharin, Zinoviev, Kamenev, Rykov, Tomsky, Trotsky • Bukharin allies with Stalin, becomes chief promoter of NEP • Urges relaxations against “Kulaks” • 1924-25 – opposition develops. Includes “Zinovievists” and “Trotskyists.” • Zinoviev and Kamenev form New Opposition • Accuse Stalin of becoming a dictator, argue for democracy in the Party • Criticize “Kulakization” – rich farmers – say it’s a retreat • Endorse concept of world revolution • 1925 – Party Congress repudiates the New Opposition • Kamenev reduced to candidate member of Politburo • United Opposition forms – Kamenev and Zinoviev ally withTrotsky, Muralov, Pyatakov, Radek, Smirnov, Bakayev…

  11. United Opposition defeated,Trotsky exiled to Europe • December 1927 – 15th. Party Congress • Trotsky, Zinoviev expelled from Party CC(Central Committee) • Recommended for expulsion: Kamenev, Pyatakov, Radek, Smirnov… • They attempt a demonstration – supporters arrested • Zinovievists capitulate • Zinoviev, Kamenev, Bakayev readmitted, later gain Party posts • Trotskyists refuse to capitulate • Trotsky gets internal exile, then deported to Europe in 1929 • First in Turkey, then France in 1933, Norway in 1935 Norway, finally Mexico in 1937 • Radek exiled to Siberia • Capitulates in 1929, readmitted to the PartyBut it’s not over until the “rude Georgian” sings...

  12. Stalin moves left,Right Opposition forms • 1928 – Peasants hoard grain, demand better prices • Stalin changes course to the Left • Like Trotsky, demands expropriations • Endorses forced collectivization and rapid industrialization • Bukharin, a moderate, opposes these moves. Supported by Rykov and Tomsky. • 1929 – they publish the “Platform of the Three” • Accuse Stalin of “military-feudal exploitation of the peasantry” • Warn of rupture between peasants and workers • Suggest incentives rather than coercion • Want to expand and improve NEP • Stalin and supporters criticize the three and their followers as “Right Deviationists” who are defending capitalism • 1930-31 political campaign against the Rightists • Rightists lose influence, capitulate The “rude Georgian” is now the de-facto Dictator of the USSR

More Related