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New Economic Policies 1921-1929

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Title: New Economic Policies 1921-1929


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 whats 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 Russias
    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
    therevolutionary justice of war communism
  • Art. 45 socialist conception of justice
  • Art. 46 crimesagainst 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 industryby
    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 workers
    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 Stalins
    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
    its 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
    its 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
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