Title: Introducing%20the%20Russian%20Case
1Introducing the Russian Case
- What are the outcomes to be explained?
- Old Russia
- defeated in multiple wars
- Soviet Union
- victorious in WW II (Allies)
- superpower during Cold War
- political collapse during reform process
- New Russia (Russian Federation)
- Market and democratic reforms under Yeltsin
- partly free (Freedom House)
- economically struggling
- Rolling back of market and democratic reforms
under Putin - Putinformer KGB officerelected president in
2000 - Now not free (Freedom House)
- economically struggling 2004 GDP lt 1989 GDP
2Socio-economic Development (2004 data)
Country GDP per capita (ppp, US) HDI Rank
United States 39,676 8
Britain 30,821 18
Japan 29,251 7
Russia 9,902 65
Mexico 9,803 53
China 5,896 81
Nigeria 1,154 159
Source Human Development Report, 2006
3How to explain theoretically?
- Major debates
- statist vs. neo-liberal
4Origins of Soviet System
- Lenin, Bolshevik Party
- Slogan Peace, Land, and Bread
- Appeals to
- Soldiers
- Workers
- peasants
5Goals of Soviet System
- Massive economic transformation
- Rapid industrialization for national defense
- Massive ideological transformation
-
6Ideological Transformation Totalitarianism
- Charismatic leader
- Stalin (Gen Sec 1922-53)
- Single dominant party
- CPSU (Communist Party of Soviet Union)
- vanguard party
- democratic centralism
- Utopian, forward-looking ideology
- Marxism-Leninism
- State control over all organized activity
- nomenklatura
- list of positionsappointment controlled by
party - Arbitrary terror
7Totalitarianism Authoritarianism charismatic
leader ? more routinized succession single
dominant party ? single dominant
party utopian, forward-looking ideology ?
economic performance/nationalism state control
over all ? emergence of non-political
private organized activity sphere arbitrary
terror ? end of arbitrary terror,
but no overt challenge to regime
allowed mass mobilization ? apathy okay
8Economic Transformation Planned Economy
- Contrast market and planned economies
- Contrast Japan and Soviet Union
- Key features of planned economy
- Planners preferences (not consumers prefs)
- ? Heavy industry with defense applications
- State ownership (no private)
- Factories
- Farms
- State-set prices (no free market forces)
9Planned Economy
- How did the Soviet economy affect the average
citizen? - No consumer choice
- No chance to get rich, little socio-economic
advancement - But
- Security
- Relatively egalitarian
- Basic needs met
- ? Important to understanding public reaction to
shock therapy