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Transcript The collective farm
Variants of Transition among
Former Socialist Economies
Chapter X
The Former Soviet Union:
The Myth and Reality of the Command
Economy and Russia’s Economic Transition
1
Transformation of Russian economy in
1990s
Centrally planned economy was replaced by
an economy operating on the basis of market
forces and private property
Some of the former communist states of
Central Europe began their process of
economic transition earlier
2
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
Until December 25, 1991
USSR was the largest country in the world
Occupied 1/6th of the earth’s inhabited land
293 million population (third largest in the
world)
128 ethnic groups
3
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
Until December 25, 1991
Ethnic Groups in USSR
Eastern Slavs (70 percent)
Russians
Belorussians
Ukranians
Turkic
Baltic
Finno-Ugric
Caucasian
Persian
Armenian
4
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
Russian Empire before 1917
Intermediate case compared to underdeveloped
Asia and to industrially developed Western and
Central Europe
Duality between
traditional agriculture and
military-driven industrial development
This duality produced undecided attitudes toward
change and reforms: Change is seen as
industrialization at the expense of agriculture
5
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
Russian Empire before 1917
Peasant Emancipation Act of 1861
Abolished serfdom
Granted personal freedom to the peasants
However, the freedom given by Peasant
Emancipation Act was constrained by
collective decision-making in rural communes
(mir)
6
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
Russian Empire before 1917
Rural Communes (Mir)
Rural communes started in 1400s and survived into the 19th
century
Collective land ownership
Held back private farming in most of European part of Russia
Communal Agrarian Practice feeding the uniqueness of the
Russian economic tradition
Allowed Russia to avoid industrial capitalism
Given the Russian peasants egalitarian (democratic) and
collectivists instincts → Forced Russia into agrarian
communism
7
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
Russian Empire before 1917
Industrialization
Industry was considered as alien to Russian culture
Initial foundation of heavy industry in late 1600s
under Tsar Peter the Great was associated with his
pro-western policy of modernizing Russia
Peter’s industrialization continued in the aftermath of
Russian army’s defeat in the Crimean War with the
Ottoman Empire, Britain and France in 1854
Industrialization’s belated implementation driven by
militarization
8
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
1917 Revolution
In 1917, in the middle of the First World War,
after the elimination of the Russian autocracy
system and Tsar Nicholas, Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (USSR) under the control
of the Bolshevik party and Lenin was
established
The socialist economy in Soviet Russia did not
start until the First-Five Year Plan in 1928
9
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
New Economic Policy (NEP) 1921
Repair the conflict between the workers and the
peasantry
Allowed limited restoration of markets
Partial reprivatization of previously nationalized
industries
Banks taking responsibility for maintaining critical
state control over strategic key industries controlled
by the state
10
Historical Background of The Soviet Economy:
New Economic Policy (NEP) 1921
Result of NEP reforms, the recovery of
agriculture surpassed that of industry and
was perceived as a possible political threat to
the goals of the proletarian revolution → thus
aborted
The Soviet economy rejected the use of
market forces and turned to command central
planning
11
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Several economic subsystems coexist that ranged
from
Self sufficient communes with mostly barter exchange
Individual small-scale proprietorships
Medium-sized businesses that produced for markets with
the use of hired labor
Also publicly owned large-scale enterprises (mostly in
heavy industries) that by nature were socialist prototypes
using direct administrative allocation of resources and
assigned labor
12
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
This economic pluralism produced political break in
the ruling Communist Party
Leon Trotsky, founder of the Red Army in the Soviet
Union, was Stalin’s chief rival for power
Advocated super-industrialization in the Soviet
Union that would lead to a worldwide permanent
communist revolution
Call for liberalization of domestic and international
markets
13
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Divisions between Trotsky and Stalin
Trotsky and Stalin agreed about the need for
rapid industrialization, but they disagreed
whether this should be done in isolation or in
an international context
Trotsky supported the idea of an international
permanent revolution, believing that true
socialism could not be achieved in the Soviet
Union without an international revolution
14
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Stalin supported an autarkic model of socialism in
one country
Exterminated his opponents (Trotsky) in the party
Established his own cult
Reasserted economic traditionalism in the guise of
revolutionary socialism
15
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Implementing socialism in one country
required speedy industrialization
For self-sufficiency
Military Buildup
Social transformation from a relatively backward
agro-industrial economy into an urban industrial
one ordered by the political center
16
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Disallowed market allocation of resources
State monopolized foreign relations
Closed the economy through restrictions on foreign
trade, currency inconvertibility, and limited trade
specialization
Accelerated industrialization, which favored
producer and military goods at the expense of
agriculture, assumed unbalanced economic growth
17
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Pressure for super-industrialization reinforced by
hostility toward Communism by Britain, Japan,
Poland and Chinese Nationalists
The possibility of foreign military invasion → a push
for rapid change instead of gradualism
The debate on industrialization between the
genetics and the teleologists
Focused on the feasibility of economic engineering
18
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
The genetics argued that planning could give the
market as with indicative planning
Argued for objectivity of economic laws and viewed
planning as a navigating tool
Movement toward general market equilibrium
The teleologists leaned toward social engineering,
with resource allocation determined by planners
A biased economy with an imposed equilibrium reflecting
the preferences of the ruling elite
Sought to eliminate markets that bred capitalism
19
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Super-industrialization favored the
teleologists that asserted the need for longrun plans and opposed market forces
First Five-Year Plan in 1928
Central comprehensive planning
Ensured political control over the diverse republics
Grouping them into economic regions to meet
nation-wide production needs
20
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Prioritize industry over agriculture for sociopolitical
reasons
Emphasize on regional specialization
Deemphasize republic-level diversification
Establish state monopolies in key industries
Eliminate the entrepreneurial subsystems alien to
socialism
21
Command Economy:
Launching the Model
Agricultural collectivization
Forced collective ownership on peasants as a
stepping stone to comprehensive public
ownership
Success of industrialization program turned
out to be a disaster for agriculture
An over-industrialized and over-urbanized
economy with an inadequate and no longer
self-sufficient agricultural sector
22
Command Economy:
Soviet Central Planning: The Beginning
Central administrative planning eliminating waste of
market forces, thus pushing structural and social
reorganization of the economy
Central planners steered individual sectors to
assigned targets and instructed every enterprise,
industry and region
State control over virtually
all means of production and
over investment, production, and consumption decisions
throughout the economy
23
Command Economy:
Soviet Central Planning: The Beginning
Proportionate allocation of resources that are
established a priori by central planning
The initial industry-biased growth to be
compensated for in the long-run by future production
increases in the reprioritized sectors of consumer
and agricultural goods
The economic strategy consisted of plans relying on
mass enthusiasm with little use of material
incentives
24
Command Economy:
Soviet Central Planning: The Beginning
Economic policies designed by Five-Year Plans and Annual
Plans
A dual role → allocating resources and setting targets for
economic growth
According to those economic policies, the State Planning
Committee (Gosplan) formulated countrywide output targets
for certain planning periods
Responsible for plan feasibility studies and for research on
the methodology of balancing nationwide proportions
25
Command Economy:
Soviet Central Planning: The Beginning
The goal of First Five-Year Plan was to catch up
with capitalist industrial countries
Success of the initial industrialization push
attributed to central planning accomplished at cost
of forced collectivization and a major decline in
living standards
The share of private consumption declined
Concentrated investment in growth-supporting
sectors based on domestic savings
26
Command Economy:
Soviet Central Planning: The Beginning
Industrialization produced an extensive bureaucracy
in planning and executive institutions interested in
increasing their own power → rent-seeking
Merger between the party, planners, and the
ministerial and local government bureaucracies
resulting in the formation of a new class
nomenklatura
Consisted of party members appointed to particular
government jobs
27
Soviet Central Planning:
Implementation
Planning versus market
Planning is concerned with expanded
reproduction and particular investment, with
consumption deemphasized
Soviet planning → Prioritized investment to catch
up with the West industrially and militarily
Ignored static efficiency in favor of high rates of economic
growth
28
Soviet Central Planning:
Implementation
A system of annual, medium-term and perspective plans
Increase in the building of overly large production facilities that
would employ up to 10000 people, gigantomania, that led to
industrial and regional monopolization
The problems of implementation:
Informal bargaining by enterprise to lower their quotas plagued
the implementation of plans
The ratchet effect that is an increase in the planned assignment
if the previous plan’s target was achieved
Storming arose from holding off production followed by lastminute attempts to meet production quotas
29
Soviet Central Planning:
Implementation
Prices were used by planners to ensure compliance with
plans and continuous control over plan implementation
Domestic prices were distorted because they reflected
planners’ priorities in distribution and production rather than
relative scarcities
Pricing disabled rational decision making by producers
The planners used wholesale prices to balance inter-sectoral
outputs and to provide for comparison of alternative
production mixes based on different technologies
30
Soviet Central Planning:
Implementation
In agriculture, government procurement prices
designated quotas promoted specific crops,
individual regions and financially controlled
collective farms
Retail prices produced inequality in income
distribution
Two policies to solve:
Free provision of public goods (health care and education)
Low prices for mass consumption goods (food, housing,
transportation) while raising prices for luxury goods
31
Soviet Central Planning:
Implementation
The gap between sticky prices and scarcity values
increased over time and lowered the effectiveness
of planning
The planned creation of a socialist market where
efficiency of production rose with diminishing
inequality in income distribution failed
Success in creating a second economy where market
forces partially corrected artificial shortages
32
Soviet Central Planning:
Agriculture: The Peculiarity of Soviet Model
Surviving agricultural producers:
State
Collective
Private farm
Stalin’s industrialization was dependent on
the mass collectivization of peasants and the
elimination of the well-off peasants (kulaks)
33
Soviet Central Planning:
Agriculture: The Peculiarity of Soviet Model
The collective farm (kolkhoz)
A pseudo-cooperative, with elected management ensuring
a supply of agricultural goods to the state at minimum cost
The income of peasants at subsistence level maintained by
household plots and individually owned livestock
Exploited by paying low procurement prices and by
overcharging for state-owned tractors and machinery
Not have guaranteed wages and were paid in labor days
Payments were arbitrary and variable depending on
regions, seasons and specific farms
Consumer goods sold to kolkhozes at high prices
34
Soviet Central Planning:
Agriculture: The Peculiarity of Soviet Model
The state farm (sovkhoz)
Factories in the fields and were run under more
favorable policies
If underpaid, compensated by subsidies
State employees and got a guaranteed wage
Have access to better inputs at wholesale prices
35
Soviet Central Planning:
Agriculture: The Peculiarity of Soviet Model
The individual farmer
Found in private sector
Land in auxiliary household plots not privately
owned and cultivated only by peasants and state
employees
Livestock was privately owned but usually
pastured on collective or state land
Individuals worked on these plots for themselves
and owned their produce but also worked for
collective or state enterprises
36
Soviet Central Planning:
Agriculture: The Peculiarity of Soviet Model
The collective farm (kolkhoz) versus the
state farm (sovkhoz)
Their coexistence served the sociopolitical goal of
crowding out entrepreneurship
A decline in productivity and in absolute
production
On collective farms because of price discrimination and
compulsory deliveries
On state farms because of subsidization
37
Soviet Central Planning:
Agriculture: The Peculiarity of Soviet Model
Agriculture deprioritized resulting in
dependence on grain imports
The increasing role of imports of agricultural
products and other goods inspired reforms in
export sector and the overall economy
Raising questions about maintaining itself
as a closed economy?
38
Soviet Central Planning:
Closed Economy: Command Trade Isolationism
Its ideological underpinning is an autarkic
socialist country encircled by hostile
imperialist countries
The anarchy of world markets could
undermine the effectiveness of central
planning
Domestic firms were protected from foreign
competition and world prices
39
Soviet Central Planning:
Closed Economy: Command Trade Isolationism
State authority over foreign trade and foreign currency
transactions through state monopolies
Planners determined imports and exports by balancing
domestic inputs with projected outputs and making up for
potential discrepancies
Export production derived from the need to pay for imports
Producers of exportable goods did not have direct
relationships with foreign buyers but dealt with foreign trade
bureaucracies organized at the industrial level
40
Soviet Central Planning:
Closed Economy: Command Trade Isolationism
Foreign trade relations bilateral and highly politicized
The use of trade for greater integration with the socialist satellites
through Council of Mutual Economic Assistance (CMEA or
Comecon) founded in 1949
As a multilateral body to persuade these countries to adopt a
uniform strategy of communist industrialization with the USSR
CMEA membership → USSR, Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
Poland, East Germany, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania (withdrew in
1961), Mongolia, Cuba and Vietnam joined later, Yugoslavia as
an associate member
41
Soviet Central Planning:
Closed Economy: Command Trade Isolationism
Two principles:
Extensive development that prioritized capital goods at the
expense of consumer goods
An autarkic focus on import substitution and minimal dependence
on western markets
CMEA countries dependent on soviet energy resources and raw
materials
The idea of socialist international division of labor suggested
intra-industrial rather than inter-industrial specialization
A collective isolationism from world markets and a tendency to
create a socialist alternative to international capitalist trade
42
Soviet Central Planning:
Closed Economy: Command Trade Isolationism
Intra-CMEA specialization acknowledged the benefits of trade
for economic development
The international socialist division of labor was shaped by
concentrated planning rather than markets
The problems of inefficiency and non-competitiveness of
individual national industries increased in the mid-1960s,
leading to declining intra-bloc trade
Liberalization of trade with the West brought about by
technological backwardness in the course of the arms race
Decade of trade promotion ended in 1979 with the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan
43
The Reform Cycle:
Reluctant Reform Thinking
Soviet economy characterize pervasive protectionism
Enterprises were shielded against bankruptcy through centralized subsidies
No financial discipline and managers’ performance assessed on basis of
compliance with the government's plans
People were protected against economic fluctuations and the possibility of
unemployment
The state monopoly of foreign trade protected domestic firms from external
shocks and from competition with foreign goods
The network of commodity flows with preset prices and quotas created a
sense of certainty in domestic trade
THIS ECONOMIC STABILITY LACKED ANY IMPETUS TO CHANGE
44
The Reform Cycle:
Reluctant Reform Thinking
Reform and reformism unacceptable and interpreted as
dangerous Western imports
The strengths of Stalin’s economic model →
Mobilization of resources for industrial catch-up
Development of a military-industrial complex
The postwar recovery through extensive growth
The weaknesses of Stalin’s economic model →
Undervaluation of the opportunity cost of planned priorities
absent appropriate criteria to assess economic performance
Protectionism downplaying economic incentives
Vertical institutional structure producing shortsighted
bureaucracies and compartmentalism
45
The Reform Cycle:
First Attempts at Economic Reforms
Khrushchev’s Period
Nikita Khrushchev, Communist Party General
Secretary during 1953-1964, initiated destalinization
in domestic politics and economics
In foreign policy Khrushchev embraced the idea of
peaceful coexistence and competition between
socialism and capitalism
Higher standards of well-being and consumption
without cutting back on military control over the
Soviet block
46
The Reform Cycle:
First Attempts at Economic Reforms
Economic Reforms during Khrushchev’s period
Agriculture (reduced taxes and canceled old debts)
Administrative Decentralization (through delegating
authority of decision-making to regions and away
from ministries)
Aggressive use of foreign trade and military and
industrial assistance to aid regimes sympathetic to
USSR
47
The Reform Cycle:
Gorbachev’s Revolution
Reducing soviet economic performance and a
widening technological gap with the West
The initial strategy to form greater political and
economic unity with Warsaw Pact countries and
proceed with concerted reforms
Raised the issue of real socialism
Opened debate over the divergence between
existing practices and theoretical socialism in his
policy of openness (glasnot)
48
The Reform Cycle:
Gorbachev’s Revolution
Perestroika (Economic Restructuring)
Opened the economy into international competition
hoping that it would provide incentives to change
Eliminated the state monopoly on foreign trade to
end Soviet enterprises’ insulation from international
competition
Wanted to duplicate the success of China’s gradual
opening to foreign trade that had spurred its
economic growth
49
The Reform Cycle:
Gorbachev’s Revolution
Radical reform started in 1990
Open debate over transition to a market economy
by
dismantling central planning
introducing different kinds of property relations to promote
individual entrepreneurship
Replacement of the vertical planning hierarchy by
horizontal market linkages and direct interaction
between demand and supply → introducing
economic decentralization
Removal of the central authority → distancing of the
Communist Party from economic matters
50
The Reform Cycle:
Gorbachev’s Revolution
Secessionist Movements
Decentralization of economic decision
making stimulated the nationalist sentiment of
individual republics and sped up secessionist
movements
The disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991
and the rise of economic nationalism
fragmented the reform movement by diverting
it into the individual political realms
51
Legacies of Soviet Economy
State-planning for state-owned industries and demand structuring by
the state budget
State-determined monetary policy with a one-tier banking system
State-run monopolistic firms, producing a narrow range of goods at
state-administered prices and facing monopolistic suppliers
Risk-aversion by managers who were reluctant to innovate
Full-employment guarantee and as a consequence, the systemic
impossibility of firms going bankrupt- a soft-budget constraint policy
State monopoly in foreign trade, administered prices and exchange
rates reflecting the inconvertibility of the domestic currency
Fiscal revenues generated by turnover taxes and mandatory transfers
of profits used to subsidize firms
52
Problems with Legacies of Soviet
Economy
Monopolistic producers and risk-averse managers
lacked the motive to innovate
Full-employment guarantees hidden unemployment
and favor labor-intensive production processes
Domestic production is not exposed to international
trade and therefore, becomes non-competitive
State provision caused the creation of poor quality
of public goods
53
Slowdowns and Stagnations
Slowdown in growth rates from the mid 1970s
Economic stagnation in 1980s
Central planners’ inability to deal with a complex, overindustrialized economy’s need for constant adjustment
A succession of reforms failed to improve central
planning, was unsuccessful in questioning state
ownership
Late 1980s → legal recognition of private enterprise
ranging from introduction of cooperatives to individual
proprietorships
54
Collapse of the USSR
Establishment of Russian Federation
After the collapse of the USSR in December
1991, the Russian Federation faced the
demanding need for moving away from
Centrally Planned Economy
Boris Yeltsin, the first democratically elected
president of Russia, launched the sixth
reform to undo the legacies of Soviet model
55
Transition in Post-Soviet Russia:
Boris Yeltsin (1991-1999)
Destroyed of Communist Party’s monopoly politically
and economically
Failed to build a new pluralist society
Finished off the remnants of command economy
system
Yeltsin took great steps toward developing a market
economy:
Price liberalization
Mass privatization of state enterprises
Foreign trade liberalization
Introduction of full convertibility of ruble
56
Transition in Post-Soviet Russia:
Problems with Yeltsin’s Reforms
Price and foreign trade liberalization created high inflation and
decline in domestic production
Mass privatization was accompanied by political rhetoric,
contrary to the West’s economic emphasis on the fundamental
importance of private property for the institution of a market
economy
Voucher privatization forced negotiations in the regional
implementation of privatization
Several local elites succeeded in seizing formerly state-owned
enterprises
Local established elites continued to exercise their power
57
Transition in Post-Soviet Russia:
Problems with Mass Privatization
By the end of 1995, Russia had completed the privatization of
over 120,000 enterprises
55 percent of the large and medium-sized enterprises sold could
be classified as non-competitive worker-management buyouts
Labeled as destatization officially and grabitization informally
This mass privatization failed to improve economic efficiency and
induce normal market behavior
Instead generated effects of persistent arrears (non-payment of
outstanding liabilities) and sliding into a barter (non-money)
economy
58
Transition in Post-Soviet Russia:
Problems with Barter Economy and Persistent Arrears
The emergence of arrears due to the enterprises’ failure to keep
pace with collapse of demand in the short-run and to continue to
produce
The underdevelopment of banking system played an additional
role
Emergence of risk-free tax arrears and reliance on state
subsidies
Resurfacing of barter economy
1960-mid 1980s → inefficient planned distribution
Late 1980s-early 1990s → general shortages
1992-1994 → enterprises’ financial deficits
Starting in 1997 → institutionally built into system and accounted
for 90 percent of industrial output
59
Transition in Post-Soviet Russia:
Problems with Barter Economy and Persistent Arrears
Barter economy and persistent arrears (amount overdue)
locked regions into local transactions, hindered
competition and corrupted the effectiveness of property
rights
Privatization and price liberalization created income
inequality
State revenues, which consisted mostly of profits from
state-owned enterprises during the Soviet era dropped
as a result of the recession and mass privatization
Issuance of short-term state bonds that offered high
interest rates crowded out private investment
60
Transition in Post-Soviet Russia:
Deep Recession
Russian industrial production fell by 55 %
Consequently, tax rates were raised creating a shadow
economy
Budget debt increased
The rate of export dropped
The fall in oil prices magnified the current account deficit,
causing a financial crisis that resulted in the devaluation
of ruble in 1998
Severe economic instability and hyperinflation
61
Conclusion:
The Soviet Model of a Command Economy
Created by a combination of internal economic
underdevelopment and international political discontinuity in
the aftermath of WW I, when workers’ revolutions threatened
many nations
Designed to produce a transition from a relatively backward
nation to a modern industrial society
Central planning that is a superior tool for balancing economic
proportions and maximizing the use of resources, produced
disproportionate and inflexible economic outcomes
Producing many problems, agriculture being a prominent
example
62