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First five-year plan

The first five-year plan (Russian: I пятилетний план, первая пятилетка) of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) was a list of economic goals, implemented by Communist Party General Secretary Joseph Stalin, based on his policy of socialism in one country. Leon Trotsky had delivered a joint report to the April Plenum of the Central Committee in 1926 which proposed a program for national industrialisation and the replacement of annual plans with five-year plans. His proposals were rejected by the Central Committee majority which was controlled by the troika and derided by Stalin at the time.[1] Stalin's version of the five-year plan was implemented in 1928 and took effect until 1932.[2]

Propaganda stand dedicated to the first five-year plan in Moscow. 1931 colour photo by Branson DeCou.

The Soviet Union entered a series of five-year plans which began in 1928 under the rule of Joseph Stalin. Stalin launched what would later be referred to as a "revolution from above" to improve the Soviet Union's domestic policy. The policies were centered around rapid industrialization and the collectivization of agriculture. Stalin desired to remove and replace the mixed-economy policies of the New Economic Policy.[3][a] Some scholars have argued that the programme of mass industrialization advocated by Leon Trotsky and the Left Opposition was co-opted after Trotsky's exile to serve as the basis of Stalin's first five-year plan.[4][5][6][7][8] According to historian Sheila Fitzpatrick, the scholarly consensus was that Stalin appropriated the position of the Left Opposition on such matters as industrialisation and collectivisation.[9]

The plan, overall, was to transition the Soviet Union from a weak, poorly organized agricultural economy, into an industrial powerhouse. Its grand and idealistic vison, enforced through Stalin's terror-based dictatorship, led its planners and builders to ignore material limitations as they struggled to fulfill unrealistic timetables under threat of severe punishment.[10][11]

Collective farming and peasants' resistance edit

In 1929, Stalin edited the plan to include the creation of kolkhoz collective farming systems that stretched over thousands of acres of land and had hundreds of thousands of peasants working on them. The creation of collective farms essentially destroyed the kulaks as a class (dekulakization). Another consequence of this is that peasants resisted by killing their farm animals rather than turning them over to the State when their farms were collectivized.[12] The resistance to Stalin's collectivization policies contributed to the famine in Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan as well as areas of the Northern Caucasus. Public machine and tractor stations were set up throughout the USSR, and peasants were allowed to rent these public tractors to farm the land, with the intention to increase the food output per peasant. Peasants were allowed to sell any surplus food from the land. However, the government planners failed to take notice of local situations. In 1932, grain production was 32% below average;[13] to add to this problem, procurement of food increased by 44%. Agricultural production was so disrupted that famine broke out in several districts.[14]

Because of the plan's reliance on rapid industrialization, major cultural changes had to occur in tandem. As this new social structure arose, conflicts occurred among some of the majority of the populations. In Turkmenistan, for example, the Soviet policy of collectivization shifted their production from cotton to food products; Russian settlers were given the best land, and Kazakh and Kyrgyz nomads were forced to settle down on soil without agricultural potential.[15][16][17] Such a change caused unrest within a community that had already existed prior to this external adjustment, and between 1928 and 1932, Turkmen nomads and peasants made it clear through methods like passive resistance that they did not agree with such policies, the Kirgiziya area also knew guerrilla opposition.[15][16][17]

Reasoning for the first five-year plan edit

Prior to launching the first Soviet five-year plan, the Soviet Union had been facing threats from external sources as well as experiencing an economic and industrial downturn since the introduction of Bolshevik rule.[18] The first war threat emerged from the East in 1924.[19][need quotation to verify] A war scare arose in 1927[20] when multiple Western states, like Great Britain, began cutting off diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union.[21] This created fear among the Soviets that the West was preparing to attack the Soviet Union again; during the Russian Civil War, foreign powers had occupied portions of Russian territory. The fear of invasion from the West left the Soviets feeling a need for rapid industrialization to increase Soviet war-making potential, and to compete with the Western powers. At the same time as the War Scare of 1927, dissatisfaction grew among the peasantry of the Soviet Union. This dissatisfaction arose from the famine of the early 1920s, as well as from increasing mistreatment of the peasants.[22][need quotation to verify] Also during this time the secret police (the OGPU) had begun rounding up political dissenters in the Soviet Union.[23][need quotation to verify] All these tensions had the potential to destroy the young Soviet Union and forced Joseph Stalin to introduce rapid industrialization of heavy industry so that the Soviet Union could address external and internal threats if needed.

Rapid growth of heavy industry edit

The central aspect of the first Soviet five-year plan was the rapid industrialization of the Soviet Union from October 1928 to December 1932, which was thought to be the most crucial time for Russian industrialization.[24] Lenin himself before the time of his death, knew the importance of building a transitional state to communism and was quoted saying "Modern industry is the key to this transformation, the time has come to construct our fatherland anew with the hands of machines".[25] Rapid growth was facilitated starting in 1928 and continued to accelerate because of the building of heavy industry, which in turn raised living standards for peasants escaping the countryside.[26] The Bolsheviks' need for rapid industrialization was once again out of the fear of impending war from the West. If war were to break out between the Soviet Union and the West, the Soviets would be fighting against some of the most industrialized nations in the world. The rapid industrialization would inhibit fears of being left unprotected if War between the Soviets and the West were to occur. To meet the needs of a possible war, the Soviet leaders set unrealistic quotas for production.[27] To meet those unrealistic needs, the facilities had to be constructed quickly to facilitate material production before goods could be produced. During this period 1928–1932, massive industrial centers emerged in areas that were highly isolated before. These factories were not only for war production, but to produce tractors to meet the needs of mechanized agriculture. The Stalingrad Tractor Plant was built with the help of western allies and was meant to play a major factor in the rapid industrialization of Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. These isolated areas included Magnitogorsk, Dnieper, and Nizhny Novgorod.[28] Magnitogorsk, the largest of the rapid industrialized areas of Russia, was founded in 1743, but became more prevalent in the early 1930s by Stalin. His plan was to make it a one-industry town. The city would become the largest steel producer in Russia and was meant to rival production that was being seen in the U.S. at the same time. During this era of Soviet history, heavy industry was supposed to experience a 350% increase in output.[27] The Soviet Union's achievements were tremendous during the first five-year plan, which yielded a fifty-percent increase in industrial output.[29] To achieve this massive economic growth, the Soviet Union had to reroute essential resources to meet the needs of heavy industry. 80% of the total investment of the first five-year plan, was focused heavily on the industrial sector. Programs not necessary to heavy industry were cut from the Soviet budget; and because of the redistribution of industrial funding, basic goods, such as food, became scarce.[30] The Soviet Union then decided that the workers necessary for further industrialization should be given most of the available food.[31] From this rapid industrialization a new working class emerged in the Soviet Union.[32] This new society was to be an industrial working class, which could be considered much of the population with the purpose of becoming a technologically advanced industry.[33] During this time the industrial workforce rose from 3.12 million in 1928 to 6.01 million at the end of the plan in 1932.[34]

The Soviet Union promoted shock work during the First Five-Year Plan period in an effort to increase productivity through human effort in the absence of more developed machinery.[35]: 57 

Agricultural collectivization edit

 
The requisition of grains from wealthy peasants (kulaks) during the forced collectivization in Timashyovsky District, Kuban Soviet Union. 1933

Agricultural collectivization, within Russia, had its origins under Lenin during the New Economic Policy. One reason for the collectivization of Soviet agriculture was to increase the number of industrial workers for the new factories.[27] Soviet officials also believed that collectivization would increase crop yields and help fund other programs.[27] The Soviets enacted a land decree in 1917 that eliminated private ownership of land. Vladimir Lenin tried to establish removal of grain from wealthier peasants after the initial failure of state farms, but this was also unsuccessful. Peasants were mainly concerned for their own wellbeing and felt that the state had nothing of necessity to offer for the grain. This stockpiling of grain by the peasantry left millions of people in the city hungry, leading Lenin to establish his New Economic Policy to keep the economy from crashing. NEP was based more on capitalism and not socialism, which is the direction the government wanted to head toward. By 1928, with the rapid industrialization, and mass urbanization that followed, consumption was to increase rapidly as well. Need for urban dwellers to be fed, the FYP increased collectivization, leading to its recognition be largely associated with Stalin.[36] Beginning in 1929 under the FYP, mass collectivization was communal farms being assigned an amount of agricultural output with government coercion.[37] Villages had to agree to collectivization: some collectivization planners would hold endless meetings that would not end until villages joined; another tactic was through intimidation and coercion.[38] Mass agricultural collectivization was largely supported by the middle and poor peasantry [38] As the peasant class itself was divided into three groups: kulaks, wealthy; serednyak, middle; bednyak, poor. The middle and lower class supported collectivization, because it took private land from individual kulaks, and distributed it among the serednyak and bednyak's villages. With the serednyak and bednyak joining collectivization they were also joining a kolkhoz. The kulaks did not support mass collectivization, as their land was being taken from them as well as their animals. At the end of 1929 the Soviets asserted themselves to forming collectivized peasant agriculture, but the "kulaks" had to be "liquidated as a class," because of their resistance to fixed agricultural prices.[39] Resulting from this, the party behavior became uncontrolled and manic when the party began to requisition food from the countryside.[39] Kulaks were executed, exiled or deported, based on their level of resistance to collectivization.[40] The kulaks who were considered "counter-revolutionary" were executed or exiled, those who opposed collectivization were deported to remote regions and the rest were resettled to non-arable land in the same region.[40] In the years following the agricultural collectivization, the reforms would disrupt the Soviet food supply.[39] In turn, this disruption would eventually lead to famines for the many years following the first five-year plan, with 6–7 million dying from starvation in 1933.[41]

Although Stalin reported in 1930 that collectivization was aiding the country, this was the era of exaggeration.[42] Collectivization was under-planned; a lack of instructions, and unrealistic quotas were the reality.[38] Lacking a foundation, collectivization led to the Kazakh famine of 1931–1933, in a region that had been a major grain producer.[43][44] Farmers of Kazakhstan rejected collectivization, and protested, while Stalin raised quotas, meaning peasants would not be able to eat and would psychologically break them. Those who did not give up their grain were considered breaking Soviet law, which caused the famine. Death rates are estimated between 6–7 million.[43] Stalin's second wife Nadezhda Alliluyeva, committed suicide due to the atrocities of collectivization, particularly the famine.[45] By the end of the FYP, agricultural collectivization showed minimal growth in production as well as profits.

Prisoner labor edit

 
Yakov Guminer's [ru] 1931 propaganda poster reading: "The arithmetic of an industrial-financial counter-plan: 2 + 2 + Enthusiasm of workers = 5"

To meet the goals of the first five-year plan the Soviet Union began using the labor of its growing prisoner population. Initially the Soviet leaders sought to decrease the number of prisoners in the Soviet Union so that those resources could be rerouted to the five-year plan.[46] This legislation led to many dangerous prisoners being released from prison into labor camps.[47]

Early in the plan, however, the Communist leaders realized the necessity and the benefit of prisoner labor to complete the five-year plan. At this time the Soviet leaders attempted to orchestrate an increase in prison population.[46] The people of the Soviet Union began being sentenced to forced labor, even when they committed small offenses, or committed no crime at all.[47] Many of the prisoners used for labor were peasants who had resisted indoctrination.[48] This was an attempt by the Soviet Union to acquire free labor for the rapid industrialization; however, it led to the incarceration of many innocent people in the Soviet Union. Eventually Western nations, such as the United States, began to boycott goods produced by this form of labor.[49]

Successes of the first five-year plan edit

Although many of the goals set by the plan were not fully met, there were several economic sectors that still saw large increases in their output. Areas like capital goods increased 158%, consumer goods increased by 87%, and total industrial output increased by 118%.[50] In addition, despite the difficulties that agriculture underwent throughout the plan, the Soviets recruited more than 70,000 volunteers from the cities to help collectivize and work on farms in the rural areas.[51]

The largest success of the first five-year plan, however, was the Soviet Union beginning its journey to become an economic and industrial superpower.[52] Stalin declared the plan a success at the beginning of 1933, noting the creation of several heavy industries where none had existed,[53] and that the plan was fulfilled in four years and three months instead of five years.[54] The plan was also lauded by some members of the Western media, and although much of his reporting was later disputed, New York Times reporter Walter Duranty received the 1932 Pulitzer Prize for Correspondence for his coverage of the first five-year plan. Duranty's coverage of the five-year plan's many successes led directly to Franklin Roosevelt officially recognizing the Soviet Union in 1933.[55]

The first five-year plan also began to prepare the Soviet Union to win in the Second World War. Without the initial five-year plan, and the ones that followed, the Soviet Union would not have been prepared for the German invasion in 1941. Due to the rapid industrialization of the plan, as well as the strategic construction of arms manufacturers in areas less vulnerable to future warfare,[56] the Soviet Union was partially able to build the weapons it needed to defeat the Germans in 1945.

Failures of the first five-year plan edit

The first plan saw unrealistic quotas set for industrialization that, in reality, would not be met for decades to come. The great push for industrialization caused quotas to consistently be looked at and adjusted. Quotas expecting to reach 235.9 percent output and labor to increase by 110 percent were unrealistic in the time frame they allotted for.[57] The goals for the plans were not set and those that were, were constantly changed.[58] Each time one quota was met, it was revised and made larger.[58] Unions were being shut down which meant workers were no longer allowed to strike and were not protected from being fired or dismissed from work for reasons such as being late or just missing a day.[57]

 
Stamp commemorating the First Five Year plan depicts a man and woman working together in an industrial setting.

Secondly, many western historians point to collectivization as a cause of the large-scale famine in the Soviet Union between 1932 and 1933 in which 3.3 to 7.5 million died.[41] These famines were among the worst in history and created scars which would mark the Soviet Union for many years to come and incense a deep hatred of Russians by Ukrainians, Tatars, and many other ethnic groups. This famine led many Russians to relocate to find food, jobs, and shelter outside of their small villages which caused many towns to become overpopulated. Their diet consisted of bread but there was a major decrease in the amount of meat and dairy they were receiving if any at all.[57] Aside from the three to four million people dying because of starvation or even freezing to death because of waiting in line for rations, people were not wanting or unable to have children which assisted in the decrease of the population.[59] Hitler claimed the supposed disregard of human life by Russians toward non-Russians as one of his reasons to conduct Operation Barbarossa and gain initial victories over the Russians.[60]

In his work, Revolution Betrayed, Trotsky argued that the excessive authoritarianism under Stalin had undermined the implementation of the First five-year plan. He noted that several engineers and economists who had created the plan were themselves later put on trial as "conscious wreckers who had acted on the instructions of a foreign power".[61]

Legacy edit

In cities edit

A number of streets and squares in major Russian cities are named after the plan, including the First Five-Year Plan Street in Chelyabinsk and Volgograd, and First Five-Year Plan Square in Yekaterinburg. The First Five-Year Plan saw Soviet cities sharply rise in population. At least 23 million Soviet peasants moved into cities, with Moscow's population rising by nearly 60 percent.[62] A large portion of the Soviet Union's urbanization was due to the deportation of peasants from villages.[62] From 1929 through 1931, 1.4 million peasants were deported into cities.[62]

Cultural edit

The Five-Year Plan saw the expedited transformation of Soviet social relations, nature, and economy. The plan's greatest supporters viewed it as the means to change the Soviet Union economically and socially. This change was visibly seen in the role of women in the industrial workplace where rudimentary figures show they comprised 30 percent of the workforce. The prevalence of women within the industrial workplace saw International Women's Day rise in significance in Soviet Culture.[63]

The Five-Year Plans also saw a cultural change in the decline of the Kulak population within the Soviet Union.[63] Members of Agitprop brigands attempted to use the push towards industrialization to isolate peasants from religion and away from the formerly influential Kulak population with performances in which they would deem that issues faced by peasant populations were the faults of the Kulaks.[63] From 1929 through 1931, 3.5 million Kulaks were dispossessed by the Soviet Union and left with no choice but relocation to cities.[62]

State investment edit

As a result of the First Five Year Plan, state investment volume increased from 15% in 1928 to 44% in 1932 due to the rise in industry.[64] The First Five Year Plan resulted in the easy access of staple foods bread, potatoes and cabbage across the Soviet Union.[64] Severe drops in agriculture did however result in famine and inflation as agricultural output and livestock numbers in general dropped.[64]

Military edit

Soviet reports from before the Five-Year Plan found that much of the military production capacities in the Soviet Union lay in the country's war threatened Western provinces and notably the city of Leningrad.[65] In 1931 evacuation plans for military production facilities into deeper Soviet territories were drafted[65] beginning a policy that would accelerate and relocate deeper within the Soviet Union during World War II.

Film industry edit

Between 1929 and 1936 the Soviet Union shifted from producing solely silent films to solely sound films.[66] During this period, the Soviet government signed agreements with American, French and German companies to develop sound technology for Soviet cinema.[66]

Further reading edit

  • Applebaum, A. (2017). Red Famine: Stalin's War on Ukraine. New York: Doubleday.[67][68][69]
  • Conquest, R. (2006). The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine. London: Pimlico.[70][71]
  • Danilov, V. P., Ivnitskii, N. A., Kozlov, D., Shabad, S., & Viola, L. (2008). The War Against the Peasantry, 1927–1930: The Tragedy of the Soviet Countryside. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.[72][73]
  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila. (1994). Chapter 5: Stalin's Revolution. In The Russian Revolution, Second Edition. New York: Oxford University Press.[ISBN missing]
  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila. (1994). Stalin's Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization. New York: Oxford University Press.[74][75]
  • Melnikova-Raich, Sonia (2010). "The Soviet Problem with Two 'Unknowns': How an American Architect and a Soviet Negotiator Jump-Started the Industrialization of Russia, Part I: Albert Kahn". IA, The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology. 36 (2): 57–80. ISSN 0160-1040. JSTOR 41933723. (abstract)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The text of the report "The Results of the First Five-Year Plan" by J. V. Stalin delivered on January 7, 1933 to the Joint Plenum of the Central Committee and Central Control Commission can be found at: http://www.marxists.org

References edit

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  66. ^ a b Bohlinger, Vincent (2013). "The development of sound technology in the Soviet film industry during the first Five-Year Plan". Studies in Russian & Soviet Cinema. 7 (2): 189–205. doi:10.1386/srsc.7.2.189_1. S2CID 159553067.
  67. ^ Kuzio, Taras (2018). "Red Famine. Stalin's War on Ukraine". Europe-Asia Studies. 70 (8): 1334–1335. doi:10.1080/09668136.2018.1520510. S2CID 54880488.
  68. ^ Fitzpatrick, Sheila (August 25, 2017). "Red Famine by Anne Applebaum review – did Stalin deliberately let Ukraine starve?". The Guardian Book Reviews. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  69. ^ Hochschild, Adam (October 18, 2017). "Stalinist Crimes in Ukraine That Resonate Today". New York Times Book Review. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  70. ^ Smith, George B. (1987). "Reviewed Work: The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine. by Robert Conquest". The Journal of Politics. 49 (3): 904–905. doi:10.2307/2131299. JSTOR 2131299.
  71. ^ Kosiński, L. A. (1987). "Reviewed Work: The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine by Robert Conquest". Population and Development Review. 13 (1): 149–153. doi:10.2307/1972127. JSTOR 1972127.
  72. ^ Moon, David (2007). "Reviewed work: The War against the Peasantry 1927–1930: The Tragedy of the Soviet Countryside, L. Viola, V. P. Danilov, N. A. Ivnitskii, D. Kozlov". The Slavonic and East European Review. 85 (3): 585–587. doi:10.1353/see.2007.0065. JSTOR 25479122.
  73. ^ Merl, Stephan (2006). "The War against the Peasantry, 1927–1930: The Tragedy of the Soviet Countryside. By Lynne Viola, V. P. Danilov, N. A. Ivnitskii, and Denis Kozlov. Trans. Steven Shabad. Annals of Communism. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005". Slavic Review. 65 (4): 828–829. doi:10.2307/4148486. JSTOR 4148486.
  74. ^ Johnson, R. (1996). "Stalin's Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization". Slavic Review. 55 (1): 186–187. doi:10.2307/2500998. JSTOR 2500998. S2CID 164781635.
  75. ^ Merl, Stephan (1995). "Reviewed Work: Stalin's Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village After Collectivization by Sheila Fitzpatrick". Russian History. 22 (3): 326–328. JSTOR 24658456.

External links edit

  • Info on the first five-year plan from Infoplease

first, five, year, plan, this, article, about, first, five, year, plan, soviet, union, other, topics, five, year, plan, disambiguation, first, five, year, plan, russian, пятилетний, план, первая, пятилетка, union, soviet, socialist, republics, ussr, list, econ. This article is about the first five year plan in the Soviet Union For other topics see Five year plan disambiguation The first five year plan Russian I pyatiletnij plan pervaya pyatiletka of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics USSR was a list of economic goals implemented by Communist Party General Secretary Joseph Stalin based on his policy of socialism in one country Leon Trotsky had delivered a joint report to the April Plenum of the Central Committee in 1926 which proposed a program for national industrialisation and the replacement of annual plans with five year plans His proposals were rejected by the Central Committee majority which was controlled by the troika and derided by Stalin at the time 1 Stalin s version of the five year plan was implemented in 1928 and took effect until 1932 2 Propaganda stand dedicated to the first five year plan in Moscow 1931 colour photo by Branson DeCou The Soviet Union entered a series of five year plans which began in 1928 under the rule of Joseph Stalin Stalin launched what would later be referred to as a revolution from above to improve the Soviet Union s domestic policy The policies were centered around rapid industrialization and the collectivization of agriculture Stalin desired to remove and replace the mixed economy policies of the New Economic Policy 3 a Some scholars have argued that the programme of mass industrialization advocated by Leon Trotsky and the Left Opposition was co opted after Trotsky s exile to serve as the basis of Stalin s first five year plan 4 5 6 7 8 According to historian Sheila Fitzpatrick the scholarly consensus was that Stalin appropriated the position of the Left Opposition on such matters as industrialisation and collectivisation 9 The plan overall was to transition the Soviet Union from a weak poorly organized agricultural economy into an industrial powerhouse Its grand and idealistic vison enforced through Stalin s terror based dictatorship led its planners and builders to ignore material limitations as they struggled to fulfill unrealistic timetables under threat of severe punishment 10 11 Contents 1 Collective farming and peasants resistance 2 Reasoning for the first five year plan 3 Rapid growth of heavy industry 4 Agricultural collectivization 5 Prisoner labor 6 Successes of the first five year plan 7 Failures of the first five year plan 8 Legacy 8 1 In cities 8 2 Cultural 8 3 State investment 8 4 Military 8 5 Film industry 9 Further reading 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksCollective farming and peasants resistance editIn 1929 Stalin edited the plan to include the creation of kolkhoz collective farming systems that stretched over thousands of acres of land and had hundreds of thousands of peasants working on them The creation of collective farms essentially destroyed the kulaks as a class dekulakization Another consequence of this is that peasants resisted by killing their farm animals rather than turning them over to the State when their farms were collectivized 12 The resistance to Stalin s collectivization policies contributed to the famine in Ukraine Russia Kazakhstan as well as areas of the Northern Caucasus Public machine and tractor stations were set up throughout the USSR and peasants were allowed to rent these public tractors to farm the land with the intention to increase the food output per peasant Peasants were allowed to sell any surplus food from the land However the government planners failed to take notice of local situations In 1932 grain production was 32 below average 13 to add to this problem procurement of food increased by 44 Agricultural production was so disrupted that famine broke out in several districts 14 Because of the plan s reliance on rapid industrialization major cultural changes had to occur in tandem As this new social structure arose conflicts occurred among some of the majority of the populations In Turkmenistan for example the Soviet policy of collectivization shifted their production from cotton to food products Russian settlers were given the best land and Kazakh and Kyrgyz nomads were forced to settle down on soil without agricultural potential 15 16 17 Such a change caused unrest within a community that had already existed prior to this external adjustment and between 1928 and 1932 Turkmen nomads and peasants made it clear through methods like passive resistance that they did not agree with such policies the Kirgiziya area also knew guerrilla opposition 15 16 17 Reasoning for the first five year plan editPrior to launching the first Soviet five year plan the Soviet Union had been facing threats from external sources as well as experiencing an economic and industrial downturn since the introduction of Bolshevik rule 18 The first war threat emerged from the East in 1924 19 need quotation to verify A war scare arose in 1927 20 when multiple Western states like Great Britain began cutting off diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union 21 This created fear among the Soviets that the West was preparing to attack the Soviet Union again during the Russian Civil War foreign powers had occupied portions of Russian territory The fear of invasion from the West left the Soviets feeling a need for rapid industrialization to increase Soviet war making potential and to compete with the Western powers At the same time as the War Scare of 1927 dissatisfaction grew among the peasantry of the Soviet Union This dissatisfaction arose from the famine of the early 1920s as well as from increasing mistreatment of the peasants 22 need quotation to verify Also during this time the secret police the OGPU had begun rounding up political dissenters in the Soviet Union 23 need quotation to verify All these tensions had the potential to destroy the young Soviet Union and forced Joseph Stalin to introduce rapid industrialization of heavy industry so that the Soviet Union could address external and internal threats if needed Rapid growth of heavy industry editThe central aspect of the first Soviet five year plan was the rapid industrialization of the Soviet Union from October 1928 to December 1932 which was thought to be the most crucial time for Russian industrialization 24 Lenin himself before the time of his death knew the importance of building a transitional state to communism and was quoted saying Modern industry is the key to this transformation the time has come to construct our fatherland anew with the hands of machines 25 Rapid growth was facilitated starting in 1928 and continued to accelerate because of the building of heavy industry which in turn raised living standards for peasants escaping the countryside 26 The Bolsheviks need for rapid industrialization was once again out of the fear of impending war from the West If war were to break out between the Soviet Union and the West the Soviets would be fighting against some of the most industrialized nations in the world The rapid industrialization would inhibit fears of being left unprotected if War between the Soviets and the West were to occur To meet the needs of a possible war the Soviet leaders set unrealistic quotas for production 27 To meet those unrealistic needs the facilities had to be constructed quickly to facilitate material production before goods could be produced During this period 1928 1932 massive industrial centers emerged in areas that were highly isolated before These factories were not only for war production but to produce tractors to meet the needs of mechanized agriculture The Stalingrad Tractor Plant was built with the help of western allies and was meant to play a major factor in the rapid industrialization of Russia Belarus and Ukraine These isolated areas included Magnitogorsk Dnieper and Nizhny Novgorod 28 Magnitogorsk the largest of the rapid industrialized areas of Russia was founded in 1743 but became more prevalent in the early 1930s by Stalin His plan was to make it a one industry town The city would become the largest steel producer in Russia and was meant to rival production that was being seen in the U S at the same time During this era of Soviet history heavy industry was supposed to experience a 350 increase in output 27 The Soviet Union s achievements were tremendous during the first five year plan which yielded a fifty percent increase in industrial output 29 To achieve this massive economic growth the Soviet Union had to reroute essential resources to meet the needs of heavy industry 80 of the total investment of the first five year plan was focused heavily on the industrial sector Programs not necessary to heavy industry were cut from the Soviet budget and because of the redistribution of industrial funding basic goods such as food became scarce 30 The Soviet Union then decided that the workers necessary for further industrialization should be given most of the available food 31 From this rapid industrialization a new working class emerged in the Soviet Union 32 This new society was to be an industrial working class which could be considered much of the population with the purpose of becoming a technologically advanced industry 33 During this time the industrial workforce rose from 3 12 million in 1928 to 6 01 million at the end of the plan in 1932 34 The Soviet Union promoted shock work during the First Five Year Plan period in an effort to increase productivity through human effort in the absence of more developed machinery 35 57 Agricultural collectivization edit nbsp The requisition of grains from wealthy peasants kulaks during the forced collectivization in Timashyovsky District Kuban Soviet Union 1933Agricultural collectivization within Russia had its origins under Lenin during the New Economic Policy One reason for the collectivization of Soviet agriculture was to increase the number of industrial workers for the new factories 27 Soviet officials also believed that collectivization would increase crop yields and help fund other programs 27 The Soviets enacted a land decree in 1917 that eliminated private ownership of land Vladimir Lenin tried to establish removal of grain from wealthier peasants after the initial failure of state farms but this was also unsuccessful Peasants were mainly concerned for their own wellbeing and felt that the state had nothing of necessity to offer for the grain This stockpiling of grain by the peasantry left millions of people in the city hungry leading Lenin to establish his New Economic Policy to keep the economy from crashing NEP was based more on capitalism and not socialism which is the direction the government wanted to head toward By 1928 with the rapid industrialization and mass urbanization that followed consumption was to increase rapidly as well Need for urban dwellers to be fed the FYP increased collectivization leading to its recognition be largely associated with Stalin 36 Beginning in 1929 under the FYP mass collectivization was communal farms being assigned an amount of agricultural output with government coercion 37 Villages had to agree to collectivization some collectivization planners would hold endless meetings that would not end until villages joined another tactic was through intimidation and coercion 38 Mass agricultural collectivization was largely supported by the middle and poor peasantry 38 As the peasant class itself was divided into three groups kulaks wealthy serednyak middle bednyak poor The middle and lower class supported collectivization because it took private land from individual kulaks and distributed it among the serednyak and bednyak s villages With the serednyak and bednyak joining collectivization they were also joining a kolkhoz The kulaks did not support mass collectivization as their land was being taken from them as well as their animals At the end of 1929 the Soviets asserted themselves to forming collectivized peasant agriculture but the kulaks had to be liquidated as a class because of their resistance to fixed agricultural prices 39 Resulting from this the party behavior became uncontrolled and manic when the party began to requisition food from the countryside 39 Kulaks were executed exiled or deported based on their level of resistance to collectivization 40 The kulaks who were considered counter revolutionary were executed or exiled those who opposed collectivization were deported to remote regions and the rest were resettled to non arable land in the same region 40 In the years following the agricultural collectivization the reforms would disrupt the Soviet food supply 39 In turn this disruption would eventually lead to famines for the many years following the first five year plan with 6 7 million dying from starvation in 1933 41 Although Stalin reported in 1930 that collectivization was aiding the country this was the era of exaggeration 42 Collectivization was under planned a lack of instructions and unrealistic quotas were the reality 38 Lacking a foundation collectivization led to the Kazakh famine of 1931 1933 in a region that had been a major grain producer 43 44 Farmers of Kazakhstan rejected collectivization and protested while Stalin raised quotas meaning peasants would not be able to eat and would psychologically break them Those who did not give up their grain were considered breaking Soviet law which caused the famine Death rates are estimated between 6 7 million 43 Stalin s second wife Nadezhda Alliluyeva committed suicide due to the atrocities of collectivization particularly the famine 45 By the end of the FYP agricultural collectivization showed minimal growth in production as well as profits Prisoner labor edit nbsp Yakov Guminer s ru 1931 propaganda poster reading The arithmetic of an industrial financial counter plan 2 2 Enthusiasm of workers 5 To meet the goals of the first five year plan the Soviet Union began using the labor of its growing prisoner population Initially the Soviet leaders sought to decrease the number of prisoners in the Soviet Union so that those resources could be rerouted to the five year plan 46 This legislation led to many dangerous prisoners being released from prison into labor camps 47 Early in the plan however the Communist leaders realized the necessity and the benefit of prisoner labor to complete the five year plan At this time the Soviet leaders attempted to orchestrate an increase in prison population 46 The people of the Soviet Union began being sentenced to forced labor even when they committed small offenses or committed no crime at all 47 Many of the prisoners used for labor were peasants who had resisted indoctrination 48 This was an attempt by the Soviet Union to acquire free labor for the rapid industrialization however it led to the incarceration of many innocent people in the Soviet Union Eventually Western nations such as the United States began to boycott goods produced by this form of labor 49 Successes of the first five year plan editAlthough many of the goals set by the plan were not fully met there were several economic sectors that still saw large increases in their output Areas like capital goods increased 158 consumer goods increased by 87 and total industrial output increased by 118 50 In addition despite the difficulties that agriculture underwent throughout the plan the Soviets recruited more than 70 000 volunteers from the cities to help collectivize and work on farms in the rural areas 51 The largest success of the first five year plan however was the Soviet Union beginning its journey to become an economic and industrial superpower 52 Stalin declared the plan a success at the beginning of 1933 noting the creation of several heavy industries where none had existed 53 and that the plan was fulfilled in four years and three months instead of five years 54 The plan was also lauded by some members of the Western media and although much of his reporting was later disputed New York Times reporter Walter Duranty received the 1932 Pulitzer Prize for Correspondence for his coverage of the first five year plan Duranty s coverage of the five year plan s many successes led directly to Franklin Roosevelt officially recognizing the Soviet Union in 1933 55 The first five year plan also began to prepare the Soviet Union to win in the Second World War Without the initial five year plan and the ones that followed the Soviet Union would not have been prepared for the German invasion in 1941 Due to the rapid industrialization of the plan as well as the strategic construction of arms manufacturers in areas less vulnerable to future warfare 56 the Soviet Union was partially able to build the weapons it needed to defeat the Germans in 1945 Failures of the first five year plan editThe first plan saw unrealistic quotas set for industrialization that in reality would not be met for decades to come The great push for industrialization caused quotas to consistently be looked at and adjusted Quotas expecting to reach 235 9 percent output and labor to increase by 110 percent were unrealistic in the time frame they allotted for 57 The goals for the plans were not set and those that were were constantly changed 58 Each time one quota was met it was revised and made larger 58 Unions were being shut down which meant workers were no longer allowed to strike and were not protected from being fired or dismissed from work for reasons such as being late or just missing a day 57 nbsp Stamp commemorating the First Five Year plan depicts a man and woman working together in an industrial setting Secondly many western historians point to collectivization as a cause of the large scale famine in the Soviet Union between 1932 and 1933 in which 3 3 to 7 5 million died 41 These famines were among the worst in history and created scars which would mark the Soviet Union for many years to come and incense a deep hatred of Russians by Ukrainians Tatars and many other ethnic groups This famine led many Russians to relocate to find food jobs and shelter outside of their small villages which caused many towns to become overpopulated Their diet consisted of bread but there was a major decrease in the amount of meat and dairy they were receiving if any at all 57 Aside from the three to four million people dying because of starvation or even freezing to death because of waiting in line for rations people were not wanting or unable to have children which assisted in the decrease of the population 59 Hitler claimed the supposed disregard of human life by Russians toward non Russians as one of his reasons to conduct Operation Barbarossa and gain initial victories over the Russians 60 In his work Revolution Betrayed Trotsky argued that the excessive authoritarianism under Stalin had undermined the implementation of the First five year plan He noted that several engineers and economists who had created the plan were themselves later put on trial as conscious wreckers who had acted on the instructions of a foreign power 61 Legacy editIn cities edit A number of streets and squares in major Russian cities are named after the plan including the First Five Year Plan Street in Chelyabinsk and Volgograd and First Five Year Plan Square in Yekaterinburg The First Five Year Plan saw Soviet cities sharply rise in population At least 23 million Soviet peasants moved into cities with Moscow s population rising by nearly 60 percent 62 A large portion of the Soviet Union s urbanization was due to the deportation of peasants from villages 62 From 1929 through 1931 1 4 million peasants were deported into cities 62 Cultural edit The Five Year Plan saw the expedited transformation of Soviet social relations nature and economy The plan s greatest supporters viewed it as the means to change the Soviet Union economically and socially This change was visibly seen in the role of women in the industrial workplace where rudimentary figures show they comprised 30 percent of the workforce The prevalence of women within the industrial workplace saw International Women s Day rise in significance in Soviet Culture 63 The Five Year Plans also saw a cultural change in the decline of the Kulak population within the Soviet Union 63 Members of Agitprop brigands attempted to use the push towards industrialization to isolate peasants from religion and away from the formerly influential Kulak population with performances in which they would deem that issues faced by peasant populations were the faults of the Kulaks 63 From 1929 through 1931 3 5 million Kulaks were dispossessed by the Soviet Union and left with no choice but relocation to cities 62 State investment edit As a result of the First Five Year Plan state investment volume increased from 15 in 1928 to 44 in 1932 due to the rise in industry 64 The First Five Year Plan resulted in the easy access of staple foods bread potatoes and cabbage across the Soviet Union 64 Severe drops in agriculture did however result in famine and inflation as agricultural output and livestock numbers in general dropped 64 Military edit Soviet reports from before the Five Year Plan found that much of the military production capacities in the Soviet Union lay in the country s war threatened Western provinces and notably the city of Leningrad 65 In 1931 evacuation plans for military production facilities into deeper Soviet territories were drafted 65 beginning a policy that would accelerate and relocate deeper within the Soviet Union during World War II Film industry edit Between 1929 and 1936 the Soviet Union shifted from producing solely silent films to solely sound films 66 During this period the Soviet government signed agreements with American French and German companies to develop sound technology for Soviet cinema 66 Further reading editApplebaum A 2017 Red Famine Stalin s War on Ukraine New York Doubleday 67 68 69 Conquest R 2006 The Harvest of Sorrow Soviet Collectivization and the Terror Famine London Pimlico 70 71 Danilov V P Ivnitskii N A Kozlov D Shabad S amp Viola L 2008 The War Against the Peasantry 1927 1930 The Tragedy of the Soviet Countryside New Haven CT Yale University Press 72 73 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1994 Chapter 5 Stalin s Revolution In The Russian Revolution Second Edition New York Oxford University Press ISBN missing Fitzpatrick Sheila 1994 Stalin s Peasants Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization New York Oxford University Press 74 75 Melnikova Raich Sonia 2010 The Soviet Problem with Two Unknowns How an American Architect and a Soviet Negotiator Jump Started the Industrialization of Russia Part I Albert Kahn IA The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology 36 2 57 80 ISSN 0160 1040 JSTOR 41933723 abstract See also editAgriculture in the Soviet Union Bibliography of Stalinism and the Soviet Union Economy of the Soviet Union Left Opposition Primitive socialist accumulationNotes edit The text of the report The Results of the First Five Year Plan by J V Stalin delivered on January 7 1933 to the Joint Plenum of the Central Committee and Central Control Commission can be found at http www marxists orgReferences edit Rogovin Vadim Zakharovich 2021 Was There an Alternative Trotskyism a Look Back Through the Years Mehring Books p 358 ISBN 978 1 893638 97 6 The First Five Year Plan 1928 1932 Special Collections amp Archives 2015 10 07 Retrieved 2019 02 23 Kotkin Stephen 2017 Chapter 1 Triumph of the Will Stalin Waiting for Hitler 1929 1941 New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 1594203800 Carr Edward Hallett Davies Robert William 1971 Foundations of a Planned Economy 1926 1929 Macmillan p 199 Phillips Steve 2000 Stalinist Russia Heinemann p 23 ISBN 978 0 435 32720 0 Fitzpatrick Sheila 2008 The Russian Revolution OUP Oxford p 110 ISBN 978 0 19 923767 8 Lee Stephen J 2005 Stalin and the Soviet Union Routledge p 8 ISBN 978 1 134 66574 7 Payne Anthony Phillips Nicola 2013 Development John Wiley amp Sons p 1936 ISBN 978 0 7456 5735 6 Fitzpatrick Sheila 22 April 2010 The Old Man London Review of Books 32 08 ISSN 0260 9592 Collectivization and Industrialization www loc gov Retrieved 2018 04 20 Holland Hunter 1973 The Overambitious First Soviet Five Year Plan Slavic Review Cambridge University Press 32 2 237 257 doi 10 2307 2495959 JSTOR 2495959 S2CID 156723799 1929 Seventeen Moments in Soviet History 2015 06 17 Retrieved 2018 03 25 Robert Conquest The Great Terror 1971 ISBN missing page needed R W Davies Soviet History in the Gorbachev Revolution Macmillan London 1989 ISBN missing page needed a b Edgar Adrienne 2004 Tribal Nation Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 296 ISBN 978 0 691 11775 1 a b Thomas Alun 2019 Nomads and Soviet Rule Central Asia under Lenin and Stalin Paperback ed Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1350143685 a b Kyrgyz people www britannica com Retrieved 2022 12 08 Florinsky Michael Aug 1953 Soviet Economic Policies ProQuest Politics Collection 93 100 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1994 The Russian Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press p 120 Hudson Hugh 2012 The 1927 Soviet War Scare The Foreign Affairs Domestic Policy Nexus Revisited The Soviet and Post Soviet Review 39 2 1 doi 10 1163 18763324 03902002 Morrell Gordon W 1995 Britain Confronts the Stalin Revolution Anglo Soviet Relations and the Metro Vickers Crisis Waterloo Canada Wilfrid Laurier University Press p 29 ISBN 978 0889206762 Google Preview for the book Hudson Hugh 2012 The 1927 Soviet War Scare The Foreign Affairs Domestic Policy Nexus Revisited The Soviet and Post Soviet Review 39 2 1 doi 10 1163 18763324 03902002 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1994 The Russian Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press p 121 Davies Robert 1994 The Economic Transformation of The Soviet Union 1913 1945 ISBN 978 0521451529 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1999 Everyday Stalinism Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times ISBN 978 0195050004 Allen Robert 1947 Farm to Factor A Reinterpretation of the Soviet Industrial Revolution ISBN 978 0691006963 a b c d Collectivization And Industrialization Library of Congress Retrieved April 17 2014 Fitzpatrick Shelia 1994 The Russian Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press p 133 Keefe Joshua 2009 Stalin and the Drive to Industrialize the Soviet Union Inquires 1 10 1 Hansen Stephen 1997 Time and Revolution Marxism and the Design of Soviet Institutions University of North Carolina Press p 95 Khrushchev Nikita 2004 Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev Chapel Hill Pennsylvania State University p 56 ISBN 978 0271023328 Davies Robert 1994 The Economic Transformation of the Soviet Union New york Cambridge University Press p 95 Davies Robert 1994 The Economical Transformation of the Soviet Union 1913 1945 ISBN 978 0521451529 Hansen Stephen 1997 Time and Revolution Marxism and the Design of Soviet Institutions University of North Carolina Press p 95 Li Jie 2023 Cinematic Guerillas Propaganda Projectionists and Audiences in Socialist China New York NY Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231206273 Livi Bacci Massimo 1993 On the Human Costs of Collectivization in the Soviet Union Population and Development Review 19 4 743 766 doi 10 2307 2938412 JSTOR 2938412 Millar James R 1974 Mass Collectivization and the Contribution of Soviet Agriculture to the First Five Year Plan A Review Article Slavic Review 33 4 750 766 doi 10 2307 2494513 JSTOR 2494513 S2CID 163822930 a b c Fitzpatrick Sheila 2010 The Question of Social Support for Collectivization Russian History 37 2 153 177 doi 10 1163 187633110X494670 a b c Fitzpatrick Shelia 1994 The Russian Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press p 136 ISBN missing a b McCauley Martin 2013 Stalin and Stalinism New York Rutledge p 40 a b Fitzpatrick Shelia 2008 The Russian Revolution 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 140 Fitzpatrick Sheila Everyday Stalinism Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times Soviet Russia in the 1930s Oxford England New York Oxford University Press 1999 page needed ISBN missing a b Pianciola N The Collectivization Famine in Kazakhstan 1931 1933 Harvard Ukrainian Studies vol 25 no 3 4 2001 p 237 Economakis E Soviet Interpretations of Collectivization Slavonic and East European Review vol 69 no 2 1991 pp 272 McCauley Martin Stalin and Stalinism Pearson Longman 2008 ISBN missing page needed a b Scherer John 1993 The collectivisation of agriculture and the Soviet prison camp system Europe Asia Studies 45 3 N26 doi 10 1080 09668139308412104 a b Scherer John 1993 The collectivisation of agriculture and the Soviet prison camp system Europe Asia Studies 45 3 N31 doi 10 1080 09668139308412104 Scherer John 1993 The collectivisation of agriculture and the Soviet prison camp system Europe Asia Studies 45 3 N35 doi 10 1080 09668139308412104 Scherer John 1993 The collectivisation of agriculture and the Soviet prison camp system Europe Asia Studies 45 3 N49 doi 10 1080 09668139308412104 Dobb Maurice 2007 Rates of growth under the five year plans Soviet Studies 4 4 364 385 doi 10 1080 09668135308409870 ISSN 0038 5859 Millar James R 2017 Mass Collectivization and the Contribution of Soviet Agriculture to the First Five Year Plan A Review Article Slavic Review 33 4 750 766 doi 10 2307 2494513 ISSN 0037 6779 JSTOR 2494513 S2CID 163822930 Hunter Holland 2017 The Overambitious First Soviet Five Year Plan Slavic Review 32 2 237 257 doi 10 2307 2495959 ISSN 0037 6779 JSTOR 2495959 S2CID 156723799 Stalin Joseph 7 January 1933 Joint Plenum of the C C and C C C C P S U B January 7 12 1933 The Results of the First Five Year Plan Foreign Languages Publishing House Moscow Retrieved 29 March 2017 Stalin Joseph 1954 Works Vol 13 1930 January 1934 Moscow Foreign Languages Publishing House Retrieved 29 March 2017 Taylor Sally J 1990 Stalin s Apologist Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 505700 3 Stone David R 2006 The First Five Year Plan and the Geography of Soviet Defence Industry Europe Asia Studies 57 7 1047 1063 doi 10 1080 09668130500302756 ISSN 0966 8136 S2CID 153925109 a b c F Pauley Bruce 2014 Hitler Stalin and Mussolini Totalitarianism in the Twentieth Century 4th ed Hoboken Wiley ISBN 978 1118765869 OCLC 883570079 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Fitzpatrick Shelia 1994 The Russian Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press p 132 Sheila Fitzpatrick 1999 Everyday Stalinism ordinary life in extraordinary times Soviet Russia in the 1930s New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195050011 OCLC 567928000 Khrushchev Nikita 2004 Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev Chapel Hill Pennsylvania State University p xiv Trotsky Leon 1991 The Revolution Betrayed What is the Soviet Union and where is it Going Mehring Books p 28 ISBN 978 0 929087 48 1 a b c d Hoffmann David L Winter 1991 Moving to Moscow Patterns of Peasant In Migration during the First Five Year Plan Slavic Review 50 4 847 857 doi 10 2307 2500466 JSTOR 2500466 S2CID 163966214 via Cambridge University Press a b c Mally Lynn 1996 Shock Workers on the Cultural Front Agitprop Brigades in the First Five Year Plan Russian History 23 1 4 263 276 doi 10 1163 187633196X00178 a b c Ellman Michael December 1975 Did the Agricultural Surplus Provide the Resources for the Increase in Investment in the USSR During the First Five Year Plan The Economic Journal 85 340 844 863 doi 10 2307 2230627 JSTOR 2230627 a b Stone David R November 2005 The First Five Year Plan and the Geography of Soviet Defence Industry Europe Asia Studies 57 7 1047 1063 doi 10 1080 09668130500302756 S2CID 153925109 via Taylor amp Francis Ltd a b Bohlinger Vincent 2013 The development of sound technology in the Soviet film industry during the first Five Year Plan Studies in Russian amp Soviet Cinema 7 2 189 205 doi 10 1386 srsc 7 2 189 1 S2CID 159553067 Kuzio Taras 2018 Red Famine Stalin s War on Ukraine Europe Asia Studies 70 8 1334 1335 doi 10 1080 09668136 2018 1520510 S2CID 54880488 Fitzpatrick Sheila August 25 2017 Red Famine by Anne Applebaum review did Stalin deliberately let Ukraine starve The Guardian Book Reviews Retrieved 1 February 2020 Hochschild Adam October 18 2017 Stalinist Crimes in Ukraine That Resonate Today New York Times Book Review Retrieved 1 February 2020 Smith George B 1987 Reviewed Work The Harvest of Sorrow Soviet Collectivization and the Terror Famine by Robert Conquest The Journal of Politics 49 3 904 905 doi 10 2307 2131299 JSTOR 2131299 Kosinski L A 1987 Reviewed Work The Harvest of Sorrow Soviet Collectivization and the Terror Famine by Robert Conquest Population and Development Review 13 1 149 153 doi 10 2307 1972127 JSTOR 1972127 Moon David 2007 Reviewed work The War against the Peasantry 1927 1930 The Tragedy of the Soviet Countryside L Viola V P Danilov N A Ivnitskii D Kozlov The Slavonic and East European Review 85 3 585 587 doi 10 1353 see 2007 0065 JSTOR 25479122 Merl Stephan 2006 The War against the Peasantry 1927 1930 The Tragedy of the Soviet Countryside By Lynne Viola V P Danilov N A Ivnitskii and Denis Kozlov Trans Steven Shabad Annals of Communism New Haven Yale University Press 2005 Slavic Review 65 4 828 829 doi 10 2307 4148486 JSTOR 4148486 Johnson R 1996 Stalin s Peasants Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization Slavic Review 55 1 186 187 doi 10 2307 2500998 JSTOR 2500998 S2CID 164781635 Merl Stephan 1995 Reviewed Work Stalin s Peasants Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village After Collectivization by Sheila Fitzpatrick Russian History 22 3 326 328 JSTOR 24658456 External links editInfo on the first five year plan from Infoplease Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First five year plan amp oldid 1206280776, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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