khrushchevs agricultural policy
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Khrushchev decided he needed to improve Russia’s agricultural problems quickly and embarked on a process to increase food
production. In 1953 agricultural production was low and the livestock population was
low. Khrushchev partly blamed this on Stalin’s methods of controlling agriculture.
“What kind of communism is it that
can’t produce sausages?”
WHY?
To increase food production
Grain stocks and livestock populations were lower than
Tsarists times. Collectivisation was not working as farms had to pay high taxes and received low
wages for their produce!
He was an expert
Khrushchev believed he was a agricultural expert (he had a
agricultural/peasant background) and thought he
knew what he was doing
Failures of the Centrally Planned Economy
Khrushchev thought the controlled economy
under Gosplan had taken away local initiative and
independence. He wanted to reduce control and allow local leaders to
decide agricultural policy.
ENCOURAGE PEASANTS TO PRODUCE MORE
A) Peasants were paid more for grain
B) Taxes on peasants were reduced C) amount of grain requisitioned was
reduced, therefore there was more left for the peasants to sell.
ALL THESE INCREASED THE CHANCES OF PEASANTS MAKING MONEY
•Increase Efficiency
Tractor stations were disbanded.
Tractors sold to state farms
Peasants worked harder to buy tractors
With a tractor can produce more grain
Sell more grain
Bigger profit!
Increase Efficiency Collective farms were also merged to
create larger farms Ministry of Agriculture was moved
away from Moscow, there was also regionalisation- wanted regions to have greater self control as they knew their area better than Moscow
The Virgin Lands Scheme In its 1st three years 36 million hectares
of new land was brought under cultivation
Young communists were sent into the countryside to make these regions fertile
100,000 Tractors were provided
Between 1949 and 1953 agricultural output = 80 million tonnes
Between 1954 and 1958 (under K.) it was 110 million tonnes.
Critics of Khrushchev complained that there was too much investment in agriculture and not enough in other areas, such as the military and space.
This led to a decrease in tractors and machinery.
To maintain improvements Khrushchev tried to experiment with other grains such as maize.
Many areas like Kazakhstan had unsuitable soil.
There were not enough fertilizers. Encouraged early sowing of crops. This
led to wheat infestation, soil erosion.
1963 had to import 20 million tonnes of grain from USA and Australia.
Explain in detail what the Virgin Lands Scheme was.
Draw a table of SUCCESSES and FAILURES of Khrushchev’s agriculture policy.
Successes Failures•Grain harvests rose sharply between 1953-64. (84 million tonnes in 1953 and 109 million tonnes in 1963)•By 1956, 35.9 million hectares of land had been reformed•At least it was an attempt to do something
•Khrushchev didn’t listen to any advice and interfered too much•There wasn’t enough research into the policies so they failed•Not enough money was put in for fertilisers, grain storage etc•Harvest figures began to drop from 1958 due to over farming•Climate was unsuitable for the Virgin Land Scheme so crops failed due to lack of rain•Hurricanes lashed Kazakhstan in 1963 and tore the soil away. 6 million hectares of land was destroyed•Transport was not able to cope moving crops around Russia so much food rotted on the roadside•Russia had to still buy grain from America and Australia to prevent famine