2.3.2

Investment in Agriculture & Virgin Lands

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Agriculture under Khrushchev

Under Stalin's rule, no-one had seriously addressed the issue of food supplies. The situation was dire.

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Comparison to tsarist Russia

  • 1953: Grain stocks were lower than had been the case under the tsar.
    • There were also fewer animals in the USSR than under the tsar.
  • High taxes on farmers meant there was no incentive to improve productivity.
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Khrushchev's solutions

  • The government increased state procurement prices.
    • Prices increased by 25% from 1953 to 1956.
  • 1952-1958: Grain incomes doubled.
  • The state also cut the running costs of the kolkhozy (collective farms), including for transport and equipment.
  • Taxation was changed so that, for example, peasants who did not own livestock did not have to give meat as part of their taxes.
  • The government also increased fertilizer production.

Virgin Land Scheme

The Virgin Land Scheme was Khrushchev's main agricultural policy. It was designed to solve the lack of food.

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The plan

  • Khrushchev proposed a plan to use lands which had not been farmed before to improve grain production.
  • He wanted to compete with the American plains.
  • 1954: The Central Committee approved the plan.
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Virgin land

  • 28 million hectares of previously idle land existed in Siberia and Kazakhstan.
  • The government encouraged young Communist Party members to go east and enact the plan.
    • They were given a promise of guaranteed payment.
  • The areas were turned into sovkhozes (state farms).
    • Each was between 20 000 and 40 000 hectares.
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Failure of the scheme

  • The plan was too ambitious.
    • The Russian steppe was not as fertile as the American plains.
  • Too much enthusiasm led to poor planning.
  • The soil was often very arid, and this quickly created dust storms.
  • Droughts were common.
  • There was not enough fertiliser.
  • Housing for volunteers was inadequate.

Jump to other topics

1Communist Government in the USSR, 1917-85

2Industrial & Agricultural Changes

3Control of the People, 1917-85

4Social Developments, 1917-35

5Historical Interpretations

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