3.2.5
The Extent of Modernisation
Industrialisation and Gosplan
Industrialisation and Gosplan
Stalin was the nickname of Joseph Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili. It meant ‘man of steel’. The NEP was not industrialising Russia fast enough for the Communist leadership. In 1927, the first Five-Year Plan was announced to drive forward the process of industrialisation.
Abandonment of the NEP
Abandonment of the NEP
- The 1927 war scare (between Russia and European powers) caused concerns about industry because Russia would have needed the industrial capacity to produce weapons in order to compete with the capitalist West.
- Stalin also believed that if the Soviet Union was going to survive as as a major power, it needed to industrialise rapidly.
- Stalin saw industrialisation as a way for him to win the power struggle within the party.
- Abandoning the NEP was also popular with the workers.
Gosplan
Gosplan
- Gosplan was the committee responsible for delivering the 5 year plans. It had existed since 1920 but now became more important.
- It set targets for factory managers and workers and worked to ensure they were achieved. Five thousand new factories were created between 1928 and 1937.
The success of five year plans
The success of five year plans
- The first two Five-Year Plans were completed each within 4 years. This was a great success.
- The first focused on heavy industries, whilst the second looked to use resources more efficiently, and to provide consumer goods.
Stakhanovite Movement
Stakhanovite Movement
- Aleksey Stakhanov was the son of peasant from Ukraine. There was a story that in August 1935 he managed to mine 102 tons of coal in under 6 hours. This was 14 times more than his quota.
- He was held up as an example to other workers, and became a national hero.
- He travelled the country and appeared on the cover of Time magazine in the west.
- He received two Orders of Lenin and the Order of the Red Banner.
Stakhanov as propaganda
Stakhanov as propaganda
- In reality, Stakhanov had assistants to help him in this work, and he had better equipment.
- In practice, those who tried to copy him disrupted the smooth running of their factories in pursuit of personal gain.
- He was used by the Soviet Union as an example of a Soviet worker.
The Successes and Failures of Industrialisation
The Successes and Failures of Industrialisation
There were both successes and failures of industrialisation and the five year plans.
Successes
Successes
- Workers gained more power and influence in the communist system, and workplaces became more organised.
- Production levels in industry increased dramatically from 1928 to 1939.
- Electricity supply and machinery production in particular were key successes.
- The Dnieper Dam and the Moscow Metro were built, serving as visual symbols of Russian engineering.
Failures
Failures
- It became harder to find a place to live, and targets grew higher and higher.
- The First Five-Year Plan set entirely unrealistic goals: a 250% increase in overall industrial development and a 330% expansion in heavy industry.
Outcome
Outcome
- Heavy industry grew enormously, and sparked the development of industrial cities like Magnitogorsk.
- Unemployment virtually vanished, and the country was able to re-arm.
- As there were more industrial workers the popularity of the regime grew.
1The End of Tsardom
1.1Russia's Economy & Society
1.2Nicholas II's Autocracy & the Court
2Lenin's New Society
2.1The Provisional Government
2.2The Impact of Lenin's Dictatorship
3Stalin's USSR
3.1Stalin the Dictator
3.2Stalin's Modernisation of the USSR
Jump to other topics
1The End of Tsardom
1.1Russia's Economy & Society
1.2Nicholas II's Autocracy & the Court
2Lenin's New Society
2.1The Provisional Government
2.2The Impact of Lenin's Dictatorship
3Stalin's USSR
3.1Stalin the Dictator
3.2Stalin's Modernisation of the USSR
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