virgin stanley's policy of collectivisation yield immediately resaul
Answers
Answered by
0
mark as BRAINLIEST ANSWER
follow me
that ANSWER is too long
so I can't write
only 5000 words can be written
Trouble on U.S.S.R.'s Socialized Farms
A Disastrously Poor Harvest last year gave the Soviet Union one more of communism's many farm failures. Now Moscow is forced to make bulk purchases of wheat from the capitalist West. Raised once again is the specter of severe food shortages in the future unless Premier Khrushchev's crash program to develop the chemical fertilizer industry brings Soviet agriculture out of the stagnation in which it has been mired much of the time for years.
Soviet farm problems make it more than ever prudent for the Kremlin to avoid exacerbating the cold war. It needs to cultivate improved relations with the West if it wants to make further grain purchases or obtain favorable credit terms for the planned purchase of entire chemical plants from foreign countries.1 It is the consensus of Western experts that crop failures since Russia's last bumper grain harvest five years ago have rolled up a crisis of grave proportions.
According to a Central Intelligence Agency document (Soviet Economic Problems Multiply) made public Jan. 9, per capita Soviet agricultural production was 10 per cent lower in 1963 than in 1958, the bumper harvest year. Total Soviet farm output declined 4 per cent in 1962 and probably more than 4 per cent in 1963, C.I.A. analysts estimated. Agricultural failures were identified in the report as the “single most important factor” in holding the over-all Soviet economic growth rate to only 2.5 per cent in both 1962 and 1963.2
Khrushchev has slaked a good deal of his popularity and prestige on improvement of the country's agricultural position. Failure in food production was one of the chief charges he leveled against the Stalinist group when he took over firm control in 1956. He has repeatedly insisted that his “correct” policy would enable the U.S.S.R, to “catch up to and surpass the U.S.A.” in various branches of agricultural production. Realization of the extent of the massive farming setbacks recently suffered may well cause sharp questioning when the Communist Party Central Committee meets in Moscow on Feb. 10. The committee met last December to approve Khrushchev's fertilizer program, but another meeting was called by the Premier to review progress toward his goal of a quick increase in farm output.
follow me
that ANSWER is too long
so I can't write
only 5000 words can be written
Trouble on U.S.S.R.'s Socialized Farms
A Disastrously Poor Harvest last year gave the Soviet Union one more of communism's many farm failures. Now Moscow is forced to make bulk purchases of wheat from the capitalist West. Raised once again is the specter of severe food shortages in the future unless Premier Khrushchev's crash program to develop the chemical fertilizer industry brings Soviet agriculture out of the stagnation in which it has been mired much of the time for years.
Soviet farm problems make it more than ever prudent for the Kremlin to avoid exacerbating the cold war. It needs to cultivate improved relations with the West if it wants to make further grain purchases or obtain favorable credit terms for the planned purchase of entire chemical plants from foreign countries.1 It is the consensus of Western experts that crop failures since Russia's last bumper grain harvest five years ago have rolled up a crisis of grave proportions.
According to a Central Intelligence Agency document (Soviet Economic Problems Multiply) made public Jan. 9, per capita Soviet agricultural production was 10 per cent lower in 1963 than in 1958, the bumper harvest year. Total Soviet farm output declined 4 per cent in 1962 and probably more than 4 per cent in 1963, C.I.A. analysts estimated. Agricultural failures were identified in the report as the “single most important factor” in holding the over-all Soviet economic growth rate to only 2.5 per cent in both 1962 and 1963.2
Khrushchev has slaked a good deal of his popularity and prestige on improvement of the country's agricultural position. Failure in food production was one of the chief charges he leveled against the Stalinist group when he took over firm control in 1956. He has repeatedly insisted that his “correct” policy would enable the U.S.S.R, to “catch up to and surpass the U.S.A.” in various branches of agricultural production. Realization of the extent of the massive farming setbacks recently suffered may well cause sharp questioning when the Communist Party Central Committee meets in Moscow on Feb. 10. The committee met last December to approve Khrushchev's fertilizer program, but another meeting was called by the Premier to review progress toward his goal of a quick increase in farm output.
Similar questions