Social Sciences, asked by yuvrajsarpanch35, 10 months ago

why Stalin introduced firm measures in Russia ​

Answers

Answered by toshupawar445
12

Answer:

Stalin, who headed the party after the death of Lenin, introduced firm emergency measures .He believe that rich peasants and traders in the countryside were holding stocks in the hope of higher prices Speculation had to be stopped and supplies confesticated.

Answered by sherin23
2

ANSWER-

Stalin, who headed the party after the death of Lenin, introduced

firm emergency measures. He believed that rich peasants and traders

in the countryside were holding stocks in the hope of higher prices.

Speculation had to be stopped and supplies confiscated.

EXPLANATION-

The period of the early Planned Economy was linked to

the disasters of the collectivisation of agriculture. By 1927-

1928, the towns in Soviet Russia were facing an acute

problem of grain supplies. The government fixed prices

at which grain must be sold, but the peasants refused to sell their

grain to government buyers at these prices.

Stalin, who headed the party after the death of Lenin, introduced

firm emergency measures. He believed that rich peasants and traders

in the countryside were holding stocks in the hope of higher prices.

Speculation had to be stopped and supplies confiscated.

In 1928, Party members toured the grain-producing areas, supervising

enforced grain collections, and raiding ‘kulaks’ – the name for wellto-do peasants. As shortages continued, the decision was taken to

collectivise farms. It was argued that grain shortages were partly due

to the small size of holdings. After 1917, land had been given over to

peasants. These small-sized peasant farms could not be modernised.

To develop modern farms, and run them along industrial lines with

machinery, it was necessary to ‘eliminate kulaks’, take away land

from peasants, and establish state-controlled large farms.

What followed was Stalin’s collectivisation programme. From 1929,

the Party forced all peasants to cultivate in collective farms (kolkhoz).

The bulk of land and implements were transferred to the ownership

of collective farms. Peasants worked on the land, and the kolkhoz

profit was shared. Enraged peasants resisted the authorities and

destroyed their livestock. Between 1929 and 1931, the number of

cattle fell by one-third. Those who resisted collectivisation were

severely punished. Many were deported and exiled. As they resisted

collectivisation, peasants argued that they were not rich and they

were not against socialism. They merely did not want to work in

collective farms for a variety of reasons. Stalin’s government allowed

some independent cultivation, but treated such cultivators

unsympathetically.

In spite of collectivisation, production did not increase immediately.

In fact, the bad harvests of 1930-1933 led to one of most devastating

famines in Soviet history when over 4 million died.

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