Brezhnev
years:
Foreign
Policy
Afghanistan
Prague Spring
led to alienating countries in Communist bloc – Romania, Yugoslavia, Brezhnev doctrine destroyed relations with China
But
Détente was a success and slowed down missile production for Strategic weapons
Helsinki
granted recognition to iron curtain boundaries (Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia,
East Germany recognizes)
Economy
Central
Planning/ Command Economy was inefficient and could not respond to an
increasingly complex economy. It stressed quantity over quality and was poor at
delivering consumer goods
Agriculture - High agricultural subsidies (highest in the world in the
1970s) led to economic strain, - 22% of economy. Massive investment in Industry
still failed to bring improvements.
Living
standards did improve initially but by mid-70s slowed
Behind in
biotech, technology, I.T.
Military
spending was enormous about 25% of Soviet GNP from
1962-1982 was the Soviet military.
Low wages,
absenteeism, inefficient work practices, (‘you pretend to pay us, we pretend to
work’ was a motto) drunkenness rife.
Social
Endemic
Corruption “Nobody lives just on his wages."
His family was grossly corrupt. Allowed ’nests’ to spring up where local party
bosses promoted families and protoges.
Alienated
the intelligentsia with his clamp down, as he reduced works allowed to be
published.
Soviet people
had become increasingly educated and aware of the outside world and demanded
more from their government.
Political
Bureaucrats
as this had contributed to the dislike of Khrushchev. Allowed
Moral
and living standards declined by 1975 food and petroleum shortages.
Gorbachev
years
0.What were the aims of Gorbachev’s policies? And
what went wrong?
Glasnost
‘openess’ gave Soviet more freedom to speak out, read what they wanted and
criticise the party (but not the role of the party at first)
Had limits;
Stalin was criticised but not Lenin. USSR still had collectivisation/ WWII as
successes.
Freedoms also
meant more strikes particularly in mining as workers demanded higher
wages.
Also increased
nationalism, in Estonia in ’89 right to veto Russian laws, Baltic States drop
Russian language. 19 killed in Georgian demonstrations.
Economic
Policy
Perestroika
meant – ‘rebuilding’ of economy introducing market reforms but not necessarily
full free market. Early Lenin (NEP 1922 – 29) or Scandinavian socialism were
the original models.
Vodka drive
depleted state revenue
Raising of
retail prices encouraged hoarding and then inflation. As did co-ops in
retail, restaurants.
By 89 decline in
production, meat rationing in over half of the regions, sugar in almost
all.
Law of State
Enterprises: elect factory
directors (led to excessive wage rises). Factories decided what to produce after
state quota, less wage control and set wholesale prices.
Co-operatives - limit private enterprise in retail
sector (create inflation by charging higher prices for goods might have gone to
state shops, corrupt as often bribed officials for licences and factories for
products)
1990 economy was
in meltdown. Gorbachev refused to let factories and collectives go bankrupt
despite rapid deterioration in economy. 1991 output fell 18% and budget deficit
ballooned, no major foreign loans. Prices in shops doubled.
0.Was Gorbachev a failure?
See essay plan
on successes and failures
0.Was the communist system reformable?
Should they have
done Perestroika without the glasnost, like Deng did in China. This was more
successful. However, we can never tell…USSR might have been a different
situation than China.
Problems of
growing nationalism breaking up the Soviet Union was made worse by Glasnost.
Also, the Communist Party was so corrupt/ against change that it was the real
problem, yet it was the only vehicle for reform.
Vocab
words
Nomenklatura – communist party elite
Samizdat – self-published, illegal work
Andropov – leader of Soviet Union 1982 – 84…partial
reformer
Chernenko - leader of Soviet Union 1984 – 85
hardliner
Glasnost – see above
Perestroika – see above
Law on State
Enterprises –
Decentralises industry – got rid of central planning, factories could now
decide what to produce
Congress of
People’s Deputies – first
elected body of the Soviet Union – chose who was going to run the party
Boris Yeltsin – first President of Russia
Yegor
Ligachev – Soviet
‘hardliners’ opposed to reform
Coup of
August 1991 – coup to
reverse Gorbachev’s reforms
No comments:
Post a Comment