The building of socialism in one country, the Soviet Union, up to World War II
From the
October Revolution to the outbreak of World War II, the USSR made enormous
progress unprecedented in the history of social evolution. In a very short
period of time it covered the greater part of the distance that separated it
from the developed capitalist countries.
The USSR
had to secure productive self-sufficiency in order to deal with international
isolation. It had to address the problem of energy sources, to develop its
steel and armaments industries, because of the international situation, with
neither a chemicals industry nor significant metal works. Under harsh,
disparate climatic and terrain conditions, heavy industry had to be developed
and the agrarian economy mechanised.
It was
necessary to establish strong central planning and centralised leadership for a
relatively long period of time. Central planning contributed decisively to
helping the USSR to stand on its own two feet, to cover the distance that would
normally have required centuries of socio-political and cultural development,
and to combat Hitler's fascist offensive thus making a decisive contribution to
the international victory against fascism.
The Soviet
power had to put into practice the principle of socialisation of the basic
means of production, at the same time developing the alliance between the
working class and the peasants, under conditions of a sharpening class
struggle.
19. The new
system, from the very beginning, chose to address the lack of a distribution
and supply mechanism, and the prevalence of scattered, backward and small
production units, with measures of an economic nature. It chose to act within
the spirit of the New Economic Policy. This choice was necessary during the
transitional period, where the new power had to build the foundations of
socialism on the grounds of capitalist relations. Intervention and isolation,
however, obliged it to abandon this choice early and led it to apply the policy
of "wartime communism" without which it would not have been possible
to defend the socialist revolution.
The CPSU did
not want, nor was it in its interest, that the class struggle which had
intensified during that period take on the form of a civil war. But it was
necessary because the supporters of the class society did not back down easily
nor, above all, quietly.
The policy
of "wartime communism" was succeeded by the "New Economic
Policy" (NEP) and later by the policy of "the socialist offensive
against capitalism" and the "all-out cooperative organisation of the
agrarian economy''.(9)
Generally,
Soviet power addressed successfully the problems associated with the recovery
of industry, agricultural production and transport. It laid the foundations for
socialist production with spectacular rates of growth and under conditions of
the sharpening of the confrontation between the socialist and capitalist forces
(kulaks and the section of the intelligentsia which stemmed from the ruling
class). (10)
The
specific conditions (encirclement and the threat of war in conjunction with a
high degree of backwardness) necessitated a very rapid pace of
collectivization, which in certain regions caused social friction and
difficulties in the alliance between the working class and the middle peasantry
against capitalism.(11) In party decisions and the speeches by Joseph Stalin,
reference was made to the problems and mistakes in assessing each region's
diversity. In some cases, preliminary preparatory work was replaced by a
bureaucratic enforcement of the movement, with decisions on paper to develop
collective farms in places which did not in fact exist.
The
problems which appeared in the course of collectivization aggravated the
contradiction between the working class and the petty and middle peasantry. Despite
the corrective decisions in the application of collectivization, problems remained.
20. The
adverse phenomena were used to publicize different viewpoints and dissensions,
which went beyond disagreements over the pace of collectivization. They touched
upon the very necessity to continue the class struggle against the kulaks, who
were opposing and hindering the building of socialist relations in the village.
The inner-party struggle constituted a barrier to progress in building
socialism (Bukharin group and Trotsky-Zinoviev).
The primary
phase in the building of socialism is a field for further study. It offers
experience of the relationship between the economy and politics during the
period in which the new power was trying to lay the foundations for socialist
construction by consolidating and cementing the alliance between the working class
and the middle strata in towns and villages.
21. Early
in the 1930s, Soviet power came up against new problems in the building of
socialism, such as the contradictions between the elimination of unemployment
and the delay in the effort for extensive mechanisation of production which was
manifested by a shortage of skilled labour and a levelling viewpoint on wages
policy. The party perceived the need to determine "new tasks for building
the economy in the new situation". It became aware of the need to step up
the rate of development in comparison with the corresponding rates of
development under capitalism.
Symptoms can be seen in party documents of some laxity in
its characteristics, such as bureaucracy, complacency, and abuse of power. This
fact led to the decision to "purge its ranks". The distortions which
arose can be attributed mainly to the problem of the promotion of cadres. In
the place of cadres who had felt victim to anti-socialist forces during the
civil war in the early years of Soviet power, replacements were elected who had
no experience, nor the required ideological and political background. (12)
The new situation demanded a new way of dealing with party
work, and within this framework, the party emphasized the need to expand
inner-party democracy and to address phenomena associated with the
administrative way of solving problems, and with violation of the principle of
the electibility of party cadres, as the constitutional procedures provided for
conferences were, unjustifiably, not being observed.
The study of this period and the relevant documents bears
witness to the fact that there was some departure and deviation from decisions.
Despite the measures taken to develop inner-party democracy and collectivity,
phenomena appeared of abuse of power and of arbitrary actions.
The criticism levelled at this period by the 20th Congress
of the CPSU (1956) did not constitute an all-round and objective examination of
the course of building socialism under those particular historical conditions.
The discussion was focused on the question of the personality cult, an issue
which by itself could not provide comprehensive explanations for the problems
of that time, nor for negative phenomena in the functioning and activity of the
party.
The most
serious event was that the 20th Congress condemned the correct position -- for
that particular historical period - i.e. that the class struggle was
sharpening. (14) During the pre-war period (building of socialism in a
country under conditions of encirclement), crushing the activity of the
exploiting classes, their supports and vestiges was not an easy task. Vigilance
was required with regard to the machinations of capitalism that had found a
response and support in the interior of the country among forces which had vested
interests in preventing the foundations of socialism from being built. At that
particular period, the centralised means of managing the economy was necessary,
and up to a point its repercussions in the political superstructure.
The criticism levelled by the 20th Congress was used to
launch a destructive and slanderous attack against socialism by people who were
certainly not interested in studying mistakes and deploring them, but who, in
the name of such mistakes, preferred to strike at the root of communist theory
and the socialist construction. In its talk of Stalin, imperialism showed all
its class hatred for the creation of the socialist system after World War II.
One
conclusion is that the party, at the most complex and difficult moments in the
building of socialism, should not have underestimated the fact that, apart from
the major, basic fact which was the counter-revolutionary threat, there was
also the danger of abuse of power and high-handed actions by cadres and organs.
There is a danger that anti-socialist criticism and activity may be confused
with the criticism of real mistakes and deviations.
The last word on the real problems, the total experience and
the negative aspects of this period has not yet been pronounced.
Deeper
study of the period is required so that the historic conclusions drawn will be
comprehensive and objective with regard to the primary phase of socialist
construction, and that the positive as well as the negative aspects are put
forward in their true dimensions.
e-mail:cpg@int.kke.gr