Meltdown
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Meltdown

Inside the Soviet Economy

  1. 280 pages
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

Meltdown

Inside the Soviet Economy

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About This Book

This book describes the irrational life of Soviet producers, the monstrous deprivation of Soviet consumers, and the ideological origins of the Soviet economy that have resulted in a system unable to bear the weight of being a superpower. The authors spell out the challenges that Gorbachev and his successors face. The penultimate chapter deals with the privatization of the Soviet economy. In the last chapter they document the failure of Western experts and pundits to create a true picture of the Soviet system.

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1. Introduction

On February 17,1988, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev jolted the entire world when he told the Central Committee of the Communist Party that, except for vodka sales and the higher prices paid for Soviet oil, the Soviet economy had not grown for 20 years.1 The Central Intelligence Agency and Soviet specialists at Western universities were still reeling when top Soviet economist Abel Aganbe-gyan landed another punch:
In the period 1981-85 there was practically no economic growth. Unprecedented stagnation and crisis occurred, during the period 1979-82, when production of 40% of all industrial goods actually fell. Agriculture declined (throughout this period it failed to reach the 1978 output levels). The use of productive resources sharply declined and the rate of growth of all indicators of efficiency in social production slowed down, in effect the productivity of labour did not increase.2
In April 1988, after Gorbachev's speech and its dissemination in the West, the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency still put a positive gloss on the Soviet economy, telling the Joint Economic Committee of Congress that the Soviet economy grew roughly 2 percent yearly during 1981-85. In their report to the JEC, our intelligence agencies painted a picture of unbroken progress for the Soviet economy, which, they said, grew at a rate of 2.2 percent yearly from 1976 to 1980, 3.1 percent from 1971 to 1975, and 5 percent from 1966 to 1970.3 These estimates were reductions from the previous, more optimistic line.
The CIA has not been unique in exaggerating Soviet economic achievement. Since the Bolshevik Revolution, Western analysts have had a history of overestimating the accomplishments of the Soviet economy. Government and academic specialists alike predicted great success for the system of central planning that was first implemented by Lenin, finding a potency in the Soviet planned economy that would surpass our "chaotic" market economy. Perhaps the high-water mark in glorifying "Soviet-type planning" was a 1979 World Bank report, "Romania: The Industrialization of an Agrarian Economy under Socialist Planning." According to this report, "comprehensive economic planning, which was made possible by the state's control of the major productive resources and its monopoly over foreign trade," produced an average annual growth rate of 9.8 percent between 1950 and 1975, outstripping even the success of Japan and Hong Kong. As the Wall Street Journal noted in an August 10, 1979, editorial, using these lofty growth rates to project backward the World Bank's estimate of Romanian per capita income produced a figure too low to sustain life. "We have heard exaggerated claims made for central economic planning," the Journal wrote, "but never that it resurrected a whole nation from the dead."
Many Westerners were seduced by the Soviets' talk of systematically planning and controlling a national economy. Some progressive intellectuals had lost faith in capitalism and found central planning emotionally satisfying and exciting. Many scientists accepted the Marxists' claims that communism was based on science; in Great Britain there was an active movement among scientists calling on government to plan science in the interests of society.
Since capitalism was regarded as a system that elevated greed above social needs, the Great Depression in the 1930s shook what confidence intellectuals had left in the market. Laissez faire was officially pronounced dead, first by President Herbert Hoover's extra-market measures,4 and then by President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal. Rexford Tugwell, assistant secretary of the Treasury under Roosevelt, and Howard Hill observed in their 1934 book that
the challenge of Russia to America does not lie in the merits of the Soviet system, although they may prove to be considerable. The challenge lies rather in the idea of planning, of purposeful, intelligent control over economic affairs. This, it seems, we must accept as a guide to our economic life to replace the decadent notions of a laissez-faire philosophy.5
Julian Huxley, noted British scientist, concurred: "Proper planning is itself the application of scientific method to human affairs."6 In praising the efforts of the Soviets, Huxley remarked,
But while the Five Year Plan is without doubt of the greatest importance, it is in a sense only an incident, only a symptom. It is an incident in a long series of plans; it is a symptom of a new spirit, the spirit of science introduced into politics and industry.7
Thus, from the start the hopes inspired by planning led to an overstatement of the case. Forgetting completely the American experience, one traveler through the Soviet Union explained,
Economically, Russia calls for a collectivist society. Its fields are vast, its horizons remote: only a people organized as a whole can dominate the physical vagueness of Russia. It is the lack of such a dominance that left Russia impotent for a thousand years.8
Tugwell and Hill agreed, explaining that "there is little evidence that production in Russia is less than it would be under capitalism."9
In 1957 Stanford University professor Paul Baran, in his influential book The Political Economy of Growth, explained away the heinous crimes and devastation wrought by the Soviet regime in its efforts to create the new economic system:
For a considerable time both irrationality and error will mar also the socialist order. Crimes will be committed, abuses will be perpetrated, cruelty and injustice will be inevitable. Nor can it be expected that no mistakes will be made in the management of its affairs. Plans will be wrongly drawn up, resources will be wasted, bridges will be built where none are needed, factories constructed where more wheat should have been planted.10
Baran concluded that these mistakes were minor stuff compared to the victory of banishing the irrationality of the market from economic life:
What is decisive, however, is that irrationality will henceforth not be—as it is under capitalism—inherent in the structure of society. It will not be the unavoidable outgrowth of a social system based on exploitation, national prejudice, and incessantly cultivated superstition. It will become a residue of a historical past, deprived of its socioeconomic foundation, rendered rootless by the disappearance of classes, by the end of exploitation of men by men.11
Baran wholeheartedly sympathized with Stalin:
The attainment of a social order in which economic and cultural growth will be possible on the basis of ever-increasing rational domination by man of the inexhaustible forces of nature is a task exceeding in scope and challenge everything thus far accomplished in the course of history.12
Western observers continued to admire the wonders of central planning throughout the decades marked by government-imposed famines, purges, and slave labor camps. In 1932, while the terrible famine raged in the Ukraine, killing 7 million, Huxley enthused:
The first result of the plan, then, will be for Russia to reach a high level in heavy industry, even though this means keeping the food and comforts of the people at a low level. The next step will be to raise light industry to a corresponding level. ... If all goes well, this stage, when both industry and standard of living rival those of advanced capitalist countries, will be reached in fifteen or twenty years.13
Fifty-eight years later, the Soviets are further behind than ever. Indeed, even people in Third World countries such as Brazil, Malaysia, and the Ivory Coast have easier access to goods and enjoy higher standards of living than Soviet citizens.
Thanks to Mikhail Gorbachev and Soviet economists such as Abel Aganbegyan and Leonid Abalkin, almost everyone today understands that central planning does not work. Still, the Soviet economy remains a mystery to Westerners, and the Soviet consumer's deprivation is unimaginable to those accustomed to a convenient economic life filled with a rich variety of foodstuffs and consumer goods.
In this book we describe the irrational life of Soviet producers, the monstrous deprivation of Soviet consumers, and the ideological origins of the Soviet economy that have resulted in a system unable to bear the weight of being a superpower. We spell out the challenges that Gorbachev and his successors face. The penultimate chapter deals with the privatization of the Soviet economy. In the last chapter we document the failure of Western experts and pundits to create a true picture of the Soviet system.
For its own sake, the West must do a better job of understanding Soviet experience, both past and present.

FootNotes

1 Communique on the Plenary Session of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Pravda and Izvesłiya, February 18, 1988, p. 1. Also, Daniel Franklin, "The Soviet Economy," in The Economist, April 9,1988, and Abram Bergson, Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, "Gorbachev on Soviet Growth Rate," March 25, 1988.
2 Abel Aganbegyan, The Economic Challenge of PerestroiL· (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1988), p. 3.
3 "Gorbachev's Economic Program: Problems Emerge," Central Intelligence Agency report presented to Subcommittee on National Security Economics of the Joint Economic Committee of Congress on April 13, 1988, p. 61.
4 Charles A. Beard and William Beard, The American Leviathan: The Republic in the Machine Age (New York: The Macmillan Co., 1930), pp. 643-44. "While insisting that government and business should be considered separate entities, the President [Hoover] proceeded on the theory of planned national economy rather than on the assumption of fatalistic helplessness common to classical economic doctrines."
5 Rexford Guy Tugwell and Howard C. Hill, Our Economic Society and Its Problems: A Study of American Levels of Living and How to Improve Them (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1934), p. 527.
6 Julian Huxley, A Scientist Among the Soviets (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1932), p. 61.
7 Huxley, p. 60.
8 Waldo Frank, Dawn in Russia: The Record of a Journey (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1932), p. 240.
9 Tugwell and Hill, pp. 521-22.
10 Paul Baran, The Political Economy of Growth (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1962), p. 299. First published in 1957.
11 Baran, p. 299.
12 Ibid., p. 297.
13 Huxley, p. 98.

2. The Soviet Producer

Picture the life of factory directors in the Soviet Union. They esca...

Table of contents

  1. Preface
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. 1. Introduction
  4. 2. The Soviet Producer
  5. 3. The Soviet Consumer
  6. 4. The Original Aspirations and the Soviet Economy Today
  7. 5. Is the Soviet System Redeemable?
  8. 6. Privatizing the Soviet Economy
  9. 7. Beyond Marxism