The Soviet Economy


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Case Details:

Case Code : ECON028
Case Length : 19 Pages
Period : 19915-2007
Pub. Date : 2008
Teaching Note :Not Available
Organization : -- Industry : - Countries : Russian Federation

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This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.

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Introduction Contd...

Russia then had an agrarian economy, with the serfs doing all the agricultural labor under the control of the nobility, who were the owners of the land. The continued oppression of the serfs and the Russo-Japanese war of 1904-05, which weakened the economy, contributed to the Russian Revolution of 1905.

With the country starting to industrialize, the number of industrial workers (the proletariat) also grew. As political and economic conditions worsened, revolutionary fervor increased and the Russian Revolution succeeded in removing the Tsar from power in 1917.

After the period of Civil War (1917-1922), the USSR or the Soviet Union was founded in 1922 and Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (Lenin)4 became the first leader of the USSR.

Lenin introduced a New Economic Policy (NEP), which permitted private activity in some sectors of the economy, while most sectors were retained under state control. After Lenin's death, Joseph Stalin (Stalin) took control of the USSR.

His era was characterized by an extreme centralization that included Five Year Plans and collectivization of agriculture. Rapid industrialization (through central planning) was also strongly emphasized. After Stalin's death, Nikita Khrushchev (Khrushchev) led the USSR. He came to be most remembered for his agricultural reform policy that included introduction of modern technology and allowing farmers to sell more grain in the open market...

 Excerpts >>

4] Lenin was the leader of the Russian Revolution in 1917 and the first leader of the Soviet Union.

 

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