
Insights into the Soviet Union Economy and Society
Discover the complex reality behind the Soviet Union's economic success narrative from 1930 to the 1980s. Explore the vast geographical expanse, societal limitations, and misconceptions that shaped this historic era. Uncover the truth about the living conditions, societal disparities, and economic challenges faced by the average Soviet citizen. Reflect on the failed model of the Soviet economic system and the consequences of restricted political freedoms. Delve into the intricacies of Soviet economic planning and ownership structures to gain a deeper understanding of this significant period in history.
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Presentation Transcript
The Economy of the Soviet Union Was Good From a period from about 1930 to about the 1980s many talked about the Soviet economy with some admiration
Union of Soviet Sosialist Republics Now when we look back we pretend that we never said those thing They were not growing just doing a good job at acting for the world
USSR The old Soviet Union was by far the largest country in the world Covered nearly 1/6 of the worlds land From the Baltic Sea, bordered Finland and Sweden, all the way to the islands in the Bering Strait near Alaska. From Central Asia to the Artic. 11 time zones in all Even when the USSR disbanded in the early 90s, the Russian Federation is still the largest at twice the size of Canada
What was really happening? Few got a chance to visit and even fewer got a chance to see the truth Visitor were generally confined to a few cities like Moscow Nobody got a chance to see how the real population lived nobody was allowed into the rural areas
Average People Many did not have running water and therefore did not have toilets Many did not have electricity Many did not have phones Many did not have cars
We Were Fooled Paul Samuelson, Nobel Laureate
Failed Model We knew that there was not much political freedom In the old days we often justified this by talking about our inequalities, problems in our prison and justice system, problems with racial prejudice, non-universal healthcare, long-term unemployment Many just stated it as though they selected this tradeoff
How Soviet Economic Planning Worked The Soviet government owned the resources and the companies in the country Land, minerals, factories, machinery, all companies What is left a few private homes, some small family-size agricultural plots, and some personal and professional services
Soviet Planning Agencies Gosplan national economic planning Gossnab materials and equipment supply Gosstroi construction Goskomtsen prices Goskomtrud labor issues All were at the national level and most were duplicated at the 15 regional levels
What the bureaucrats did They made a plan for how much every enterprise would produce A detailed investment plan Other committees would determine all of the prices
Money and Credit These were not part of the major plan Just a medium of exchange Just one bank Gosbank
Gov Had a Monopoly on Foreign Trade All imports and exports had to go through a specific state agency Council for Mutual Economic Assistance COMECON Goal was to do large scale production of one good in one place
Sum Up the Bureaucratic Problem In an age of weak computing power you are trying to plan the total economy of this huge country Plans plans plans info is continually flowing up and down Tons of bargaining firms would ask for very low quotas and many resources
Promises promises promises Regional authorities would often promise to meet quotas
Taut Planning We are going to ask you to do something that according to our calculation you will not be able to do given your resources Why? The government thinks that the firms are lying about what they have and are capable of doing
Prices are Fixed With all of the chaos and poor planning, prices stay fixed for long periods Try to set the correct price, but quantity and price are not related nor are they related to the consumer they are just made up numbers
Planning From the Achieved Level Planning was often just This results in freezing existing patterns in place. In some ways the command economy degenerated into a traditional economy
Why Did This Central Economic Planning Seem So Attractive
War Had an Effect Also During both WWI and WWII the US government, as well as several governments across Europe, intervened heavily
The Demonstrable Failure of the Overly Planned Economy Failure in the macroeconomic statistics Failure in its ability to function well Failed at the basic task of providing goods and services that the consumers want
Productivity = Output / Person All those decade of good news and the Soviet economy was growing so fast By 1990, the Soviet Union had a per capita GDP comparable to countries like Turkey or Brazil
Quantities, Prices, Quality Quantities were made up Prices were made up Quality was unknown Growth must have been very slow in the 1970s and 1980s probably about 0
The Soviet Union Invested About 25% of GDP This is considerably above US levels Yet they had zero growth
Failure on the Micro Side The emphasis was on quantity over quality Distribution was never correct and long lines always formed Not to mention environment degradation
Quotas For a while they boasted that they were leading the world in television production
Quotas 600 million watches per year Every person can have 2 or 3 new watches every year
Widespread Shortages Soviet women used to spend hours every week just standing in lines The old joke is that if you see a line go stand in it because there is something that has worth
Planned System Lack of incentives and flexibility We pretend to work and they pretend to pay us
Externalities Rarely took environmental issues into account They had awful environment poisoning!
Norilsk An industrial town north of the artic circle The snow turns black, the air is yellow with sulfur, and over 60% of the population have serious respiratory problems
People Were Not Happy Lousy quality Long lines No incentives to advance Environment Destruction Planners can not just wave a wand at these problems and make them disappear
What was the Nationality of Adam and Eve
Two Ways Out of the Russian Economic Crisis The natural way and the miraculous way