When
is Collectivization
In certain
situations,
low short-run Poland
agricultural
costs
reversed
partial
the early
and mid-1950s.
the same
process
1980s.
appeared
1980s
steps
success,
at least on
stew. nations
is not
so that
websof
costs of being
I wish
to
paper.
I am
out-of-step
1
During
2.
thank
an
1985),
Paul
pp.
“Spatial versity, S~JDIES
measures to make
faster
notable in large
situations, to return
an aquarium
to
it is easy out of fish
of the East
why various
when
railroads
other
Why
when
European
refer
keyboard
arrange-
gauges
all would
and
around
gained
short-run
ofothers, benefit
are better
by a given
of production costs
and to the imperfect
to the intentions
in&strialized
revolving
to the benefits
to the interrelatedness
are
industrial
mainly
to the high
economies
do many
do most
wider
questions,
These
although
a
I alone,
1964
seminar the
to
at
the
University
Institution
draft.
David,
and
project;
the
and
National
to Paul
however,
am
North
Vietnam
1974,
University
“Clio
and
same
author,
in the
Social
Technology
the
Economics
“Path
tech-
of breaking
information
ofthe
not daring
to bear
the
if all decided
together
to
responsible
for
experienced
A and
Model
with
an
the 533,
to
Workshop,
the
informal NY:
0003-22
$03.00
@
1991
VOL.
XXIV,
University
Past
No.
1, March
East
and
European
Susan
at on
the this
Studies
Woodward
for
of decollectivization 1989)].
2 (May,
No.
Institute
Economics,” 1988;
Standardization
1991,
type Sharpe,
in
November,
Department
of California
and
and
comments
Economic Review,
of
1987.
COMPARATIVE COMMUNISM,
Cruz
their
errors.
A mencan
Report
Application
Productivity
Wang,
(Armonk,
Putting
Santa for
for Soviet
Christine
ofQWERTY,”
Technical
California, Berkeley
Council
David,
Dependence:
Sciences,
of
of California,
Question in Norfh Vietnam, 1974-1979
Externalities:
paper,
IN
Union
any
taken
for instance,
typing?
to these
to the benefits;
at
for this
period
A.
in
Hoover
TheA,qrarian
Network
0039.3592/91/01
Soviet
have noted,
efforts
Why,
another;
with others
support
Studies
Unpublished
in their given
with regard
Seminar
to the
332-337;
Mathematical
been
participants
earlier
the
Fforde, See,
in
action.
grateful on
gauges
upon
financial
comments
in the late
historical
observers
for a moment
much
one
Communism
for providing
in and
can be blamed
in certain
on typewrit&s,
allow
in comparison
a particular
consider
keyboard
agents
The
to achieve
an outcome that
or standards.
technology;
economic
Comparative
decollectivized;
also be unsuccessful.
system
depends
such
any large-scale
use the same
interaction
individual
and
1950s
such as Mozambique
unable
the decollectivization
in context,
have
was
As some Soviet
and embeddedness.2
others
nologies,
[Adam
might
narrow
answers
externalities
when
and early
and Vietnam
nations
but impossible
that
the QWERTY
Several
network
*
so that
technologies
use relatively
safer?
take
1990s
this possibility
use
Laos,
relatively
Yugoslavia
must be noted.
but
possible
to failure.
the prospect
such as the Dvorak
nations
user
reversible
into inefficient
nations
1940s
essentially
African
Although
it is also
are doomed
raises
To place
ments
1980s.
failures,
in the early
locked
China
with
instance,
of the late
ofdecollectivization
fish stew out of an aquarium,
This
For
in Cambodia,
in some
decollectivization
by the late
farming
to make
failure
a partial
policy
collectivization individual
1980s
to be occurring also collapsed
one major
toward
measure
drives
the early
is reversible,
benefits.
as well.
Nevertheless, took
certainly
long-run
collectivization
During
1Collectivization
the late
collectivization
and considerable
their
Reversible?
3-24
Douglas of
Economics,
Railway
J.
for
Puffert, Gauge,”
Stanford
Uni-
4
STUIIIES
Considerable nations also
be locked
willing the
evidence
can be locked into
to defend
lack
lasted
institutions In some
cases
individual
certainty
that
collective
private
steps,
accruing
benefits
to society
reason
may
may
or state
autonomous
production
farms,
e.g.
purpose
economic, major
sociological,
thesis
situations:
is that where
and whcrc decades.
with
of this
greater
political
for that
of the
may
takt
calculations
who must
the
Third,
the
implement
and thus
the
have
good
land to those wishing inputs
farms
to thern.
organized and their
A change the workers
the same,
either
as
creation
as
of ownership or others
hold
is quite
a diffcrcnt
the most
important
ease. more
likely
technology
has been
specifically
making
is more
agriculture
the exarnplcs
roughly
that,
benefits
of
of the
means
action.
farms,
in which
remain
(so
others
in their
of the government.”
factors
of agricultural
that
agricultural
operated
the costs
the lack
to them)
the social
infertile
of large-scale
is to consider
collectivization
the level
collectivized In short,
much
discussion and
by assigning
into a corporation operations
First,
actions
certain
officials
far outweigh
overseeing
the power
or politically,
and withholding
independent
farming
reasons:
and complementary
into indiviciually
a conversion
and can occur
The
units
are
of
as well,
the specific
for instance,
will be available
but local
the break-up
officials
complementary
economically
for instance,
enterprises,
but the essential
matter
the costs,
rents,
as a whole
to take into account
take a similar
high
possihle
if they
aspects agricultural
agriculture
own decisions,
will lie below
even
off, either
1 mean
cooperatives
stock
of change for them
outweigh
them
By decollectivization
or
such
arc
such as
controversy.
or local
(so that,
inputs
yet
slave
if
they can
historians
such feudal
to the system their
and
surely
agriculture
and
for
to more
for several
Second,
the program,
charging
be said
to guide
reduced)
if others
end up worst
land,
of these
system.
dues;
farmers
then
of feudal
underlying
is open
actions
is inefficient;
few economic
aspects
of labor may
of agricultural
net benefits
to them
to sabotage
to lease
be
example,
of change
similar
will
agriculture and standards,
causes
to individual
it may be impossible
benelits program
same
the benefits
sources
of the entire
similar
The benefits
take
chairmen
expected
changing
initial
such calculations will
alternative
system
after
but
outweigh
farm
instance, their
costs,
others
For
of this institution
the long-term
who are making
collectivized
of certain
or the
to wane.
COMML’NISM
technologies
efficiency
centuries
short-run
to that
that
institutions.
movement many
the inefficiency
the overall farms
inefficient
appeared
although
suggests
into inefficient
the economic
of factor
feudalism
IN COLIP.AKATI\.E
decollectivization to be
in the country
the dominant
of successful
irreversible form
decollectivization
difficult. in two is relatively
ofproduction briefly
noted
The
types
of
high;
for many above
are
not random.
Economic
Factors
Dec~~llecti~~ization commensurate
is most
to the effort
appealing he would
to the hard-working be willing
to expend.
farmer From
whose
income
this simple
is not
idea we can
?. Included in my drtinition ofdccollecti~%~A~~ are cases where private farminS includes many diffvrrnr types ofgroup activities, e.g. when a rice lield is irrigated by a sin+ system maintained by a group, wjhilc the liclds are subdivided into a number ofstrips, each farmed by a different household. Decollerrivization can also occur without full markrtization. rsprcially of factor markets; and it can also take place without a drwloped sysrrm of contractrnforcemrnt (as in China), although it is likely that such a sys~crn would won cwlvr. I’ht~ creation of autonomous units and the breaking of the link with thr go~ernrnent nppcars tu bc the raiest part of thr problt~m: by the end of 1990 none of the East European nations had an qricultural pian fin ttx farrm to f~ollow and the crfatmn ~f~“t~*~,~,~,~s units seemed well on its was.
When is Collectivization predict
that those
option
in those
shirking
is easy
accounting
farmers
adopt
farms
where
and
work
unit
analyses
for China.”
system
that
moreover,
provide
such
a venture
semblance
Network
What
individual
exactly
do
in centrally
satisfying time.
reward
in
some
also requires,
in agriculture
a viable
farm
with
be consistent
with other
the
so that
(e.g.,
where
the
statistical
the creation
indi~,idualized
a certain
choice
if given
interesting
however,
to support
economic
quickly
performance
level
of
farming.
of economic
at a particular
level
of risk;
goals of the government
so that
of permanency.
A New Institutional
institutions
a commensurate
the household
must
the most
to monitor
confirmed
Decollectivization structure
such a program
it has some
given
5
farming
it is difficult
hypothesis
must
makes
household
is not
an
new institlltional
new
return
hard
is large},
by Lin
an entirely This
would
collective
Reversible?
the needs
in the Agricultural farmers
Nevertheless,
program
that
cannot
economies?
below
the short-run
a decollectivization
need
administered
discussed
Sector be
Most
are of a short-run
costs
provided
of the nature
and time-constraints
to be followed
the
existing
involved
and can
may
by a leader
by
problems
be solved
in over
be too high to permit
facing
considerable
internal
opposition. A Reliable and Accessible Source offnputs: centrally
planned
seeds,
fertilizers
storage,
have
such
based
small
contract
(a) Since outlets
they cannot
would
collective
have
farms
is followed,
the existing
provide such
power
many
farmers
being a parent
supply
services
(e.g.,
(e.g., repairs,
amount.
Collective
and state
elaborate
networks
the
agricultural
Stalinist
by large
problems
units
model
that were usually
are compounded
to maintain
networks,
for the
the existing
who
use the various
needed
inputs
“Small
A hundred
only railroad
network.
by
difficult
leasing
can’t
problems
cars full. The
systems As
easily
to
and of
Zhores
separate
would
smallest
press
commitments
themselves.
operators
opposition
In the Soviet
on their
land
strategy
of individual-
by the active
reneging
retail
by the members,
for the system
chairmen
Union,
provides.
incentives
special
of the original
If the latter
to be elected
may be compounded over
either
remnants
this function.
have
farm
to obtain
for the Soviet
are no sacks offertilizer,
strong
control
to farmers
to fulfill would
problems
from
such
or else the administrative
of collective
farm
farm
within
to developing
since
input
may have
network
unable
has noted
the network
Such
of the remnant
inputs
and
to the farms
to be maintained
comes
inputs
parts),
especially
the labor
director
instances
the proper
Medvedev There
farm
to fail, i.e.
whose
one finds
have
farms
equipment,
reasons:
afford
the leader
for collective
manpower
and services
to be developed
would
then
ized farming of those
for three
problem the proper
time and in the right
problems,
and far from the users. units
spare
considerable
the sales of such goods
urban
obtaining
and
at the right
devoted
supply
A chronic
has been
insecticides,
therefore
solving
featured
since
and
or transportation)
farms for
economies
come
normal
A. from
up daily.
tractor
is 150
horsepower.“” 4. SW, tional
Justin
Choice,”
iHousehold
Yifu
Lin,
“The
~rn~jc~n~o~~~a~
Responsibility
Household
in China’s
neile/uprnentandCulluraf Change, Vol. A+cultural 5. 42
11‘.
Cited
Productivity by Mark
Growth
Kramer,
Responsibility
ffj~~r~r~~f~rui
“Can
Economics,
Agricuitural 36,
No.
R~forrn:
3 (April,
in China,” Gorbachev
System Vol
UCLA Feed
1988),
69,
Reform NO.
in China:
2 (May,
A Theoretical Supplement,
Working
Paper
Russia.”
New
and pp.
No.
1987), Empirical
199-225;
576,
York ‘limes
A Peasant’s pp.
Los
Study,” “Rural
Angeles,
Magazrne,
Institu-
410-415;
April
“The Eronom~~
Reforms
and
1989. 9,
1989,
pp.
6
SIUDIES IN COMPARATIVE COMMUNISM It
should
economy,
be
noted
many
instance,
in China
of the
of these
virtually
80 to 90 per cent from
rural
and
local
industries
all hand
efforts
to
increase
required
inputs
have
been
near
those
who use their
have
often
been
by small-scale Although
this effort
continued
of output
from
time;g
rural
much
at roughly
enterprises
of this,
exceeded
however,
been
to local rapid
came
to
rural
industry
for manufacturing After
than
in the
the reforms,
rural
rural
the gross
value
output
for the
of agricultural
rather
of
which
in the countryside
and by 1986
value
to urban
so
features
degree
of Chinese
needs.
rate
lasted
20 horsepower, fertilizers
the
For many
population.h many
unique
located
a capacity
the gross
went
has
of the
enterprises
the same
rural
of nitrogen
“One
the successes
created
the
had high costs,
54 per cent
for responsiveness
to grow
by
problem.
producing
with less than
production
supplied
administered
input
industries
used
declare:
products.“8
and the potential
industry first
agricultural
of rural
machinery
and
Yusef
of a centrally agricultural
and many
and farm
and
overemphasized,
this
goods
failed
fertilizer,
Perkins
China’s
framework
consumer
tools
of phosphorus
the
to relieve
the formation
inputs
enterprises.7
countryside
within
encouraged
farm
many
that by 1980
even
are possible
Mao
necessary
Although
that
measures
producers
and
consumers. Such
local
responsive other
Marxist
exception. mittees
regimes
their
1950s
by creating
various
remains These
“agro-industrial
technologies.
lock-in
be added
serious
of problems
of interrelatedness
producing
Korea
rural
supplies,
effects.
districts,” that
is this supply
which
underlie
Such
conditions
but help to keep the system equipment
Hungary
the county-level
industries Vietnam
are examples
system,
small-scale
and by the mid-1960s
It must
the more types
for
In the mid-1980s
to be seen.
technology,
the supply
of rural
in North
to develop
supervision; factories.”
simplify especially
have a network
In the late
such
and
not only
demands,
were encouraged
under from
industries to local
which
about
(kun)
would
tools.“’
but
management
aid the collective
to move
whether non-labor
this
Few
the most notable
half of all consumer
also started
the more
and
being
goods
came
in this direction
experiment
inputs
comfarms
required
works by the
problem.
of the conditions the existence also explain
of “strong
of positive the lock-in
complementarity”
feedback
mechanisms
of certain
inefficient
l2
(b) Large-scale
mechanical
equipment
cannot
be divided
easily
among
the farmers
of
6. American Rural Small-Scale Industry Delegation, Rural Small-Scale Industry VI the People’s Republic ofChina Production in the (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977); Lee Travers, “Peasant Non-Agricultural China’r Economy Looks Tou~ard People’s Republic of China, ” in U.S. Congress, Joint Economic Committee, fhe Year 2000, Volume I, The FourModernizations (Washington, DC: G.P.O., 1986), pp. 376-387. 7. Christine Wang, Maoism and Deuelopmen!: Rural Industrialization in the People’s Republic of Chzna (Sorthcoming). 8. Dwight Perkins and Shahid Yusef, Rural Deuelopmenl in China (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1984), p. 61. Rural Industrial Growth in the Post-Mao Period,” Modern China, Vol. 9. Christine Wong, “Interpreting 14, No. 1 Uanuary, 1988), pp. 3-30. c h ronicles an interesting Soviet schizophrenia: the economic authonticx 10. Stefan Hedlund (pp. 91-96) recognize the importance of such small-scale equipment, but they seem unable to produce such equipmrnt for the farmers in any volume commensurate with the need. [Priuale Agriculfure in the Sooiel IJnmn (New York: Routledge, 1989)] Another example is found in Poland, where the government paid considerable money to purchase a licence to produce giant Massey-Ferguson tractors suitable only for the large fields of the state farms. Ofcourse, most Polish land was farmed in smallholdings for which such tractors were quite unsuitable. 11. Joseph Sang-hoon Chung, The North Korean Economy (Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1974), p. 70. 12. David, op. cit., note2.
When is Collectivization a collective
farm
to competing possible worthy
for the farms individual
in Eastern
harvest
the crop.
consuming
and
particular Whether general clearly
especially
than
highly
the newly
small
dairy
operations.
could
as well as for the non-labor or hand
weeding,
of course, unless
than
of farm
by much
equipment
regression
more
13.
I>in (1987,
1988),
14.
Ifthe
is mechanized,
actually
farm
used.
of lack
In some
of spare
15.
Paul
coopt,ratives
to jointly and
harvesting
machinery.
He have
Technological
Victorian
Britain,”
Mrthutn,
1971), (1985)
rraping USA.
Alan Olmstead,
l’p.
601 I(%
“The
rather
than
where
services, machines,
proportions
represents,
situations
might
to begin
fall
production
agriculture,
for
to has
form
as certain
been
century tasks
equpment
cooperatives
for constraint
have
required
the
to
were such
time
the
farm
was
was inoperable
greater
difficult and
19th
post-harvest
would
Tenure
such
paper”
because
a problem. in the
such
a much
equipment have
whether “on
such
equipment
reaping, and
users
to form shelters,
mowing,
the
Corn
of
some
Landscape
of
or
the problems
to form
[“The
negotiate.
Mechanization
willing as corn
type
and
the
Harvest
in
in the
“The
ed.,
interpretation
that
in the mid
is controversial
newly 1800s.
to share Vol.
settled Given such
Mechanization
Agricultural
has
farms,
available.
ProductIon farm
Farm
Change
and
In China,
farm
- 1984.
some
where
cottrrtivc
in farm
farm
of
the
(but
Otmstead
not
relatively
reaping
and
1975),
the
short
equipment
Reaping
35, No. 2u me,
Mechanization
and
states
(1975)
devrlopcd growing
might
Mowing
pp. 327
season
be more in
-353;
Martin
and
sharing
in most
swcre
than
American
Philip
Science, No.
Controversy,”
and states),
of
of the in the
Agriculture,
L. Martin
227 (February
and 8,
Alan 1985),
-606. Wirrzbicki
~ottcctive
1983
is not
farmers
unwilling
of such
arrangements
Olmstead,
raising
also be easier
in such
account
why
harvesting
Land
1879,“JournulqfEconomicHisto~y,
183S I>
of making
L.
labor
in factor
the
farm-
to decollectivize
various
individual
into
equipment or
would
This
out
common
upon
of animal
be easier would
oftheequipment
context
McCtoskey,
and
208.1
a
Ersays on a Mature Economy: Bri:azn @er 1840 (London: T echnml Choice, Znnooakm, and Economic Growth (New York: Cambridge
N.
pointed
was
, problems
USSR
which
p
have
equipment
were that
Interrelatedness,
1975),
in
to decollectivize
types
l6 It is also possible
to take much
equipment
of use
pp. 212%214;
Press,
important of the
but
in Donald
be easier
for these
hand
to small-scale
different
conjectures
arrangement,
Machine:
Olmstead
division
priority
not just
on a particular
certain
production
effort.
as Romania,
in a quite
equipment,
would
01 compensation
University
the
change
out
4.
it is also
USC plowing
other
who
note such
so that
considers
threshrrs, deriding
up. al.,
using
This
be time-
carried
depends
would
(e.g.,
and farm
individual
appropriate
countries
parts
David
supplies
fertilize,
would
be
crop
Decollectivization
the newly
weed,
to be effective.‘”
would
his own labor
herbicides).
greater
SSR
Similarly,
as pigs or sheep,
substitute
input
rather
a technological
offset
SSR.
seed,
must
of major
Nevertheless,
services
period
is a problem
in Georgia
in Kazakh such
farmer
these
services
animals
mechanized private
to coordinate time
collectives
of household
mechanized,
the land,
short
farms
the system
highly
more
to prepare
is quite
large-scale
and it is note-
option.
these
growing
wheat
are much
on the type
little
is another
since
but
relatively
the last to adopt
of equipment
the equipment farmers
not be underestimated
and in a relatively division
of leasing
using
cooperatives
negotiation
of mechanization,
the grape
must
were
which
especially
sequence
the large
farms,
I4 The
or not this
level
to the individual
need to buy services
difficult,
time
farms
equipment
Europe,
would
solution
services
involved
mechanized
7
Chinese
type of agriculture
the difficulties
“r Creating
farmers
The
sell mechanical
labor-intensive
that the more in China.
dissolved.
which
although
farming
than
is being
for a highly
equipment,
and
that
groups,
Reversible?
interesting
the
farmers
increased
as we do now, in the
[Wang,
mechanization
as one
farmer
Community,
sales
op. cit., during
declined
note71 the
of technological
to
we would
Rural
machinery
and,
examples began
Some 1980s.
have
use
been
hand-methods noted
millionaires.”
” in Inrtylul after foreign
to the
the
of
following
farming
author,
“If
[Zbigniew and
sales
of the Chinese
rhe
because wr T.
had
of small
brrakup
tractors
countryside
of Polish
machinery worked
Wierzbicki,
FilorofiiandSoclofqeii(Warsaw,
reforms,
observers
regression
“The
1968), did have
was
as hard
the
Collective
pp. not
not
on
186 - 191.1
recover
reported
until
a decline
8 countries
STUIXES IN COMPARATIVE
such as Czechoslovakia
COMMUNISM
(or Zimbabwe)
have
been
doing.‘7
Again,
this
solution takes time and resources. (c) The problems of dividing the assets among the members of a collective farm or the workers on a state farm are more serious with farm infrastructure, much of which was constructed for large-scale production and not for individual farming. The barns are built to house large herds of dairy cattle (in East Germany, for instance, barns housing over 2000 cows are common); the material handling equipment is designed for massive amounts of supplies, the silos hold a large volume of crops. Again, sharing or leasing arrangements lottery.‘8
can be made; and in Bulgaria
The former arrangements
livestock have been distributed
take time and effort;
through a
and the intervening
can be disastrous for the newly established individualized farmers. Several aspects of the administration of the division of land, equipment,
period
and capital
deserve mention. Clearly in situations where the collectives are merely nominal, decollectivization can be carried out without much difficulty. Decollectivization is also easier to carry out where the ownership unit on the farm is the team,lg rather than the farm itself, and where the internal organization of labor on the farm is land-centered (a group of workers carry out all farm tasks on a given piece of land). In this case (exemplified by China), a small group can divide the land, which all know well, in a manner perceived as fair.*O The opposite case (exemplified by the USSR) where the ownership unit is the entire farm and where the internal organization is not landcentered (but rather structured around products and functions) gives rise to problems. The group is too large to make such decisions, the individual farm members are not well acquainted with specific pieces of land, and the farm manager must make the key decisions
about the division of land. This state of affairs both increases
the possibility
that decollectivization measures promulgated by the top can be resisted by the local cadre and also increases the likelihood of serious inequities, either inadvertent or deliberate. Both possibilities raise the risk to individual farmers. Another complicating factor in dividing the land and the assets is that in some ofthese countries, land claims by previous owners who have left the farm raise difficulties. In Czechoslovakia, East Germany, and Hungary, considerable controversy has raged over which post-war land reform is to be considered the “base line” for settling land disputes. prices of agriculturai P~ofi~a~~E Sale of&tputs: This refers not only to the “official” produce, whether determined by the market or by central government, but also to the 17. Goodman, Hughes, and Schroeder point out that in the USSR, both the 11 th Five Year Plan (1981-85) and the 1982 “Food Program” stressed the importance of increasing production of small-scale agricultural equipment. The major emphasis still lay, however, in the production of large-scale equipment. [Ann Goodman, Margaret Hughes, Gertrude Schroeder, “Raising the Efficiency of Soviet Farm Labor: Problems and Prospects,” in Gorbachev’s Economic Plans, Vol. 2, U.S. Congress, Joint Economic Committee (Washington, DC: G.P.O., 1987), pp. 100- 126.1 Timofeev notes that even such farm tools as shovels and rakes are poorly designed and too heavy for easy use by children and older people. who generally work the personrtl plots. [Lev Timofeev, Soviet Peasants (New York: Telos Press, 1985), pp. 80 ff.] 18. Anon, “East European Farming: No Yeomen They.” ~~~~co~~~~~~, July 21, 1990, pp. 15-17. 19. By “ownership unit” I mean the group that has effective control over the land, equipment, and tools. In China, the farm could not transfer equipment from one team to another; in the USSR, it could. 20. This does not mean that division of the land was easy in China because the teams still had 20 to 40 households. In Laos and Vietnam the apparent ownership unit was the small farm (a subunit of a larger state farm) or team, usually with a land-centered labor organization. This eased the processes of decollectivization that occurred in each country. Such a division of land must also be constrained by certain guidelines about equality of division, which are set and enforced by the central government. Otherwise, the process may be halted by conflict between those households who brought (or whose forefathers brought) land into the collective and others who brought little or no land into the collective.
When is Collectivization structure tion
of agricultural
to occur
farmers,
procurement.
at the same
the farmers
time
may
state
procurement
offices.
Tome
attempted
to assign
state
farms
incentive tion
processed structure
the government
as decollectivization
have
no price
For
the cocoa
produced
was not favorable
farm
by these
marketiza-
prices
paid
to
to monopsonistic
the government
to individual
farmers
for the aims
crops
of 1988
lands
allows
the official
to sell their
in the summer
of its state
either
or raises
incentive
instance,
some
9
of S”ao Since
the
and paid very low prices,
the
of the reform
farmers.
and the decollectiviza-
failed.
Credit: Other financial rent
measures
instruments
farm
course,
assets.
Without
risk to farmers have
steps
or has taken
bank
without
function credit
very
many
local
credit
clear
seriously
little
incentive press
for individual
where
they
had nothing
they preferred
density,
it is difficult
a sizable
centers
were
to create
never (or
of rural
ing the rural density
to maintain
suppressed a varied
is high or where
or a nation
where
In sum,
latter
the population
groups
to spend
their
in a rural goods
of
Chinese special
and encouraged is known
(the
to farmers),
through
and,
credit
it
were
difficult,
has negative
and,
without
that is easily
population
both time and
bureaucratized
toward
servic-
the population
it is a task requiring
attitudes
it is
to a large
network
where
has
marketing
density,
accessible
of a retail
in a long-term
such
reachable
government
the older
market
especially
in the because
with a low population
Chinese
a high
goods
reported
dissolved
money
Moreover,
with
is an important
been
have
market
the development
supply
goods
have
sector the
outlets.
exist in embryo,
is in rare
cases
of contrast,
is not conceptually such markets
The
the whose
than
units
of consumer
consumer
although
1979
institutions
work
many
an agricultural
level)
industry
contract
and retail
completely
workers.
talents.
traders
in
of
bankruptcy
not taken
institution
at the local
Union
consumer
way
resuscitate)
population
commercial
By
hand (an
or
of credit,
orderly
creating
and
sell,
of agriculture.
on which
a varied
other
to rural
availability
22 Of course,
of people.
e.g.
the smaller
productivity
shops
where
of these
credit
In the Soviet
leisure.
the rise of rural
easier number
more
number
encouraged
ready
high
in the local
goods,
more
facilities
or to buy,
has either
Bank
the reorganization
farming.
hardworking,
the
sector
of supporting
during
Union
21 On
of credit credit
the availability
manner,
of the activities
supply
Supply of Consumer Goods: The
and
Agricultural
to the agricultural
that the problems
considered
Soviet formal
branches.
is that they
bank
by the difficulties
The
former
as the creation
to obtain
institutions
multiplied
Although
impression
financial
in a purely
the
such
farms
established.
them
resuscitated
cooperatives.
seems
such
not been
is to supply
general
also be taken individual
increases,
these
government
must
to allow
procedures
by
Unless
Reversible?
commerce
economy and trade.
Problems Facing the Individual Farmers The
return/risk
ticipate The system”
facing
in individual first for
step
individual agriculture.
toward
agricultural
farmers Some
decollectivization output,
but
must
be sufficient
of the major is usually many
farmers
problems
to induce arising
the development are
reluctant
farmers
to par-
are as follows. of a “contract to
accept
such
21. Kramer, op. cit., note 5. 22. Roy D. and Betty A. Laird, “The Zueno and Collective Contracts: The End of Soviet Collectivization?,” in Josef C. Brada and Karl-Eugene Wadekin, eds., Soczalist Agriculture in Transition. Orpnizational Response to Failins Performance (Boulder: Westview Press, 1988), pp. 34-44; Kramer, op. cit., note 5; Yu. Vorobyev, “Ob Arende-Otkrovenno,” Prauda, April 18, 1989, p. 2.
10
STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE
contracts.
For
indicated
that
system. only
instance, only
” A later
30 per cent
to take
resistance
at that time
up private
were
ofthe
concerned
enables
about
side that
policy
to become
investments
needed
current
leases
to take
it back
to increase
lack credibility or violate
property
production
because
their
stated
the contractual
after
beautiful
farmer
rural
ready
to do (which to be
in China,
“the
people
survey
party’s
periodically
fieldwork
could
population
are not believed a 1987
whether
because
expending
one
actually
rights
that
reported
to such activities
sweep
interviews
that farmers
the collective
also
“in
of the
to Bernstein, about
From
that
decollectivization
and rumors
and Hanstad
revealed
they
farm,
10 to 14 per cent
Arcording
is occurring.
Prosterman
fear
legal protection
still worried
the contract
source
and the [individual]
effective
rich will change’
recollectivization in China,
after
the
by Vorobyev
under
but
40 per cent
but only
reversals.
a contract,
individual
In surn,
years
reported a farm
the same
voiced an
providing
that 80 per cent
from
roughly
farming,
some
work
180 degrees
consideration).“”
Even
showed
people
families
such
turn
lack ofIaws
under
or stable.
households
could
specialists
up such
ii4any
on
‘Q* A 1990 poll showed
in taking
“strong”
chairmen
system.
resources
policies
so, in part because were
to the and
government
interested
be willing
farm
Linc~nditionally
would
energy
everything.
of Soviet
farm
considerable lose
poil would
poll of collective
considerable moment
a 1987
10 per cent
COMMUNISM
of 100
policy
that
the countrywith
81 farm
are not undertaking
of uncertainties
the
of tenure;
the
still owns the land and has the power
conditions
without
much
recourse
available
to
the farmers.2” Every
inconsistency
of government
government
leaders
government
to the farmers
increases
of individual
farming
in some
type
difficulties unrest,
facing inflation
about
the
a government
policy,
future
the risks
conflicting
Any
dissension)
broken
general
by different
promise
by
their
resources
face in investing
the possibility
or political
statement
every
farmers
arran~er~lent.
that raised
or shortages,
every
of agriculture,
political
or economic
of its replacement would,
of course,
the
(e.g.,
ethnic
aggravate
such
fears. On a deeper rights,
i.e.
level,
rights
the government. (but
In past
not all) of other
determined property many upward
the problem
which
rights. of these pressure
as Karl countries. on
centuries
Marxist
by the current
of confidence
can be enforced neither
regimes
policies Wittfogel 27 For
agricultural
lies in the creation
and which China
cannot
nor the Soviet
had objective
ofthe
government
described instance, cadres
laws,
rather
or ruler.
it, continued
of “strong”
be suddenly
The
away
nor
a number
Union property
tradition
through
property
taken
rights
the
USSR
Nove
notes
which
led
to the
“repeated
were
of “weak”
the Marxist
for
by
the
era
in
constant
dishonoring
of
When is Collectivization pledges
about
the size of the delivery
the removal
even
considerable
may
use such
annul
a particular
unit,
or to raise
The
governmental
units
farm
whose
to return
contract
is much
careers
farm
in the operations
more than
important
in China,
are no longer
grain’
of course,
tied
because
interest”)
to
of the contract
in the Soviet where
or
creates
with the government
or to intervene
chairman,
‘borrowed
This,
(or “overriding
interests”
problem
is the collective
11
for livestock.“28
with a lease
as “state
in the contract,
the rent.
the lessor
local
excuses
clause
or promises
and grain
risks for any household
the lessor
where
quota,
of seed grain
Reversible?
Union,
the lessors
to increases
are the
of agricultural
production. The
creation
of strong
a series
of measures
in 1983
of introducing
the
permanency
however,
become
property
more
1989
and 1990,
case
put
if a non-Marxist
party
these
point
out,
so that
rights
the
might
also
of the government,
Nicaragua,
rights
and
the step
is mentioned
farmers),
takes over leadership
can enforce
Lewis that
2g Property
Hungary,
took
and guaranteeing
and
by collective
limited.
East Germany,
and if the government
proclaiming landownership
to land still
quickly
government
Kolankiewicz
“private”
are
be accomplished
(which
and Poland
does not seem
in the
in Nicaragua).
taken
place,
uncertain
argued
tivized
to induce
A different than
such kind
share,
important 197991983;
and
Share
rents,
of the
such
most
a system many
of the forms
of course,
to act
more
are much
advanced
on the government
effectively.
form If the
28. Alec Univcrsitv
Now,
can
include farms
“Peasants
of California
G?brge
agreement
collective and
Press,
such a contract
Kolankicwm
and
Paul
Marx’s not
are
pp. G.
during
adopted
might
belief
only
a division indebted,
ln Jerzy
Karcz,
ed.,
share
guided
highly
since would
the
also
period
is a share
reasons.“O
the government place
some of the
the input
rents
suggest
were
there
for other
encourage
that
to have
introduced Laos
in China in the USSR
widely
which
from elements
for the household
appears
Officials,”
1967),
contracts
rather
contracts
in the 196Os,
Share
Moreover, as well,
system
reports
1980s.)
suppliers
represent
a less
policy.
of farm many
assets
but
individuals
also
may
farm be un-
Soviet and East European Agriculture (Berkeley:
57-73. Lewis,
Poland: Politics, EcunomzcsandSociely (London:
Pinter,
1988),
34. 30.
culture
Karen and
Brooks, Applied
“Agiculture Economics
and
Five
(University
Years
of Perestroika,”
of Minnesota,
1990).
Staff
a
of contract
fixed, with
akkord
less risky
Nevertheless,
of rental
Decollectivization liabilities.
of lease
specify
was Hungary
contracts
has not been
some of the risk of production.
risk of late inputs
late
had
household.
experimented
exception
decollec-
team
with the form
(Contradictory
in the
transitional
a contract
have
and often
to have in the
contracts
as the Romanian notable
on a large-scale.
such
in some
although
such
The
arises
most
has
will be too
are difficult
households
problem
regimes
of land
appears
to which
of countries
elements,
contracts
introduced in several
element, shares
and share
share
rights
decollectivization
piece
surveys
the various
Marxist
after
however,
“belonged”
a number
in the mid-1970s.
it also
land
Such
China,
apparently
In most
survey
in a particular
in the land.
violence.
which
although
fixed
used
to invest
of risk and property
rents,
in agriculture which
about
a cadastral
of the farmer
a survey,
by the farmer.
combining
that
the farmer
understanding
received
without
rights
by considerable
without
strong
that
the property
are accompanied
29.
As
the right
be
in Czechoslovakia,
It is sometimes
p.
may
cannot
the Polish
a paragraph
than
include
land
believable
occurred
rights
instance,
landholding. rather
rights
such
which
For
into the constitution
of individual
to which
property
be taken.
it is “individual,”
(individual uses
and stable
must
Paper
P90-12,
Department
ofAigri-
willing In
to engage
such
cases
incentives
in individual government
to make
the system
East
European
nations,
after
cooperative
farms
between
1970 and 1980
doubled
between
this debt.“’ to total that off,
farming
the
1980
To place
annual
it must
be noted
began
paying
short and
1984,
agricultural
last
even
economically insurance older
more
farmers
farming in scope
of such
debt
risk
wages.
such
Union
farm
write-off
In the
implies
as China,
in East
mentioned.
a
farmers
belong
of social
security,
for their
a certain
less so
were
written
number
the loss
of
the
to the social then
many
old age through
type of social
decoliecti~~ization
of
equal
Germany.:jt In
collective
where
farm,
is roughly debts
and
off some
was very much
the risks of providing
or collective
for instance,
to write
all farm
of
especially
five times,
indebtedness
indebtedness
be
regimes,
USSR,
increased began
occurred
also
sufficient
and a number
has soared,
indebtedness
such farm
of this farm debt.
to provide
indebtedness
in 1989-1990
must
to accept
In countries social
share
debt
the government
In China,
farming
may be unwilling by the cotnmune
while
Marxist
If leasehold
activities.
was offered
of
advanced
system.
minimum
In Bulgaria
a partial
type
their
off this
that farm
in perspective,
output.
1990,
personal
assume
to write
and long terrn farm
the figures
and in March,
have
work. 3i In the case of the Soviet
this was Iess of a problem.“”
One
if they must
may
resulted
insurance
in a reduction
benefits.
Consistency Problems Facing the Government In
carrying out a decollectivization
only
the problems
obtaining
products
for export,
but also of integrating
have
in particular
argued
or threshing)
that are difficult
to consumers. are
troublesome
higher
are
useful,
of subsidies reasons,
not
than
to obtain
which
manner.
out, very
therefore,
contract
to turn
such
not
and
a program
of
into
possible
agricultural
empirical for
to more
most
unless for food,
products
from
on by
to the farms.
As for
suggests
(sugar
economic relatively
will prohably
problems.
result
prices
government
the
farmers
that
is a major
low food In-ices
to continue
the
of scale
be carried
evidence crops
pressing
producer
economies
can
services
for the government
Nevertheless, prices
that
such
of the loss of agri-
of these
has maintained
then decollectivization
free-market
Some
considerable important
the government
It is, ofcourse,
food in the traditional ment
plowing
to contract
of scale
in the city for political prices
(e.g.,
or cooperatives
It seems
If by a system
in the short-run
in terms
activities
activities exception}.
decollectivization of scale.
enterprises
economies
against
due to a loss of economies
separate such
food
policies.
Marxists production
occur
sufficient
must take into account
with
its macro-economic cultural
the government
the nation
agricultural
Some
program,
of supplying
in higher
food
to subsidize
paid by the governwill
for two
find
it more
reasons:
it is
3 1. In the Soviet Unwn the Presidium ofthe Cnuncii ofhlinisters announced in Dccwnber, 1989, that f&m tlrbts would be cancellt:d in proportion 10 the degree to which such farms shifted ~CIa lrasr system. 32. Laird and Laird, op. cif , note22; Zhores A. Medvedcv, Swirl /I+~~/turr (New York: W. W. Norton. 19X7), p_ 349. 33. To encourage household leasing, the Soviet Union in December, 1989, offwcd to thy farms contrxting out a portion ofthc’ir assetsto households the opportunity to write off its drbts in the same proportion. (Rwoks, op. at, note 30) In Chime many collective farm debts were written off when they transferred the land to individual households. 34. The law stated that all debts arising from uneconomic tasks assigrwd to the farm by the Crntral :Authoritics would be ranrcfled. Ofcoursc, every farm will try to makr this claim SC)that t~nforccm~nt wiil he diffiwlt.
When ix Collectivization
Reversible?
13
dealing with so many more units; and it is also more difficult to prevent these individual farmers
from selling directly to urban consumers.
Some notion gained from a on the farmers’ prices in state
of the magnitude of this micro-economic disequilibrium problem can be few examples. In the late 1980s in the Soviet Union, the prices for food markets were often two to three times higher than the official consumer retail stores (a multiple found in many other Marxist regimes as well).
Food subsidies from the government budget to urban consumers amounted to roughly 6 to 8 per cent of the factor cost GDP.“” In China food subsidies were relatively low in the late 1970s. As the government, however, was unwilling to raise urban food prices as fast as procurement prices, food consumption subsidies soared and, by the early 198Os, subsidies amounted very roughly to 3 per cent of the GNP; agricultural and other subsidies contributed to the budget deficit which played an important causal role in the Chinese
price inflation
of the late 1980s.“”
In such situations, unless the government is witling either to let food prices rise or to continue to subsidize agriculture, decollectivization does not seem possible. Unfortunately, consumer agricultural prices are highly politicized in most Marxist regimes so that the political costs of the first alternative are high. Agricultural subsidies, however, represent
a considerable
strain on the budgets
of most Marxist
regimes
so that the
economic costs of the second alternative are also high, especially with the increasing difficulties of obtaining tax revenues which often accompanies economic reform.
Social
Factors
Sociological
evidence is delicate because the emphasis on norms and values is often too
easy an explanation to have any verifiable meaning. The methodological pitfalls should be readily apparent. In comparing disciplines many have pointed out that economists explain why individuals make certain choices, while sociologists explain why society sees to it that individuals
are not left with any choices to make.
Pensant Entrepreneurship
A common
argument
to explain the success of the Chinese
agricultural
reforms and the
failure of the Soviet changes is that the Chinese farmers are more entrepreneurial than Soviet farmers. The forrner have been fiercely individualistic for millennia, cooperating only with fellow clan members
or in projects
such as irrigation
in which individual
benefits were manifest. In contrast, since the feudalization ofRussia in the 16th century the Russian village has had strong communal elements, reinforced after the emancipation of the serfs in the 1860s by the designation of the rural community, not the individual peasant, as the primary legal subject of Tsarist law. Although the shoots of individualistic farming began to bloom for a few decades in the early part of the 20th century,
they were crushed by collectivization.
3.5. This estimate started with a Soviet claim that such subsidies amounted to 40 billion rubles in 1983 [Alec Now, 7FzrSwre~ ~co?~~~~~S~~J/~R, 3rd edition (London, 1986), p. 1151 and increased considerably in succeedinS years. [The 1985 GDP datum from USA, CIAIDIA, “Gorbachev’s Economic Program: Problems Emerge,” I!.S. Congress, .Joinr E conornic Commitree, 1989, pp. 3- 70.J 36. This rough estimate is based on reported data for food subsidy&r 1979- 1981 (combined) by Solinger [Dorothy ,J. Solinger, “The 1980 Inflation and the Politics of Price Control in the PRC,” in David M. Ianpton, ed., Policy Itn~lcmenlalion in Post-Mao China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), pp. 81 - 1191 and GNP data from World Rank [World?hbles, 4th edition (Washington. D.C., 1988)].
Convincing provide, Although apply
evidence
especially such
to focus
regimes
on the
a conjecture
is,
and heterogeneous
factors
31 Marxist
attention
such
as large
macro-sociological
to the other
useful
to demonstrate
for countries
may
except
specific
well
be true,
they
in a superficial
social
impact
however,
as China are
fashion
of the
difficult
to
and the USSR.“’ also
difficult
and it seems
system
to
more
of collectivized
farming. Individual
farming
European
nations
Hungary,
and
activities
provide
and with
the
peasant
markets
centrally
USSR.
were
planned
Although
good entrepreneurial
also
widespread
agricultural
sectors
it seems
likely
training,
I have found
that
in
certain
such
such
as
legal
and
no systematic
East
Bulgaria, semi-legal
evidence
on
the matter.
Time
Factor
According
to a common
increasingly
irreversible
scale
economy.
market
active
peasants
neither
the
individual which
The
and
Collectivized
farming
farming
occupation
system
of collectivized and,
according
successfully
in such
lasted
more
memories Following lost
than
to this
argument,
existed
system
a system. 50
years
this approach love
successful,
individual
village
Fyodor
farms.
generation Soviet
For
and
rush?
looked-after disappearing.
The old pride livestock
but
of state
that attitudes
Union,
management skills
Full
the land
before
and the
In China,
the
the 1979 reforms
a generation
his
and
are less those
bureaucracies.:‘s
farming.
still lived
necessary
the system
began
take
plot production
toward
25 years
the
have
to
mentality.
attitudes
meant
who and
for
of collectivized
reforms,
which
functioning
so that
farming few
such
of farmers.
observers ability
instance,
claim
that
the rural
to act as responsible a well
known
population
farmers
Soviet
writer
had
operating
interested
in
has observed:
When was it known that able-bodied harvest
training,
to individual
Gorbachev
of the land
Abramov
this
workers
individual
in a full
transforms
farmers
a different
certain
carried
gradually
of the required
requires
In the Soviet
some
some
becomes
to operate
rural
The
only for roughly
and
before
in the current
its traditional life,
tasted
former
efforts.
to be hostile
farming
i.e.
manipulation
is also said to breed
agriculture
forget
independent
and many
of semi-legal
are said
as
provides
to this argument,
which
the
proletarians,
of their
markets
than
according
as farmers
of agriculture
to work
are very small-scale;
farming,
rcmcmbered
passive
desire
for the results
farming,
began
into the
is sold on the farmers’
of capitalist
of collectivized
of time
hyper-industI.ialization
nor
decisions
a system
the passage
farmers
initiative responsibility
investment scale
conjecture, with
is vanishing.
peasants
go away
in a well-ploughed I,ove
Is all this not the curse
for the land,
of absenteeism,
[to market]
at the time ofthe
field, in a well-sown for work, lateness,
crop,
in well-
even self-respect
is
drunkenness?“”
39. Cited by ker Nwx [Sguiel A,picuke: The Brezhnev Lepcy and Gorbacheai Cure (Santa Monica, CA: KANWUCLA Center for the Study of Soviet International Behavior, LRS-OS, 1X@)] from Prauda, November 17, 1979.
When is Collectivization More
directly
leading
related
sociologist
to concerns
I have been to many kolkhozy
kinds
type of question ambiguous.
current
by the amount
overcome visited repair
before
chickens
selling
their
to discourage “Crude
behavior.
shouting
harvest right
himself
to make
Composition more
serious
force.
If the
age;
few farmers work.
the 1960s
moreover,
graphic
conditions,
that
this
would
to lower
and
to circumstances arises
be
a vicious
a long-term
is an artifact
has acted
methods
pests.
The
deprives
types
of
comments:
a reluctance
to think. make
official himself
the who
of the
of irresponsibility."*'
circle problem
of the present
for and
costs.*’ power
by certain
Stereotyped
weeds,
is raising
Germany
Chernichenko,
engendered
I
then
themselves
of political Yu.
methods.
farm
to
farm
would
in West
I
I visited:
collective
reorganizing
In
of 1990,
repairmen
is reinforced
author,
officials]
stereotyped
There
German
in order
which
one Soviet
others.
but rather
impact
sociological rural would
Moreover,
in the few years
During and,
for workers
the spring
market
may
conditions.
collective
the centralization
to act according
upon
are
of proper
farming
present
tractor
to tap a niche
of any kind,
of weather
one East
countries
are
a lack
in the farms
a Czechoslovak
rules four
the
the conclusions
in individual under during
their
in part because
reflect
underway
which
just do not
under
a system
of
system.
of the Rural Labor Force
labor
a system
victim
Hungary
facilities,
[to the farm
engendered
only
activity
is that
thinking
to believe
Much because
of time
of the right
farming,
all
For instance,
demands
It is difficult individual
in
of interest
and
Germans;
ecological
and directives
to think the helpless
deprives
simply
and benefits
of compensation
impact
independent
Reluctance
may
in its repair
farms
methods
alleged
bureaucratic
laziness
of entrepreneurial
to special and
at face value, as a result,
Germany,
the cars to East
according
Another
a
up of the
they
and,
to buy used cars in Hamburg,
“eco-chickens”; changing
to take
the lack
of its costs
underemployment
planned
and
system, East
in this [FP breaking
is unclear
the alleged
evaluation
Czechoslovakia,
was struck
Zaslavskaya,
and talked to many people and those
difficult
the investigation
specifically,
in the
a rational
Bulgaria,
of generalizations
framing
More
incentives reflect
Tatiana
who dream of working individually,
),4,1
I find these
decollectivization,
of’ any people who are interested
farm].
who would give me that chance, exist.
15
has noted:
I do not know collective
about
Reversible.?
evidence
population be willing
on the collective for them
and 197Os,
the Soviet
to be composed War
or state to engage rural
predominantly II*”
and
in the composition
decollectivization
or able to invest
remaining
of World
can be found
is aged,
a flight
is unlikely
the time and energy farm
they have
in individual
population of women, to urban
security
farming,
appeared
to succeed to make
of many
such
in their
old
they do not.
to be rapidly
a consequence areas
of the rural
aging
of the demoof the young
40. Cited by Hedlund, “I’rlvatr Plots as a System Stabilizer, ” in Gregory Grossman, Roy Laird and KarlIkgr~n Wadekin, rds., Farmins under Cummunrsm: New and Old A,bp roacheJ (London. Routledge, 1990). 41 Frcdrrk L. Pryor, Ecut European Bconomzc R+rms ?%e Rehzrth qf/heMarkel (Stanford: Hoover Institution and Stanlord University, 1990). 42. Cited by Now, op tit , note28, from Navy Mir, No. 11 (1965), p 182. 43 Goodman, Hughes and Schroeder, op. czl , note 17.
16
STUI)IES
people
in
rural
European the
areas.44
nations
countryside
income has
has
countries
where
planners
is most
evident,
youth
In some from
East
appear rural
areas,
despite
or Romania carried had
their
independence,
collectivization, their
independence
over,
as farm
between
farm
destinies.” more
In essence,
arduous
provided people,
farms,
work
status
the
the more
provided
the major
of CLbor
Havas
such
of former
land
workers
particular
aspects
to become
source
countries
suggest
the same
and
and
of farming such
their
urban
them
more
specialized
within
children,
but
off the farm
who
as a result,
4” Similar is occurring,
For e.g.
the
middle
the difficulty
widened
prestige free class
population
specialized
for young who have thesis primarily of
(see below)
in some
shards
in keeping
and
education
knowledge
or ability
to operate Union,
lost
over their
to a controversial
desire
seem
the Soviet
After More-
farm
lower The
a farm only
the
but they
work.46
and into city jobs
have little
mechanisms
with
rural
48 According have
workers,
lost control
workers.
has left behind
who has system,
but the peasants
employees,
entrepreneurs.
farming varied
increasingly
of the former
up in
and monotonous.
differences
collar
reasons
growing
such as the USSR
and urban
much
benefits
other
an anthropologist
blue
of mobility
as Czechoslovakia.“”
phenomenon
governments Bell,
social
still
people
still remained,
more
children
and who,
farmers.
their
status
“counter-selection”
independent
socialist
of rural
Peter
differences
became
than
capable
some by the
in part because
do receive workers,
that in the individual
and the peasants
by the state was the avenue especially
In
farming
has occurred
of young
by certain
became
farmers
to perform
Hungary.
individual
farmers
between
proceeded,
and workers
of differentials
and
to urban
movement.
their
work
East from
to considerable
emigration
has argued difference
consolidation officials
equal
attempts
status
and their
some
is due
against
collective
the urban
the urban-rural
migration
in
migration
and the narrowing
this migration
where
to stem such a population ofthe
found where
farming.4”
the (ineffectual)
were aware
such areas,
or the bias
roughly
to explain
be
as Czechoslovakia
bias
nations incomes
out field work in Hungary,
peasants
In part
countries
can
and Yugoslavia
and rural
for private
have
to be at work
population
as in Yugoslavia,
European and
rapid.
the urban
see no future
the state
rural
in Bulgaria
urban
in such
socialist fhrm
most
between
migration
aging
especially
been
differentials
reduced
This
as well,
COMMUNISM
IN COMPAKATIVE
other
of evidence specialists
on
44. Unfortunately, the Scniet q~vu-“ment has not released census data to prwidc dccailed rGdencc on this point. According tu data from Danilov and USSR Goskomstat, the awxage age of adults (those 20 or over) in the rural sector as a whole (including non-agriculturaljobs) increasedfrom40.6in 1926to43.3in 1959t047.4 m 1987 [V. 1’. Danilov, RuralRuc\2a L’nder~heNew Re@ne, translated by (Irlandr) Figes (Bloomington: Indzma Uniwrsity Press, 1988), p. 42; USSR, Goskomstat, Na&niye SSS’R 1987: Statidxherkii Sbornik (Moscow,: Finansy i Sratistika, 1988), pp. 50-51.1 In the latter year women constituted 56 per cent of the rural population, A rapid aging of the farm population has occurred in other East European nations as well; S&ma” has SOII~ intcrcsting comments on the process in Czechoslovakia [Zdrnek Salzrnan, 7hree Contribu/ionr to fhr Research Report 22 (Departmrnt uf Anthropology, University r11 Study: qf Socialid Czechoslovakia, blassachusetts, Amherst, 1983)]; and a number of observers havr commented on this fact in Hungary. 45. Branko Horvar. ?%e Yuyo~lav Economzc Sptem (White Plaina: Intel-national Arts and Sciences Press. 1976), pp. 78-79. 46. Peter D. Bell, Peamnts WI Socialist 7iansztion Life in a Cullectivized Hun,pnun Vzliqe(Berkrley: University ot California Press, 1984). 47 Marida Hellos and Bela C. Maday, eds., .~ew Huyarian Peasants An Eat Central Eurojmn Exf~~nence mth Colied~umztzun (New York: Columbia University Press, 1983), p. 18, Ivan Szelenyi, So&didEntwprmeur~ Embourpnen/ m Rural Hungary (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1988). 48 Szclenyi, zbid 49. Interview by the author. .iO. Zdcnek Salzman and Vladimir Scheufler, Komaro~~~A Czech Farmq VZlqe(New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1974).
When is Collectivization the farm
suggests
In China, where
until
massive
that
many
recently
migrations
as farmers). in order
nation,
to improve
because
youth
their
of the farm
is possible
sufficiently
that
over
the
urban
government
incomes
by entrepreneurial-minded if they
Several
taxes
peasants
in any than
sector,
preventing
also
areas
to increase
most
(not
of the
necessarily
production
of their
activities
on the
rural/non-industrialized
in urban/industrialized
of a given
would,
share
a lower
income
would might
Some
of farm
such
of running
may carry
out only a few tasks
deskilled.
whom
I interviewed
much
less severe
productive
are
nations
of an age cohort
this
of rural
than
and
to accept
Szelenyi state
farms
activities
food prices
again.52
or the higher
Furthermore,
workers,
such
since
the latter
higher
Finally,
so that
Of
differen-
concerned.
scale,
might
incomes.
“compensating
for those social
have
farms
backward a modern
made
the
such
additional
force
controversial.
farm
farm
a given
This
farm
problem
than
worker
individual
in an important
of collective
sector
takes
average
farms
has become,
a number
agricultural
that the industrializa-
the
is, on such
labor
out with
that it is quite
also argued
has
farm. 53 That
so that the rural
running
individual
considerably
about
in the
sector
created
resisted.
industrial
incomes
to the rural
up farming urban
rural
back
higher.
argument
and found where
higher
to have
down
as Ivan
in a relatively
sector
to take
worried
difficult
an independent
I tried
to increase
a migration
be strongly
status
not
much
on collective
incapable sense,
The
would
a moving
to be very
sociologists work
occur.
for the former is often
represent
have
rural
city,
social
economists
but the phenomenon
migration
measures
to take over the newly
a program
unpalatable
take
to the
however,
such
have
professional
tials;”
commuting
to finance
it politically
can
so as to encourage
ex-peasants
been
generally
course,
tion
had
problems
urban find
is slower
of absorption
and
in rural
in new economic
Moreover,
population
the possibilities
opportunity
and to engage
income.
regulations
of the youth
remained
left.51
of the farm
are smaller.
It
or,
any
new crops,
to enforce
most
have
have
for the aging
able
As a result,
17
farmers
evidence
were
and women
welcome
to plant
the aging
simply
men would
crops,
entrepreneurial
is little
authorities
to the cities.
These
traditional
there
political
entrepreneurial-minded
side
of the most
by way of contrast,
Reuersible?
directors
is, of course,
in a modern,
an enormous
number
highly
of different
skills.54 Finally, farm
it should
education
independent
be added
for the rural farm.
training
program
Farmers
of America
that
although
youth,
As far as can provided clubs,
be determined,
for farm which
most
such education youth
provide
Marxist
no Marxist
in the United monetary
regimes
provide
does not provide States
regime
has
by the 4-H
and prestige
vocational
the skills
awards
to run an
the
type
of
or the Future to farm
youth
51. Bill Keller quotes a Soviet collective farm chairman saying: “Here we have lost the tradition [of farming]. It’s gotten so bad that in school they warn children: “If you don’t study hard, you will stay on the collective farm to work.” [“Plight of Soviet Farming: A Collective Indifference,” New York Times, August 19, 1990, p. I.] In Poland the aging of the private farm population is attributable to a different mechanism. In the early 198Os, however, out-migration from the farm appears to have been markedly reduced. 52. Political meam such as discrimination in schools and housing can also be used either to keep people in the farming sector or to encourage them to leave the urban areas where they have moved. 53. Szelenyi, op. cd., note 47. 54. The account of a year in the life of an American farmer by Rhodes provides a superb account of the number of different skills that a given farmer must master. [Richard Rhodes, Farm: A Year in the Life ofan American Farmer (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1989.1 Ofcourse, in some countries the family farms are too autarkic so that many of the skills acquired by the farmers are really unnecessary to learn if the farmers took greater advantage of the opportunities for specialization offered by the market.
S-1~nrll.s IN COMPARATIVE COMMUNISM
18 for
successful
efforts
in
stockraising
and
other
skills
necessary
for
independent
farming.‘.?
Risk, In
Social Inertia, and Individual Effort
recent
years
cooperative Romania,
social
Hungarian
collectivization
would
that many
a total
revision
Some the
opinion
Czechoslovak
advantages
spring
that
countryside..
toward
cooperative
to which
Some
versus
quarters
than
that
moreover, they
had
between no market
farmers
farming
level
roughly and
provided
can be traced
of the two systems agreed
Clearly
than
of de-
to the
undertake
For instance, polled
the
same
standard evidence
closely
tied
during
saw
more
percentage
of living that
to the
In East had
material
to evaluations of agriculture.
that the work of collective Germany
more
free
55 and 65 per cent stressed worries,
exhibit
members
of production rather
of all farmers
and
was
farms
older
farming.“7
this notion.
thirds
system
inertia
polled
farmers.
cooperative’
two
of
habitual.
supporting
the cultural
farm
not even
system
become
studies
Czechoslovakia,
of the
a positive
success
of the
belonged.“’
return
of the farmers
of individual
that
of social
economic
have
village
of the collective that
to traditional
anthropologist
collective
the person
of this problem
risk
three noted
the
one
out
China,
of the old system,
about
increased
in
a functioning
individual
Hungary,
disposition
disturb
1968,
than
collectivization 58 In
the members
a return
that
carried
also
in such claims
are available
of
but
a continuation
practices
data
to collective
believed
and
prefer
of farming
public
studies
want
sufficiently
have
Hungary
as illustrated farms
would
sociologists
in
In these
inertia,
collective
extent
and
particularly
and the USSR.5b
considerable the
anthropologists
farms,
or social
over time
of effort
In Slovakia farmers
half
of the 453
than
individual
that in comparison insecurity,
of the ratio
farmers
polled
farmers
to capitalist
or anxieties
about
was easier
over
and,
farmers, their
own
55. Ofcourse. as l‘imufeev points out, rural youth in the Soviet Union carry out a considrrablr amount ol larm work, but this is work for others, not themselves. He also rcpol-ts (p. 112) ofan instance whcrc prr-school childrrn were playing at straling milk from thr collective farm, which is a useful skill tu learn for w&list. bat not private. farming (up. cil., note 17). i(i. Many of thcsc have appeared in I:.nSlish. For Hungary recznt studies include: Kcll, up rzl , note 45, C:. M. Harm, ?hz/ar. A Village m Huqary (Carnbridg-e: Cambridge University Prrss, 1980); Hellos and Maday, up. cit., notr 46; Nigel Swain, CollectzueFarms Which Work? (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985); and Vasary, op. cil., notr 57. For Czechoslovakia: S&man and Schcuflcr-, op cit., note 50. For thr USSR: Caroline Humphrey, Karl Marx Collect&. Economy, Society and Rul~~ion in n Sibman C&rf~oe Farm (Cambridge: Cambridxc University Press, 1983); T‘arnara Dragadz?, Rural I;arr~zlze~zn Soai& Geqza (I,ondon. Routledge, 1988). For Romania: Andreas Argyres, Prarant Produ~~zon, St& Art~~ulatzun and Compr~q~ Ro/tuna/i/~e~: TheColle~t~urEconomy~fRuralRomania (Ph.D. dissertation, University ol’Califom~a, Davis, 1988). Katherine Maureen Verdery, Ethnic Stratij2ca2mn m /he European Pmphery 7‘hr liis/orical Sociolo,~y qf n 7fans_ylm ‘lian~yluanian Villa,~rrs ~~anmz Vtlla~r(Ph.D. dissertation, Stanford University, December, 1976);. sameauthor, (Hcrkelry: University ofCalifornia Press, 1983). For China: Anita Ghan, Richard Madyen, Jonathan Ungcr. Chen Vilhzqe. 7.hheRecent History oJa Peasant Community in Mao i China (Herkcley: University of California I’rrss, 1984); Shu-min Huang. ?‘he Sptral Road: Chaqw zn n Chinme Vzllqc 7hroqh /he EYPJ ofa Cornmunt~l Pnr!y I.uudv (Boulder:Westview Press, 1989). 57. Ildiko Vasary, Beyond the Plm Social Chan,Fe in o Hun,+an Vzliqe (Boulder: Wrstview Press, 1987), ,‘_ 129. 58 ,Jaroslaw A. Piekalkiewicz, Public Opinion Polltq~n Czechoslouakra, 196&69(Ncw York: Praeger. 1972), p 310. The sample includes 16.5 farmers in Slovakia. Piekalkicwicz also includes answers of 886 non-farmel-s in Slovakia to the same questions and, with the exception of a question about thr rural arcas subsidlztng the urban areas, the two samples wcrc in rough agreement. “Ideology and Ilconomics: Cooperatlvc Orgamzation and Attitudes toward 59 Marida Hellos, Cr)llcctlvization in ‘1.~0 Hungarian Commumtics,” in Hellos and Maday, op al . note 47.
When is Collectivization Reversible? economic
existence.60
In Wungary
this sentiment
19
was stated more bluntly
to me in
individual conversations by several specialists: farmers on collective and state farms have too easy a life ever to want to return to individual farming.61 Of course, if subsidies to collective or state farms were removed, such ideas might change. Some of the social inertia must also be traced to the social benefits which have been given to collective farmers and the personal risks the farmers would face in an environment of individual one Byelorussian
farms where such benefits might not be available. Along these lines Let peasant is quoted as saying: “They drove us into collectivization.
them drive us into perestroika. “‘* Political
Factors
A number of political problems must be mentioned
in connection
with the economic
and
social factors discussed above. The problems discussed below, I must emphasize, are much more severe in countries with Marxist governments than in countries which have voted Marxist governments out of power. For those Marxist regimes where the Marxist parties are still in power, five factors deserve special emphasis.
For decollectivization a general
recognition
to occur, two types of recognition of a serious
must occur. First, there must be
crisis in agricultural
production.
In China,
for
instance, the low level of economic development (and the high labor/land ratio) meant that the constraints on the growth of the entire economy arising from the agricultural sector were taken much more seriously than in the USSR; and some observers have argued that in the 1960s and 1970s unfulfilled demand for agricultural products increased more than in the Soviet Union, which made the Chinese agricultural situation more severe.63 In the Soviet Union the per capita level of agricultural production was higher and, at least in terms of aggregate growth, per capita agricultural production was respectable during the 1960s and 197Os, even if that growth was accompanied by very high investment costs. As a result, the recognition of a crisis was less generalized and the political leaders were less likely to take radical steps. The extent to which an agricultural crisis is recognized varies in the different Marxist regimes. In some of these nations such as Albania, Cuba, and North Korea, agricultural growth has been quite respectable so that there is little popular pressure for decollectivization, despite such “secondary assortment problems.
problems”
as shortages of particular
foods and
Second, there must be a recognition that the agricultural problems arise not from exogenous forces (weather or machination by foreign enemies), not from simple mismanagement by the administrators and sloth by the workers, not from imperfect 60. Arthur W. McCardle and A. Rruce Boenau, Easl Gervtan~: A Nem German N&m under So&&m (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1984). 61. Regarding the problem of individual effort, Keller cites a Soviet joke: “Which is better, individual sex or group sex? Group sex, of COUTS~,because it leaves you time off to goof off.” (op. cit., note51.) 62. Cited by Ernest Gellner, “Ethnicity and Faith in Eastern Europe,” Daedah, Vol. 119, No. 1(Winter, 1990), p. 282. 63. Karl-Eugen Wadekin provides estimates of such excess agricultural demand. (“Agrarian Structures and Policies in the USSR, China and Hungary: A Comparative View,” in Brada and Wadekin, op. cit.. notr 22).
plan
indicators
itself.
and
misplaced
Understanding
agricultural cultural
of this
sector
must
institutions
mcnt
have
intellectual
road
supply
to travel
and
Marxist
from
in turn,
autonomy
need serious
from
the
the
of which
of agriculture
accepting
political
that
sector,
that
and that a different
must
be created.
be immeasurably
both
system
requires
restructuring, production
it would
problems,
rather
element,
in agricultural
of the various
in many
but
causal
greater
and policies
for decision-making
discussion
incentives, last
aided
environ-
This
by frank
characteristics.of
is a long and
debate
the agri-
public
are in short
regimes.“4
The Problem of Ideology The
ideals
of socialism
socialism
implies
are noble
agricultural
and to many
collectivization.
only an end of socialism,
but a means
program
a crisis
requires
either
ing of beliefs
so that
that
reversed
will
be
mechanized public with
can such
or if the party collectivized
in
future
be more
easily
continues
to stress
time
realized.
certain
according
and
into
reluctant
to invest
their
tivization
program
will not achieve
resources
or else a reorder-
of tactical
advantages
Indeed,
the
If such
ideological
(as in China,
program
the
will occur.
maneuver
of
more
large-scale
advanced
a justification
themes
which
to Bernstein),“”
individual
is not
A decollectivization
in terms
when
regimes,
collectivization
as well.“”
socialist
is rationalized
the
in the Marxist
specifically,
socialism
in the entire
recollectivization
agriculture
leaders
change
sometime
the sooner
More
to achieve
of faith
institutional
agriculture
economy,
political
farming
the
becomes
are associated farmers
and
will be
the decollec-
its goals.
The Problem of Political Will At a number
of points
government
to offset
this discussion a particular
economically
costly,
top political
leadership.
this high price then the risks
politically
goals that conflict
their
priorities,
as a brief
comparison
Xiaoping
did not gain
put a high between political
priority 1979
and
opponents
individual
to private
political
have
between
the
complete
control
on agricultural 1981. so that
In the latter he could
leading
farmer
rise.
be taken
of these
some
problems
so enabling toward
by the
are either for the
them
to pay
decollectivization,
If this political
leadership
is relatively
has
low on
also increase. quite
Union
over
different and
the party he was able
quickly
in the various
China
shows.
and state
and took a series
year
move
and this raises
policies
been
Soviet
reform
Most
or ifdecollectivization
farming
factors
that could
is not fully unified
with decollectivization
the risks
upper-level
or both,
a set of consistent
any would-be
other
These
painful,
measures
in decollectivization.
If the top leadership
and to follow facing
has mentioned
difficulty
apparatus
of small
to defeat
and effectively
countries,
Although
but consistent decisively
Deng
in 1979,
he
steps
his major
to decollectivize
agri-
64 Judy Bat provides a fascmating account of this type of Intellectual rvolution for the 1968 rrforrns in (:zcchoslovakia and HUIISJW~. Although she focuses primarily on reforms in the industrial WCtar, hrr grnt~al ~w~clusions are equally valid for agriculture. [Ecconornzc R@m and Poli&d Charye in Emlern Europe (I.ondon: Macrnillim, 1988).] 65. l‘he strength ofthe idea that land cannot be sold and must br used only by thusc whom the govrrnrnent dctcrmines are the most capable farmers dies slowly. Bill Keller quotes a Soviet local party official contrnding: “From the point of view of morality and ethics, selling land is blasphemy. The land should not be trcatcd as some prostitute who goes with the guy w,ho pays thr hisheat price” (C//J czl , nntc 51). 66. Hcrnstcin, o,b cif , note 26.
When is Collectivization culture
thereafter.
because
of a desire
an initial place
belief
that
the highest
reform farms,
only
specializing
and
in different
crops
cultural
always
sector,
Political
which
appropriate
increased
property
property.“s
The
governmental
relative
organs
to their
size.
and
the willingness
to establish
mechanisms
strength
of
at different
which
rules
levels
that
over
is a crucial
in
for
agricultural agri-
and other
a
system
administrative
determinant
he
the risks
more.
system
lacking
state
extent,
the individual
even
a court
of law
with
compromises
the socialist over
farming
are
pluralism
not only raised
resources
of individual
agricultural to encourage
to a certain
political
of
he did not
less radical
The
which
Either
or because
did he seem each,
the specter
of inputs
party.h7
or because
an institutional coexisting,
the risks
rights,
divided
costs of reform,
a much
inconsistencies,
priority
will also implies
enforce
farms
but also raised
receive
more
at no point
he envisioned
with many
decollectivization,
would
he pursued
individual
21
was required,
Furthermore,
rather,
farms,
a much
and political
tinkering
on agriculture,
led to a problem
a successful
policy
of power.
,decollectivization;
accepted
faced
the economic
minor
years
collective
sector
Gorbachev
priority
in his early
a general
to
Mikhail to minimize
Reversible?
means
of
weak
orders
of the risk
from
of private
farming.
The Problem of Cadre Resistance Decollectivization many
party
summed
up the
agriculture] These
ideas
a negation
but this raises redefine
production
in their
in a position
leaders
for
that its entire evaluation
district.
to enrich
options. and purge
heads
authority
of cadres
the recalcitrant
in the rural
so that
they
It can also buy off the resistance
themselves
mechanisms
in the decollectivized
[in
to do?
to enforce
sector
are
.
of cadres
state
its political
local officials, may crumble.
no longer
system,
of
Castro
of local (and higher)
and in order
crack
power
Fidel
left for the party
resistance
face several
top,
[economic]
be then
“TV The
and the direct
At the very “If
level:
would
can be expected;
of course,
the possibility criteria
the income, sector.
general what
of the party.
measures
political can,
most
everything,
to such
government
of positions,
in the agricultural
at the
to solve
involve
cadres
the number
cadres
problem
the top level
The can
state
were
and party will,
reduces
and
by placing
which
It
judged
by them
happened
in
China.“’ In China,
for instance,
of land for private position economic inputs. rural
to become activities Moreover,
cadres
were
farm
farming.
“specialized allowing because in a better
and party
” Further,
officials
party
households,” them
ofthe
high
which
incomes
importance
position
were able to gain favorable
and state cadres
to engage
allowed
and priority
oflocal
sources
in trade,
allotments
were in the most them access
to engage to credit
of agricultural
not just
of farm
favorable in certain and other
inputs, inputs
such
but also
67. Anders Aslund. Gorbachec’c .Stru,&fur E commuc Reform (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1989) 68. Wittfogrl, op. (il., note 27. 69. Quoted by Carmelo Mesa-Lago, “The Cuban Economy in the 1980s: The Return of Ideology,” in Scrgio G. Rota, cd., Socialzst Cuba: Past fnlerpretations and Future Challenges (Boulder: Westview Press, 1988), p. 86. 70. ,Jean C. Oi, “Peasant Grain Marketing and State Procurement,” China Quuarter(y, No. 106 CJunr, 1986), pp. 270-290; “Market Reforms and Corruption in Rural China,” Studies in Compara’tiue Communism, Vol. XXII, Nos. 213 (Summer/Autumn, 1989), pp. 221-233; StateandPeasanl in Contemporary China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989). 7 1. A rase Ftudy is provided by Chan, Madsen and Unger, op cit., note56.
STUDIES IN COMPARA’IWE COMMUNISh4
22
of consumer goods, than the average peasant. Finally, since the system was not completely marketized, the local governmental cadres could manipulate their ability to distribute certain types of permits and licenses for their economic advantage.
Decollectivization problems
such problems conceivable. In China, irrigation
is not necessarily
can arise that encourage are important
for instance,
being neglected;
the answer to all agricultural more government
and cannot
decollectivization deforestation
problems
intervention
be resolved,
even a recollectivization
has led to: communal
becoming
and certain
in the countryside.
a problem;7z
facilities
agricultural
If is
such as produc-
tivity growth beginning to level off again; in the late 198Os, no significant increase in grain production; a “hog cycle” (a 4-year cycle of hog production that is found in many market economies) since the reintroduction of the market;73 population growth in the countryside beginning to rise;74 income differentiation proceeding to the point where many rural families are unable to operate in the new environment and are alleged to have a standard of living far below the socially acceptable norm; and rural violence, although not a major problem, increasing, at least up to the middle 1980s.75 Although I believe that all of these can be resolved in the present decentralized system, other problems may arise that are not so tractable. may decollectivization.
Reflections
If collectivization
may be reversible,
so
on Decollectivization
The collectivization of agriculture has probably been the most radical institutional change in the economy undertaken by the various Marxist regimes. It has required considerable coercion and violence, great administrative efforts, and enormous personal dedication on the part of the political leaders, all in the name of a formal doctrine which did not offer much support for introducing
such changes,
particularly
at low levels of
economic development. Once the process was completed, however, it has not proven simple to reverse such changes. The discussion above suggests that it may be much easier to decollectivize in a relatively poor country where farming is not highly input intensive or mechanized, than in an economically
more advanced
nation.
Such a conclusion
is reinforced
by the
case of Hungary, a nation which was able to marketize its agricultural sector but which has lacked the desire, apparently both on the side of the government and the farmers, to decollectivize. This proposition is merely the reverse side of the approach toward collectivization of Nicolai Bukharin (of the USSR) in the 1920s or Edvard Kardelj (of Yugoslavia) in the early 1950s that successful collectivization can occur only when the 72. Lester Ross, “Obligatory Tree Planting: The Role of Campaigns in Policy Implementation in PostMao China,” in Lampton, op. cik, note 36, pp. 225-252. 73. Thomas B. Wiens, “Issues in the Structural Reform of Chinese Agriculture,“JournnE ~~Cu~~ur~t~~~ Economics, No. 11 (1987), pp. 372-384. 74. Blanche Tyrene White, “Implementing the ‘One-Child-Per-Couple’ Population Program in Rural China: National Goals and Local Politics, ” in Lampton, op. cit., note36, pp. 284-317. 75. Elizabeth J. Perry, “Rural Collective Violence: The Fruits of Recent Reforms,” in Elizabeth J. Perry and Christine Wong, eds., The Political EconomyofRefom in Post-Mao China (Cambridge, MA: Council on East Asian Studies and Harvard University Press, 1985), pp. 175- 192.
When is ~o~~ecti~izati~~ ReuersibEe?
labor force in agriculture Most of the economic
is relatively difficulties
small and production arising
23 is relatively
from decollectivization-the
mechanized. creation
of a
reliable and accessible source of inputs, the provision for the profitable sale of outputs, the establishment of outlets for credit and consumer goods-fall into the category of network
externalities and thus have parallels with the factors locking nations into inefficient technologies or standards, in particular costs external to the farm itself (pecuniary externalities), rather than classic production externalities. Most of the sociological difficulties are rather different and reflect the long-term consequences of selfreinforcing
demographic
and social-structural
factors
of the system of collectivized
agriculture. Most of the political factors are the outcome of particular power conligurations that differ considerably from nation to nation, so that few generalizations can be made. Underlying this study of collectivization are several simple messages. Some major institutional changes may occur only with dif~culty, if at all, even if the institutions to be changed
are dysfunctional
or highly inefficient.
The costs of decollectivization
are
high, particularly in the short run. Further, as the Hungarian case has shown, most systems of collectivized agriculture can be improved considerably by measures short of decollectivization, the development
e.g. structural
improvements
of an effective infra-structure
within the farms,
marketization,
and
aiding agriculture.
This study has been carried on at too high a level of abstraction to be able to make detailed predictions about the course of decollectivization in particular nations. It seems likely, however, that most of the Third World Marxist regimes will not greatly increase the relative importance of their state and collective farms, given the administrative difficulties
which such farms are experiencing.
By the same token, in such nations as
Cuba and North Korea, where collectivized agriculture appears relatively successful and firmly entrenched, decollectivization also does not appear likely unless some unexpectedly dramatic political changes occur. In Eastern Europe, after the events of 1989, marketization reforms or changes in the incentives facing farmers appear considerably more likely than decollectivization; indeed, even though communist parties have been dethroned in many of these countries, the calls for decollectivization have not been sufficiently strong to receive attention in the Western press-the only country in 1989 where reporters noted that demonstrators made such demands was Mongolia. In 1990 public
opinion
pollsters
in East
Europe
made
surveys
among
the rural
population about intentions to take up private farming as a full-time occupation. In East Germany, less than 5 per cent of the current farmers intended to undertake such a step; in Czechoslovakia, less than 10 per cent; in Bulgaria and Hungary, which have a less mechanized farming system, less than 30 per cent.76 In some countries such as Bulgaria, where the communist party opposed a full-scale decollectivization, they received
a higher percentage
poll, or election
results,
of votes than in the urban areas.77 Of course,
must be interpreted
cautiously,
because
it is unclear
any such exactly
76. These results were cited to me in interviews with economists in the four countries. I was, unfortunately, unabir to see the actual poll results. It would be aesthetically pleasing if there were some symmetry between the processes of collectivization and decollectivization, e.g. the more coercion used in collectivization, the grs~ttr the degree of voluntary decollectivization. Such public opinion data suggest, however, that the degree nf decollectivization is roughly related to the capital intensiveness of agriculture. 77. Anon, op. cit., note 18.
24
STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE COMMUNISM
what the respondents
were assuming
about
the future economic environment
so that the
support such data provide for my thesis is llmited.78 In brief, the system of collectivized agriculture introduced by Stalin in the USSR in the late 1920s and implanted by Marxist parties in other nations is difficult to reverse where the system
has been
in existence
for several
decades
and where the level of
agricultural technology used on the farms has become relatively high. Large-scale mechanized farming is far from a closed episode in the economic history of the world; and in Marxist regimes it may prove to be one of Stalin’s few lasting legacies, at least within the foreseeable
future.
78. These comparisons are made with regard to the entire agricultural population. If, however, the denominator were the number of farm families with a household head between 20 and 55 who would really be capable of taking over a family farm, then the relative number of applicants for such farms would appear more impressive and such numbers would be more useful in predicting future developments. One also hears stories that in certain parts of Hungary peasants were driving in stakes to mark out old land boundaries after the communists were voted out of power; but such anecdotal evidence has limitations.