{"id":212404,"date":"2017-03-01T06:57:02","date_gmt":"2017-03-01T11:57:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/socio-economic-collapse-prometheism-net-part-3.php"},"modified":"2017-03-01T06:57:02","modified_gmt":"2017-03-01T11:57:02","slug":"socio-economic-collapse-prometheism-net-part-3","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/socio-economic-collapse\/socio-economic-collapse-prometheism-net-part-3.php","title":{"rendered":"Socio-Economic Collapse | Prometheism.net &#8211; Part 3"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    A Critical Analysis into the Different Approaches Explaining    the Collapse of the Soviet Union: Was the Nature of the Regimes    Collapse Ontological, Conjunctural or Decisional?  <\/p>\n<p>    Abstract  <\/p>\n<p>    This investigation seeks to explore the different approaches    behind the demise of the Soviet Union. It will draw from    Richard Sakwas three approaches with regards to the collapse of    the Soviet Union, namely of the ontological, decisional and    conjunctural varieties. This dissertation will ultimately    demonstrate the necessity of each of these if a complete    understanding of the demise is to be acquired.  <\/p>\n<p>    This dissertation will be split into three different areas of    scrutiny with each analysing a different approach. The first    chapter will question what elements of the collapse were    ontological and will consist of delving into long-term    socio-economic and political factors in order to grasp what    structural flaws hindered the Soviet Union from its inception.    Following this will be an analysis of the decisional approach,    this time focusing on short-term factors and how the decisions    of Gorbachev contributed to the fall. Finally, this    investigation will examine the conjunctural approach, which    will provide valuable insight as to how short-term political    contingent factors played a leading role in the eventual ruin    of the Soviet Union.  <\/p>\n<p>    Introduction  <\/p>\n<p>    On December 26th, 1991, the Soviet Union was officially    dissolved into fifteen independent republics after six years of    political-economic crises. This unanticipated collapse of a    super-power that had once shaped the foreign policies of East    and West took the international community off-guard. Since the    collapse, scholars have attempted to provide insight into the    reasons behind the demise of the Soviet state. In 1998 Richard    Sakwa published Soviet Politics in Perspective, which    categorised the three main approaches adopted by scholars in    the study of the collapse of the Union of Soviet Socialist    Republics (USSR). These were the ontological, decisional and    conjunctural approaches and will be the foci of this    investigation. Ultimately, my aim is to prove that none of    these approaches can thoroughly explain the collapse when    viewed individually.  <\/p>\n<p>    Instead, I will advance that all three are vital in order to    acquire a thorough understanding of the Soviet collapse. To    prove this, I will be analysing how each approach covers    different angles of the fall, but before being able to answer    this question of validity, I must begin by arranging each    scholar I scrutinize into Sakwas three approaches. In my    research I have discovered that the vast majority of scholars    have no notion of such schools of thought, which increases the    possibility of bias in secondary sources and makes my    investigation all the more challenging. Once a solid    theoretical basis is set I will then move onto investigating    the legitimacy of each approach when considering historical    events.  <\/p>\n<p>    Research Questions  <\/p>\n<p>    To provide the basis for my hypothesis, my analysis will be    subdivided into three research questions.  <\/p>\n<p>    The first one will address what ontological traits existed in    the collapse of the Soviet Union. Following this, the second    question will mirror the first by attempting to make sense of    decisional aspects of the fall. Finally, my attention will turn    to answering in what way was the collapse conjunctural in    nature. Although the characteristics of these questions may    seem basic it is important not to fall prey to appearances and    bear in mind the complexity of each approach. Moreover, the    arrangement and formulation of the research questions was    carried out in this manner to provide an unbiased evaluation of    each approach, eventually displaying the necessity of each in    the explanation of fall.  <\/p>\n<p>    Methodology  <\/p>\n<p>    The fall of the Soviet Union is a subject that has attracted    vast amounts of literature from scholars all over the world.    Although this presents a challenge when it comes to working    through such a large topic it also helps the researcher    elaborate solid explanations behind historical events.    Consequently, I will be mainly employing qualitative data,    supplemented by quantitative evidence; which will consist of    both primary and secondary sources. The quantitative    information will draw from various economists such as Lane,    Shaffer and Dyker; these will mainly be used to ensure that    qualitative explanations are properly backed by statistical    data regarding socio-economic factors.  <\/p>\n<p>    The majority of the qualitative data drawn will be from    secondary sources written by contemporary scholars. A few    primary sources such as official documents will also be    analysed to provide further depth to analysis. Due to the vast    amount of information concerning my topic, it is important to    focus on literature aiding the question as one can easily    deviate from the question regarding the three approaches. The    other main challenge will also consist in avoiding to be drawn    into deep analysis of the separate independence movements of    the Soviet republics.  <\/p>\n<p>    Theoretical Framework  <\/p>\n<p>    Before being able to embark on a complete literature review, it    is important to understand the theoretical framework that    accompanies the analysis, namely Sakwas three approaches.    Subsequently, I will then be able to show that all three of    these approaches are necessary in explaining the downfall of    the Soviet Union.  <\/p>\n<p>    When looking at the different approaches elaborated by Sakwa,    each advances a unique hypothesis as to why the Soviet Union    collapsed. Although all three approaches are different in    nature, some overlap or inter-connect at times. To begin with,    the ontological approach argues that the Soviet Union dissolved    because of certain inherent shortcomings of the system []    including [] structural flaws.[1] This approach enhances the    premise that the collapse of the Soviet Union lies in long-term    systemic factors that were present since the conception of the    system. This view is countered by the conjunctural approach,    which suggests  <\/p>\n<p>    that the system did have an evolutionary potential that might    have allowed it in time to adapt to changing economic and    political circumstances. [] The collapse of the system [is]    ascribed to contingent factors, including the strength of    internal party opposition [and] the alleged opportunism of the    Russian leadership under Boris Yeltsin.[2]  <\/p>\n<p>    The final approach theorised by Sakwa is the decisional one,    and advances the belief that  <\/p>\n<p>    particular decisions at particular times precipitated the    collapse, but that these political choices were made in the    context of a system that could only be made viable through    transformation of social, economic and political relations.    This transformation could have been a long-term gradual    process, but required a genuine understanding of the needs of    the country.[3]  <\/p>\n<p>    Although the decisional and conjunctural approaches are    different in scope, they nevertheless both focus on the    short-term factors of collapse, which at times may cause    confusions. As both approaches analyse the same time frame,    certain factors behind the collapse may be logically attributed    to both. A relevant example may be seen when a contingent    factor (factions within the Communist Party) affects the    decisions of a leader (Gorbachev). This leads to ambiguities,    as it is impossible to know whether certain outcomes should be    explained in a conjunctural or decisional light. This type of    ambiguity can also cast doubts on certain conjunctural    phenomena with historical antecedents. In these cases it    becomes unclear as to whether these phenomena are ontological    (structural), as they existed since the systems conception or    conjunctural as they present contingent obstacles to progress.  <\/p>\n<p>    In most cases, when ambiguities arise, scholars may adopt a    rhetoric that is inherently ontological, decisional or    conjunctural and then base most of their judgements and    analysis around it. Kalashnikov supplements this, stating that    studies tend to opt for one factor as being most important in    bringing about collapse [] [and] do not engage other    standpoints.[4] This is a trait I have noticed in certain works    that were written by scholars more inclined to analyse events    through a certain approach, such as Kotkin with the ontological    approach, Goldman with the decisional one, or Steele regarding    the conjunctural approach. In my analysis, I will scrutinise    the fall through the theoretical lens of each approach, and    from this will prove the indispensability of each of these in    the explanation of the downfall. The fact that certain    approaches overlap is testament to the necessity of this    theoretical categorisation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Literature Review  <\/p>\n<p>    The first approach to be investigated will be the ontological    one: a school of thought espoused by scholars who focus on    systemic long-term factors of collapse. Kotkin is one such    author, providing valuable insight into the ontological    dissolution of Soviet ideology and society, which will figure    as the first element of analysis in that chapter. He advances    the theory that the Soviet Union was condemned from an early    age due to its ideological duty in providing a better    alternative to capitalism. From its inception, the Soviet Union    had claimed to be an experiment in socialism []. If socialism    was not superior to capitalism, its existence could not be    justified.[5] Kotkin elaborates that ideological credibility    crumbled from the beginning as the USSR failed to fulfil    expectations during Stalins post-war leadership. Kotkin goes on    and couples ideological deterioration with emphasis on societal    non-reforming tendency that flourished after the 1921 ban on    factions, setting a precedent where reform was ironically seen    as a form of anti-revolutionary dissidence.  <\/p>\n<p>    Kenez and Sakwa also supplement the above argument with insight    on the suppression of critical political thinking, notably in    Soviet satellite states, showing that any possibility of    reforming towards a more viable Communist rhetoric was stifled    early on and continuously supressed throughout the 1950s and    60s. This characteristic of non-reform can be seen as an    ontological centre-point, as after the brutal repression seen    in Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia (1968), no feedback    mechanism existed wherein leadership could comprehend the    social, political and economic problems that were gradually    amassing. The invasion of 1968 represented the destruction of    the sources of renewal within the Soviet system itself.[6]    Consequently, this led the Kremlin into a state of somewhat    ignorance visvis the reality of life in the Soviet Union.    Adding to the explanation of the Soviet Unions ontological    demise, Sakwa links the tendency of non-reform to the    overlapping of party and polity that occurred in the leadership    structure of the USSR. The CPSU was in effect a parallel    administration, shadowing the official departments of state: a    party-state emerged undermining the functional adaptability of    both.[7] Sakwa then develops that this led to the    mis-modernisation of the command structure of the country, and    coupled with non-reform, contributed to its demise.    Furthermore, ontologically tending scholars also view the    republican independence movements of the USSR as a factor    destined to occur since the conception of the union.  <\/p>\n<p>    The second section concerning the ontological approach analyses    the economic factors of collapse. Here, Derbyshire, Kotkin and    Remnick provide a quantitative and qualitative explanation of    the failure of centralisation in the agricultural and    industrial sectors. Derbyshire and Remnick also provide    conclusive insight into ontological reasons for the failure of    industrial and agricultural collectivization, which played a    leading role in the overall demise of the Soviet Union.  <\/p>\n<p>    Finally, in my third area of investigation, Remnick and Sakwa    claim that the dissolution came about due to widespread    discontent in individual republics regarding exploitation of    their natural resources as well as Stalins detrimental policy    of pitting different republics against each other.  <\/p>\n<p>    Moscow had turned all of Central Asia into a vast cotton    plantation [] [and in] the Baltic States, the official    discovery of the secret protocols to the Nazi-Soviet pact was    the key moment.[8]  <\/p>\n<p>    Although I will explore how independence movements played a    role in the dissolution, I will ensure the focus remains on the    USSR as a whole, as it is easy to digress due to the sheer    amount of information on independence movements. Upon this,    although evidence proves that certain factors of collapse were    long-term ontological ones, other scholars, namely Goldman and    Galeotti go in another direction and accentuate that the key to    understanding the downfall of the USSR lies in the analysis of    short-term factors such as the decisional approach.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dissimilar to the ontological approach, within the decisional    realm, scholars more frequently ascribe the factors of the    collapse to certain events or movements, which allows them to    have minute precision in their explanations of the fall.    Goldman is a full-fledged decisional scholar with the    conviction that Gorbachev orchestrated the collapse through his    lack of comprehensive approach,[9] a view espousing Sakwas    definition of the decisional approach. In order to allow for a    comprehensive analysis, this chapter will start off with an    examination of Gorbachevs economic reforms in chronological    order, allowing the reader to be guided through the decisions    that affected the collapse. Goldman will be the main literary    pillar of this section, supplemented by Sakwa and Galeotti.    Having accomplished this, it will be possible to investigate    how economic failure inter-linked with political decisions    (Glasnost and Perestroika) outside of the Party created an aura    of social turmoil. Here, Galeotti and Goldman will look into    the events and more importantly, the decisions, that    discredited Gorbachevs rule and created disillusion in Soviet    society. My final section of the chapter will scrutinize the    affects of Glasnost and Perestroika within the Communist Party,    which will stand as a primordial step in light of the    independence movements; seen as a by-product of Gorbachevs    policies. Due to the inter-linked nature of the political,    social and economic spheres, it will be possible to see how    policy sectors affected each other in the collapse of the    Soviet Union.  <\/p>\n<p>    Overall, this chapter will end with an analysis of how    Gorbachevs incoherence pushed certain republics onto the path    of independence, which is perceived as a major factor behind    the fall by Goldman.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the chapter regarding the conjunctural approach, I will be    looking into the key contingent factors that scholars believe    are behind the fall of the Soviet Union. The first will be the    conservatives of the Communist Party who obstructed the reform    process since Brezhnevs rule, meaning that up until the    collapse, reform efforts had run headlong into the opposition    of entrenched bureaucratic interests who resisted any threat to    their power.[10] Due to the broadness of this topic I will draw    from two scholars, namely Kelley and Remnick, for supplementary    insight. Moving on, I will also investigate the inception of    the reformist left, a term encapsulating those within and    outside the party striving to bring democratic reform to the    USSR. Here the main conjunctural scholar used will be Steele,    who explains that Gorbachevs hopes for this reformist left to    support him against the Communist conservatives evaporated once    Yeltsin took the lead and crossed the boundaries of socialist    pluralism set by Gorbachev. A concept coined by the leader    himself, which implied that there should be a wide exchange of    views and organizations, provided they all accepted    socialism.[11] This brought about enormous pressure and sapped    social support from Gorbachev at a time when he needed    political backing. Once the political scene is evaluated    through conjunctural evidence, I will divide my chapter    chronologically, first exploring the 1989 radicalisation of the    political movements with the significant arrival of Yeltsin as    the major obstacle to Gorbachevs reforms to the left. In this    section I will be mainly citing Remnick due to his detailed    accounts of events. Ultimately I will be attempting to vary my    analysis with approach-specific scholars and more neutral ones    who provide thorough accounts, such as Remnicks and Sakwas. The    analysis will continue with insight in the 1990-1991 period of    political turmoil and the effects it had on Gorbachevs reforms;    I will be citing Galeotti, Remnick and Tedstrom as these    provide varying viewpoints regarding political changes of the    time. My chapter will then finally end with a scrutiny of    Yeltsins Democratic Russia and the August 1991 Coup and how    both of these independent action groups operated as mutual    contingent factors in the dissolution of the Soviet Union.  <\/p>\n<p>    Chapter One: Was the Collapse of the USSR Ontological in    Nature?  <\/p>\n<p>    When analysing the collapse of the USSR, it is undeniable that    vital ontological problems took form during the early days of    its foundation. Here I will analyse these flaws and demonstrate    how the collapse occurred due to ontological reasons, hence    proving the necessity of this approach. In order to provide a    concrete answer I will begin by scrutinizing how the erosion of    the Communist ideology acted as a systemic flaw where the    Soviet Unions legitimacy was put into question. I will then    analyse how a non-reformist tendency was created in society and    also acted as an ontological flaw that would play a part in the    fall. From there I will explore how ontological defects plagued    the economic sector in the industrial and agricultural areas,    leading the country to the brink of economic collapse. Finally    I will analyse the independence movements, as certain scholars,    especially Remnick and Kotkin, argue that these movements    pushed towards ontological dissolution. It is imperative to    recall that this chapter will analyse symptoms of the collapse    that are of an ontological nature, namely long-term issues that    manifested themselves in a negative manner on the longevity of    the Soviet Union. As a result it is vital to bear in mind that    the ontological factors to be analysed are usually seen as    having all progressively converged together over the decades,    provoking the cataclysmic collapse.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Untimely Death of an Ideology  <\/p>\n<p>    Since its early days, the Soviet Union was a political-economic    experiment built to prove that the Communist-Socialist ideology    could rival and even overtake Capitalism. It promoted itself as    a superior model, and thus was condemned to surpassing    capitalism if it did not want to lose its legitimacy. However,    during Stalins tenure, the ideological legitimacy of the Soviet    Union crumbled due to two reasons: the first one being the    aforementioned premiers rule and the other being Capitalisms    success, which both ultimately played a part in its demise.  <\/p>\n<p>    The early leaders of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union    (CPSU) such as Lenin, Trotsky, Kamenev, Bukharin, Zinoviev and    Stalin all had different views regarding how to attain    socio-economic prosperity, but Stalin would silence these after    the 1921 to 1924 power struggle. Following this period, which    saw the death of Lenin, Stalin emerged as the supreme leader of    the Soviet Union. With the exile of Trotsky, and isolation of    Zinoviev, Kamenev and Bukharin from the party, no effective    opposition was left to obstruct the arrival of Stalins fledging    dictatorship. Subsequently, Stalin was able to go about    effectively appropriating the Communist ideology for himself;    with his personality cult he became the sole curator of what    was Communist or reactionary (anti-Communist). Subsequently, to    protect his hold on power, he turned the Soviet Union away from    Marxist Communist internationalism by introducing his doctrine    of Socialism in One Country, after Lenins death in 1924.  <\/p>\n<p>    Insisting that Soviet Russia could [] begin the building of    socialism [] by its own efforts. [] [Thus treading on] Marxs    view that socialism was an international socialist movement or    nothing.[12]  <\/p>\n<p>    As a result, the USSR under Stalin alienated the possibilities    of ideological renewal with other Communist states and even    went as far as to claim, that the interests of the Soviet Union    were the interests of socialism.[13] Sakwa sees these actions    as ones that locked the Soviet Union into a Stalinist mind-set    early on and thus built the wrong ideological mechanisms that    halted the advent of Communist ideology according to Marx. As a    result, it is fair to acknowledge that when looking at    ontological reasons for collapse, one of them can be mentioned    as the Soviet Union being built upon an ambiguous ideological    platform wherein it espoused elements of Communism but was    severely tainted and handicapped by Stalinist rhetoric.  <\/p>\n<p>    In addition to the debilitating effects Stalins political    manipulations had on the ideological foundations of the USSR,    capitalisms successful reform dealt a supplementary blow to    Soviet ideological credibility.  <\/p>\n<p>    Instead of a final economic crisis anticipated by Stalin and    others, Capitalism experienced an unprecedented boom [] all    leading capitalist countries embraced the welfare state []    stabilising their social orders and challenging Socialism on    its own turf.[14]  <\/p>\n<p>    Adding to the changing nature of capitalism was the onset of    de-colonisation during the 1960s, taking away more legitimacy    with every new independence agreement. By the end of the 1960s,    the metamorphosis of capitalism had very much undermined the    Soviet Unions ideological raison dtre, as the differences    between capitalism in the Great Depression [which the USSR had    moulded itself against,] and capitalism in the post-war world    were nothing short of earth shattering.[15] Here the    ontological approach generally elaborates that Capitalism and    incoherent ideological foundations brought about the disproving    of the very political foundations the Soviet state rested upon    and thus any social unrest leading to the collapse during    Gorbachevs rule can be interpreted as logical by-products of    the previous point. From this, it is possible to better    understand how the crumbling of the legitimacy of the Communist    ideology was a fundamental ontological factor behind the    collapse of the USSR. Building on this, I will now look into    how the establishment of society during Stalins rule also    played a role in the collapse due to the shaping of a    non-reforming society.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Foundations of a Non-Reforming Society  <\/p>\n<p>    One defect that would remain etched in the Soviet    political-economic mind-set was the ontological tendency for    non-reform. This trait would plague the very infrastructure of    the Soviet Union until its dying days. The emergence of such a    debilitating characteristic appeared during the very inception    of the Soviet Union with the Kronstadt Sailors Uprising. This    uprising occurred during the Tenth Party Congress in 1921 and    would have severe repercussion for the Soviet Unions future as    Congress delegates [] accepted a resolution that outlawed    factions within the Party.[16] Thus, by stifling critical    thinking and opposing views, this would effectively cancel out    a major source of reform and act as an ontological shortcoming    for future Soviet political-economic progress. This    non-reformist trait was reinforced during Stalins rule with the    constant pressure the Communist Party exerted on agricultural    and industrial planners. Here, the party demanded not careful    planning [] but enthusiasm; the leaders considered it treason    when economists pointed out irrationalities in their plans.[17]    Subsequently, planners were forced into a habit of drawing up    unmanageable targets, which were within the partys political    dictate. This meant, central planners established planning    targets that could only be achieved at enormous human cost and    sacrifice. [] [and lacked] effective feedback mechanism[18],    which would provide insight to the flaws that existed in their    plans. In the short-run this would only hinder the economy, but    in the long-term it would lock the Soviet Union in a tangent    where it could not reform itself in accordance to existent    problems[19], thus leading it to a practically technologically    obsolete state with a backwards economy by the time it    collapsed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Nevertheless, repression of critical thinking did not limit    itself to the economic realm; it also occurred in the social    sector where calls for the reform of the Socialist ideology    were mercilessly crushed in Hungary in 1956 and in    Czechoslovakia in 1968. It is possible to see a link here with    the previous section of this chapter with regards to Stalins    hijacking of the Communist ideology. In the two social    movements cited, both pushed towards a shift away from    Stalinist rhetoric towards an actual adoption of Marxist    Socialism. In Czechoslovakia this social push came under the    name of Socialism with a Human Face and wanted to permit the    dynamic development of socialist social relations, combine    broad democracy with a scientific, highly qualified management,    [and] strengthen the social order.[20] Although these were only    Soviet satellite states, the fact that they were repressed    showed that by the 1960s, the Soviet Unions non-reforming    characteristic had consolidated itself to the point that any    divergence from the official party line in the economic or    social sectors was seen as high treason. This leads us to the    ambiguous area of Soviet polity and how it jeopardised the    existence of the USSR when merged with ontological non-reform.  <\/p>\n<p>    Polity is the term I use here because it remains implausibly    unclear as to who essentially governed the USSR during its    sixty-nine years of existence. It seems that both the CPSU and    the Soviet government occupied the same position of authority,    thus creating  <\/p>\n<p>    a permanent crisis of governance. [Wherein] the party itself    was never designed as an instrument of government and the    formulation that the party rules but the government governs    allowed endless overlapping jurisdictions.[21]  <\/p>\n<p>    Adding to the confusion was the CPSUs role in society, defined    by Article Six of the USSRs 1977 Constitution: The leading and    guiding force of the Soviet society and the nucleus of its    political system, of all state organisations and public    organisations, is the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[22]    From here a profound ambiguity is seen surrounding the role of    politics in the social realm. Accordingly, these two traits    would create a profound ontological factor for collapse when    merged with the non-reforming tendency of society. Due to the    fact that when a more efficient leadership mechanism was sought    out, it was impossible to identify how and what elements of the    polity had to be changed.  <\/p>\n<p>    It is here that an inter-linkage of approaches can be    identified as the politys ontological inability to reform    according to Gorbachevs decisional re-shaping of society    contributed to the demise of the USSR.  <\/p>\n<p>    The one-party regime ultimately fell owing to its inability to    respond to immense social changes that had taken place in    Soviet society- ironically, social changes that the Party    itself had set in motion.[23]  <\/p>\n<p>    Because Soviet polity was ontologically ill defined, when time    came to reform it, the notion of what was to be changed    obstructed the reform process. From this analysis, it is    possible to see how ontological weaknesses in the over-lapping    areas of politics and the social sector seriously hindered the    Soviet Union. In the following section I will explore how    ontological defects were of similar importance in the economic    realm and were also interwoven with previously explained    shortcomings.  <\/p>\n<p>    An Economy in Perpetual Crisis  <\/p>\n<p>    When looking at the economic realm there are a number of    weaknesses that took root from the early days of the Soviet    Union, the first aspect of scrutiny will be the ontological    failure of economic centralisation and its contribution to the    fall. In both the agricultural and industrial sectors, the USSR    was unable to progress towards economic prosperity due to its    flawed centralised economy. Agriculturally, centralisation    meant that peasants were compelled to fulfil farming quotas set    by the ministry in Moscow on land that solely belonged to the    state. Consequently this generated two problems, the first one    being a lack of incentive from the farmers and secondly, the    inability of central authorities to cope with the myriad of    different orders that had to be issued.  <\/p>\n<p>    Central planners in Moscow seldom know in advance what needs to    be done in the different regions of the country. Because of    this [] sometimes as much as 40 to 50 per cent of some crops    rot in the field or in the distribution process.[24]  <\/p>\n<p>    Worsening this was the partys non-reforming tendency, which    meant that the Soviet Union protected its misconceived    collective and state farming network and made up for its    agricultural ineptness by importing up to 20 per cent of the    grain it needed.[25] This patching-up of ontological    agricultural problems would result in an unpredictable and    inconsistent agricultural sector as the decades passed, thus    rendering it unreliable. This can be seen in the post-war    agricultural growth rates that continuously fluctuated from    13.8 per cent in 1955 to -1.5 per cent in 1959 and finally    -12.8 per cent in 1963![26] Such a notoriously unpredictable    agricultural sector [] consistently failed to meet planned    targets[27] and would remain an unresolved problem until the    fall of the regime.  <\/p>\n<p>    As for the industrial sector, the situation was difficult; with    the disappearance of a demand and supply mechanism, the central    authorities were unable to properly satisfy the material    demands of society. Moreover, because of centralisation, most    factories were the sole manufacturers of certain products in    the whole of the USSR, meaning that an enormous amount of time    and money was wasted in transport-logistics costs. Without the    demand and supply mechanism, the whole economy had to be    planned by central authorities, which proved to be    excruciatingly difficult.  <\/p>\n<p>    Prices of inputs and outputs, the sources of supply, and    markets for sale were strictly stipulated by the central    ministries. [] [and] detailed regulation of factory level    activities by remote ministries [] led to a dangerously narrow    view of priorities at factory level.[28]  <\/p>\n<p>    Consequently, central ministries frequently misallocated    resources and factories took advantage of this by hoarding    larger quantities of raw materials than they needed. Although    the ontological failure of centralisation did not have as    immediate effects as certain short-term conjunctural or    decisional factors, its contribution to the fall can be seen in    how, combined with the economic shortcomings to be highlighted    hereon, it gradually deteriorated the economy of the country.  <\/p>\n<p>    In addition to the failure of centralisation was the failure of    agricultural collectivization, which would have an even greater    negative effect on the Soviet Union. When looking at    collectivization we can see how its affects were multi-layered,    as it was a politically motivated campaign that would socially    harm society and destroy the economy. Agriculturally, Stalin    hindered the Soviet farming complex from its very beginnings by    forcing collectivisation on farmers and publicly antagonising    those who resisted as anti-revolutionary kulaks. After the    winter of 1929, Stalin defined the meaning of kulak as anyone    refusing to enter collectives. Kulaks were subsequently    persecuted and sent to Siberian gulags, the attack on the    kulaks was an essential element in coercing the peasants to    give up their farms.[29] These repeated attacks came from a    Bolshevik perception that peasants were regarded with suspicion    as prone to petty-bourgeois individualist leanings.[30] Due to    these traumatic acts of violence, the peasantry was entirely    driven into collectivisation by 1937; however, this only    bolstered peasant hatred of the government and can be seen as    the basis for the agricultural problem of rural depopulation    that gradually encroached the country-side. By the 1980s,  <\/p>\n<p>    The legacy of collectivization was everywhere in the Soviet    Union. In the Vologda region alone, there were more than seven    thousand ruined villages [] For decades, the young had been    abandoning the wasted villages in droves.[31]  <\/p>\n<p>    This agricultural depopulation can be seen in how the number of    collective farms gradually shrank from 235,500 in 1940 to    merely 25,900 in 1981[32]; causing severe labour scarcity    concerns to the agricultural sector.  <\/p>\n<p>    Industrially, collectivisation was not widespread, although in    the few cases it appeared, it brought about much suffering to    yield positive results. The mining city of Magnitogorsk is a    prime example where Stalinist planners  <\/p>\n<p>    built an autonomous company town [] that pushed away every    cultural, economic, and political development in the civilized    world [and where] 90 per cent of the children [] suffered from    pollution-related illnesses.[33]  <\/p>\n<p>    While the West followed the spectacular expansion of Soviet    industry from 1920 to 1975, this was at the cost of immense    social sacrifice in the industrial and agricultural sectors,    which were entirely geared towards aiding the industrial    complex. In addition to this, much of Soviet industrial growth    after Khrushchevs rule was fuelled by oil profits emanating    from Siberia, peaking from 1973 to 1985 when energy exports    accounted for 80% of the USSRs expanding hard currency    earnings.[34]  <\/p>\n<p>    Overall, ontological non-reform inter-linked with the failure    of collectivisation and a deficient command structure would    gradually weaken the economy to the brink of collapse in the    1980s. This elaboration was made clear in the 1983 Novosibirsk    Report, which  <\/p>\n<p>    argued that the system of management created for the old-style    command economy of fifty years ago remained in operation in    very different circumstances. It now held back the further    development of the countrys economy.[35]  <\/p>\n<p>    Nevertheless, ontological problems behind the fall did not only    restrict themselves to the economic, political or social realms    but also existed regarding the nationalities question.  <\/p>\n<p>    A Defective Union  <\/p>\n<p>    When looking at the fifteen different republics that comprised    the USSR, one may ask how it was possible to unite such diverse    nationalities together without the emergence of complications.    The truth behind this is that many problems arose from this    union even though the CPSU maintained, until the very end, the    conviction that all republics and people were acquiescent of    it. Gorbachevs statement in 1987 that  <\/p>\n<p>    the nationalities issue has been resolved for our country []    reflected the partys most suicidal illusion, that it had truly    created [] a multinational state in which dozens of    nationalisms had been dissolved.[36]  <\/p>\n<p>    Today certain scholars see the independence movements of the    early 1990s as a result of the ontological malformation of the    Soviet Unions identity. The most common argument expounds that    the independence movements fuelling dissolution occurred due to    two ontological reasons. The first one can be seen as a    consequence of Stalins rule and as part of his policy of divide    and rule, where the borders between ethno-federal units were    often demarcated precisely to cause maximum aggravation between    peoples.[37] This contributed to the Soviet Unions inability to    construct a worthwhile federal polity and an actual Soviet    nation-state. In addition to this was the ontological    exploitation of central Soviet republics and prioritisation of    the Russian state. This created long-term republican discontent    that laid the foundations of independence movements: Everything    that went wrong with the Soviet system over the decades was    magnified in Central Asia,[38] Moscow had turned all of Central    Asia into a vast cotton plantation [] destroying the Aral Sea    and nearly every other area of the economy.[39]  <\/p>\n<p>    Overall, it is possible to argue that the collapse occurred due    to inherent flaws in the foundations of the Soviet Union.    Ontological factors behind the collapse were an admixture of    socio-political and economic weaknesses that gradually wore at    the foundations of the USSR. The first area analysed was the    demise of the Marxist ideology that up-held the legitimacy of    the Soviet Union. I then scrutinized the non-reforming tendency    that settled in Soviet society very early on. Such an area    eventually brought me to inspect the ontological flaws in    Soviet economy, which had close links with the previous    section. Finally, I examined inherent flaws in the USSRs union    and how these also played a role in the demise. While the    ontological factors represent a substantial part of the    explanation to the downfall, decisional and conjunctural    factors must also be examined to fully grasp the collapse.  <\/p>\n<p>    Chapter Two: Was the Collapse of the USSR Decisional in Nature?  <\/p>\n<p>    Whilst long-term flaws in the foundations of the Soviet Union    played a major role in its demise, it is important to    acknowledge that most of Gorbachevs reforms also had drastic    effects on the survival of the union. From hereon, I will    explore how the decisional approach explains vital short-term    factors behind the collapse and cannot be forgone when    pondering this dissertations thesis-question. To begin with, I    will analyse the failure of Gorbachevs two major economic    initiatives known as Uskoreniye (acceleration of economic    reforms) and Perestroika. This will then inevitably lead me to    the scrutiny of his socio-political reforms under Glasnost and    how imprudent decisions in this sector led to widespread unrest    in the USSR. Finally I will look into how Gorbachevs decisional    errors led to most republics to opt out of the Soviet Union.    But before I start it is important to understand that although    I will be separating the economic reforms (Uskoreniye and    Perestroika), from socio-political ones (Glasnost), these were    very much intertwined as Gorbachev saw them as mutually    complementary.  <\/p>\n<p>    A Botched Uskoreniye and an Ineffective Perestroika  <\/p>\n<p>    By the time Gorbachev rose to power in March 1985,    ontologically economic problems had ballooned to    disproportionate levels. His initial approach to change was    different to his predecessor; he took advice from field-experts    and immediately set into motion economic Uskoreniye    (acceleration). At this point, economic reform was    indispensible as the collective agricultural sector lay in    ruins with a lethargic 1.1 per cent output growth between 1981    and 1985, whilst industrial output growth fell from 8.5 per    cent in 1966 to 3.7 per cent 1985.[40] Although Gorbachev could    not permit himself mistakes, it is with Uskoreniye that the    first decisional errors regarding the economy were committed    and cost him much of his credibility. Under Abel Aganbegyans    advisory, Gorbachev diverted Soviet funds to retool and    refurbish the machinery industry, which was believed would    accelerate scientific and technological progress. He    supplemented this effort by reinforcing the centralisation of    Soviet economy by creating super-ministries, that way planners    could eliminate intermediate bureaucracies and concentrate on    overall strategic planning.[41] Whereas these reforms did have    some positive impacts, they were not far reaching enough to    bring profound positive change to Soviet industrial production.    Moreover, in the agricultural sector, Gorbachev initiated a    crackdown on owners of private property in 1986, which led    farmers to fear the government, and would disturb the success    of future agricultural reforms. His error with Uskoreniye lay    in the fact that he had aroused the population with his call    for a complete overhaul of Soviet society, but in the economic    realm at least, complete overhaul turned out for most part to    be not much more than a minor lubrication job.[42] Realising    his mistake, Gorbachev acquired the belief it was the economic    system he had to change, and set out to do just that with his    move towards Perestroika (Restructuring).  <\/p>\n<p>    Gorbachev had at first tried simply to use the old machinery of    government to reform. [] the main reason why this failed was    that the old machinery [] were a very large part of the    problem.[43]  <\/p>\n<p>    Although the term Perestroika did exist prior to Gorbachevs    tenure in office, it was he who remoulded it into a reform    process that would attempt to totally restructure the archaic    economic system. Unlike the first batch of economic reforms []    the second set seemed to reflect a turning away from the    Stalinist economic system,[44] a move that startled the    agricultural sector which had been subjected to repression the    prior year. In 1987, Gorbachev legalised individual farming and    the leasing of state land to farmers in an effort to enhance    agronomic production. However, this reform was flawed due to    the half-hearted nature of the endeavour, wherein farmers were    allowed to buy land but it would remain state-owned. Therefore,    due to Gorbachevs reluctance to fully privatise land, many    prospective free farmers could see little point in developing    farms that the state could snatch back at any time.[45] Adding    to this social setback was the purely economic problem, since  <\/p>\n<p>    without a large number of participants the private [] movements    could never attain credibility. A large number of new sellers    would produce a competitive environment that could hold prices    down.[46]  <\/p>\n<p>    Thus, due to Gorbachevs contradictory swift changes from    agricultural repression to reluctant land leasing, his second    agrarian reform failed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Industrially, Gorbachev went even further in decisional    miscalculations, without reverting his earlier move towards    ultra-centralisation of the super-ministries, he embarked on a    paradoxical semi-privatisation of markets. Gorbachevs 1987    Enterprise Law illustrates this as he attempted to transfer    decision-making power from the centre to the enterprises    themselves[47] through the election of factory managers by    workers who would then decide what to produce and work    autonomously. Adding to this, the 1988 Law on Cooperatives that    legalized a wide range of small businesses[48] supplemented    this move towards de-centralisation. Combined, it was    anticipated that these reforms  <\/p>\n<p>    would have introduced more motivation and market responsiveness    [] in practice, it did nothing of the sort [] workers not    surprisingly elected managers who offered an easy life and    large bonuses.[49]  <\/p>\n<p>    Moreover, the Enterprise Law contributed to the magnitude of    the macro and monetary problems. [] [as] managers invariably    opted to increase the share of expensive goods they    produced,[50] which led to shortages of cheaper goods. Whilst,    the law had reverse effects on workers, the blame lies with    Gorbachev as no effort was put into the creation of a viable    market infrastructure.  <\/p>\n<p>    Without private banks from which to acquire investment capital,    without a free market, [] without profit motive and the threat    of closure or sacking, managers rarely had the incentive [] to    change their ways.[51]  <\/p>\n<p>    By going halfway in his efforts to create a market-oriented    economy, Gorbachev destroyed his possibilities of success. The    existing command-administrative economic system was weakened    enough to be even less efficient, but not enough that market    economics could begin to operate,[52] in effect, he had placed    the economy in a nonsensical twilight zone. Consequently, the    economy was plunged into a supply-side depression by 1991 since    the availability of private and cooperative shops, which could    charge higher prices, served to suck goods out of the state    shops, which in turn caused labor unrest[53] and steady    inflation. Here, Gorbachev began to feel the negative effects    of his reforms, as mass disillusionment in his capability to    lead the economy towards a superior model coupled with his    emphasis on the abolition of repression and greater social    freedom (Glasnost) tipped the USSR into a state of profound    crisis.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Success of Glasnost  <\/p>\n<p>    Having understood Gorbachevs economical decisional errors with    Perestroika, I will now set out to demonstrate how his    simultaneous introduction of Glasnost in the social sector    proved to be a fatal blow for the Soviet Union. Originally,    Gorbachev set out to promote democratisation in 1987 as a    complementary reform that would aid his economic ones, he saw    Glasnost as a way to create nation of whistle-blowers who would    work with him[54] against corruption. To the surprise of Soviet    population, Gorbachev even encouraged socio-economic debates    and allowed the formation of Neformaly, which were leisure    organizations [and] up to a quarter were either lobby groups or    were involved in issues [] which gave them an implicitly    political function.[55] Gorbachev initiated this move at a time    when the USSR was still searching for the correct reform    process. Thus, the Neformaly movement was a way for him to    strengthen the reform process without weakening the party by    including the involvement of the public. But as Perestroika led    to continuous setbacks, Gorbachev began to opt for more drastic    measures with Glasnost, upholding his belief that the key lay    in further democratisation. In November 1987, on the 70th    anniversary of the October revolution, Gorbachev gave a speech    purporting to Stalins crimes, which was followed by the    resurgence of freedom of speech and gradual withdrawal of    repression. Intellectually, politically and morally the speech    would play a critical role in undermining the Stalinist system    of coercion and empire.[56] At Gorbachevs behest, censorship    was decreased and citizens could finally obtain truthful    accounts regarding Soviet history and the outside world.    However, this reform proved to be fairly detrimental as Soviet    citizens were dismayed to find that their country actually    lagged far behind the civilized countries. They were also taken    aback by the flood of revelations about Soviet history.[57]    While this did not trigger outbursts of unrest in amongst the    population, it did have the cumulative impact of delegitimizing    the Soviet regime in eyes of many Russians.[58] After his    speech, Gorbachev continued his frenetic march towards    democratisation with the astounding creation of a Congress of    Peoples Deputies in 1989. Yet again, Gorbachev had found that    the reform process necessitated CPSU support, however,    conservatives at the heart of the party were continuously    moving at cross-purpose to his reform efforts. Hence, by giving    power to the people to elect deputies who would draft    legislation, Gorbachev believed that he would be strengthening    the government, [and] by creating this new Congress, he could    gradually diminish the role of the Party regulars    [conservatives].[59]  <\/p>\n<p>    Instead of strengthening the government, Gorbachevs Glasnost of    society pushed the USSR further along the path of social    turmoil. In hindsight, it is possible to see that  <\/p>\n<p>    the democracy Gorbachev had in mind was narrow in scope. []    Criticism [] would be disciplined [] and would serve to help,    not hurt the reform process. [] His problems began when []    disappointment with his reforms led [] critics to disregard his    notion of discipline.[60]  <\/p>\n<p>    As soon as economic Perestroika failed to yield its promises,    the proletariat began to speak out en masse, and instead of    constructive openness, Gorbachev had created a Glasnost of    criticism and disillusion. This was seen following the 1989    Congress, as social upheavals erupted when miners saw the    politicians complain openly about grievances never aired before    [61] and decided to do the same. In 1989, almost half the    countrys coal miners struck,[62] followed by other episodes in    1991 when over 300,000 miners had gone out on strike.[63] Very    quickly, Gorbachev also came to sourly regret his Neformaly    initiative as workers, peasants, managers and even the military    organized themselves in lobby groups, some of them asking the    Kremlin to press forth with reforms and others asking to revert    the whole reform process. Gorbachevs decisional error lay in    his simultaneous initiation of Perestroika and Glasnost; as the    latter met quick success whilst the economy remained in    free-fall, society was plunged into a state of profound crisis.  <\/p>\n<p>    Party Politics  <\/p>\n<p>    Alongside his catastrophic reform of society and the economy,    Gorbachev launched a restructuring of the CPSU, which he deemed    essential to complement his economic reforms. In 1985,    Gorbachev purged (discharged) elements of the CPSU    nomenklatura, a term designating the key administrative    government and party leaders.  <\/p>\n<p>    Within a year, more than 20 to 30 % of the ranks of the Central    Committee [] had been purged. Gorbachev expected that these    purges would rouse the remaining members of the nomenklatura to    support perestroika.[64]  <\/p>\n<p>    This attack on the party served as an ultimatum to higher    government and party officials who were less inclined on    following Gorbachevs path of reform. Nevertheless, as economic    and social turmoil ensued, Gorbachev went too far in his    denunciation of the party, angering party members and causing    amplified disillusionment within the proletariat. Examples of    this are rife: behind the closed doors of the January 1987    Plenum of the Central Committee, Gorbachev [] accused the Party    of resisting reform.[65] In 1988, Gorbachev also fashioned    himself a scapegoat for economic failures: the Ligachev-led    conservatives were strangling the reforms.[66] Up until 1988,    this attack on the party nomenklatura did not have far-reaching    repercussions, but as Gorbachev nurtured and strengthened the    reformist faction of the CPSU, infighting between the    conservatives and reformist began having two negative effects.    The first one was widespread public loss of support for the    party; this can be seen in the drop in Communist Party    membership applications and rise in resignations. By 1988 the    rate of membership growth had fallen to a minuscule 0.1 per    cent, and then in 1989 membership actually fell, for the first    time since 1954.[67] The other negative repercussion lay in how    party infighting led to the inability of the CPSU to draft    sensible legislation. This was due to Gorbachev continuously    altering the faction he supported in order to prevent one from    seizing power. Such a characteristic can be spotted in his    legislative actions regarding the economy and social sector,    which mirrored his incessant political shifts from the    reformist faction to the conservative one. In 1990, Gorbachev    opted for more de-centralisation and even greater autonomy in    Soviet republics by creating the Presidential Council where    heads of each republic were able to have a say in his    decisions. However, he reversed course in 1991 with the    creation of the Security Council where heads of republics now    had to report to him directly, thus reasserting party control.    Concerning the economy, Gorbachev acted similarly: as earlier    explained, his first batch of reforms in 1986 stressed the need    for centralisation with super-ministries, but he changed his    mind the year after with his Cooperatives and Enterprise Laws    and agricultural reforms. Gorbachev constantly  <\/p>\n<p>    switched course [] [his] indecisiveness on the economy and the    Soviet political system has generated more confusion than    meaningful action. [] After a time, no one seemed to be    complying with orders from the centre.[68]  <\/p>\n<p>    In effect, it is possible to see here an overlapping of    approaches since the way party infighting affected Gorbachevs    reforms can be seen as a contingent factor that obstructed    reform or a decisional error on Gorbachevs behalf for having    reformed the party in such a manner.  <\/p>\n<p>    Overall, this incoherence in his reform process can be seen as    the result of his own decisional mistakes. Having succeeded in    his Glasnost of society and the party, Gorbachev had allowed    high expectation to flourish regarding his economic reforms,    expectations that were gradually deceived. Amidst this social    turmoil, economic downturn, party infighting and widespread    disillusionment, Soviet republics began to move towards    independence as the central command of the Kremlin    progressively lost control and became evermore incoherent in    its reforms.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Death of the Union  <\/p>\n<p>    As the Soviet Union descended into a state of socio-economic    chaos, individual republics began to voice their plea to leave    the union. This can be seen as having been triggered by the    combination of three decisional errors on Gorbachevs behalf.    The first one was his miscalculation of the outcome of    Glasnost, as by 1990  <\/p>\n<p>    all 15 republics began to issue calls for either economic    sovereigntyor political independence. []Gorbachevs efforts to    induce local groups to take initiative on their own were being    implemented, but not always in the way he had anticipated.[69]  <\/p>\n<p>    Originally, initiative had never been thought of as a topic    that could lead to independence movements, instead Gorbachev    had introduced this drive to stimulate workers and managers to    find solutions that were akin to the problems felt in their    factory or region. Adding to this mistake were Gorbachevs    failed economic reforms with Perestroika, and as the Unions    economic state degenerated, individual republics began to feel    that independence was the key to their salvation. Gorbachevs  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>See the original post here: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.prometheism.net\/news\/socio-economic-collapse\/page\/3\/\" title=\"Socio-Economic Collapse | Prometheism.net - Part 3\">Socio-Economic Collapse | Prometheism.net - Part 3<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> A Critical Analysis into the Different Approaches Explaining the Collapse of the Soviet Union: Was the Nature of the Regimes Collapse Ontological, Conjunctural or Decisional? Abstract This investigation seeks to explore the different approaches behind the demise of the Soviet Union. It will draw from Richard Sakwas three approaches with regards to the collapse of the Soviet Union, namely of the ontological, decisional and conjunctural varieties.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/socio-economic-collapse\/socio-economic-collapse-prometheism-net-part-3.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431675],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-212404","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-socio-economic-collapse"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/212404"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=212404"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/212404\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=212404"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=212404"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=212404"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}