ABSTRACT

Soviet Agriculture in Perspective (1969) examines the framework within which Soviet agriculture had to operate from the start: the dilemma of a revolutionary regime in a backward peasant country, the straightjacket of a bureaucratic system inherited from Tsarism, made even more rigid by the internal tensions of the new society, and the imperative needs of economic development. In analysing Soviet agricultural policy, it looks at the appropriate volume of agricultural output, the need for massive capital investment, the level of prices and costs, and the optimum size of a farm.

chapter I|6 pages

Historical Signposts

part One|46 pages

Starting Points

part Two|178 pages

The Past

chapter V|26 pages

Agricultural Policy, 1917-1928

chapter VII|36 pages

War, Recovery and Stalemate (1941-1953)

chapter VIII|62 pages

The Khrushchev Era (1953-1964)

chapter IX|15 pages

After Khrushchev

part Three|60 pages

Problems and Prospects

chapter X|46 pages

Open Questions

chapter XI|12 pages

The Balance of Soviet Agriculture