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Summary Social developments in the USSR from 1917-85

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This document provides a full summary of the chapter Social developments from 1917-85. It goes into depth into the strategies taken to increase equality, education and changes in employment and workI used these notes in my mocks to get an A* predicted and have a place at Oxford for history

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Social developments 1917-85
Subido en
15 de junio de 2023
Número de páginas
12
Escrito en
2022/2023
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Social developments, 1917-85

How successful was the government in providing social security for the Soviet people
between 1917 and 1985
- One of the greatest attractions of communism was its claim that it would ensure that the
people were provided with what they needed; this included the provision of employment,
shelter, food, an education and welfare such as healthcare
Full employment, housing and social benefits, 1917-53

The labour market under Lenin
- The collapse of industrial production during the civil war of 1918-21 resulted in a drift of
factory workers to the countryside where food supplies were more reliable
- This led factories to have insufficient workers and the government resorted to issuing a
decree that forced people without employment to take any work offered
- The end of the civil war brought additional pressures to the labour market
o Demobilisation of the Red Mary returned millions of soldiers to the cities in search of
work and food
o Unemployment soared and reached over 1 million workers by 1926
o For skilled workers there was increasing job security
- Impact of the NEP
o Wage differentials grew as skilled workers demanded more money than their
unskilled counterparts
Industrialisation and full employment
- The Soviet government could hardly claim that the five year plans were launched to create
full employment
- In 1930, the soviet government announced that it was the first county to reach full
employment in peace time
o Number of hired workers rose from 11.6 million in 1928 to 27million in 1937
o Employment opportunities were plentiful with the rapid expansion in heavy industry
- By 1932, there were labour shortages
- Full employment had a considerable impact on the workers
o In October 1930, unemployment benefit was cancelled in the light of full
employment
o Productivity was low, in 1938, the average soviet worker produced only half of what
a British worker produced
o Most of the work was hard, repetitive and unchallenging increasing absenteeism
o High employment turnover
 In order to deal with this, the government introduced a passport system in
1932
 Only partly successful, 30% of all urban workers changed their job in each
quarter of the year
o In 1931, wages for skilled workers increased to discourage them from moving jobs
 The following year better rations and bonuses were introduced to add
incentive
o The government used honours and medals to motivate the workforce
 A key example is like Alexei Stakhanov who could apparently mine 15x the
average amount of coal
Housing
- Soviet government was slow to make an impact on the provision oh housing for its
population

, - In 1917, the Bolsheviks began a programme of confiscating the large houses of the rich and
portioning them and renting them to families of workers
o The principle of allocating housing according to need was often dropped in favour of
distribution according to rank within communist party
o The reality was that there was not enough hosing to meet the needs of all
- The growth of towns and industrial centres under the five year plans put considerable strain
on housing
o Housing revived few resources, was low priority, despite the focus on
industrialisation greatly increased the demand for workers housing
o Established cities saw exceptional growth eg Moscows’ population increased from
2.2 million in 1929 to 4.1 million in 1936
o The population of Magnitogorsk rose from 25 people in 1929 to 250,000 in 1932
- The rush to industrialise often left workers sleeping in tents and makeshift housing
- Conditions did improve throughout the 1930s but often were only drab barracks or blocks of
apartments where resources would allow
- In 1936, only 6% of rented units of housing consisted of more than one room
o 24% of cases it was only part of one room
o 5% of people lived in a kitchen or a corridor
- The lack of available housing was exacerbated by the damage caused during the WWII
o Some cities were particularly badly hit, Stalingrad lost 90% of its hosing and
Leningrad lost lone-third during the siege of the city
- Housing remained low priority in the fourth and fifth five year plans where post
reconstruction was heavily focused on heavy industry
Social benefits
- The workplace did provide some social benefits; by the 1930s, cheap food was available
within the workforce canteens and work clothes were given free
- Despite the trade unions losing the majority of their economic and political power, they
played a key role in organising sports facilities, meetings and film shows
o Workers were give 2 weeks paid holiday – this was usually taken on cheap subsidised
state resorts
o Trade unions were responsible for organising these and sick pay was also granted
through trade unions
- Health care was designed by the government to benefit all the population and despite
limited resources, it proved effective at containing epidemics
o A compulsory vaccine was implemented in 1921 to deal with a serious cholera
outbreak
- Many doctors had fled Russian soon after the revolution and this weakened health care
provision
o The government was forced to increase the number of training places on offer
o As a result, the number of doctors increased from 70,000 in 1928 to 155,000 in 1940
o The number of hospital beds increased 247,000 in 1928 to 791,000 in 1939
 This does not necessarily mean the quality was amazing but does show that
there were considerable improvements
Khrushchev, Brezhnev and the promotion of a stable society, 1953-85

- Society became much more stable under Khrushchev and Brezhnev

What were the key features of social stability under developed socialism

Full employment
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