Development, Part 6
New
Economic Policy
To read Lenin’s writings and speeches on the “New Economic Policy” (NEP)
is to discover a process of comprehensive unpacking and assessment, of factors
and variables that are quite similar to those in play in South
Africa at the present time.
The NEP followed after the “War Communism” that had been in effect
during the Civil War in Russia, after the Great October Revolution of
1917. [Picture: Lenin in Red Square, Moscow, 25 May 1919]. The NEP followed on
from “the struggle”, as it were.
The NEP was not a substitute for big-scale, planned industrial
development. Early in today’s main document, “The Tax in Kind” (1921) (attached), Lenin emphasises:
“Socialism is inconceivable without large-scale
capitalist engineering based on the latest discoveries of modern science. It is
inconceivable without planned state organisation which keeps tens of millions
of people to the strictest observance of a unified standard in production and
distribution... At the same time socialism is inconceivable unless the
proletariat is the ruler of the state.”
Later, he sums up:
“The tax in kind is a transition from War Communism to
a regular socialist exchange of products. The extreme ruin rendered more
acute by the crop failure in 1920 has made this transition urgently necessary
owing to the fact that it was impossible to restore large-scale industry
rapidly. Hence, the first thing to do is to improve the condition of the
peasants. The means are the tax in kind, the development of exchange between
agriculture and industry, and the development of small industry. Exchange is
freedom of trade; it is capitalism.”
The whole document is worth reading and re-reading. Note that the actual
“tax in kind” is not particularly prominent in the text. The sub-title, “The
Significance of the New Policy and its Conditions” is more apt.
The actual “tax in kind” policy meant that peasants in particular had
the option to pay tax in the form of produce, not cash, after which they were
free to sell any additional produce they had on the open market. The tax in
kind was a component within the overall scheme of the NEP, which in total
amounted to a revival of small-scale market-capitalist production.
It is clear that what Lenin is doing is ordering priorities and
synthesising all of the factors that were in play. There is no crude dichotomy
here that would cancel out the small-scale producers in favour of the larger
ones. On the contrary, the “development of exchange” between small and large is
seen by Lenin as the “means”, both to improve the condition of the peasants,
and to restore large-scale industry rapidly.
In the Soviet Union, a false dichotomy did subsequently develop
between the small and the large, and it may have weakened that country and
helped to set it up for the collapse that occurred in the 1990s.
In China, on the contrary, the most scrupulous attention was paid
to those peasants and petty-bourgeois who formed the (once-overwhelming and
still-existing) majority of the population; but not at the expense of
large-scale industrial planning and development. China has survived, and
prospered.
Are these things separate? Are they contradictory? Or are they one?
There is in fact no choice. We must have it all: both large and small.
We must also recognise the inter-relationship between the small-scale
enterprises, that can activate large masses of our people, and the large-scale
enterprises, that need the same people as providers of goods and services, and
as a market.
Industrial Strategy and Rural Development must be a unity.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-texts: The Tax in Kind,
Lenin, 1921, Part 1 and Part 2.
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