Leon Trotsky and the Opposition bloc had advocated a programme of industrialization which also proposed
agricultural cooperatives and the formation of collective farms on a
voluntary basis. According to Fitzpatrick, the scholarly consensus was that Stalin appropriated the position of the Left Opposition on such matters as
industrialisation and
collectivisation. Other scholars have argued that the economic programme of Trotsky differed from the forced
policy of collectivisation implemented by Stalin after 1928 due to the levels of brutality associated with its enforcement. During the
Russian Civil War,
Joseph Stalin's experience as political chief of various regions, carrying out the dictates of
war communism, involved extracting grain from peasants, including extraction at gunpoint from those who were not supportive of the
Bolshevik (Red) side of the war (such as
Whites and
Greens). After a grain crisis during 1928, Stalin established the USSR's system of state and collective farms when he moved to replace the
New Economic Policy (NEP) with collective farming, which grouped peasants into collective farms (
kolkhozy) and state farms (
sovkhozy). These collective farms allowed for faster mechanization, and indeed, this period saw widespread use of farming machinery for the first time in many parts of the USSR, and a rapid recovery of agricultural outputs, which had been damaged by the
Russian Civil War. Both grain production, and the number of farm animals rose above pre-civil war levels by early 1931, before major famine undermined these initially good results. At the same time, individual farming and
khutirs were liquidated through class discrimination identifying such elements as
kulaks. Coincidentally with the start of First "pyatiletka" (
5 year plan), a new commissariat of the Soviet Union was created, better known as
Narkomzem (People's Commissariat of Land Cultivation) led by
Yakov Yakovlev. After the speech on collectivization that Stalin gave to the
Communist Academy, there were no specific instructions on how exactly it had to be implemented, except for liquidation of kulaks as a class. Another contributing factor to the famine suggested by some historians, was poor weather conditions and poor harvests. The famine started in Ukraine in the winter of 1931 and despite the lack of any official reports the news spread by word of mouth rapidly. The famine finally ended in 1933, after a successful harvest. Especially after his visit to the United States in 1959, he was keenly aware of the need to emulate and even match American superiority and agricultural technology. Khrushchev became a hyper-enthusiastic crusader to grow corn (maize). He established a corn institute in Ukraine and ordered thousands of hectares to be planted with corn in the
Virgin Lands. More than 1.5 million people went to Kazakhstan, the Volga Region, Siberia, and the Ural Mountains. In 1955, Khrushchev advocated an Iowa-style corn belt in the Soviet Union, and a Soviet delegation visited the U.S. state that summer. The delegation chief was approached by farmer and corn seed salesman
Roswell Garst, who persuaded him to visit
Garst's large farm. The Iowan visited the Soviet Union, where he became friends with Khrushchev, and Garst sold the USSR of seed corn. Garst warned the Soviets to grow the corn in the southern part of the country and to ensure there were sufficient stocks of fertilizer, insecticides, and herbicides. This, however, was not done, as Khrushchev sought to plant corn even in Siberia, and without the necessary chemicals. The corn experiment was not a great success, and he later complained that overenthusiastic officials, wanting to please him, had overplanted without laying the proper groundwork, and "as a result corn was discredited as a
silage crop—and so was I". Khrushchev sought to abolish the Machine-Tractor Stations (MTS) which not only owned most large agricultural machines such as combines and tractors but also provided services such as plowing, and transfer their equipment and functions to the
kolkhozes and
sovkhozes (state farms). After a successful test involving MTS which served one large
kolkhoz each, Khrushchev ordered a gradual transition—but then ordered that the change take place with great speed. Within three months, over half of the MTS facilities had been closed, and
kolkhozes were being required to buy the equipment, with no discount given for older or dilapidated machines. MTS employees, unwilling to bind themselves to
kolkhozes and lose their state employee benefits and the right to change their jobs, fled to the cities, creating a shortage of skilled operators. The costs of the machinery, plus the costs of building storage sheds and fuel tanks for the equipment, impoverished many
kolkhozes. Inadequate provisions were made for repair stations. Without the MTS, the market for Soviet agricultural equipment fell apart, as the
kolkhozes now had neither the money nor skilled buyers to purchase new equipment. In the 1940s Stalin put
Trofim Lysenko in charge of agricultural research, with his crackpot ideas that flouted modern genetics science. Lysenko maintained his influence under Khrushchev, and helped block the adoption of American techniques. In 1959, Khrushchev announced a goal of overtaking the United States in the production of milk, meat, and butter. Local officials kept Khrushchev happy with unrealistic pledges of production. These goals were met by farmers who slaughtered their breeding herds and by purchasing meat at state stores, then reselling it back to the government, artificially increasing recorded production. In June 1962, food prices were raised, particularly on meat and butter, by 25–30%. This caused public discontent. In the southern Russian city of
Novocherkassk (
Rostov Region), this discontent escalated to a strike and a
revolt against the authorities. The revolt was put down by the military. According to Soviet official accounts, 22 people were killed and 87 wounded. In addition, 116 demonstrators were convicted of involvement and seven of them executed. Information about the revolt was completely suppressed in the USSR, but spread through
Samizdat and damaged Khrushchev's reputation in the West. Drought struck the Soviet Union in 1963; the harvest of of grain was down from a peak of in 1958. The shortages resulted in bread lines, a fact at first kept from Khrushchev. Reluctant to purchase food in the West, but faced with the alternative of widespread hunger, Khrushchev exhausted the nation's hard currency reserves and expended part of its gold stockpile in the purchase of grain and other foodstuffs. ==Agricultural labour==