Benito Mussolini came to power in 1922 under a
parliamentary coalition until the
National Fascist Party seized control and ushered in a one-party dictatorship by early 1925. The growth in Mussolini's popularity to the extent of becoming a national leader was gradual as would be expected for a leader of any fascist movement. The doctrine only succeeded in Italy because the public was just as enthusiastic for change as much as Mussolini was committed to doing away with the
liberal doctrines and
Marxism in the country. Therefore, he would later write (with the help of
Giovanni Gentile) and distribute
The Doctrine of Fascism to the Italian society, which ended up being the basis of the Fascist agenda throughout Mussolini's dictatorship. Mussolini did not simply thrust himself into the dictatorship position, but rather rose gradually based on his understanding of the existing support for his ideas in the country. Before the dictatorship era, Mussolini tried to transform the country's economy along fascist ideology, at least on paper. In fact, he was not an economic radical, nor did he seek a free-hand in the economy. The Fascist Party held a minority faction of only three positions in the cabinet, excluding Mussolini; and providing other political parties more independence. During the coalition period, Mussolini appointed a
classical liberal economist,
Alberto De Stefani, originally a stalwart leader in the Center Party as Italy's Minister of Finance, who advanced
economic liberalism, along with minor
privatization. Before his dismissal in 1925, Stefani "simplified the
tax code, cut
taxes, curbed
spending, liberalized trade restrictions and abolished
rent controls", where the Italian economy grew more than 20 percent, and unemployment fell 77 percent, under his influence. To proponents of the first view, Mussolini did have a clear economic agenda, both long and short-term, from the beginning of his rule. The government had two main objectives—to modernize the economy and to remedy the country's lack of strategic resources. Before the removal of Stefani, Mussolini's administration pushed the modern
capitalistic sector in the service of the state, intervening directly as needed to create a collaboration between the industrialists, the workers and the state. The government moved toward resolving class conflicts in favour of
corporatism. In the short term, the government worked to reform the widely abused tax system, dispose of inefficient state-owned industry, cut government costs and introduce tariffs to protect the new industries. However, these policies ended after Mussolini took dictatorial controls and terminated the coalition. The lack of industrial resources, especially the key ingredients of the
Industrial Revolution, was countered by the intensive development of the available domestic sources and by aggressive commercial policies—searching for particular raw material trade deals, or attempting strategic colonization. In order to promote trade, Mussolini pushed the
Italian parliament to ratify an "Italo-Soviet political and economic agreement" by early 1923. This agreement assisted Mussolini's effort to have the
Soviet Union officially recognized by Italy in 1924, the first Western nation to do so. With the signing of the
1933 Treaty of Friendship, Nonaggression, and Neutrality with the Soviet Union, Fascist Italy became a major trading partner with the
USSR, exchanging Soviet natural resources for Italian technical assistance, which included the fields of aviation, automobile and naval technology. Although a disciple of the French Marxist
Georges Sorel and the main leader of the
Italian Socialist Party in his early years, Mussolini abandoned the theory of
class struggle for
class collaboration. Some
fascist syndicalists turned to economic collaboration of the classes to create a "
productivist" posture where "a
proletariat of producers" would be critical to the "conception of revolutionary politics" and social revolution. However, most fascist syndicalists instead followed the lead of
Edmondo Rossoni, who favored combining
nationalism with class struggle, often displaying a hostile attitude towards capitalists. This
anti-capitalist hostility was so contentious that in 1926 Rossoni denounced industrialists as "vampires" and "profiteers". Since Italy's economy was generally undeveloped with little industrialization, fascists and revolutionary syndicalists, such as
Angelo Oliviero Olivetti, argued that the Italian working class could not have the requisite numbers or consciousness "to make revolution". They instead followed
Karl Marx's admonition that a nation required "full maturation of capitalism as the precondition for socialist realization". Under this interpretation, especially as expounded by
Sergio Panunzio, a major theoretician of
Italian fascism, "[s]yndicalists were productivists, rather than distributionists". Fascist intellectuals were determined to foster economic development to enable a syndicalist economy to "attain its productive maximum", which they identified as crucial to "socialist revolution". == Structural deficit, public works and social welfare ==