WEEKLY SUMMARY SPECIAL REPORT PRIVATE ENTERPRISE ALIVE BUT NOT WELL IN THE USSR

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP85T00875R001500020016-3
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RIPPUB
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S
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9
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December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 14, 2009
Sequence Number: 
16
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Publication Date: 
March 20, 1970
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 Secret DIRECTORATE OF INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY Special Report Private Enterprise: Alive But Not Well in the USSR DSP FILE COPY RETU~ 1J TO IE-61 DOCUMFNT BRANCH 1. SERX?9' 6 qms Secret BILE COPY N2 678 TROY ;f 20 March 1970 No. 0362/70A DO NOT DES Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 25X1 Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 SECRET Popular Western conceptions, or misconceptions, of the role of private economic activity in the Soviet Union probably run the gamut from the belief that it is insignificant to a suspicion that it plays a dominant part in providing the populace with food and a broad range of consumer services. The truth, as usual, lies somewhere between the extreme views. The Soviet economy is predominantly a socialized economy; yet certain private eco- nomic activities are permitted. The conduct of these activities in ariably is restricted to an individual or family scu1e of operation, but the aggregate impact of private activity is significant. PRINCIPAL FIELDS OF PRIVATE ECONOMIC ACTIVITY Private economic activity in three fields is sanctioned, under strict controls, by the Soviet Government. The Soviet citizen is allowed to grow and market his own agricultural products, build his own home, and work in some profes- sional, personal, or repair service field. In addi- tion, he is known to indulge in various other economic activities illegally, sometimes with little interference from the authorities. Some of these illegal activities-such as prostitution and black market traffic in foreign currencies and consumer goods--are impressively evident to foreign visitors, yet have little impact on the economy at large. Others-particularly the theft of building ma- terials and of agricultural products From social- ized organizations--are less visible but may be of substantial economic importance. Unfortunately, the scarcity of data on illegal activities prevents discussion in precise quantitative terms. Private agriculture consists of cultivating garden plots ranging in size up to an acre and a half', tending small flocks of poultry, and keeping livestock, usually only one or two head. The size of the plots and the numbers of livestock and poultry tended are strictly regulated, as are the Special Report assignments of the plots themselves. In rural areas, plus on the socialized farms are allocated to households with one or more members em- ployed either on state or collective farms or in other socialized enterprises or organizations. Plots also are assigned to households in urban areas whose heads have jobs in the socialized sector. For the most part, urban householders' plots are found in clusters on the outskirts of cities. Because of the small size of the private plots and the market conditions, private agriculture concentrates on crops and products that require relatively little land. Leigh value, labor-intensive products such as potatoes, vegetables, fruit, pleat, milk, and eggs are dominant. Most of the privately produced goods are consumed by their producers, but some are sold to socialized processing and distribution organiza- tions and some are sold by their producers on farmers' markets known as collective farm mar- kets. Prices in these markets, which are main- tained by the authorities in all towns and cities. are largely determined by supply and demand and usually are higher than the fixed prices of the state retail stores. Product quality, however, is higher in the collective farm markets. SECRET Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 SECRET vv~ Figure 1. Ha 3TOM yxa6e n / OM nocTpo.nl ("I built a house on that bump !,,) Figure 2. CTOJ16OBAA 40POrA ( The high road ") (FRUIT AND VEGETABLE STORE) (V) iUT L!UI rr, rau~L -' 'i. Special Report ("How about a couple of nicely salted cucumbers!") -dll cartoons from Krokodil 20 March 1970 SECRET Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 SECRET Construction of dwellings is the most impor- tant nonagricultural type of private enterprise. Private construction is concentrated in rural areas and on the outskirts of smaller towns, where local authorities allocate parcels of land. As private building is limited to do-it-yourself arrangements, privately built houses characteristicaily are crudely and simply built and rectangular and sin- gle story in design. Unskilled labor is normally used, and many of the materials are cast-offs from state construction projects. Even cadged materials sometimes are of first class quality, however. (See Figures 1 and 2.) Utilities, in rural areas espe- cially, generally are lacking, except for electricity. Some new houses, however, are without even that. Single family residences are limited to 60 square meters (646 square feet) of floor space. This means that the typical privately built house measures only about 20 by 32 feet. 11' several families join to build a multifamily dwelling, space per family is not to exceed 60 square meters. Private ce:istruction is financed from per- sonal savings and state loans. Work in private services covers a broad and poorly defined range. It includes (I ) professional services such as medical and dental care and the teaching of languages and music,(2) repair work on shoes, electrical appliances, musical instru- ments and housing,(3) personal services such as barbering, hairdressing, and sewing,and (4) handi- craft work such as boot making, gold working, and embroidery. Also, there is a "gray" area in which service activities are tolerated but not le- gally sanctioned. Included in this area is work done on bicycles, motorcycles, and automobiles, house painting, furniture moving, and the delivery of goods. IMPORTANCE OF PRIVATE ACTIVITY The share of Soviet gross national product (GNP) generated by the private sector has been Special Report -3 SECRET Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 declining irregularly over time. Since 1950 it has dropped from about 22 percent to a current level of approximately 10 percent. The absolute value of private production, however, increased slightly over this time span. Moreover, mere allusion to tho proportion of' GN13 generated by the private sector ill' ' 'relays the importance of its contribu- tion. Prihu1e activities contribute directly and ap- preciably to the quality of Soviet consumers' lives and are not qualitatively duplicated by the social- ized sector. About eight percent of GNP and 31 percent of net agricultural production are accounted for by private agricultural activity. Because of the. low quality and spotty availability of perishable foodstuf'f's in the socialized stores, Soviet con- sumers rely on produce from their own plots or buy the major share of their high-quality vege- tables, meat, dairy products, and other perish- ables directly from other private producers. Even the manager of' a state fruit and vegetable store may depend on private vendors to satisfy his personal wants. (See Figure 3.) The relatively large share of total crop out- put accounted for by the private sector (about one-fourth) is grown on about four percent of the total area under crops. In the private sector, the value of output per unit of land is nearly nine times as great as in the socialized sector. More than half of this difference in value is accounted for by the difference in crop composition in the two sectors. For example, vegetables are more common in the private sector and grain is more prevalent in the socialized. The rest of the dif- ference can be chalked up to the application of more and better labor to each unit of land in the private sector. People who tend private plots give greater attention to weeding, watering, fertilizing, and killing pests. Partly because they exert such effort, the plot tenders can and do plant vege- tables and potatoes more densely than farmers in 20 March 1970 Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875R001500020016-3 SECRET the socialized sector. The diligence of private growers no doubt is clue in large pleasure to the knowledge that the produce of their l,lots is their own for consumption or for sale. Private production accounts for nearly 40 percent of all treat production, although the an- nual census of livestock shows that private owners have only about a quarter of the animals. The anomaly seems to be largely accounted I'or by reluctance of private producers to keel) livestock through the winter, when ma illtcllance costs are high. The livestock census is conducted on I .lanuary each year. Privately owned livestock are not entirely maintained by feed grown on privately held land. In addition to the 21 million acres of land di- rectly under the control of households--which includes one and a quarter million acres of wild hayland--privately owned livestock are sustained by roughly 250 million acres of pasture and 70 trillion acres of hayland in the socialized sector. In addition, the household members receive feed as payment ill kind for work in the socialized sector, and, apparently, they steal :i good deal more from the state and collective farms. As has been noted, a portion of private I'arnl production is sold through the collective farm markets. In 1968, collective farm markets ac- counted for about five percent of retail sales of all food, but for larger portions of retail sales of perishables, such as eggs (20 percent), meat (10 percent), and milk (I0 percent). Even larger pro- portions of fruit and vegetables are sold in the collective farm markets. In 1968, private construction of housing generated only about two percent or GNP and absorbed only one sixth of investment ill housing, but it accounted for about one third (by floor area) of the housing completed. Roughly 55 per- Special Report ce. ~ of the total atllount of housing now is pri- vat 'y owned, in contrast to 70 percent in 1950. In urban localities the private share is only about one third and is falling rapidly. Private construc- tion is most conlnloh in the rural areas, where socialized construction of housing is least devel- oped and 80 percent of the dwellings still are privately owned. Privately rendered services generate less than one hall' of one percent of GNP and comprise less thtul five percent of all consumer services. Never- theless they uniquely f'ulf'ill certain spec:l'ic needs --particularly in small towns and rl.~ral areas---that are not served by socialized service organizations, POLICY TOWARD PRIVATE ECONOMIC ACTIVITY Official government policy toward private economic activity over the long run has been characterized by antagonism and repression. This approach, which has been common to the Stalin and post-Stalin governments, is rooted in the ideological underpinnings of Conlnlunism. It is related to an assumption that all Soviet citizens sooner or later voluntarily will surrender their rights to engage in private enterprise when the superiority of socialized production becomes manifest. Despite their continuing hostility toward pri- vate activity, however, various Ieadershavcdenl- onstrated la good deal of' Ilexibility in the short run, particularly toward private agricultural pro- duction. Changes in policy toward private farming and resulting fluctuations in private farm output have been rather prominent and appear to be related closely to success or lack thereof in the socialized sector. After a period of relatively rapid growth--or even it single year of' exceptional per- formance by the collective and state farms-there SECRET Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875R001500020016-3 Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 SECRET is a tendency to tighten the restrictions on private farming. Limits on the size of private plots and Iivestock holdings are made more stringent, taxes are increased, confiscations occur, less feed is made available to householders, and the number of days that collective farm members are required to work in the socialized sector is increased. Then, when socialized farm production falls short of needs and expectations, restrictions on private agricultural activity are relaxed. The 1956-64 period under Khrusllchev was a time of restriction and decline in private agricul- tural production. When Brezlunev and Kosygin assumed power in late 1964, socialized agriculture was floundering, and the new government began to encourage private farming. By 1967, socialized agriculture was performing more satisfactorily, and the attitude of the leaders toward private farming became ambivalent or indifferent. In the absence of direct orders to the contrary, local authorities, responding to continuing pressure from higher authorities for greater socialized pro- duction, then put more restrictions on the private farmers. This restrictiveness, combined with side effects from certain official policies in the social- ized sector, brought a decline in individual live- stock holdings and a standstill in private pro- duction of crops and meat and dairy products. Concurrently, socialized output of meat and dairy products leveled off, and this at a timr when consumer demand for high quality foodstuffs was increasing rapidly. In late 1969 there were signs that once again a turning point in official policy had been reached. The leadership began to urge local authorities to aid the he useholds in main- taining or expanding their livestock holdings. Lo- cal Communist Party organizations were ordered to check on the response to these exhortations. Although it is too early to judge, the downward trend in private livestock holdings may be slow- ing. Even though the value of private livestock Special Report - 5 - holdings declined five percent during 1969, hog numbers increased by more than ten percent after three consecutive years of decline. The short-run attitude of the leadership to- ward private construction of dwellings has been less variable, but periods of expansion and con- traction of' private home building have occurred. Private building surged during 1957-60 in re- sponse to official encouragement, only to de- crease in the early 1960s when new constraints were imposed. After 1966 there w,,s some further reduction in private building, but that apparently was caused by shortages of building materials rather than by administrative restriction. The Brezhnev-Kosygin government seems to want to maintain private building at approximately the current level. Construction by individual would- be home owners is not a very promising approach to the extreme shortage of housing that prevails in Soviet cities, but it does play a very useful role in smaller towns and rural areas. Soviet leaders have found little reason to vary their generally hostile policies toward the private provision of' services. Complete elim ina- tio'n of' such activity, however, clearly would im- pose unnecessary hardships on Soviet consumers and further strain the capacity of' the already inadequate socialized service network. Consumer demand for privately provided services appears to be increasing as money incomes rise. Since 1965, suggestions that the private rendering of services be allowed to expand have been publicized, but little increase has been noted in the volume or scope of private service activity. Soviet leaders seem to realize that private economic activity continues to enhance the qual- ity of life in the USSR in ways that cannot be SECRET Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3 SECRET duplicated by socialized organizations. Hence it terprise altogether. Rather, they probably will seems unlikely that they will indulge their ideol- conti'AIe to permit it under varying degrees of ogically based hostility by outlawing private en- restriction.` Special Report SECRET Approved For Release 2009/08/14: CIA-RDP85T00875RO01500020016-3