FIVE YEAR PLAN 1946-50

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-00926A004200030059-0
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RIPPUB
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S
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5
Document Creation Date: 
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 14, 2002
Sequence Number: 
59
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Publication Date: 
August 15, 1951
Content Type: 
REPORT
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, qiv;A$* A p p ro vedAstgfet Mist RODIati32AUX =MUM Cati/61400420003005b:0 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY INFORMATION REPORT COUNTRY USSR SUBJECT Five Year Plan 1946-50 PLACE ACQUIRED DATE ACQU I RE 25X1C REPORT NO. CD NO. DATE DISTR. 25X1A 16/ Aug 1951 NO. OF PAGES 5 NO. OF ENCLS. (LISTED BELOW) SUPPLEMENT TO REPORT NO. IIATF nr I NIPMKAATinni 25X1X 1. The report of the State Planning Committee USSR (Gooplan) and the Central Statistical Administration USSR on the results of the fulfilIment'of the first H post-ear five year plan (1946-1950) was published on 17 April 1951. 2. Before examining the data contained in the report, a fey words shoulebe said about the circumetanCes surrounding the appearance of this report and about some of its peculiarities. What dalles one first of all is the considerable delV -- three and a half months -- in pUblishi the report on the five-year plan. BUt it is even more strange that this report comes a month after the session of the Supreme Soviet USSR, which, logically, should have htari it and. approved a nay five-year plan. We have already pointed out in materials submitted earlier that this had not been done, and for that reason we were even *vet pression that the Kremlin had decided to alter the entire system cr national , economic planning, to Change over from the principle of the five year plans - 25X1 (rigid plans for all branches of the USSR national economy) to a more flexible system of state "plan-aasignmente for individual branches of the economy and even for different time periods. 3. The posplan and TaSu report of 17 April (formally dated 16 April 1950 (siE/ ) ? soi,ys nothing specifically about the principle of planning for the future, but its very title is an indirect indication that the system of five-year plans Yin remain. The announcement is entitled "The Report of the State Platting Committee ? USSR and the TsSu USSR on the Results of the rulfillment of the Fourth (First Port-var) Five Year Plan of the USSR for 1946-1950." The incln,sion in the 'tale el Aqq1FICIATICIN Mrs nww-rr?r AT c rarr 25X1A Approved For Release 2002/07/24: CIA-RDP80-00926A004200030059-0 E; OF rla Approved For Release 2002/07/24 : CIA-RDP80-00926A004200030059-0 SgCRRT/US OFFICIALS OIL! -2- of the words "Fiest Post-war" Seems to be an indirect indication that a-second post-war aive-year plan is to'f011aW;.that is, that the system of fiveyear eConomic continue. Thlawas undonbtedly done to dispel the con- fUsion wbich the approval of a enearetc plan for 1951 bad produced in places. Under ties existing circumstances the only thing which remaims unclear is tile question of the role and character of the present (1951) economic year: Will it remain a, transitional year between the first and second post-war five-year plans; or will a second five-year plan simply be announced after considerable delay, the present year being considered the first year of the second five- yeer plan? ,.Right now the second conjecture seems the more probable, but 'with this correction?that-this year will actually be a transitional one, although it will mot be fermally so considered. Be".that as it may, this mneh is beyond doUht: Some kied of pieeeing-statistical trickvall be introduced with the an- nouncement of the. eecond five-year plan. It is also obvious that from the text of the report, in drawing up the second flee-year plea, Oosplat will =Viciously preserve the Most important character- istic .....the ehole Soviet economy--the dispropertionete development between the eroduction of capital goods and- consumer goads. In spite of the fact that the first fee-year plan provided foe maximum tempos in the development of heavy industry and war industries, with all others lagging behind, and in spite or the feet that the Ooeplan and TsSU report emphasizes the overfelfillment of the plan fO be6,N7y? industry and nonfulfillment of plats for transport, the light and food industries, and agriculture, nevertheless, the report 'States in several placee , that the tempos of growth of heavy industry do iot meet the meads of the rational economy and must be increased. This shays tE;t7E' the? still-secret plan for 1951; as vallas in the whole Second post-war five-year plan; an even greater effort eillAe Made to develop all branches of the national economy which are geared for war than were made in the previous five-year plan. Consequently, there will be a still greeter disproportion betweeh heavy and light 'industry, a still greater burden on transport, and a still greater lag in agriculture. There will also be no-improvement in living conditions. Such are the genera/ prospects for the future which emerge from the Gosplan and TsSU report on fulfillment Of the First Post-war live Year Plan. Passing to an analysis of the report itself, it should be remarked that it con- tains no absolute figures. All results are given' only in percentages. Beat even in this respect there is no set standard: comparisons are made either with 1940 or With the first year of the five-year plan (1946), or more accurately, with 1945. If the presentation of data only in percentages can be explained by the deadee to maintain secrecy; the dual principle of comparison is a trick designed to conceal the fact that one 'or another branch of the national economy is lagging behind. In all cases of lagging or disruption, a comparison is rode with 1945. In this way a great propaganda effect is attained--"growths of two or three times is demonstrated, although in reality not only is there no "growth" but there is even nonfulfillment of the plan and disruption. In e majority of oases this trick is applied ttekdata on the light, food, and timber industries and to agriculture, that is, to all these branches of the national economy in 'which the population is most interested. The mythical "growth" attempts to conceal the lack of goods and products needed by the population. 7. The attempt to conceal through percentages the actual state of the Soviet econdmy appears naive and even stupid, inasmuch as percentages of fulfillment of the five - Year plan are almost everywhere pointed out, 'while the lay on the First Post-war -live Year Plan (with absolute figures) can be foutd in any Soviet libramY. It was printed in millions of copies of special pemphle* and was contained in all Soviet newspapers of 21 March 1946. In this instance the Soviet mania for secrecy breaks all previous records. Interpreting the percentages is so simple that it in even difficult to understand why Stalin and the Politburo decided to play this strange, unnecessary, and self-defeating trick. SECRET US OFFICIALS ORLY Approved For Release 2002/07/24: CIA-RDP80-00926A004200030059-0 Approved For Release 2002/07/24: CIA-RDP80-00926A004t00030059-0' SKCRKT/US OFFICIALS ORLY -3- 8. AA Will be seen below, silence with regard to many branches of the national ecOximiy Vete more effeCtive, although even here the attempt of the Kremlin to conCealitiveaknesses seems rather naive. It mut be said that these "empty gaPs" in the Gosplan report have turned out to be greater in number than could have been anticiPated; aad this is the most important feature of this document for all those-who study its economic data. : 9. 4 table of the most important types of strategic raw materials follows (in *illions of tons). 1940 1950 (Plan) 1950 (Fulfillment) Steel. . . 18.3 25.4 27.3 Pig Iron. . . . . . 15.0 19.5 20.8 Coal 166.0 250.0 260.0 Petroleum . 31.0 35.4 37.9 10. Although the plan for teel, pig iron and coal was significantly overfUlfilled, tbI Gosplan report says that the tempos of growth in ferrous metallurgy and the anal industry do not meet the needs of the national economy. Therefore, extreme measuree to inFFeii; (11Wil and coal production will mn4oubtedly be undertaken. /Cis very characteristic that this is not said in regard to the petroleum yield, although petroleum is at present one of the weakest aspects of the entire Soviet economy. Only the need for the speedy construction of new oil refineries is mentioned. This reflects their full realization that the exploitation imtentiaIities of the old oil deposits (Baku, Grozny, and Maikop) have reached their limit, and that expansion of the exploitation of new ones (In Bashkir, TUrkmenia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kuibyshev Oblast) strikes up against the extreme weakness of the technological base. Tram this, the conclusion follows that the new five-year plan will pay particular attention to the technical outfitting of new oil-bearing regions. 11. A general conclusion is that the center of gravity for the extraction and re- fining of oil is moving more and more eaatward. The contrary is true for coal. The Gosplan report particilarly emphasizes that the Donbas has aRain become the most important balXnalh.the country. Although the report speaks of' signifi- cant achievements in the development of the coal industry in the KUzbas, the Karaganda region, the Urals and the Picherskiy basin, these new bases are rele- gated to a relatively secondary place. In this case the root of the question lies not in the potentialities of these new areas of the coal industry, but in the condition of the transportation network of the USSR. After twenty years of experimentation the Kremlin has become convinced that the eastern coal basins (in spite of their immense potentialities) cannot replace the western basins, and th't a transfer of the fuel balance of the country eastward is economically un- profitable. This, of course, does not mean that the exploitation of the eastern and northern coal basins will be slowed down or stopped, but that the Donbas is once more the coal center of primary importance in the USSR. 12. Maximum tempos also characterite the development of the Moacow coal basin, in spite of the rather poor quality of the Moscow coal. Here, too, the question of profitability dominates all others. The hauling of coal over long distances has proved to be too heavy a burden for the Soviet railroads, and the closest possihle proximity of fuel bases to industrial centers is now the slogan of the dir. This same tendency underlies the over-strained tempos in the construction of the new hydroelectric stations. All this, taken together, indicates that the previous system of distributing Soviet industrial centers is being reconsidered, along with moving these centere westward. It is very possible that this it the primary reason for maintaining complete silence in regard to the economic IOnie SECT/US OFFICIALS ONLY Approved For Release 2002/07/24 : CIA-RDP80-00926A004200030059-0 Approved For Release 2002/07/24: CIA-RDP80-00926A0d41 SECT/US OFFICIALS 0= -14- 0300594e: for 1951 and for delaying so long the adoption of a new five-year plan. An analysla of the Gosplan report of 17 April allows one only to point out the presence of such a general tendency in general Soviet pleeeing. The whole question has such a tremendous political and military-strategic import that any haste in making a final decision would be unforgivably rresponsible. Here nay be the key to the vhole policy of the USSR, and for this reason this ques- tion should be the object of the most careful, persistent and painstaking study. 25X1A 13. The second most important political item in. the Gosplan and TsSU report relates to transport. It is obvious from the report that the last five-year plan devoted particular attention to the restoration and modernization of rolling stock, and in this sphere considerable progress was achieved. On the other hand, the imMenee program for the restoration and construction of railway track outlined in the five-year plan was unfulfilled. This program provided for the restoration of 15,000 km- of railway tracks, the conversion of several main lines into quadruple-track system, the restoration of 1,800 large and average-sized bridges, 1,500 stations; 1,300 railroad depots, etc.; awl also the MAW construction of 7,000 km of railway tracks. The Gosplan report mentions that the five-year plan for the restoration of the railways, bridges and stations was not fulfilled. Regarding new construction, the report also mentions that new railroads had been built, particularly in regions of the North and in Central Asia. 14. In this area the failure of the plan is beyond doubt, and as a result, railway transport has become an even weaker spot in the Soviet economy than it had been before. A way out is sought by increasing the average load per car, but in light of the existing overstrain on the transportation system this problem which con- fronts the Soviet Government cannot be successfully resolved. ' 15. It would, however, be a mistake to interpret the failure of the plan for the conatruction and restoration of railvaes exclusively as the result of a basic inability to resolve the problem because of a deficiency in =newer' and mate-. rials. Part of the reason for this failure lies in the fact that assignments for the Construction of highways and dirt roads were sharplyincreased when the fiite-year Plan was already iu operation. The plan provided for 11,500 new dirt roads with bard outfaces. Actually, 16,000 each roads were built, mmong them the main automobile Moscow-Simferopol' highway, which was begun before the war. This, in conjunction with the Moscow-Leningrad highway, which was con- structed still earlier, has resulted in the formation of a single, large auto- mdbile Artery transecting the entire European portion of the USSR from north to south and uniting into ode complex the industrial centers of the northern and central regions and the iidustrial south. The completion of this con- struction has an exceedingly at military-strategic, as well as economic, importance. According to of ial data, the USSR now has from 2 to 5 times more hard-surfaced roads than it ? before the var. 16. When we add to all this that e Gosplan report noted that the plan for river and sea transport was not led, we are brought to the general, indisputable cunclusion that the transpo r ' ?blem in the USSR was not resolved by the five- year plan, and that priority was given to the construction of highways, where results were very considerable. And so, the resolution' of the transport problem noir takes two basic directions in. the USSR: an increase in the average load per freight car and an intensive construction of roads, designed to relieve rail transport. In the latter instance immeasurably more will have to be done in order for the results to be perceptible, but the tendency itself is clear enough. 17. The production of construction materials presents a third major problem. Ears the picture is clarified not so much by the Gosplan report itself, as by a number of separate reports Which have. appeared recently, the majority of which SECRET/US OFFICIALS ORLI Approved For Release 2002/07/24: CIA-RDP80-00926A004200030059-0 ?era, Approved For Release 2002/07/24 : CIA-RDP80-00926A004V11060EM SECEET/US OFFICIALS pELT -5- *41. have analyzed it previously submitted papers. 1.21 this sector of the Soviet economy not only i the Plan not fulfilled, but there exists a serious crisis in thelSatiotion et Cement, brick, tiabeetos and virtually every other kind of construction -material. Without the prompt solution of thisproblem, construc- tion on a large Scale will be impossible in the? future. It in for this reason that the nert five-year plan will be, ?to a significant extent, a. five-year plan for construction materials, the shortage of which reached catastrophic propor- tions' after the adoption of the state plan for the gigantic canal and. hydro- electric station projects and the simultaneous, maximum development of the highway system. It is precisely here that the Soviet economy comes up egainst one of its most difficult task's. Since the construction materials industry is azolectremely neglected state, almost all of it needs to be thorolIghiy modernized, -and-it ii3 hardly likely that it will soon be in any condition to -meet the. demands made on it. 18. The assignments set by the five-year plan to expand the production of mass constuner goods were all unfulfilled.. Therefore, the five-year plan. brought with it no improvement in living conditions. There was a significant increase in the production of only those goods which either had not been produced at all before the war or were produced in negligible amounts--bicycles, motorcycles, radio receivers, watches: etc. This was achieved solely by assembling and exploiting the plants and. factories renoired from the occupied countries in 1911.5-1947, and also by various statistical machinations which represent goods exported from occupied countries as results of the production of Soviet industry. 19. The information providad by the Ciosplen report rels virtually nothing new, Considering what we have already written along this Line on the basis of data received earlier. One should note only the unexpected disclosure by Gosplan of the "secret? of the "achieveinents" of animal husbandry in kolkhozes. Gosplan reports. that the total livestock in the USSR increased k percent over the 1940 figure; that is it remained eesentially the same,. At the same time, livestock awned by the koikhozes increased from li.0 tb 60 percent. in other words, all the "achievements" of kolkhoz animal husbandry came about from the fact that around 50 percent. of the livestock which had previously been at the private disposal of kolkhozniks have been taken by ibrce into the. kolkhozes. This has increased the commodity production capacity of kolkhozes in respect to animal husbandry, but has not improved in any way the lot of v population--far from it. 20. .And so, the general political conclusion 'to be drawn from the Gosplan and TsSU report on the fulfillment of the first poit-war five-year plan is that the plan did not solve any of the problems confronting Soviet economy, but only increased the disproportion between the branches of the national economy which are geared to war, on the one hand, and all other branches of the economy, on the Ot er. This same line of development will characterize the next period, too, reg&rdleas of whether they publish a single, new five year plan or adopt a more flexible planning system (which seems rather improbable). r! aqua/us OPTICIALS ORIZ Approved For Release 2002107124: CIA-RDP80-00926A004200030059-0