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Stalinism

Stalinism is a colloquial term for the political and economic system implemented by Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union. It is largely synonymous with totalitarianism, or a tyrannical regime[?]

Building on Lenin's work, Stalin expanded the centralized bureaucratic system of the Soviet Union during the 1930s. A series of two five-year plans led to a massive expansion of the Soviet economy. Large increases were seen in many sectors, especially coal and iron production. Society was brought from a position decades behind the West to one of near economic and scientific equality within thirty years. Some economic historians now believe it to be the fastest economic growth ever achieved.

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While the system was devastating to the Soviet Union, it is almost certainly responsible for defeating Nazism. Without the staggering economic production that Stalinism brought to the Soviet Union, the nation would have been easily overrun by the German forces. After the the Second World War Stalinism was exported to the Soviet Union's new Eastern European satellite states. Many of these régimes were just as repressive as Stalin's.

After Stalin's death in 1953, Stalin's successor Nikita Khrushchev repudiated his policies and condemned Stalinism. While the repression was somewhat reduced, the control economy continued. Bureaucratic morasses and falling standards eventually came to light after the system started to crumble under the perestroika (or "restructuring") of the 1980s and came to full light after the collapse of the Soviet system in the early 1990s.

Many parallels can be seen between Stalinism and the economic policy of Czar Peter the Great. Both men desperately wanted Russia to catch up to the western European states. Both succeeded to an extent, turning Russia temporarily into Europe's leading power. In both cases it only took a few decades for the forced economic growth to evaporate, and for Russia to once more become one of the poorest nations in Europe.

The term "Stalinism" was also used by anti-Soviet Marxists, particularly Trotskyists, to distinguish the policies of the Soviet Union from those they regard as more true to Marxism. Trotskyists argue that Stalinism is not socialism, but rather a form of "state capitalism", that is, a system in which exploitation is merely controlled by the state. The term is also used by more democratic Marxists (as well as many non-Marxists) to condemn the totalitarian variety of Communism that still exists in states such as North Korea.



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