COLLECTIVE FARM

an agricultural production unit including a number of farm households or villages working together under state control. The description of the collective farm has varied with time and place.

In the Soviet Union

In the Soviet Union a policy of gradual and voluntary collectivization of agriculture was adopted in 1927 to encourage food production while freeing labor and capital for industrial development. In 1929, with only 4% of farms in collectives, Stalin ordered the confiscation of peasants' land, tools, and animals; the kolkhoz [Rus.,=collective farm] replaced the family farm. The state would decide how much of what crops were to be produced, how much would be paid to the peasants for their work, and how much would go to the state at what price. Farmers who resisted were persecuted, exiled, even killed.

By 1931, more than half of all farms had been collectivized. Low productivity and inordinate government diversion of farm production contributed to a devastating rural famine in 1932–33. Under the Collective Farm Charter (1935), individual farmers were permitted to keep small garden plots and a few animals for domestic use, and to sell surplus production in local free markets.

Collectivization in the Soviet Union was almost complete by 1938. Successive reforms reflected the persistence of problems associated with centrally planned economies. In 1950 the government began amalgamating collective farms. The number of kolkhozy, which had peaked at 254,000, was reduced to 32,300 by 1972, while the average size of collective farms roughly tripled to approximately 7,500 acres (3,000 hectares), and the average number of households per kolkhozy increased from 75 before World War II to 340 in 1960.

In 1958 new laws abolished the government's power to requisition farm products and substituted direct state purchases at higher prices. In 1969 the Collective Farmers' Congress increased the size of private plots and instituted income guarantees and social insurance. In the 1970s, as an incentive to increase production, collective farmers were assured profits on various commodities. By this time about half of the cultivated land in the Soviet Union was in collectives; most of the rest was in state farms. As the Soviet Union and its bloc of Eastern European satellites disintegrated in the early 1990s, the collective farm faced a difficult and uncertain transition to new forms of ownership and management. In 1992, 7,000 farms chose to remain state-owned, while 9,000 chose to privatize, registering themselves as companies. Through the 1990s, Russia was forced to increase state subsidies to its collective farms, due to high inflation and price increases in supplies and equipment. In 2003, with the passage of laws permitting the sale of farmland, the foundations were laid for further changes in Russian agriculture.

In China

The commune of China is more strictly organized than the Soviet collective farm, including a wider range of activities, putting greater emphasis on communal living and including nonagricultural workers. Collectivization of agriculture in China began in 1955; by 1956, 96% of all farming households were included in cooperatives. The system failed to free the labor and capital needed for industrial expansion, and in 1958 the commune system was established.

Twenty to thirty cooperatives comprising over 20,000 members and 40 to 100 villages were merged into each commune. The land and equipment of the former cooperatives and any property and cash still held by the peasants became the property of the commune. In each commune an economic and administrative unit controlled the labor force and all means of production, providing central management of industry, commerce, education, agriculture, and military affairs. Living communally, workers performed both industrial and agricultural tasks and supported a military unit. They used communal nurseries, bathing facilities, barbershops, and similar facilities. Wages and perquisites were controlled by the state, and all products were marketed through state agencies.

By 1959 virtually all Chinese farm workers were members of communes. The inefficiency and management problems of large collectives, coupled with natural disasters and government errors, led to reforms. In the early 1960s communes were decentralized; some were divided into private farms. In the late 1970s, after the death of Mao Zedong, individual households were granted long-term leases on their farms, paying a fixed amount of their production to the state and consuming or selling the rest. For the first time the farm household was also allowed to sublet land, recover capital investments, hire labor, own machinery, and make agricultural decisions.

In Israel

In Israel, collective farms pay nominal rents to the Jewish National Fund, which holds all land in the name of the people. Israeli collectives are based on three models. The kibbutz, the best known and most important economically, was inaugurated in 1909 as a purely agricultural collective. Light industry was added in the 1920s, and other types of businesses and tourism are now also important economically. All property except specified personal possessions is collectively owned, planning and work are collective, and communal living is the rule. Work is assigned on the basis of ability; foremen are elected; and goods are distributed according to need. A town meeting governs; elected officials implement policy and administer economic and social affairs. Israel's hundreds of kibbutzim represent a wide range of political and social beliefs. Although only about 3% of Israel's population are members, the kibbutzim have wielded considerable political influence. Since the early 1980s, when the debt of kibbutzim soared, many have implemented some privatization measures.

In the moshav ovdim, first established in 1921, each family owns its own house and leases and works its own land, retaining any income it earns. Hired labor is prohibited. Buying and selling are done collectively. In the moshav shitufi, a collective model developed in 1936, property is held communally and work is done collectively. Wealth and housing are private. Many moshav dwellers now hold nonfarming jobs in projects developed on the moshav or outside the village.

In North America

Communal farming has not been markedly popular in North America, although numerous attempts have been made (see communistic settlements). An exception is the agricultural communities of Hutterites (see Hutterian Brethren), who, as a result of persecution in central Europe, emigrated to South Dakota in 1874. They have increased in population and economic prominence to include (1999) some 36,000 members, living in over 430 colonies, mainly in the Dakotas, Montana, Minnesota, Washington, and the Canadian provinces of Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.

See also ejido.

Bibliography

See R. W. Davies, The Soviet Collective Farm (1980); W. Hinton, The Great Reversal (1989); A. Etzioni et al., ed., The Organizational Structure of the Kibbutz (1980).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...sorts. Fyodor Abramov "The New Life: A Day On A Collective Farm", first published in the January issue of the Leningrad...in this case, the Russian countryside of the collective farm. Abramov touches upon that very sensitive area of...
...misappropriation from collective farm to collective farm and forcing them upon...provide the collective farms with proficient chairmen...80 percent of the collective farm chairmen were party...Communists on collective farms has increased by more...
tion of Terrebonne a cooperative plantation or "collective farm" for approximately seventy families, initiated by the Resettlement Administration in Louisiana . . . . Transylvania a cooperative...
...providing the first protections on collective bargaining by farm workers outside of Hawaii...on the short-hoe that kept farm workers bent over double in...they could not get onto the farms, Chavez spoke at public rallies...the first meeting of their farm worker union, which was broken...
...refer to the structural tensions within the gender relations of the family farm as being potentially transformative 1991: 144 , she sees the limited collective action of farm women as being the only evidence that they are taking action because they...
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...limiting the use of farm equipment and...into 3,736 collective farms amounting to...total number of collectives had decreased...every collective farm and the absence...management of the collectives. Kim Il Sung...staff of the collective farms and their failure...Consumption collectives were organized...industry within the collective farm. <br...from collective farm income <br...sub.p/N farms per labor day...
...Soviet Estonia: The End of a Collective Farm. by Pamela Ballinger RAUSING...Soviet Estonia: the end of a collective farm. xi, 176 pp., maps...Soviet Estonia: the end of a collective farm, Sigrid Rausing explores...
...Zimbabwe: divergent models of collective land holding in the communal...found mostly on Europeans farms, is to be expropriated by...consists of state forests and farms as well as Game Reserves and...owned large-scale commercial farms (formerly the white Rhodesian...
...The success of Brook Farm, as Delano understands...setbacks that ushered Brook Farm toward its demise, the farms leadership failed to...for individuals in a collective environment. The willingness...that undermined Brook Farms very foundation. When...whether to support Brook Farm, Emerson had "to confront...skeptical, worried collective living would threaten...
...justification and reaffirmation of a collective identity in adversity" (Baltensperger...illustrates the richness of farm life memory with respect to...risks to family farmers and farm workers living in the Upper...hearing loss on the family farm is a serious issue, it is...use of hearing protection on farms. As such, the authors evaluate...
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...have tried to destroy the collective system, and resistance...policies of his period, the collective farm became relatively successful...the performance of the collectives improved in the Soviet Union...easily seen facts about the collective system of organizing rural...of the Soviet collective farm but also because of the...dissolution of collective farms is a rational reflection...
...humane values and quality, that moves farm economics away from high-tech, capital...diversity that is possible if smaller farms survive. Their report and papers (available...billion by 1997, almost one-third of farm-level crop and livestock sales, and...contracting as the future. "Old MacDonalds farm is being absorbed into what might be called New McDonalds Farms," Levins observed. In other words...
Stress on the Farm by Timothy Cook Life on the farm in recent years has brought...questions about passing the family farm to the next generation...northwest Kansas, helped spur the collective attention on the stress in...pressures on small family farms will linger as the economy...
...many as 8,000 migrant "green card" farm workers, provides growers a source of...exposed the transitory nature of Californias farm labor policy, which shifts with the political...the state, it will be years before the farm labor law regains the pro-worker momentum...
...minimum wage on very small farms, and even at the biggest...the $3.35 minimum. Farm work runs like Kelly...1970s when the United Farm Workers (UFW) ran...that eventually led to collective bargaining contracts...legislature and a pro-farm workers governor, Jerry...are weak. There is no collective bargaining agreement...
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...put up 1,200 family-run farms in poverty-stricken areas...up 10-square meter (sqm) farm per family that can yield 30...five members that receive a collective financial assistance of P150,000. Each farm has 30 family-run 10-sqm farms. ldquo;(We rsquo;re giving...
...containment of dead animals on farm prior to disposal could contribute...use of this biodigester on-farm, with suction tankers to remove...setting up a bio-reducer on farm are kept to a minimum and that smaller farms may also be able to benefit...with other farmers to run a collective containment system," he said...
...of Tyranny Sown at the Animal Farm; Comedy, Evil Grow Together...tragicomic version of "Animal Farm," George Orwells barbed barnyard...the animals taking over Manor Farm for the common good. In fact...comes near the end, when the collective has gone from virtuous to vice...
...motherly mare, a worker on the farm. Clover represents the serfs...set. Orwell described Animal Farm as a little fairy story...animals to take over Manor Farm and run it as equals, after...boar, begins to dictate. As collective decisions are overturned it...battery cages and massive pig farms. He was a man of vision but...
...Second Chance at Life with Help of Thistle Farms. Byline: Andrea Billups, THE WASHINGTON...The Rev. Becca Stevens of Thistle Farms does more than take in abused and addicted...says Mrs. Stevens, founder of Thistle Farms. Here, watching them doing the work...
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encyclopedia articles on: Collective Farm  - 14 results

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...only 4% of farms in collectives, Stalin ordered...kolkhoz Rus.,=collective farm replaced the...Union was in collectives; most of the rest was in state farms. As the Soviet...1990s, the collective farm faced a difficult...first time the farm household was...In Israel, collective farms pay nominal...people. Israeli collectives are based on...
...to provide secure tenure and easy farm purchase for the body of tenants...United States was the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act (1937). In Latin America...between collectivization of land (see collective farm ) and allowing a substantial number...
...underdeveloped nations. See also collective farm . History Agrarian reform...agriculture (i.e., the collective ownership of all land partly...farming, but mainly through collective farming under state control...Tanzania promoted farming collectives (ujamaa) with limited success...
...Tenn.) and the numerous ones (notably Brook Farm , Mass.) formed on the principles of Charles...where there are a number of successful agricultural collectives (see collective farm ). See R. M. Kanter, Commitment and Community...
LAND REFORM see agrarian reform ; collective farm ; ejido . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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