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Summary HISTORY A LEVEL MAO'S CHINA THEME 2 NOTES (A*) £5.99   Add to cart

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Summary HISTORY A LEVEL MAO'S CHINA THEME 2 NOTES (A*)

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  • August 22, 2022
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theme 2 - agriculture and industry
Intro

 Mao's aim - modernise through urbanisation and industrialisation
 agriculture - had to be collectivised in order to feed the urban population
 economics - mao dismissed experts, not his strong point
 land redistributed from landlords to peasants quickly
 collectivisation slow - accelerated in 1955 and completed by 1957
 economy had to be stabilised by 1st 5yp - successful
 2nd 5yp (great leap forward) - unsuccesful - led to famine
 mao refused to take responsibility but allowed a retreat from the great leap forward -
more pragmatic approach 1960s onwards

How did the system of land ownership change during 1949-57?

Attacks on landlordism and the redistribution of land

 1950 Agrarian Reform Law - laid down the legal framework under which land reform
took place - claimed to eradicate the exploitation of peasants
 legislation needed to restrain overzealous activists from taking the law into their own
hands - what began to happen during civil war
 land reform = redistribution
 army played a crucial rile in the land reform process - silenced those who might have
been hostile to the new gov, organised work teams
 labelling of villages into classes
 party - whipped up anti landlord paranoia
 'speak bitterness' meetings - denounced and sentenced landlords
 image of a peasant led revolution - implicated the peasants

Moves towards agricultural co-operaration

 collectivisation began rapidly - didnt want peasant landowners
 wanted to learn from russias mistakes and act quickly - they were resistant to change
 1951 - ten or so families encouraged to unite to form Mutual Aid Teams - could pool
their labour, animals and equipment
 voluntary but those who remained outside struggled to get hold of resources
 1952 - successful MATs encouraged to combine and form Agricultural Producers Co
operatives - 40-50 families
 families with larger holdings allowed to keep back some land for their personal use -
incentive

The change from voluntary to enforced collectivisation

 mao frustrated at slow pace in which the APC system was developing - continued a
cautious approach however
 poor planning due to rushing - gone into debt - mao called for a slowdown in 1953
 stablilisation in 1954 - peasants started buying and selling land and food - capitalism -
infuriated mao

,  previous slowdown condemned - put pressure back on peasants to join APCs
 resistance - slaughtering of animals etc
 1954 - harvest was poor - increasing requisitioning to feed the cities - caused much
rural protest
 mao did another u turn as a reslut and called a halt to APC development for the next
18 months
 6 months later - Mao went all out on collectivsation - full scale drive to start
immediately - fear that supplies to the cities would cont to be unreliable if peasants
owned the land
 most of the new APCs classed as HPCs - 200-300 households
 peasants no longer owned the land or the equipment - profits of the year shared out
according to work points - unfair system
 ideologically - massive success - state owned the means of production, the food, the
land
 politically - more mixed - had been carried out quickly - showed maos authority
 however - showed a change in the relationship between CCP and peasants (now
slaves)
 made mao dangerously overconfident - led to catastrophic mistakes in the Great Leap
Forward
 economic - impact dissapointing - agricultural production had increased insufficiently
 could not sustain the urban workforce - urban pop outnumbered peasant pop
 peasants demotivated
 lack of state investment

What was the impact of the peoples communes after 1958?

reasons for launching the Communes

 mao delighted with the speed of collectivsation
 continued to seek ways to maximise food production - accelerate industrial growth
 thought he had the support of peasants
 maos determination to prevent the revolution from losing impetus

How the communes were organised

 walking on two legs - development of agriculture and industry
 labour force to be mobilised on water conservency and civil engineering schemes
 production of steel and grain given equal priority
 first commune in Henan province - involved the merging of 27 collectives - used them
as a model to inspire others
 750,000 collectives merged into 26,000 communes
 not possible to move elsewhere without an internal passport

Communal living

 shift to the commune system - exercise in rebranding - extra sense of communal
identity
 at together in communal canteens and slept in dormitories
 peasants working lives directed by new management teams - divided into production
teams

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