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Trade and Entrepreneurship as Forms of Adaptation to Collectivization in Russian South during 1930s

https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2026-15-1-428-446

Abstract

This study investigates trade-market relations within rural life during the 1930s using archival materials from three agricultural regions in southern Russia: Don, Kuban, and Stavropol. The research highlights a significant gap in understanding how trade and entrepreneurship contributed to peasants' adaptation to new socio-economic conditions resulting from comprehensive collectivization policies. It is argued that most peasant households were predominantly self-sufficient, selling only minor portions of their produce on markets primarily for acquiring funds necessary for tax payments and purchasing basic consumer goods. Additionally, it demonstrates that these activities fostered greater economic autonomy among collective farmers and strengthened the position of individual smallholders, prompting Soviet authorities to intensify market control measures and implement large-scale initiatives aimed at weakening small commodity-producing village farms. Evidence shows that administrative controls, increased taxation, and confiscation of land surpluses significantly impaired the viability of small personal subsidiary plots owned by collective farmers, leading almost entirely to the disappearance of non-cooperative sectors in villages by the late 1930s.

About the Author

V. A. Bondarev
Don State Technical University
Россия

Vitaly A. Bondarev, Doctor of History, Associate Professor, Department of History and Cultural Studies

Rostov-on-Don



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Review

For citations:


Bondarev V.A. Trade and Entrepreneurship as Forms of Adaptation to Collectivization in Russian South during 1930s. Nauchnyi dialog. 2026;15(1):428-446. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2026-15-1-428-446

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