Stolypin reforms in agriculture
Stolypin reforms in agriculturewere a set of measures designed to improve the situation of peasants in the Russian Empire and, on the whole, optimize the agrarian life of the country. Reforms were carried out on the initiative of the tsarist government, as well as Pyotr Arkadievich Stolypin.
Stolypin reforms in agriculture: the prerequisites
By the beginning of the 20th century, Russia had become a peasantan archaic country. The gap between Western European states and the USA in the spheres of industry, economy, and social development became more and more obvious. Even the efficiency of agriculture remained at the level of several past centuries. Increasingly, by this time literally glaring relevance acquired the thesis of Peter Valuev mid-XIX century: "From above shine, from below rot." Thus, the Stolypin reforms became obvious necessity to reform all spheres of reactionary Russian statehood, including agriculture. Otherwise, the unenviable destiny of Iran or Turkey might await the country: these states, once instigating fear for the whole of Europe, turned into semi-independent colonies of the English crown by the beginning of the 20th century.
Agrarian Stolypin reform: briefly on the objectives and conduct of the
The second program of the reform was the developmentterritories in Siberia. In this region, and at all, the land was distributed free of charge to peasant use, and the state itself contributed to the creation of an infrastructure there. To transport families to the east, special "Stolypin carriages" were created, which are quite well known today. Reform really began to give results in the form of economic revival before the First World War. However, it was never completed, interrupted by the death of Pyotr Arkadyevich in 1911, and then broke out into a continental conflict.
The results of the Stolypin reform
As a result of government actions,more than 10% of the peasant population was separated from the community, having begun independent economic activity. Modern historians note the positive value of reforms: the qualitative dynamics in the agrarian sector and economic life, the partial development of Siberia, the emergence of a number of competitive peasant estates and so on.