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The USSR and Total War: Why didn’t the Soviet economy collapse in 1942?

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  • Harrison, Mark

Abstract

Germany’s campaign in Russia was intended to be the decisive factor in creating a new German empire in central and eastern Europe, a living space that could be restructured racially and economically in German interests as Hitler had defined them in Mein Kampf. When he launched his armies against the Soviet Union in 1941 the world had two good reasons to expect him to achieve a quick victory. One, for those with long memories, was the Russian economic performance in 1914–17: when faced with a small proportion of Germany’s military might, Russia had struggled to mobilise itself and eventually disintegrated. The disintegration was just as much economic as military and political; indeed, it could be argued that Russia’s economic disintegration had been the primary factor in both Russia’s military defeat and the Russian revolution. Another much fresher reason was that the Germans had just proved in battlefields from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean that they were the best soldiers in Europe. In the outcome these expectations were overturned. The Soviet economy did not disintegrate. The German army was overwhelmed by the scale and scope of Soviet resistance. The Soviet Union turned out to be the killing ground of Nazi ambitions. How did this come about? Production was decisive: the Allies outgunned the Axis because they outproduced them. Economic factors carried more weight in the Allied victory than military or political factors. For example, the Allies were not better soldiers. It is true that some of the Allies were more democratic, but being a democracy did not save the Czechs or the French and being a dictatorship did not defeat the Soviets. The Allies won the war because their economies supported a greater volume of war production and military personnel in larger numbers. This was true of the war as a whole, and it was also true on the eastern front where the Soviet economy, of a similar size to Germany’s but less developed and also seriously weakened by invasion, s
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Suggested Citation

  • Harrison, Mark, 2001. "The USSR and Total War: Why didn’t the Soviet economy collapse in 1942?," Economic Research Papers 269373, University of Warwick - Department of Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:ags:uwarer:269373
    DOI: 10.22004/ag.econ.269373
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    Blog mentions

    As found by EconAcademics.org, the blog aggregator for Economics research:
    1. Seventy Years Ago: The Week the Tide Began to Turn by Mark Harrison
      by Mark Harrison in Mark Harrison's blog on 2012-05-28 18:00:17

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