Translated by Ollie Richardson for Fort Russ

31st March, 2016





Rusmi

The Perestroika in the country was purposely designed so that the products were issued with coupons.





Food is the most important strategic resource. The safety and defence of the country depended on it like they depended on the presence of nuclear weapons. But today, televised debates discuss one thing: will there be war or not and who will attack us — Europe or the US? Gentlemen, yes we have long been attacked! But we do not hear a word about the situation on the home front today — import substitution in agriculture and food. And this is no accident.

Domestic products now account for 55% of the population’s food purchases. Pre-Gorbachev, in the Soviet Union this figure was more than 95%. Food security is considered to be guaranteed at 80%. If the figure is below 50%, then the enemy can take out a country with their bare hands.

Yes, in Soviet times, fertile green peas, sausage or cheese in the regions was not sufficient, and even for meat that was available even at students prices it was necessary to stand in queues. But to buy it in the market or to get it from under the counter would cost double-triple the price. Except for pineapples and bananas and other fruits from overseas.

Even in 1987, food production grew faster than population growth and wages. The increase in production when compared to 1980 in the meat industry amounted to 135%, in cheese — 131%, in fish — 132%, milling — 123%. The average salary had increased by 19%.

All the enterprises of the food industry were working at full capacity and without interruption. But at the end of 1988, even in Moscow, where the inhabitants of nearby towns and seconded people took out what they could “procure”, the coupons appeared. Soon, buying something already had become almost impossible. For days people stood in queues, every three hours arranging a roll call. Barely anyone didn’t fight, wondering where everything had gone, right down to tobacco?

Only one conclusion can be drawn: the deficit was created artificially, and not in the production stage, but in the sphere of distribution. And the best proof of this: 1st January 1992, Gaidar’s “shock therapy” began, and on January 2nd, the grocery store shelves were already full. Products became more expensive by the day, sometimes by more than 30%.

Food Scam

There is a document: a speech by future first mayor of Moscow Gavriil Popov in the Inter-Regional Deputy group, where he said that it is neccessary to create a food situation so that the products were issued with coupons — said Yuri Prokofiev, first Secretary of the Moscow City Committee of the Communist party in 1989 — 1991. This aroused the indignation of the workers and their opposition to the Soviet regime.

Yuri Luzhkov, then the “Chief” of Moscow, explained the ongoing disruptions. He said, “we could supply considerably more meat in Moscow to meet the demand, but the frontline unloading refrigerated sections do not allow it. Due to a lack of access roads, the refrigerator does not have time to unload”.

Democrat-Popov was disturbed by this nonsense: likewise, through bureaucratic sabotage and provocation, in February 1917, the liberals artificially created disruptions in the supply of Petrograd to overthrow Nicholas II.

Now, in Moscow, committees were established to combat sabotage. Naive enthusiasts went to them with a simple idea: refrigerated sections with frozen meat can directly use the access roads of the Moscow giants factories, like those giant Khrunichev rocket-science factories, where about 80,000 people worked in the metallurgical plant “Sickle and Hammer” and “Moskvich” with a group of 20,000 and others. Trade Committees would’ve distributed everything and workers would’ve unloaded it all, but no. In such a scheme, not a single kilogram of meat would get to the dealers. But the workers were unaware: this is the new class of shopkeeper – shadow businesses grew in the Perestroika.

In the TV program “600 seconds” in 1989 -1991, it showed how the trucks from the regions at the entrances to both capitals threw the “coupon” products into the ditches, as they were not allowed in the city.

- Advertisement -

— Trucks with meat and butter came. There are guys to unload, as always, students. When they arrived, they are told:

“Take the money and leave pronto, no one must see you here”,

– remembers Nikolai Ryzhkov, Chairman of Council of Ministers of the USSR in 1985 — 1990. He was the first to declassify, as Boris Yeltsin was bursting for sole power, how his rival Gorbachev one day stopped 26 tobacco factories “for repairs” of the 28 available! So cigarettes disappeared from the country.

“The government’s decisions on the procurement of imported goods dumped the gold reserves of the Soviet Union,” said Mikhail Poltoranin, the former Minister of Press and ardent supporter of Yeltsin, who became Chairman of his government. “Gold was flowing abroad, and under the guise of “foreign”, they were often categorized as “native”. For example, in the ports of Leningrad, Riga or Tallinn, ships loaded with cheap feed grain sailed on the sea to Greece and Spain and came to Odessa with “imported” food wheat at $120 per ton.

Dealers operated openly. People began to leave the square, demanding to stop the looting of the country. This reaction was sought by the Democrats from all the restructuring.

How disorganized was the economy

January 1st, 1987 – the day of the conception of party-nomenclature of business. Earlier the monopoly rights of the State Committee Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations on export-import operations immediately get 20 ministries and 70 large enterprises. Their guidance and performers were fed by the state.

January 28th, 1987 – the creation of the “Komsomol economy” begins. Across the country, under the aegis of the Komsomol Central Committee, the Centers of scientific and technical creativity of youth (NTTM) are formed. Its aim is to introduce new technologies into all spheres of the national economy. It was a goldmine for profit. Less than six months later, the law on state enterprises (Association) authorized the procedure, for which before would have been executed: the conversion of non-cash money into cash. The exclusive right to cashing was given to the Center of scientific-technical creativity of youth. For the future enrichment of the two groups of future business elite: the leadership of state-owned enterprises and the creative centers.





The service took from 18%-33%, 5% deducted to the coordinating Council of the city party Committee. In its work, “the Komsomol” involved relatives and acquaintances arranging bogus welfare centres, taking into account the “interests” of Directors. So began the development of corruption schemes. “Menatep”, headed by Mikhail Khodorkovsky, led the Center of scientific-technical creativity of youth. Its members were Leonid Nevzlin, unsinkable from the Yeltsin era, Vladislav Surkov, who is now assistant to the President of the Russian Federation. Competitors — Vladimir Preobrazhensky, future Vice-President of Inkombank and “VimpelCom”, “Wimm-bill-Dann food Products”, Sergey Lisovskiy, who became famous for the “case about the box from under the Xerox” with $538,000 in cash. Many owners of mass media and landowners.

May 26th, 1988 the law “on cooperation in the USSR” gave the opportunity for the deputies on the ground to establish cooperatives and joint ventures with foreign companies. Mainly for the exportation of goods abroad for the purpose of accumulating currency. There are the first shadow businesses devoted to executives of the parent organizations, the OBKhSS, the KGB, and other security agencies associated with the criminal world. But with countries of the CMEA (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance), and the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, the GDR, Mongolia, Vietnam, Albania, and Cuba, international settlements were conducted in transferable rubles. The cost of one was 0,987412 grams of pure gold. It was kind of the first virtual solid supranational currency in the world, not subject to cashing.





In 1990, Gorbachev and Ryzhkov forced the CMEA to make a decision about trade conducted only in dollars. The CMEA has no dollars. They were all “bailed-out”by the IMF and the World Bank. By creating demand for US money, Gorbachev deprived their home country markets and planned revenues, and gave the US control over the entire zone of influence of the USSR. This affected the food market. The newly-born bourgeoisie started to remove everything from butter, fish, meat, cereals, condensed milk, sugar, and dried fruit from our warehouses. And not only CMEA countries – for example, in exchange for currency and business trips, the meat from Bashkiria was sent by echelons not only to Germany, but also to Great Britain, as well as in Africa and India.

26th December 1991 – the USSR ceased to exist. And in the morning, the law “On urgent measures on implementing land reform in RSFSR” came to power. The compulsory mass accelerated decollectivization and planting in the village of criminal and oligarchical capitalism began.

Foreign land

Regarding how Boris Yeltsin finished off agriculture and eliminated the country’s food security, we are told in the material “Yeltsin betrayed his homeland and his people”.

Add one only fact: according to expert estimates, foreigners using nominees in the 2013 year bought nearly 3 million hectares of the best farmland in our country. The far East has long hosted Chinese students, and in the rest of Russia, approximately one million hectares of arable land are controlled or owned by the Europeans and Kazakhs. Although the official purchase and sale of arable land is an outrageous crime.

With the coming to power of Putin, subsidies in agriculture increased slightly. At a meeting on agricultural policy on 19th May 2008, the head of state said that Russia needs to become a major player on the world food market. And to defend themselves against sharp fluctuations in food prices. But things are right where they started.

The total debt of agriculture is more than two trillion rubles. Even if its forgiven, without direct investment, supplies of tractors and other expensive machinery of the Russian farmers, according to the Director of the Non-public joint-stock company “State Farm of Lenin” Pavel Grudinina, cannot cope with the task of import substitution in the food sector. For at 25% interest on loans, only a madman would dare to carry out the sowing campaign on borrowed money.

In 2015, the Ministry of Agriculture admitted that the farmers en masse refused loans, but at the end of February they were issued 33% less money than in the past to conduct seasonal work; to buy mineral fertilizers, seeds, means of plant protection, and other components of the sowing campaign. But the government has no program relationship with the farmers. The state does not support farmers, but only banks. In the state program for rural development until 2020, it is recorded that we still need to ensure that wages in the agricultural sector accounted for as much as half of the salaries in the industry. Who among the young will go to the village to work hard for the money? The question is rhetorical.

Revealing figures

In 1990, at the expense of the government reserves, 50% of the food needs of the population of the subsidized regions of the country were covered. Expenditure of a year’s supply compares with four years of the great Patriotic war. This measure prevented a social explosion. At the moment, the state reserves can provide for each inhabitant of the country for the next three months.

In 1992, Russia was officially categorized as a half-starved country. An average person in our country, “ate” only 2040 calories per day. With reasonable medicine — 2600 calories. According to the World Food Organization, an intake of 2150 kilo calories means constant malnutrition. In the USSR, the level of per capita consumption amounted to 2590 calories, in the US — 3350.



