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The Great Leap Backward Essay examples

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Imagine ruling an empire that’s economy and agriculture is growing slowly while at the same time having a population burst. What would you do? Continue on improving and gaining little or increase production to try to save the blooming population? This is the situation Mao Zedong, emperor of China, was forced to face in the 1950’s. So, he made a plan that was suggested to him by the Soviet Union called the First Five-Year Economic Plan; focusing on speeding up the production of agriculture to increase the economy and decrease nation wide famine. After the 5 years, agricultural resources had mobilization, and improved efficiency of farming. But Mao did not stop here. He wanted to be the most advanced nation in the world, and to finally …show more content…

But that was not enough for Mao; he wanted more of everything. So he continued on and enforced another Five-Year Plan, and this time invested more in agriculture to make a bigger production. Though he spent more in agriculture, he made labors work in communes for no pay. Their pay was the commune, which Mao made the state pay for, in which they were given to live in with almost 100 to 200 other people. Therefore, workers had no true incentive to work hard and make more agriculture gains from which Mao believed they lacked from the first five-year plan. Enforcing this many people to work in communes cause for a wider spread of disease and more people to work a smaller land. Even though Mao made every farmer and peasant give up their own land to help the state, there was still and overflow of people on strips of land. Since Mao’s new agriculture theory of speeding up production was planting more crops closer together and this overflow of people, causing them to be more careless and plant crops even closer to each other. This closeness caused roots to cross and kill other crops. Also caused crops not to get the necessary resources and minerals need to grow and caused them to just never grow. This killing of crops, set agriculture production plummeting down causing a nation wide famine and set the economy spiraling down into a recession. Where the prices for food were overly expensive causing starvation, and millions of deaths from starvation and famine. In the end, the

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