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Centenary of the GOELRO Plan: Opportunities and Challenges of Planned Economy

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Abstract

The State Commission for Electrification of Russia (GOELRO) is the first in the world and, most importantly, successful experience in the development and practical implementation of a long-term plan for the recovery and development of the economy of a large country. It uses the achievements of the third technical and the possibilities of the second social revolution. The Soviet Union was deservedly proud of this experience as an integral part of the socialist mode of production. The GOELRO plan has become such a symbolic phenomenon in the public consciousness that ideas of its repetition have been periodically emerging for 100 years now. The attractiveness of the paradigm for managing the future and the effectiveness of the integrated approach implemented during its development (later developed as a methodology for systemic studies in the energy sector) were so great that not only all socialist but also many capitalist countries followed it. The planned system of the Soviet Union provided record economic growth rates in the 1930s, a unique mobilization capacity in 1941–1945, and a steady rise until the early 1980s. However, in the following years, it became increasingly difficult for such a system to cope with the country’s sprawling and diversified economy. Moreover, this was one of the reasons for the collapse of the Soviet Union. Russia, having abandoned rigid centralized planning, is currently trying to create a system of indicative strategic planning according to Western models but has not really succeeded in this yet. One-hundred years later and almost three decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, there is a need to comprehend new possibilities of planned economic management. Looking back, one can wonder at the wretchedness of the instruments of planned work in the Soviet Union. The widespread use of computers and the Internet has radically improved the instrumental equipment of planning processes, but their methodological, informational, and model support remains unsatisfactory. The emergence of new means of organizing reporting and generating forecast information, as well as methods for mathematical modeling of the energy sector’s development that meet market conditions, opens up favorable prospects in the context of the fourth (information-digital) transformation of the productive forces of society.

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Notes

  1. Fantastic! Who among the top officials of Russia over the past 30 years would have thought of this?

  2. Lenin V.I. Complete Works. V. 51.P. 160.

  3. By the way, V.I. Lenin mentions there “… one of our first economic plans for the restoration of transport … which was designed for five years, but has now been reduced to three and a half years, since it is being carried out in excess of the norm”.

  4. The reward was an additional food ration.

  5. The country’s closed nature did not allow the outside world to judge the means of achieving the demonstrated results.

  6. In 1973, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics with the formulation “for the development of the input-output method and its application to important economic problems,” as well as other prizes and awards. He has been a foreign member of the USSR Academy of Sciences since 1988.

  7. Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences; given USSR Lenin Prize (1964) and Nobel Prize “for contributions to the theory of optimal resource allocation” (1975).

  8. Analog (manual mechanical, later electric) personal calculating machine.

  9. http://www.computer-museum.ru/galglory/27.htm

  10. One of the authors of the article was the general designer of the subsystem “Fuel and Energy Complex of the ASPC” of the State Planning Committee of the Soviet Union; its first stage was used in the development of the latest annual plans and the failed thirteenth 5-year plan. https://aftershock.news/?q= node/530798&full

  11. The main provisions of the Soviet Union Energy Program for the long term. http://www.consultant.ru/cons/cgi/online.cgi? req=doc&base=ESU&n=45933#0928310790569232

  12. By the early 1980s, the problem of greenhouse gas emissions was only being realized, and it was proposed to combat atmospheric pollution by measures of deep processing of coal.

  13. At that time, work was already underway in the Soviet Union on horizontal drilling, but a technological breakthrough using these technologies for the development of unconventional oil (shale) deposits was not foreseen, and the limited oil resources were considered the main problem of the world energy after the Suez crisis.

  14. V.V. Putin.

  15. The first one in 1917–1929 with a decrease in population by 16% and a threefold decrease in GDP, the second one in 1941–1949 with a loss of 14% of the population and a third of GDP [14].

  16. Order of the Government of the Russian Federation of November 17, 2008, no. 1662-r.

  17. “Strategy 2020”: disappointing results…”. https://mbknews.today/ suzhet/strategiya-2020-neuteshitelnye-itogi/

  18. http://yandex.ru/government.ru/Новости/34818

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Correspondence to A. A. Makarov.

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Translated by S. Avodkova

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Makarov, A.A., Mitrova, T.A. Centenary of the GOELRO Plan: Opportunities and Challenges of Planned Economy. Therm. Eng. 67, 779–789 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1134/S0040601520110087

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