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During the 1930s over 100,000 American workers left the USA and crossed the Atlantic to the USSR. There they worked in automobile plants and other industrial enterprises of StalinStalin Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin (18 December 1878 – 5 March 1953) was a Soviet politician, dictator and revolutionary who led the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953. Read More’s Five Year Plans. The crisis of capitalism that was evident through the great depressionGreat Depression The global economic collapse that began with the US stock market crash of October 1929 and deepened through bank failures, trade collapse, and mass unemployment to produce the worst economic crisis of the twentieth century. By 1932, a quarter of American workers were unemployed; industrial production had fallen by half. The Great Depression began not with a single event but with a series of interconnected collapses. The October 1929 stock market crash wiped out speculative fortunes but would not, alone, have produced a decade-long depression; the depression was deepened by bank failures that wiped out the savings of ordinary Americans, by the Federal Reserve’s contractionary monetary policy that reduced the money supply, by the Smoot-Hawley Tariff of 1930 that triggered retaliatory trade barriers worldwide, and by the gold standard constraints that prevented governments from expanding their monetary supplies in response to the crisis. By 1932–33, a quarter of American workers were unemployed, industrial production had fallen by fifty percent, and the banking system had effectively ceased to function. The international dimension was crucial: Germany’s reparations obligations and war debt structure, financed by American loans, made the German economy uniquely vulnerable to the credit contraction. The Depression contributed directly to Hitler’s electoral rise — the Nazi Party gained over 37% of the vote in July 1932 in conditions of mass unemployment and national humiliation. The policy responses — Roosevelt’s New Deal, Britain’s abandonment of the gold standard, the various autarkic nationalisms of the 1930s — produced partial recovery in some countries while deepening the crisis in others. Full recovery required the Second World War’s military spending to restore full employment. The Great Depression was not a natural disaster but a political-economic failure: decisions made by governments, central banks, and financial institutions that could have been made differently. Keynes’s analysis — that the depression reflected a collapse of effective demand that markets could not self-correct without government intervention — was substantially correct, but politically unacceptable to the orthodoxies of the 1930s. The lasting significance of the Depression is not economic but political: it demonstrated that sustained mass unemployment was politically uncontainable, that democracies unable to provide economic security were vulnerable to authoritarian alternatives, and that the international economic system required political management that pure market mechanisms could not supply. The post-war Bretton Woods system — managed exchange rates, capital controls, the IMF and World Bank — was designed precisely to prevent a recurrence by building the international economic management mechanisms that had been absent in the 1930s. and the seeming dynamism of Stalin’s USSR and its rapid construction of industry convinced many that Soviet communism was the future. This podcast explores the fortunes of Stalin’s American guest workers, many of whom took Soviet citizenship and were swallowed up by the terror as Stalin’s NKVDNKVD Full Description The People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) was the Soviet secret police from 1934 to 1946, responsible for political repression, the administration of the Gulag, and the terror purges of 1936–1938. Under Nikolai Yezhov during the Great Terror, the NKVD executed approximately 750,000 people and arrested over 1.5 million. It also conducted mass deportations of ethnic minorities and operated a network of foreign intelligence and assassination operations. Critical Perspective The NKVD institutionalised the principle that the state’s survival required pre-emptive destruction of potential enemies. Interrogation protocols routinely used torture to extract confessions — not to discover truth but to perform it. The show trials of the Old Bolsheviks, in which loyal communists confessed to absurd crimes, demonstrated that no loyalty to the party could protect an individual once designated an enemy. searched for spies and imagined enemies and found a ready supply of victims in the large pool of foreign workers that had come to the USSR.





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