This article reinterprets the Third Program of the CPSU (Communist Party of the Soviet Union) in 1961 as a rational, auditable social contract for the Soviet one-party state rather than a utopian manifesto. Reconstructing its Stalin-era prehistory—from drafts by Dmitry Manuilsky, Mark Mitin, Pavel Yudin, and Andrei Zhdanov between 1938 and 1947 to those generated under Nikita Khrushchev between 1958 and 1961—we show how successive elites translated ideological rivalry with the West into a ledger of quantifiable welfare obligations (expressed in per capita food, housing, goods, and the duration of the working day). The program’s distinctive function took shape within the traditional context of foundational Soviet documents: constitutions which codified the status quo and party programs that projected a development path for 20–30 years into the future. Under Khrushchev, academic economists “scientized” this practice, elevating consumption indicators and “scientifically grounded norms” to the core of a national strategy for the USSR: “communism in the main” by 1980. Conceptually, the program operated as an authoritarian commitment to build a socialist welfare state—a self-binding social contract that stabilized the post-Stalin transition but also generated path dependence, constraining later reform efforts. Empirically, we document the program’s internal tensions (communal services vs. individual household needs; socialist ethics vs. personal ownership) and its comparative ambitions (to catch up and overtake the United States in per capita welfare). The result is a reframing of Soviet modernity as a project in which technocratic calculation, welfare egalitarianism, and Cold War benchmarking were fused into a pragmatic, auditable program of one-party rule.
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Aleksandr A. Fokin
Sechenov University
Nikita Y. Pivovarov
The Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration
David Brandenberger
University of Richmond
Russian Journal of Economics
ZooKeys
University of Richmond
Sechenov University
The Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration
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Fokin et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69cf58285a333a82146096ba — DOI: https://doi.org/10.32609/j.ruje.12.171595
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