Soviet State Planning Committee (Gosplan, 1921)
governance pace layer · 1921–1991
lifespan: 300 yrs · motor: push
Class card for the Soviet Union's central planning apparatus — Gosudarstvenny Planovy Komitet (Gosplan) — founded by Sovnarkom decree on 22 February 1921 as an advisory body and expanded into the operational planning core of the Soviet state after 1928. Gosplan's machine-telos: maximize the physical throughput of strategic industrial goods (steel, oil, coal, electricity, armaments) as a proxy for state power and military parity with the West. The planning apparatus ran 13 Five-Year Plans (1928–1991) using the material-balance method — physical-units planning without price-signals — to allocate capital, labor, and materials across a command-hierarchy stretching from the Politburo through Gosplan, Gossnab (supply), Goskomstat (statistics), and Gosbank (capital routing) to republican and enterprise level. The machine is MM-Day in structure and motor: the Modernity Machine's pull-toward-Progress expressed as maximized physical output and national legibility through bureaucratic-statistical capture. Yet it deviates from the Western MM in motor — Gosplan is push in the atlas seed because it forces industrial targets top-down onto enterprises regardless of price-signal feedback — a structural distinction from the market-pull of New Deal administrative-state. Peak: First Five-Year Plan (1928–1933) industrial surge; WWII war-production evacuation (1941–1945); post-war reconstruction (1945–1953); Sputnik 1957. Decline trajectory: oil-shock disruption after 1973; Brezhnev-era stagnation; Gorbachev perestroika (1985–1991); USSR dissolution December 25 1991. Canonical environmental catastrophe: Aral Sea collapse (Karakum Canal 1954+; 90% volume loss by 2000). As of 2026: ennervated_necromancy — the operational grammar of Soviet material-balance planning is functionally dead, but residual planning apparatuses survive in post-Soviet states (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Belarus) and the Chinese state-capitalism model inherits key structural patterns. This card is standalone per atlas MM-13; NOT in a lineage chain.
Machine type
corporeal
Plasticity
rigid
Substrate
Wave source
wave9-atlas-mm13-cluster-d
Inputs
- Politburo directives and strategic priority targets
- Goskomstat production reports (enterprise fulfilment data)
- Gossnab material inventories (centralized supply allocation)
- Gosbank capital allocation (rubles)
Outputs
- 13 Five-Year Plans (1928–1991)
- Annual control figures (enterprise production targets)
- Material balance sheets (physical allocation plans across ~50,000 commodities)
- Steel production (peak ~150M tonnes/yr, 1980s USSR)
Landscape pressures
- Cold War military-parity pressure (95% intensity)
- Hayek-Mises information-problem pressure (90% intensity)
- Oil-shock revenue cushion loss (post-1973 Dusk onset) (80% intensity)
- Perestroika reform pressure 1985–1991 (85% intensity)
Intra-era couplings
- priority_allocation_to USSR Military-Industrial Complex (VPK / Soviet MIC, 1930) · 0.95 CANON
- quota_imposition_on machine:soviet-agriculture-collectivized · 0.90 CANON
- capital_routing_via machine:gosbank-soviet · 0.88 CANON
- parallel_class US New Deal Administrative State (1933) · 0.70 CANON
- instrumentalized_by Bismarckian Welfare Apparatus (1883) · 0.45 EXTRAP
Cross-era couplings
- adapted_inheritance Chinese AI Labs Collective (2023) · 0.68 EXTRAP
State variables
Phase snapshots
Notable instances
- First Five-Year Plan (1928–1933, Stalin) (1928) — Canonical instance: rapid industrialization; steel output target 17M t/yr; collectivization of agriculture; ~5–7M deaths…
- Collectivization Campaign (1929–1933) (1929) — Mass forced collectivization of Soviet agriculture; dekulakization (liquidation of kulak class as class); Holodomor in U…
- Magnitogorsk Steel City (1929+) (1929) — Magnitogorsk Metallurgical Combine: canonical instance of Gosplan's heavy-industrial push. Kotkin's Magnetic Mountain (1…
- Sputnik Program (1957) (1955) — Gosplan priority allocation to space program; October 4 1957 Sputnik-1 launch. Canonical example of central-priority-all…
- Bratsk Hydroelectric Dam (1961) (1954) — Bratsk Dam on Angara River: canonical large-infrastructure instance of Gosplan electricity-push. 4.5 GW capacity; world'…
- Aral Sea Collapse (Karakum Canal 1954+, collapse 1960–2000) (1954) — Karakum Canal (1954+) diverted Amu Darya for cotton irrigation per Gosplan cotton-output targets. Aral Sea lost 90% of v…
Sources
- Nove, Alec (1969). An Economic History of the USSR · 92%
- Allen, Robert C. (2003). Farm to Factory: A Reinterpretation of the Soviet Industrial Revolution · 88%
- Kotkin, Stephen (1995). Magnetic Mountain: Stalinism as a Civilization · 87%
- Kotkin, Stephen (2014). Stalin, Volume I: Paradoxes of Power 1878–1928 · 87%
- Davies, R.W. (1989). The Soviet Economy in Turmoil 1929–1930 · 85%
- Hayek, Friedrich A. (1945). The Use of Knowledge in Society · 82%