- Goulash Communism
Goulash Communism (Hungarian: "gulyáskommunizmus") or goulash democracy refers to the variety of
socialism as practised in theHungarian People's Republic from the 1960s until the collapse of communism in Hungary in 1989. With elements offree market and improvedhuman rights record, it represented a quiet reform and deviation from the purely communist principles Hungary clung to in the previous decade. The name is a semi-humorousmetaphor derived from "goulash ", a popular Hungarian dish. As goulash is made with an assortment of unlike ingredients, it represents how Hungarian communism was a mixed ideology no longer strictly communistic. [Watkins, Thayer. " [http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/hungary.htm Economic History and the Economy of Hungary] ". Department of Economics, San José State University.] Sometimes described as "the happiest barrack in the Communist camp" (or "in the socialist camp"), Hungary in this particular period enjoyed many amenities not available to other communist countries in theEastern bloc .In 1962, six years after the
Hungarian Revolution of 1956 , the 8th Congress of theHungarian Socialist Workers' Party declared the period of "consolidation of socialism" after 1956 to be over and that the "foundations for the establishment of a socialist society" had been achieved which enabled a generalamnesty of most people sentenced in connection with 1956. The party, underJános Kádár , gradually curbed some of the excesses of thesecret police , and introduced a relatively liberal cultural and economic course aimed at overcoming the post-1956 hostility toward the Kádár government. In 1966, the Central Committee approved the "New Economic Mechanism " which eased foreign trade restrictions, gave limited freedom to the workings of the market, and allowed a limited number of small businesses to operate in the services sector. Though liberal in comparison toStalinist socialism, the first relaxation of economic control was far from posing the same threat of the 1956 reforms. Official policy employed different methods of administering thecollectives , leaving the pace ofmechanization up to eachcooperative . Stokes, Gale. The Walls Came Tumbling Down: The Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe, (Oxford, 1993), pp. 81-7. ] Additionally, rather than enforcing the system of compulsory crop deliveries and of workdays credit the collectivizers used monthly cash wages. Later, in the ‘60s, cooperatives were permitted to enter into related and then general auxiliary businesses such as food processing, light industry, and service industry.Goulash Communism showed a far greater concern for
public opinion and an increased focus on the present (rather than future) material well-being of the citizens than had been the case in the period preceding 1956. It provided a wider latitude fordissent within the limits of the socialist system, modified the role of the party in the development of socialism (now interpreted as "serving" rather than "commanding"), reduced the formality of relations between the party and the populace at large, increased the scope of societal self-expression and self-management, and refined the guidingMarxist-Leninist ideology with modified means of dissemination. Marxist-Leninist ideology is invoked in the desire to reform as seen inImre Nagy ’s 'Reform Communism' (1955-6). He argues that Marxism is a “science that cannot remain static but must develop and become more perfect”. Stokes, Gale, ed. From Stalinism to Pluralism: A Documentary History of Eastern Europe Since 1945, (Oxford, 1996), pp. 81-93. ] He attributes Marx to having created a method, meant to guide yet not entirely encompass socialism or its development. “The theory of Marx - as Lenin stated – gives general guiding principles, which must be utilized in Britain in another fashion than in France, in France differently than…”. This interpretation was not shared by theSoviet leadership,Khrushchev ’s response to Hungary in 1956 andBrezhnev ’s to Czechoslovakia in 1968 and the resultingBrezhnev Doctrine stating that though “each socialist country had the right to determine the concrete form of its development along the path of socialism by taking account of the specific nature of their national conditions… the Soviet Union would not tolerate deviation from the principles of socialism and the restoration of capitalism”. Janos, Andrew C. East Central Europe in the Modern World: The Politics of the Borderlands From Pre- to Postcommunism, (Stanford, 2000), pp. 267. ]Being a comparatively well-organized country in the East bloc, Hungary was the destination for tourists from other communist nations, for whom visits to the West were much more difficult. Queues for groceries, for instance, were virtually non-existent, unlike in other communist countries in the 60s and 70s. Hungary's economic resources were mobilised to better satisfy
consumer demand by providing a more extensive assortment of consumer goods. Some economic reform measures were introduced to integrate limitedmarket mechanisms into the framework of the plannedsocialist economy . An unfortunate result of this policy were rising economic stresses and high indebtedness which became evident by the late 1980s. Yet these economic crises were prevalent throughout the collapsing communist world. Hungary’s mild diversity left it slightly better equipped.Since 1989, after the general disintegration of
Communist control inCentral Europe , Hungary has adopted a Western-styledemocratic political system and introduced thorough reforms aimed at establishing a capitalist market economy, enablingEuropean Union membership and integration into a global market economy.References
See also
*
Market socialism
*Barracks communism
*History of Hungary External links
* [http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/hungary.htm Article on economic history of Hungary including goulash communism]
* [http://www.unc.edu/~wmckinne/hungarytoday.html Discussion of goulash communism and its aftermath]
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