I can't remember which article had the factoid about walking on top of the grain. I went down a bit if a rabbit hole a year ago and remember reading it. Those sources should be enough to show that even if Lysenkoism was being practiced, it wasn't having a serious effect on crop output and the greater factors were improved water/irrigation systems.
The communes kinda sucked for reasons beyond what you usually read about, mainly weird pay tiers and poor infrastructure. Those problems seem to have been fixed now though and they're much less insane today.
Edit: the numerical evidence for the false reporting would be the difference between the initial and later reports (~350million Ton -> ~250million Ton) there was still a net productivity increase through collectivization, but not as drastic as expected. That would point to the investigators just saying that the output was what the Lysenkoists expected when it was more closely aligned with output of traditional farming methods.
Cool, where can I read more about this?
Here's an article that talks about economic output of the Communes
A breakdown of the communes
I can't remember which article had the factoid about walking on top of the grain. I went down a bit if a rabbit hole a year ago and remember reading it. Those sources should be enough to show that even if Lysenkoism was being practiced, it wasn't having a serious effect on crop output and the greater factors were improved water/irrigation systems.
The communes kinda sucked for reasons beyond what you usually read about, mainly weird pay tiers and poor infrastructure. Those problems seem to have been fixed now though and they're much less insane today.
Edit: the numerical evidence for the false reporting would be the difference between the initial and later reports (~350million Ton -> ~250million Ton) there was still a net productivity increase through collectivization, but not as drastic as expected. That would point to the investigators just saying that the output was what the Lysenkoists expected when it was more closely aligned with output of traditional farming methods.