Attempts to Save the World That Went Disastrously Wrong

Attempts to Save the World That Went Disastrously Wrong

Khalid Elhassan - December 13, 2023

Attempts to Save the World That Went Disastrously Wrong
Propaganda poster for steel production during the Great Leap Forward. Pinterest

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The Great Leap Forward

In the late 1950s, China was in desperate need of rapid and massive industrialization. Other countries had industrialized gradually, after they accumulated enough capital to pay for heavy machinery. However, China had neither the time nor the money. Its population was rapidly outstripping the available resources, and it was too poor to accumulate enough capital anytime soon for the massive industrialization necessary. So Mao Zedong and his communist acolytes hit upon the idea of industrializing China by mobilizing the country’s vast population. They would use labor-intensive means of industrialization that emphasized manpower, of which China had plenty, instead of machinery and industrial plant, of which China had little.

Thus was born the Great Leap Forward in 1958, a revolutionary campaign to rapidly transform China from an agrarian economy into an industrial giant. Unfortunately for the Chinese, Chairman Mao’s understanding of economics turned out to be faulty, and his expectations turned out to be wildly unrealistic. Mao wanted to increase steel production – a key benchmark of industrialization. However, he and his acolytes did not want to wait for the development of infrastructure such as steel plants, or for the time it would take to train a skilled workforce. Instead, they came up with a seriously misguided plan to get China’s masses into DIY steel manufacture.

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