Shturmovshchina

Shturmovshchina (last-minute rush, storming; Russian: штурмовщина) was a common Soviet work practice of frantic and overtime work at the end of a planning period in order to fulfill the planned production target. The practice usually gave rise to products of poor quality at the end of a planning cycle.[1] The Russian word shturm (штурм, from the German Sturm) means "storm (of a bastion), an assault".

The cycle of shturmovshchina, associated with the tradition of monthly targets (on which bonuses and managers' positions depend), is described as follows. Despite the planned economy, required materials and tools were not always available on time, and the work could go slowly, or workers might have been reassigned to do something else, with the expectation that the job would be done when the materials arrive. However, when the end of a month comes closer, the management becomes nervous, substitute materials and improvised tools are used, the work goes into overtime and into overdrive. All this abruptly ends by the end of the month. At the beginning of the next month the workers slacken to recover from the previous storm, thereby continuing the next cycle.[2]

The process is known to consist of three stages:

See also

References

  1. "RUSSIA: Depression at Home"Time Magazine June 06, 1955 (access 23 June 2008)
  2. Tinkering With Shturmovshchina (access 26 July 2011)
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