------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (July 2007)
Stephen F. Williams, _Liberal Reform in an Illiberal Regime: The
Creation of Private Property in Russia, 1906-1915_. Stanford, CA:
Hoover Institution Press, 2006. xiv + 320 pp. $15 (paperback), ISBN:
0-8179-4722-1.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Steven Nafziger, Department of Economics,
Williams College.
_Liberal Reform in an Illiberal Regime_, by Stephen F. Williams, is
an interesting, interdisciplinary study of one of the largest
property rights reforms in European history -- the famed Stolypin
reforms of late-Tsarist Russia. Initiated in the wake of the first
Russian revolution of 1905-6, the Stolypin reforms (named for their
guiding personality and then presiding Prime Minister, Petr Stolypin)
aimed to help alleviate the backwardness and inefficiency of peasant
agriculture through land titling and the consolidation of scattered
plots into unified farms. Williams, a retired Federal Appeals court
judge (DC Circuit) and former law professor at the University of
Colorado, offers an interpretation of the reforms that draws heavily
on political science, law and economics, and the economics of
institutions.
_Liberal Reform_ argues that the measures taken under Stolypin failed
to truly modernize Russia's economy because they were undertaken by a
fundamentally _illiberal_ regime that did not guarantee the
enforcement of property rights or allow markets (especially in land)
to freely function. Broadly comparative, especially to property
rights issues in the modern developing world, the book implicitly and
explicitly compares the Stolypin reforms under Tsar Nicholas II to
recent reform efforts (or the lack thereof) in Russia under Vladimir
Putin. As such, Williams's analysis will appeal to scholars
interested in property rights, land reforms, and the political
implications of both, especially in authoritarian states. However,
economic historians with an interest in Russian development are
unlikely to be persuaded by the structure of the argument or the
evidence brought to bear.
After 1905, Stolypin and his allies in the administration and the
Duma passed a series of decrees and statutes aimed at transforming
the prevailing regime of peasant property rights, thereby improving
production incentives and the allocation of resources. This effort
was motivated by the perceived inefficiencies of open-field
agriculture and the communal organization of rural society. Since the
reforms of the 1860s, which emancipated the peasants and endowed them
with collective property rights (typically at the village level),
Russian peasant agriculture appeared increasingly backward in
comparison to the best practices in Western Europe and North America.
The reforms were meant to spark technological modernization by
enabling peasant households to shift from communal property rights
and practices towards individualized farming and land tenure. This
meant the establishment of individual title to land that was
previously under collective community control and consolidations of
scattered, open-field holdings into unified farms. The reforms set
forth administrative and financial support for the millions of
farmers and thousands of entire villages that undertook one of a menu
of possible changes: from full enclosures of villages under
individualized titles, to exchanges of intermingled fields among
neighboring villages, to the resettlement of interested households in
Siberia.[1] Alongside these changes in land-holdings and property
rights, the reforms ended collective responsibility for tax and land
obligations, forgave arrears on existing obligations, and officially
did away with many other juridical limitations on peasant civil
rights.
Given the epic scale of the reforms, historians have long argued over
whether Stolypin's efforts mattered (or would have, if not for World
War I and the Bolsheviks) for Russian economic development. To
Alexander Gerschenkron (1965), establishing private property rights
and ending the commune's hold on peasant initiative enabled Tsarist
Russia's belated turn towards modern economic growth.[2] In contrast,
Williams argues that any productivity benefits, as well as peasant
"freedoms" (Chapter 1) more generally, were undermined and ultimately
failed to take root because they were enacted by a non-democratic,
non-liberal state. He builds his study around a thematic question: is
it possible for fundamental grass-roots reforms (enabling "freedom"
and "liberal democracy" in his view) to take place under a
centralized and "illiberal" regime such as Tsarist Russia. Williams
eventually answers this potentially interesting query, recently
investigated by economists such as Acemoglu and Robinson (2006), in
the negative, but he bases his conclusions on theoretical musings and
secondary sources, rather than any detailed analysis of available
documents or official statistics.
After introducing the reforms and instrumental concepts such as
"liberalism" in Chapter 1, Williams describes the agricultural and
social context of pre-1905 Russia in Chapters 2 and 3. Overall, his
review of a vast literature is well-done, but problems do emerge here
that spill over the rest of the study. In several places, the book
exhibits small but significant lapses when either describing
historical developments or applying economic theory to explain them.
For example, in Chapter 3 (pp. 104-06), a puzzling discussion of the
positive correlation between grain and land prices puts much of the
blame for high land prices on the Peasant Land Bank -- a fairly
limited institution that definitely did not have market power when it
came to credit or land. Moreover, although Williams acknowledges that
practices of collective fiscal responsibility and land management
were fairly flexible, he eventually accepts Gerschenkron's
association of the commune with agricultural backwardness and labor
immobility. In contrast, recent studies (see Nafziger, 2006) have
drawn on archival and statistical evidence to question these
interpretations by econometrically testing for linkages between
communal practices and economic inefficiencies. Finally, Williams
refrains from discussing or analyzing his sources -- both secondary
and primary -- in much depth. This allows him to either brush aside
contradictory evidence or to qualify his conclusions to such a degree
that the argument of the book becomes difficult to maintain and,
eventually, to prove.
In Chapter 4, Williams describes the political context of the efforts
by Stolypin and his supporters to enact property rights reforms. This
chapter usefully outlines the views of the main political groups at
the time (the nobility, the various parties of the left, the liberal
Kadets, etc.) regarding land reforms, but these synopses exist in
something of a vacuum, without much historical context to help the
reader. Moreover, this chapter, along with Chapter 1, focuses almost
exclusively on politics at the highest levels, often through the
allusions to the personality and decisions of Stolypin, himself. The
resulting depiction of events is rife with many quasi-counterfactual
statements regarding what the reformers might have done differently,
but little documentary evidence is analyzed beyond public speeches
and memoirs to explain exactly how and why various choices were made.
This birds-eye focus on the mechanics of reform continues in Chapter
5, where Williams describes the particulars of the statutes and
decrees and the take-up of different options by peasants and
villages. The account is complemented by data at the provincial
level, but the micro-level process of the reform process is left as a
black box. In Chapter 6, which returns to the issues of reform
design, the exclusive focus on legislation and decrees contrasts
sharply with Pallot's (1999) impressive study of the enactment of the
Stolypin reforms. In her work, Pallot puts the emphasis squarely on
how peasants encountered the reform through their interaction with
surveyors, administrators, and each other. Unlike Williams, she views
the failures of the Stolypin reforms to revolutionize rural society
and economy as the outcome of peasants rationally choosing to retain
communal practices and to resist certain aspects of the reforms. At
the end of the day, this reviewer is much more convinced by Pallot's
careful study of the reform process based on archival and primary
evidence, than by Williams's analysis.
In Chapter 7, Williams concludes by studying the effects of the
reforms, both immediate and long-term. Likening the Stolypin reforms
to the English enclosure movement (although misinterpreting the state
of the literature regarding productivity benefits of enclosure),
Williams jumps from noting the lack of evidence on _positive_
productivity gains to asserting that the reforms must have not gone
far enough in liberalizing land markets or privatizing land
holdings.[3] Besides this logical leap, Williams puzzlingly points to
state support of the cooperative movement in the 1900s and 1910s as
additional evidence that the regime was not really committed to
becoming a liberal capitalist democracy (really now?). This leads him
to conclude that although the intent of the reforms was very much
"liberal" (p. 250), the "illiberalism" of the Tsarist state
undermined Stolypin's laudatory goals. The book ends with a
consideration of property rights and liberal reforms in Putin's
Russia that is overly brief and highly conjectural. As a result, the
book ends rather abruptly, without adequately summarizing what the
reader should take away.
Overall, _Liberal Reform in an Illiberal Regime_ is a significant
contribution to our understanding of a critical moment in Russian
economic and social history. Stephen Williams offers an impressive
distillation of a large amount of secondary literature on the
Stolypin reforms. He sheds deserved attention on the political
context of what ended up being the last chance for the Tsarist regime
to effect modernization in rural Russia before the October
Revolution. Unfortunately, the limited use of original sources,
several conceptual difficulties arising from not delving deep enough
into the reforms' context or process, and the polemical undertones of
the study (published by Hoover Press) detract from this book's
usefulness as either an introduction to the Stolypin reforms or as a
specialized study of the political implications of enclosing and
privatizing communal land-holdings.
Notes:
1. The "take-up" of the reforms did involve millions of households
and a large number of villages. However, these totals still only
included a minority of the vast Russian peasant population. Pallot
(1999, pp. 190-192) and Williams (2006, Chapter 5) review the
relevant numbers. 2. This "Gerscheknronian" view has recently been
questioned by Gregory (1994) and Nafziger (2006), based on aggregate
and micro-evidence, respectively. 3. Surprisingly, Williams does not
mention the only work this reviewer is aware of which "tests" for
positive agricultural productivity effects of the Stolpyin reforms.
The empirical work in Toumanoff (1984) is limited by significant
identification problems, but it could have usefully served as a
starting point for Williams's research.
References:
Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson. _Economic Origins of
Dictatorship and Democracy_. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2006.
Alexander Gerschenkron. "Agrarian Policies and Industrialization,
Russia 1861-1917." _The Cambridge Economic History of Europe_. Vol.
VI, Part II. Ed. H. J. Habakkuk and M. Postan. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1965. 706-800.
Paul R. Gregory. _Before Command: An Economic History of Russia from
Emancipation to the First Five-Year Plan_. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1994.
Steven Nafziger. "Communal Institutions, Resource Allocation, and
Russian Economic Development: 1861-1905." Ph.D. dissertation, Yale
University. 2006.
Judith Pallot. _Land Reform in Russia 1906-1917: Peasant Responses to
Stolypin's Project of Rural Transformation_. Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1999.
Peter Toumanoff. "Some Effects of Land Tenure Reforms on Russian
Agricultural Productivity, 1901-1913." _Economic Development and
Cultural Change_ 32, 4 (1984): 861-72.
Steven Nafziger is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Williams
College. His research focuses on institutions and economic
development in Imperial Russia before 1917.
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