[lbo-talk]: Poor, impoverished Soviet workers, o how they suffered

Chris Doss itschris13 at hotmail.com
Thu Feb 5 03:11:10 PST 2004


I referred this issue to my friend Sasha, who has the advantage of having actually been in the Soviet working class, and this is what he said:


>From : Kondorsky Alexander <kondorsky at yandex.ru>
Hi, Chris

You are right: Your opponents are again mistaken! Working class in the USSR was quite a privileged stratum of the population. The average wage of a factory worker was about 230-250 rubles per month plus they received quarterly bonuses, the so-called "progressivka" (bonus for overfulfillment of the plan) and "vysluga let" (regular extra pay for long service). All combined, a factory worker with over 5 years of service made around 400 rubles per month. Moreover, workers enjoyed huge discounts and even free passes to health resorts, free passes to vacation resorts for their children, etc. However, to be honest, low skilled labor was not paid that well. Cleaners, for example, made around 100 rubles per month, but these were utterly lazy people, mostly alcoholics. For comparison, a university graduate was paid 115 rubles per month and his best prospect was to rise to around 300 rubles per month toward pension. Of course, professors and members of the USSR Academy of Sciences were paid well, but they were few. Doctors and teachers were paid around 150 rubles per month. Furthermore, being a factory worker was a privelege in itself. "I'm a worker" was always pronounced with pride, while "intelligentsia" was often called "spoilt brat".

Regards

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