'Prodnalog' ('Prod'ovolstvenniy 'nalog') (''Продналог'', '''прод'овольственный 'налог''' in
Russian, or food
tax) was a fixed food tax in
Soviet Russia, introduced by the
Decree of the
All-Russian Central Executive Committee on
March 21,
1921 instead of
prodrazvyorstka.
The transition to prodnalog was the first act of the
New Economic Policy and a necessary incentive for raising the
Soviet agriculture. The
peasants knew in advance how much produce they would have to surrender to the state. The
rate of prodnalog was much smaller than that of prodrazvyorstka. For comparison, in
1920-
1921 the peasants surrendered to the state 367 million
poods (6,010,000
metric tons) of
cereals through prodrazvyorstka, as opposed to 240 million poods (3,930,000 metric tons) in 1921-
1922 through prodnalog.
During the first year of introduction of prodnalog, a significant amount of
bread and other products remained at peasant
households' disposal, which provided an incentive for peasants to develop their own household
economy, widen the sowing areas, increase the total number of
livestock and
productivity of
crops. The rate of prodnalog on each kind of agricultural product was determined depending on local conditions and prosperity of a given peasant household. The Soviet state adhered to a policy of
progressive taxation; the highest rate of prodnalog had to be paid by the
kulak households.
In March-April of 1921, a number of
Soviet Decrees introduced a natural tax on bread,
potato, oilseeds,
eggs,
dairy products,
wool,
hides,
flax and
hemp linen,
tobacco etc. The collection of agricultural goods in excess of prodnalog, if necessary, was intended to be made on a
barter basis by giving peasants manufactured goods. In order to accelerate the expansion of
commodity circulation, create necessary conditions for developing
farming and
industry and speed up the productive forces of the country, the government encouraged small-scale production all over the
Soviet Russia. The introduction of prodnalog revived the trade and created a different kind of relations between the city and the village.
By the decision of the
12th Congress of the
RCP(b) (April,
1923), prodnalog and other taxes in the rural areas were exchanged for a universal direct agricultural tax (decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee and
Sovnarkom on
May 10, 1923). The latter would be collected in
monetary form starting in
1924, with the establishment of
hard currency in the
USSR.