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A kolkhoz ( IPA: ), plural kolkhozy, was a form of collective farming in the Soviet Union that existed along with state farms (sovkhoz). The word is a contraction of коллекти́вное хозя́йство, or "collective household." The latter term is usually translated "collective farm."

In a kolkhoz, a member, called "kolkhoznik" (колхо́зник, fem. колхо́зница), was paid a share of the farm's product and profit according to the number of workdays (Russian: трудоде́нь; transliteration: trudoden), while a sovkhoz employed salaried workers. Also members of kolkhozy were allowed to hold one acre of private land and a couple of animals. Many Soviet peasants liked the kolkhozy the most because the private plots were often where they got the majority of their income.

See collectivisation in the USSR and agriculture of the Soviet Union for general discussion of Soviet agriculture and its history and efficiency.

Soviet phraseology | Agricultural labor | Economy of the Soviet Union | Russian loanwords

Kolchoz | Kolchos | Kolhoos | Kolĥozo | کلخوز | Kolkhoze | Колхоз | קולחוז | Kolūkis | Kolhoz | Kolchoz | コルホーズ | Kołchoz | Kolkoz | Colhoz | Колхоз | Kolchos

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Kolkhoz".

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