JZD Slušovice was a socialist miracle in Czechoslovakia. But not in the way you think. Starting from humble origins, Slušovice operated largely autonomously - growing to something like another country within the country.
A simple agricultural cooperative that produced industrial goods, pesticides and - interestingly enough, computers? Today's subject is a bit of a weird one. In this video, we look at a strange and unique community in Communist-run Czechoslovakia.
## Beginnings In 1948, the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia seized power, establishing the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. It toppled what was then the last liberal democracy in Europe and solidified the Soviet Bloc. The Communists would rule for over forty years thereafter.
New rules passed in wake of the takeover prohibited money-making activities within the country. Various parts of the economy like the finance and transportation systems were nationalized. And of course, there were purges.
In line with Stalinist doctrine, the government created these massive, state-owned collective farms. These consolidated what had previously been a multitude of small, privately owned farms. These were called "Unified Agricultural Cooperatives" or JZD in Czech ("Jednotné zemědělské družstvo") ## The JZDs The Party had wanted these JZDs since even before the war.
In July 1948, laws were passed to create cooperatives in the worker, artisan, and farmer sectors. In 1949, private farmers were pressured to give up their land to the JZDs. At first, this was voluntary.
Later in 1950, it was not. State enterprises would eventually come to own 95% of Czechoslovakia's agricultural land. The overall goal for these Czechoslovakian cooperatives was to fulfill the tasks of the State Plan.
But in how to achieve those tasks, the cooperatives had a lot of autonomy. They are allowed to manage their own resources and even set wages for their workers. But throughout the 1950s, the cooperatives struggled with profitability.
For political reasons, food prices were kept lower than its production costs. This sapped the cooperatives' ability to generate financial surpluses for reinvestment. In response in the 1960s, the Party granted the cooperatives the ability to generate "sideline" revenues.
So if a cooperative fulfilled their task in the state plan, but is left with some extra production, then they can sell it. This sounds a lot like capitalism. So in order to keep some cooperatives from getting too deep into that humbug, restrictions were placed on the number of hours they can invest into "sideline" activities.
## Cuba JZD Slušovice was established in 1952 in the village of Slušovice. Slušovice - now in Czechia - is about 190 miles from Prague and right outside the town of Zlin. It first appeared in the written record in 1261, and was first elevated to the status of small town in 1375.
In 1869, the town's population was about 907 people and it hasn’t changed all that much since. As you might expect, JZD Slušovice’s tiny collective farm struggled to produce enough goods. The area's soils are not particularly fertile.
The workforce moved to neighboring cities for higher pay. And the managers were former private landowners who did not work very well together. The JZD approached bankruptcy.
Then in 1963, Frantisek Cuba (pronounced more like Chuba) became chairman of the agricultural cooperative at just 27 years old. Cuba was born in 1936 in the nearby city of Březová - the son of a farmer. His father later became the head of that city’s collective, giving the younger Cuba valuable insight into how they worked.
After graduating from the University of Agriculture in Prague, he joined the Communist Party where he worked in the Czech Commission for Scientific, Technical and Investment Development. Upon arriving, he appropriated the village's only moped and rode it around the village for inspections. It was in a sorry shape indeed.
Cuba had rare entrepreneurial vision and ambition. The JZD's sales in 1962 were about 1. 3 million Czech koruna or crowns.
He set a lofty goal to grow that to 100 million crowns. ## Work Ethic In order to achieve this, Cuba needed to find ways to motivate people within the confines of the socialist system. The first thing to do was to get the people working - without the benefit of being able to pay higher wages.
But as he would say later in life: > "Human nature is such that people inherently don't want to work and want to have a good life. Therefore, they must be compelled to work by activation factors" So he promptly announced and enforced three new rules. First, people who do not show up to their workstation on time will not get paid for the day.
Second, people cannot drink during working hours. If they did, then they received a fine. And third, if you want to leave the cooperative, you can.
But if you leave, you cannot return. Many people indeed did leave because of these rules. So on Christmas 1963, Cuba and a gatekeeper had to do many farm tasks themselves, taking care of the cows.
So Cuba realized that he needed to do more than just crack a whip. Following the work of the famous Czech shoe entrepreneur Tomas Bata, he added a "sugar". He got people involved in the work on the JZD.
Problem solvers got promotions. Small rewards were given daily. And people were divided into small groups to rouse up competitive spirit.
And famously, anyone who worked at the JZD for ten years got pensions. Over time, he came up with and classified six activation factors - fear, existential, material interest, moral appreciation, self-actualization, and the factor of joy from work. These motivation systems sound like business school mumbo-jumbo, but back in socialist Czechoslovakia, these motivations were valuable.
I know this personally. The more that you put into your fields, the more you are likely to get out of it. JZD Slušovice had no access to farming machines or fertilizers, but through hard work they were able to generate the agricultural surpluses to move them forward.
## Diversification By the end of the 1960s, JZD Slušovice had largely maximized its agricultural production. Yields in grain and cow milk were as high as they could get them. And JZD Slušovice had absorbed neighboring lands through mergers with neighboring JZDs - growing from a mere 106 hectares in 1952 to 6,000 hectares spanning 17 other villages in the 1970s.
At this point, Cuba fatefully decided to steer the JZD beyond simple agricultural work - despite being explicitly forbidden to do so. He looked for gaps in the Czechoslovakian markets and started projects to produce those items. The JZD would organize meetings where they invited experts and professors to speak to them about new trends.
If the team decided a product can be made to take advantage of these trends, they would set up a new department to do so. The cooperative bought products in neighboring markets. For instance, raw potatoes from the Czech highlands or Slovakia.
Which Slušovice then professionally peeled and resold to private individuals, schools, or cafeterias. The peels were not thrown away but re-routed to the cattle for fodder. As JZD Slušovice expanded, Cuba organized these projects into profit centers headed up by regional leaders with a lot of autonomy.
He believed that only a small percentage of people had the capability to manage hundreds of people. To find those individuals, JZD Slušovice took on people that others would not take, including many party dissidents. A bad political background did not matter.
The only thing that mattered was whether they could pass the internal training and do the work. ## Protectors As I mentioned, Czechoslovakian laws prevented the JZDs from wandering too deeply in economic activities other than agriculture. Newspapers pondering Slušovice's "excessive capitalism" had started to appear as early as 1964.
They noted with consternation that people there might work for up to ten hours each day. So what gives? How did the JZD avoid prosecution for all this?
To justify its diversification, Cuba and other JZD officials constantly argued the unsuitable qualities of Slušovice's soil. In an 1988 article, the cooperative's CFO explained: > The tradition of innovation has its roots in the poverty of the farmers here . .
. The soil is not fertile and farmers always had difficulties making ends meet, so there have always been small businesses on the side They sought out loopholes. In a later interview, Cuba said that they studied the rules closely and found that it allowed them to do many of the things they were doing.
For instance, the use of a privately owned company to acquire foreign exchange. But of course, Slušovice benefitted from links to high ranking individuals in the Communist Party with regional ties, the most notable being the reformist Prime Minister Lubomír Štrougal. The JZD also had powerful enemies.
These include Gustav Husak, First Secretary of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia and later president. Husak kept an eye on Slušovice. Whenever newspapers reported on the JZD's achievements, he would underline them in red and ask to find out who funded them.
Upon finding that it was not the government, he would get angry. But Štrougal's protection remained. Cuba also had ties to the Czechoslovak secret police or StB, which helped facilitate JZD Slušovice's imports of foreign technologies or expertise - for instance, cattle embryos or chips from the West - without paying excessive amounts of money.
It is not hard to imagine possible instances of corruption. Ultimately, what kept the whole organization from being prosecuted and taken apart was its own success - validated by attention from the Soviet Union and even capitalist countries. Its exploding growth became a ray of light in an otherwise dour economy.
## Seeming Prosperity At its peak in the late 1980s, JZD Slušovice would make and sell yogurt, pesticides, tires, cattle, and more. Slušovice also had its own bank network, with 25 branches. They operated their own department stores that sold foreign goods, potato chips and coke.
You could buy things in that store using a charge card. They even ran their own football team. As well as a charter airline called Air Moravia with six aircraft.
They operated a big construction company that built resort projects in Vietnam. The cooperative regularly held horse races - some of which attracted up to 55,000 people. There were also discos and parties for the youths to enjoy.
These in addition to the unique items sold there made Slušovice a bit of a tourist attraction. The 1980s saw Slušovice gain increased attention in the regional and even foreign media. Reformists in agreement with the reforms initiated in the Soviet Union by Mikhail Gorbachev saw JZD Slušovice as an example to be admired and followed.
Visitors to the JZD often marveled at what they saw. But while critics might admire the results, they often pointed out issues with how those results were being achieved. And there indeed can be issues found with how Slušovice ran things.
Most notably, the way it worked people. Remember what they wrote about the 10 hour days. Slušovice's managers tied their workers' compensation to their output.
In 1987, a tractor driver can earn anywhere from 2,300 to 5,200 crowns - depending on their performance. Work more, earn more, one might say. But the country was not necessarily in the mood to accept such things.
Add to all that, the constant work evaluations and you can start to see why critics might call JZD Slušovice a sweatshop. ## Computers One of JZD Slušovice's most famous products was their own line of personal computers. Cuba first launched the project in 1982 to replace the poorly performing MINSK 22 computer they had been using since the early 1970s.
Cuba would be a big proponent of microelectronics and automation. No one else was working on computers in Czechoslovakia. So he went to the Slovakian academy of sciences and hired three programmers - offering them double the pay and better working conditions.
The first computers were used to help dose vegetables, monitor milk production, and other simple automated tasks. Several organizations heard about this new computer and came to Slušovice to ask for their own. Cuba and his team at first hesitated at selling the TNS - short for Terminal Network System, but later retroactively renamed to the Ten Náš Systém or "that system of ours".
TNS PCs were copies of 8-bit PCs found in the West. It was introduced with pride in 1982 at an agricultural exposition, where it received a prize. These computers were later sold to schools for youth education.
By the 1980s the West was already moving on to 16-bit PCs - powered by powerful chips like the Motorola 68000. These required semiconductor manufacturing techniques beyond what was available in the COMECON countries, so JZD Slušovice had to import these more advanced chips from abroad. Nevertheless, the cooperative had plenty of foreign exchange from its agriculture and fertilizer businesses.
The expanding line of TNS computers drove a lot of sales in the second half of 1980s in the wake of the Soviet Union's economic restructuring - perestroika. ## Downfall In these years, JZD Slušovice grew to be the largest that it ever was. In 1989, it generated 7 billion crowns in revenue.
That same year, the people rose up against the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia in what is now remembered as the Velvet Revolution. It ended the Party's 41 years of rule and ushered in a rapid transition to a market economy. JZD Slušovice could not remain the way it was.
The new regime was not particularly friendly to them. New president Vaclav Havel had called out Slušovice by name for being a tentacled mafia growing throughout and controlling the Czech food industry. Cuba resigned in 1990 soon after these speeches.
He was later charged with the crime of creating private bank accounts for the cooperative's members - violating the regulations of the Czechoslovak State Bank but was acquitted in 2000. Much of the cooperative's assets were spun off into over a hundred companies - most of whom fell into bankruptcy. The main organization turned into a corporation as well, interestingly retaining the "JZD" in their name.
But that company ended up falling into bankruptcy as well. Their products were no longer competitive now that cheap imports were available. And large fines had been levied for illegal export of farm goods.
## Conclusion After retiring, Cuba ran for office and became a Senator in the Czech Republic - winning by a very high margin thanks to nostalgia for the good old days. During his tenure, he endorsed the creation of a 2 billion crown industrial zone in Holesov, one of the largest in Czechia. Originally built for a car factory, it unfortunately did not turn out the way it should have.
By then, he was well over 70 years old. Ill health caused him to scale down his activities. He passed away in 2019 at the age of 83.
Today JZD Slušovice is long gone. And unlike other ruins, there remains little to remember it by. Maybe a horse racing track in an old town.
Socialist miracle, tentacled mafia, electronics sweatshop, or archaic symbol of its time. Whatever it had been, it was definitely one of a kind.