Dbq Great Leap Forward

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The end of World War II triggered the rise in the dual superpowers of the USSR and United States. On the pro-America side sat ambitious colonial states, such as the United Kingdom and France, who together controlled much of the world. However, these two could not stand behind a message of spreading democracy and stopping imperialism if they were actively subjugating people. So, they began releasing some of their overseas possessions, though not always without conflict. At the same time, Chinese Communists had nearly defeated the pro-Western Nationalists in a decades-long Civil War and were beginning to set up institutions throughout the ravaged nation. Both were then poised with the question of how they would turn themselves from forgotten, …show more content…

India and China accepted and implemented similar economic policies, choosing to use targeted growth plans and investing heavily in manufacturing and industry. Specifically considering what both states termed “Five Year Plans”, each nation’s government set goals for development in particular areas and used economic intervention to meet these objectives. In China, longtime Dictator Mao Zedong established the “Great Leap Forward” as a targeted industrial and agricultural development, with an image of workers laboring throughout the night as a demonstration of the ambitious goals. Great Leap Forward Doc. 1) The Chinese government identified weaknesses in the economy, especially steel production. It then used its power to put more workers into metal works, an example of direct intervention in the economy. The “Great Leap Forward” eventually failed, but it demonstrates the Chinese ideology that economic interventionism is a useful tool for growth. In India, a similar approach was adopted. According to a chart describing Indian economic planning, the government set particular growth targets for each

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