Jump to content

Great Chinese Famine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Great Famine of China)

Great Chinese Famine
三年大饥荒
CountryChina
LocationHalf of the country. Death rate were highest in Anhui (18% dead), Chongqing (15%), Sichuan (13%), Guizhou (11%) and Hunan (8%).[1]
Period1959–1961
Total deaths15–55 million
TheoryResult of the Great Leap Forward, people's commune, Four Pests campaign and other factors.
ConsequencesTermination of the Great Leap Forward campaign

The Great Chinese Famine (Chinese: 三年大饥荒; lit. 'three years of great famine') was a famine that occurred between 1959 and 1961 in the People's Republic of China (PRC).[2][3][4][5][6] Some scholars have also included the years 1958 or 1962.[7][8][9][10] It is widely regarded as the deadliest famine and one of the greatest man-made disasters in human history, with an estimated death toll due to starvation that ranges in the tens of millions (15 to 55 million).[note 1] The most stricken provinces were Anhui (18% dead), Chongqing (15%), Sichuan (13%), Guizhou (11%) and Hunan (8%).[1]

The major contributing factors in the famine were the policies of the Great Leap Forward (1958 to 1962) and people's communes, launched by Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party Mao Zedong, such as inefficient distribution of food within the nation's planned economy; requiring the use of poor agricultural techniques; the Four Pests campaign that reduced sparrow populations (which disrupted the ecosystem); over-reporting of grain production; and ordering millions of farmers to switch to iron and steel production.[4][6][8][15][17][18] During the Seven Thousand Cadres Conference in early 1962, Liu Shaoqi, then President of China, formally attributed 30% of the famine to natural disasters and 70% to man-made errors ("三分天灾, 七分人祸").[8][19][20] After the launch of Reforms and Opening Up, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) officially stated in June 1981 that the famine was mainly due to the mistakes of the Great Leap Forward as well as the Anti-Rightist Campaign, in addition to some natural disasters and the Sino-Soviet split.[2][3]

Terminology

[edit]

Aside from the "Three Years of Great Famine" (三年大饥荒), there are two names for the famine that have been used by the Chinese government. Initially, the usual name was "Three Years of Natural Disasters" (三年自然灾害). In June 1981, this was changed to "Three Years of Difficulty" (三年困难时期), thus no longer blaming nature alone for the famine.[2][3][21][22]

Extent of the famine

[edit]

Production drop

[edit]

Policy changes affecting how farming was organized coincided with droughts and floods. Weather had been relatively mild for much of the 1950s, but became particularly bad by 1959, driving down crop yields. As a result, year-over-year grain production fell dramatically.[23] The harvest was down by 15% in 1959 compared to 1958, and by 1960, it was at 70% of its 1958 level.[24] Specifically, according to China's governmental data, crop production decreased from 200 million tons (or 400 billion jin) in 1958 to 170 million tons (or 340 billion jin) in 1959, and to 143.5 million tons (or 287 billion jin) in 1960.[25]

Death toll

[edit]

The excess mortality associated with the famine has been estimated by former CCP officials and international experts, with most giving a number in the range of 15–55 million deaths. The Maoist author Gao Mobo claims that anti-communist writers prefer to stretch the death toll number as high as possible while those sympathetic to the Chinese Communist Revolution prefer to see the number as low as possible.[26] Mao Zedong himself suggested, in a discussion with Field Marshal Montgomery in Autumn 1961, that "unnatural deaths" exceeded 5 million in 1960–1961, according to a declassified CIA report.[27]

Estimates of mortality during the Great Chinese Famine
Deaths (in millions) Researchers Year Comments
55 Yu Xiguang (余习广) 2015 Yu is an independent Chinese historian and a former instructor at the Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party, estimated that 55 million people died due to the famine.[28][29][30][31] His conclusion was based on two decades of archival research.[29]
30–60 Jasper Becker 1996 Becker, a British journalist and author of Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine, wrote that most estimates of the famine death toll range from 30 to 60 million.[32][33]
43 Frank Dikötter 2010 Dikötter, Chair Professor of Humanities at the University of Hong Kong and the author of Mao's Great Famine, estimated that at least 45 million people died from starvation, overwork and state violence during the Great Leap Forward, claiming his findings to be based on access to recently opened local and provincial party archives.[34][35] His study also stressed that state violence exacerbated the death toll. Dikötter claimed that at least 2.5 million of the victims were beaten or tortured to death.[36] His approach to the documents, as well as his claim to be the first author to use them, however, have been questioned by some other scholars.[37] Reviewing Mao's Great Famine, historian Cormac Ó Gráda wrote that "MGF is full of numbers but there are few tables and no graphs. [....] On page after page of MGF, numbers [...] are produced with no discussion of their reliability or provenance: all that seems to matter is that they are 'big'."[38] Dikötter's high death toll estimate has also been criticized by sociologist Andrew G. Walder as unsupported by age-specific population data[39] and by historian Anthony Garnaut who writes that Dikötter's sampling techniques fall short of academic best practices.[40]
43 Chen Yizi (陈一谘) 1994 Chen, a former senior Chinese official and a top advisor to former CCP General Secretary Zhao Ziyang, stated that 43 million people died due to the famine.[41][42] Economist Carl Riskin wrote that "Chen Yizi's methods of estimation are unknown" because they are unpublished.[43]
40 Liao Gailong (廖盖隆) 2019 Liao, former Vice Director of the History Research Unit of the CCP, reported 40 million "unnatural" deaths due to the famine.[44][45]
36 Mao Yushi 2014 Mao, a Chinese economist and winner of the 2012 Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty, put the death toll at 36 million.[46]
36 Yang Jisheng 2012 Yang, Xinhua News Agency senior journalist and author of Tombstone: The Great Chinese Famine, 1958–1962, concluded there were 36 million deaths due to starvation, while another 40 million others failed to be born, so that "China's total population loss during the Great Famine then comes to 76 million."[13][47] In response, historian Cormac Ó Gráda wrote that the results of a retrospective fertility survey "make the case for a total [death toll] much lower—perhaps ten million lower—than that proposed by Yang".[48]
32.5 Cao Shuji (曹树基) 2005 Cao, Distinguished Professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, estimated the death toll at 32.5 million.[49][50][51][38]
30 Vaclav Smil 1999 Smil, a Czech-Canadian scientist and policy analyst, estimated 30 million deaths.[52]
30 Judith Banister 1987 Banister, Director of Global Demographics at the Conference Board,[53] estimated 30 million excess deaths from 1958 to 1961.[54]
23 Peng Xizhe (彭希哲) 1987 Peng, Professor of Population and Development at Fudan University, estimated 23 million excess deaths during the famine.[55]
22 Li Chengrui (李成瑞) 1998 Li, former Minister of the National Bureau of Statistics of China, estimated 22 million deaths.[49][56][57] His estimate was based on the 27 million deaths[8][58] estimated by Ansley J. Coale, and the 17 million deaths estimated by Jiang Zhenghua (蒋正华).[59][48]
18 Shujie Yao (姚书杰) 1999 Yao, the Chair of Economics at the Business School of Middlesex University, concluded that 18 million people died due to the famine.[60]
15 Chinese Academy of Sciences 1989 A research team at the Chinese Academy of Sciences concluded that at least 15 million people died of malnutrition.[44]
15.4 Daniel Houser, Barbara Sands, and Erte Xiao 2009 Houser, Sands, and Xiao, writing in the Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, estimated that China suffered 15.4 million excess deaths during the famine, of which 69% (or 10.6 million) were attributable to effects stemming from national policies.[61]
11 Utsa Patnaik 2007 Patnaik, a Marxian economist, estimated that 11 million deaths were caused due to the famine.[62][note 2]
3.66 Sun Jingxian (孙经先) 2016 Sun, a scholar in applied mathematics and professor at Shandong University, concluded an estimate of 3.66 million "anomalous deaths" during the famine years.[63]
2.6–4 Yang Songlin (杨松林) 2021 Yang, a researcher at the Development Research Center of the State Council in Henan, estimated that roughly 2.6–4 million people died during the famine years.[64]
Birth and death rates in China

Due to the lack of food and incentive to marry at that time, according to China's official statistics, China's population in 1961 was about 658,590,000, some 14,580,000 lower than in 1959.[65] The birth rate decreased from 2.922% (1958) to 2.086% (1960) and the death rate increased from 1.198% (1958) to 2.543% (1960), while the average numbers for 1962–1965 are about 4% and 1%, respectively.[65] The mortality in the birth and death rates both peaked in 1961 and began recovering rapidly after that, as shown on the chart of census data displayed here.[66][67] Lu Baoguo, a Xinhua reporter based in Xinyang, explained to Yang Jisheng why he never reported on his experience:

In the second half of 1959, I took a long-distance bus from Xinyang to Luoshan and Gushi. Out of the window, I saw one corpse after another in the ditches. On the bus, no one dared to mention the dead. In one county, Guangshan, one-third of the people had died. Although there were dead people everywhere, the local leaders enjoyed good meals and fine liquor. ... I had seen people who had told the truth being destroyed. Did I dare to write it?[68]

Yu Dehong, the secretary of a party official in Xinyang in 1959 and 1960, stated:

I went to one village and saw 100 corpses, then another village and another 100 corpses. No one paid attention to them. People said that dogs were eating the bodies. Not true, I said. The dogs had long ago been eaten by the people.[68]

Cannibalism

[edit]

There are widespread oral reports, though little official documentation, of human cannibalism being practiced in various forms as a result of the famine.[69][70][a][71] To survive, people had to resort to every possible means, from eating soil and poisons to stealing and killing and even to eating human flesh.[72][73] Yang Jisheng, a retired Chinese reporter, said "Parents ate their own kids. Kids ate their own parents. And we couldn't have imagined there was still grain in the warehouses. At the worst time, the government was still exporting grain."[74] Due to the scale of the famine, some have speculated that the resulting cannibalism could be described as "on a scale unprecedented in the history of the 20th century".[69][75]

Causes of the famine

[edit]

The Great Chinese Famine was caused by a combination of radical agricultural policies, social pressure, economic mismanagement, and natural disasters such as droughts and floods in farming regions.

Great Leap Forward

[edit]

The Chinese Communist Party introduced drastic changes in farming policy during the Great Leap Forward.[76][77]

People's communes

[edit]
The public dining hall (canteen) of a people's commune. The slogan on the wall reads "No need to pay to eat, focus on producing".

During the Great Leap Forward, farming was organized into people's communes and the cultivation of individual plots was forbidden. Previously farmers cultivated plots of land given to them by the government. The Great Leap Forward led to the agricultural economy being increasingly centrally planned. Regional Party leaders were given production quotas for the communes under their control. Their output was then appropriated by the state and distributed at its discretion. In 2008, former deputy editor of Yanhuang Chunqiu and author Yang Jisheng would summarize his perspective of the effect of the production targets as an inability for supply to be redirected to where it was most demanded:

In Xinyang, people starved at the doors of the grain warehouses. As they died, they shouted, "Communist Party, Chairman Mao, save us". If the granaries of Henan and Hebei had been opened, no one need have died. As people were dying in large numbers around them, officials did not think to save them. Their only concern was how to fulfill the delivery of grain.[68]

The degree to which people's communes lessened or worsened the famine is controversial. Each region dealt with the famine differently, and timelines of the famine are not uniform across China. One argument is that excessive eating took place in the mess halls, and that this directly led to a worsening of the famine. If excessive eating had not taken place, one scholar argued, "the worst of the Great Leap Famine could still have been avoided in mid-1959".[78] However, dire hunger did not set in to places like Da Fo village until 1960,[79] and the public dining hall participation rate was found not to be a meaningful cause of famine in Anhui and Jiangxi.[80] In Da Fo village, "food output did not decline in reality, but there was an astonishing loss of food availability associated with Maoist state appropriation".[81]

Agricultural techniques

[edit]

Along with collectivization, the central government decreed several changes in agricultural techniques that would be based on the ideas of later-discredited Soviet agronomist Trofim Lysenko.[82] One of these ideas was close planting, whereby the density of seedlings was at first tripled and then doubled again. The theory was that plants of the same species would not compete with each other. In natural cycles they did fully compete, which actually stunted growth and resulted in lower yields.

Another policy known as "deep plowing" was based on the ideas of Lysenko's colleague Terentiy Maltsev, who encouraged peasants across China to eschew normal plowing depths of 15–20 centimeters and instead plow deeply into the soil (1 to 2 Chinese feet or 33 to 66 cm). The deep plowing theory stated that the most fertile soil was deep in the earth, and plowing unusually deeply would allow extra-strong root growth. While deep plowing can increase yields in some contexts, the policy is generally considered to have hindered yields in China.

Four Pests campaign

[edit]
The Eurasian tree sparrow was the most notable target of the Four Pests campaign

In the Four Pests campaign, citizens were called upon to destroy mosquitoes, rats, flies, and sparrows. The mass eradication of the sparrows resulted in an increase of the population of crop-eating insects, which had no predators without the sparrows.

Illusion of superabundance

[edit]

Beginning in 1957, the Chinese Communist Party began to report excessive production of grain because of pressure from superiors. However, the actual production of grain throughout China was decreasing from 1957 to 1961. For example:

  • In Sichuan Province, even though the collected grain was decreasing from 1958 to 1961, the numbers reported to the central government kept increasing.[83]
  • In Gansu, the grain yield declined by 4,273,000 tonnes from 1957 to 1961.[9]

This series of events resulted in an "illusion of superabundance" (浮夸风), and the Party believed that they had an excess of grain. On the contrary, the crop yields were lower than average. For instance, Beijing believed that "in 1960 state granaries would have 50 billion jin of grain", when they actually contained 12.7 billion jin.[84] The effects of the illusion of superabundance were significant, leaving some historians to argue that it was the major cause of much of the starvation throughout China. Yang Dali argued that there were three main consequences from the illusion of superabundance:

First, it led to planners to shift lands from grain to economic crops, such as cotton, sugarcane, and beets, and divert huge numbers of agricultural laborers into industrial sectors, fueling state demand for procured grain from the countryside. Second, it prompted the Chinese leadership, especially Zhou Enlai, to speed up grain exports to secure more foreign currency to purchase capital goods needed for industrialization. Finally, the illusion of superabundance made the adoption of the commune mess halls seem rational at the time. All these changes, of course, contributed to the rapid exhaustion of grain supplies.[85]

Iron and steel production

[edit]
Backyard furnaces for producing steel

Iron and steel production was identified as a key requirement for economic advancement, and millions of peasants were ordered away from agricultural work to join the iron and steel production workforce. Much of the iron produced by the peasant population ended up being too weak to be used commercially.

More policies from the central government

[edit]

Economists Xin Meng, Nancy Qian and Pierre Yared showed that, much as Nobel laureate Amartya Sen had earlier claimed, aggregate production was sufficient for avoiding famine and that the famine was caused by over-procurement and poor distribution within the country. They show that unlike most other famines, there were surprisingly more deaths in places that produced more food per capita, explaining that the inflexibility in the centrally planned food procurement system explains at least half of the famine mortality.[86] Economic historians James Kung and Shuo Chen show that there was more over-procurement in places where politicians faced more competition.[87]

In addition, policies from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the central government, particularly the Three Red Banners and the Socialist Education Movement (SEM), proved to be ideologically detrimental to the worsening famine. The Three Red Banners of the CCP "sparked the fanaticism of 1958". The implementation of the Mass line, one of the three banners which told people to "go all out, aim high, and build socialism with greater, better, and more economical results", is cited in connection to the pressures officials felt to report a superabundance of grain.[88] The SEM, established in 1957, also led to the severity of the famine in various ways, including causing the "illusion of superabundance" (浮夸风). Once the exaggerations of crop yields from the Mass Line were reported, "no one dared to 'dash cold water'" on further reports.[89] The SEM also led to the establishment of conspiracy theories in which the peasants were believed to be pretending to be hungry in order to sabotage the state grain purchase.[90]

Power relations in local governments

[edit]
Mao Zedong on an airplane, 1957

Local governments had just as much, if not more, influence on the famine than did higher rungs of government. As the Great Leap Forward progressed, many provincial leaders began aligning themselves with Mao and higher Party leaders.[91] Local leaders were forced to choose between doing what was best for their community and guarding their reputation politically. Landlords began "denouncing any opposition as 'conservative rightism'", which is defined broadly as anything anti-communist.[92] In an environment of conspiracy theories directed against peasants, saving extra grain for a family to eat, espousing the belief that the Great Leap Forward should not be implemented, or merely not working hard enough were all seen as forms of "conservative rightism". Peasants became unable to speak openly on collectivization and state grain purchase. With a culture of fear and recrimination at both a local and official level, speaking and acting against the famine became a seemingly impossible task.[90]

The influence of local government in the famine can be seen in the comparison between the provinces of Anhui and Jiangxi. Anhui, having a radical pro-Mao government, was led by Zeng Xisheng who was "dictatorial", with ties to Mao.[93] Zeng firmly believed in the Great Leap Forward and tried to build relationships with higher officials rather than maintain local ties. Zeng proposed agricultural projects without consulting colleagues, which caused Anhui's agriculture to fail terribly. Zhang Kaifan, a party secretary and deputy-governor of the province, heard rumours of a famine breaking out in Anhui and disagreed with many of Zeng's policies. Zeng reported Zhang to Mao for such speculations. As a result, Mao labeled Zhang "a member of the 'Peng Dehuai anti-Party military clique'" and he was purged from the local party. Zeng was unable to report on the famine when it became an emergency situation, as this would prove his hypocrisy. For this he was described as a "blatant political radical who almost single-handedly damaged Anhui".[94]

Jiangxi encountered a situation almost opposite to that of Anhui. The leaders of Jiangxi publicly opposed some of the Great Leap programs, quietly made themselves unavailable, and even appeared to take a passive attitude towards the Maoist economy. As the leaders worked collaboratively among themselves, they also worked with the local population. By creating an environment in which the Great Leap Forward did not become fully implemented, the Jiangxi government "did their best to minimize damage". From these findings, scholars Manning and Wemheuer concluded that much of the severity of the famine was due to provincial leaders and their responsibility for their regions.[95]

Natural disasters

[edit]
Premier Zhou Enlai (center front) visited Luokou Yellow River Bridge during the 1958 Yellow River flood.[96]

In 1958, there was a notable regional flood of the Yellow River which affected part of Henan Province and Shandong Province.[96][97][98][99][100][101] It was reported as the most severe flood of the Yellow River since 1933.[100][101] In July 1958, the Yellow River flood affected 741,000 people in 1708 villages and inundated over 3.04 million mu (over half a million acres) of cultivated fields.[100] The largest torrent of the flood was smoothly directed into the Bohai Sea on 27 July, and the government declared a "victory over the flood" after sending a rescue team of over 2 million people.[96][100][102] The spokesperson of the Flood Prevention Center of Chinese government stated on 27 July 1958, that:

This year we defeated the large flood without division of torrents or breaks on dams, which secures the big harvest of the crops. This is yet another miracle created by the Chinese people.[100]

But the government was encouraged to report success and hide failures.[8] Because the 2 million farm laborers from the two provinces were ordered away from the fields to serve as a rescue team and were repairing the banks of the river instead of tending to their fields, "crops are neglected and much of the harvest is left to rot in the fields".[103] In contrast, historian Frank Dikötter has argued that most floods during the famine were not due to unusual weather, but to massive, poorly planned and poorly executed irrigation works which were part of the Great Leap Forward.[34] At this time, encouraged by Mao Zedong, people in China were building a large number of dams and thousands of kilometers of new irrigation canals in an attempt to move water from wet areas to areas that were experiencing drought.[104][105][106][107] Some of the works, such as the Red Flag Canal, made positive contributions to irrigation,[108][109] but researchers have pointed out that the massive hydraulic construction project led to many deaths due to starvation, epidemics, and drowning, which contributed to the famine.[106][107][110][111]

However, there have been disagreements on the significance of the drought and floods in causing the Great Famine.[4][14][15][112] According to published data from Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences (中国气象科学研究院), the drought in 1960 was not uncommon and its severity was only considered "mild" compared to that in other years—it was less serious than those in 1955, 1963, 1965–1967, and so on.[113] Moreover, Yang Jisheng, a senior journalist from Xinhua News Agency, reports that Xue Muqiao, then head of the National Statistics Bureau of China, said in 1958, "We give whatever figures the upper-level wants" to overstate natural disasters and relieve official responsibility for deaths due to starvation.[16] Yang claimed that he investigated other sources including a non-government archive of meteorological data from 350 weather stations across China, and the droughts, floods, and temperatures during 1958–1961 were within the typical patterns for China.[16] According to Basil Ashton:

Many foreign observers felt that these reports of weather-related crop failures were designed to cover up political factors that had led to poor agricultural performance. They also suspected that local officials tended to exaggerate such reports to obtain more state assistance or tax relief. Clearly, the weather contributed to the appalling drop in output, but it is impossible to assess to what extent.[8]

Despite these claims, other scholars have provided provincial-level demographic panel data which quantitatively proved that weather was also an important factor, particularly in those provinces which experienced excessively wet conditions.[114] According to economist Daniel Houser and others, 69% of the Famine was due to government policies while the rest (31%) was due to natural disasters.[114]

Aftermath

[edit]

Initial reactions and cover-ups

[edit]
Mao Zedong reading People's Daily (1961).

Local party leaders, for their part, conspired to cover up shortfalls and reassign blame in order to protect their own lives and positions.[77][115] Mao was kept unaware of some of the starvation of villagers in the rural areas who were suffering, as the birth rate began to plummet and deaths increased in 1958 and 1959.[85] In 1960, as gestures of solidarity, Mao ate no meat for seven months and Zhou Enlai cut his monthly grain consumption.[116]

In visits to Henan province in 1958, Mao observed what local officials claimed was increases in crop yield of one thousand to three thousand percent achieved, supposedly, in massive 24-hour pushes organized by the officials which they called "sputnik launches". But the numbers were faked, and so were the fields that Mao observed, which had been carefully prepared in advance of Mao's visit by local officials, who removed shoots of grain from various fields and carefully transplanted them into a field prepared especially for Mao, which appeared to be a bumper crop.[117]

The local officials became trapped by these sham demonstrations to Mao, and exhorted the peasants to reach unattainable goals, by "deep ploughing and close planting", among other techniques. This ended up making things much worse; the crop failed completely, leaving barren fields. No one was in a position to challenge Mao's ideas as incorrect, so peasants went to extreme lengths to keep up the charade; some grew seedlings in their bedding and coats and, after the seedlings quickly sprouted, "planted" them in fields—the bedding made the plants look high and healthy.[117]

The post office in Xinyang confiscated 1,200 outgoing letters begging for help.[74] Yang Jisheng, a retired Chinese reporter, said:

When the Guangshan County post office discovered an anonymous letter to Beijing disclosing starvation deaths, the public security bureau began hunting down the writer. One of the post office's counter staff recalled that a pockmarked woman had mailed the letter. The local public security bureau rounded up and interrogated every pockmarked woman without identifying the culprit. It was subsequently determined that the writer worked in Zhengzhou and had written the letter upon returning to her home village and seeing people starving to death.[74]

Like in the massive Soviet-created famine in Ukraine (the Holodomor), doctors were prohibited from listing "starvation" as a cause of death on death certificates.[118][page needed][119] This kind of deception was far from uncommon; a famous propaganda picture from the famine shows Chinese children from Shandong province ostensibly standing atop a field of wheat, so densely grown that it could apparently support their weight. In reality, they were standing on a bench concealed beneath the plants, and the "field" was again entirely composed of individually transplanted stalks.[77]

Response by Taiwan

[edit]

In response to learning about the famine, the government of Taiwan delivered food aid via parachute drops.[120][121]

Cultural Revolution

[edit]
Liu Shaoqi visiting North Korea (1963).

In April and May 1961, Liu Shaoqi, then President of the People's Republic of China, concluded after 44 days of field research in villages of Hunan that the causes of the famine were 30% natural disaster and 70% human error (三分天灾, 七分人祸).[19][20]

In January and February 1962, the "7000 Cadres Conference" took place in Beijing, which was attended by more than 7,000 CCP officials nationwide.[122][44][29] During the conference, Liu formally announced his conclusion on the causes of the great famine, while the Great Leap Forward was declared "over" by the Chinese Communist Party.[122][123][124] The policies of Mao Zedong were criticized.[123][124]

The failure of the Great Leap Forward as well as the famine forced Mao Zedong to withdraw from active decision-making within the CCP and the central government, and turn various future responsibilities over to Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping.[125] A series of economic reforms were carried out by Liu and Deng and others, including policies such as sanzi yibao (三自一包) which allowed free market and household responsibility for agricultural production.[126][127]

However, the disagreement between Mao Zedong, Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping over economic and social policy grew larger. In 1963, Mao launched the Socialist Education Movement and in 1966, he launched the Cultural Revolution, during which Liu was accused of being a traitor and enemy agent for attributing only 30% to natural calamities.[8][125][128] Liu was beaten and denied medicine for diabetes and pneumonia; he died in 1969.[128] Deng was accused of being a "capitalist roader" during the Cultural Revolution and was purged twice.[129]

Reforms and reflections

[edit]
Deng Xiaoping

In December 1978, Deng Xiaoping became the new Paramount Leader of China and launched the historic Reforms and Opening Up program which fundamentally changed the agricultural and industrial system in China.[130][131][132] Until the early 1980s, the Chinese government's stance was that the famine was largely a result of a series of natural disasters compounded by several planning errors, reflected by the name "Three Years of Natural Disasters". During the "Boluan Fanzheng" period in June 1981, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) officially changed the name to "Three Years of Difficulty", and stated that the famine was mainly due to the mistakes of the Great Leap Forward as well as the Anti-Rightist Campaign, in addition to some natural disasters and the Sino-Soviet split.[2][3] Academic studies on the Great Chinese Famine also became more active in mainland China after 1980, when the government started to release some demographic data to the public.[133][134] A number of high-ranking Chinese officials had expressed their views on the famine:

  • Zhao Ziyang, former General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, once said that "our Party never admitted mistakes. If things got really bad, we just found some scapegoats and blamed them, like Lin Biao and the Gang of Four. If scapegoats were hard to find, we simply blamed natural disasters, such as for the great famine in the late 1950s and early 1960s when tens of millions of people died, which was simply due to political errors of the Party."[135]
  • Bo Yibo, one of the Eight Elders and former Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China, once said, "During the three difficult years, people across the country went into malnutrition due to lack of food, and edema was prevalent, resulting in an increasing number of deaths due to starvation among many rural areas. It is estimated that in 1960 alone, more than 10 million people died. With such thing happening during a time of peace, we as members of the Communist Party feel truly guilty in front of the people, and we must never forget this heavy lesson! "[136]
  • Wan Li, former President of the National People's Congress of China, stated that "during the three difficult years after the People's Commune movement, people everywhere had edema and even starved to death. In Anhui alone, according to reports, there were 3-4 million people died 'abnormally' ...... We had been ' left ' for too long, and farmers were no longer motivated to work."[137]
  • Tian Jiyun, former Vice Premier of China and former Vice President of the National People's Congress of China, stated that "looking back at the Three Years of Difficulty, people everywhere had edema and died of starvation, and tens of millions of people died abnormally, more than the total death toll during the entire Democratic Revolution. What was the reason for that? Liu Shaoqi said it was '30% natural disasters and 70% human error.' But it is now clear that the famine was mainly due to human error, which was the erroneous command, the 'Utopian Socialism', and the 'Left opportunism'."[138]

Researchers outside China have argued that the massive institutional and policy changes which accompanied the Great Leap Forward were the key factors in the famine, or at least worsened nature-induced disasters.[139][140] In particular, Nobel laureate Amartya Sen puts this famine in a global context, arguing that lack of democracy is the major culprit: "Indeed, no substantial famine has ever occurred in a democratic country—no matter how poor." He adds that it is "hard to imagine that anything like this could have happened in a country that goes to the polls regularly and that has an independent press. During that terrible calamity the government faced no pressure from newspapers, which were controlled, and none from opposition parties, which were absent."[141][142] Sen though also argues: "Despite the gigantic size of excess mortality in the Chinese famine, the extra mortality in India from regular deprivation in normal times vastly overshadows the former. [...] India seems to manage to fill its cupboard with more skeletons every eight years than China put there in its years of shame."[143]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The title of Becker's book is a reference to Hungry ghosts in Chinese religion.
  1. ^ According to various sources.[4][5][6][11][12][13][14][15][16]
  2. ^ She wrote in an essay that "[t]he figure of 30 million has passed into popular folklore ... The fact that 19 million of them never existed because they were never born in the first place is not conveyed by the formulation." She criticized the equating of China's "missing millions" with famine deaths, rather than people who were never born due to declining birth rates. Also she claimed that "Because the internal political developments in China after 1978 were in the direction of attacking Maoist egalitarianism and the commune system, no repudiation from Chinese sources of the US estimates are to be seen". Patnaik concluded that the figures were ideologically derived in attempts to discredit communism, while similar excessive deaths in 1990s Russia, following the collapse of the USSR, were routinely ignored.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b 曹树基 (2005). 大饥荒:1959–1961年的中国人口. Hong Kong: 時代國際出版. pp. 46, 67, 117, 150, 196. ISBN 978-9889828233. An excerpt, which calculates death rate between 1958 and 1962, is published as: 曹树基 (2005). "1959–1961 年中国的人口死亡及其成因". 中国人口科学 (1).
  2. ^ a b c d "关于建国以来党的若干历史问题的决议". The Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 22 October 2019. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d "Resolution on Certain Questions in the History of Our Party since the Founding of the People's Republic of China" (PDF). Wilson Center. 27 June 1981.
  4. ^ a b c d Smil, Vaclav (18 December 1999). "China's great famine: 40 years later". BMJ: British Medical Journal. 319 (7225): 1619–1621. doi:10.1136/bmj.319.7225.1619. ISSN 0959-8138. PMC 1127087. PMID 10600969.
  5. ^ a b Gráda, Cormac Ó (2007). "Making Famine History". Journal of Economic Literature. 45 (1): 5–38. doi:10.1257/jel.45.1.5. hdl:10197/492. ISSN 0022-0515. JSTOR 27646746. S2CID 54763671.
  6. ^ a b c Meng, Xin; Qian, Nancy; Yared, Pierre (2015). "The Institutional Causes of China's Great Famine, 1959–1961" (PDF). Review of Economic Studies. 82 (4): 1568–1611. doi:10.1093/restud/rdv016. Archived (PDF) from the original on 5 March 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  7. ^ Kung, Kai-sing; Lin, Yifu (2003). "The Causes of China's Great Leap Famine, 1959–1961". Economic Development and Cultural Change. 52 (1): 51–73. doi:10.1086/380584. ISSN 0013-0079. JSTOR 10.1086/380584. S2CID 9454493.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Ashton, Basil; Hill, Kenneth; Piazza, Alan; Zeitz, Robin (1984). "Famine in China, 1958–61". Population and Development Review. 10 (4): 613–645. doi:10.2307/1973284. JSTOR 1973284.
  9. ^ a b Yang, Jisheng (2012). Tombstone: The Great Chinese Famine, 1958–1962. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-374-27793-2.
  10. ^ "45 million died in Mao's Great Leap Forward, Hong Kong historian says in new book". South China Morning Post. 5 September 2010. Archived from the original on 26 February 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  11. ^ Hasell, Joe; Roser, Max (10 October 2013). "Famines". Our World in Data. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  12. ^ Dikötter, Frank. "Mao's Great Famine: Ways of Living, Ways of Dying" (PDF). Dartmouth University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 July 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  13. ^ a b Mirsky, Jonathan (7 December 2012). "Unnatural Disaster". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 24 January 2017. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  14. ^ a b Branigan, Tania (1 January 2013). "China's Great Famine: the true story". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 10 January 2016. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  15. ^ a b c "China's Great Famine: A mission to expose the truth". Al Jazeera. Archived from the original on 21 April 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  16. ^ a b c Huang, Zheping (10 March 2016). "Charted: China's Great Famine, according to Yang Jisheng, a journalist who lived through it". Quartz. Archived from the original on 25 May 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  17. ^ Bowman, John S. (2000). Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-50004-3.
  18. ^ Kung, James Kai-sing (2022), Ma, Debin; von Glahn, Richard (eds.), "The Political Economy of China's Great Leap Famine", The Cambridge Economic History of China: 1800 to the Present, Cambridge University Press, pp. 642–684, doi:10.1017/9781108348485.019, ISBN 978-1-108-42553-7, S2CID 246670673
  19. ^ a b Sun, Zhonghua. "刘少奇"三分天灾,七分人祸"提法的由来". Renmin Wang (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 14 December 2012. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  20. ^ a b Sun, Zhonghua. "刘少奇"三分天灾,七分人祸"提法的由来(2)". Renmin Wang (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 15 September 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  21. ^ Songster, Edith Elena (2004). A Natural Place for Nationalism: The Wanglang Nature Reserve and the Emergence of the Giant Panda as a National Icon (thesis). University of California, San Diego. OCLC 607612241. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
  22. ^ M., J. (17 February 2015). "New (approved) assessments The great famine". The Economist. Beijing. Archived from the original on 20 January 2018. Retrieved 18 January 2018. citing Dikötter, Frank (2015). The Tragedy of Liberation: A History of the Chinese Revolution 1945–1957. London: Bloomsbury Press. ISBN 978-1-62040-349-5. OCLC 881092774. Retrieved 18 January 2018.[page needed]
  23. ^ Hammond, Ken (2023). China's Revolution and the Quest for a Socialist Future. New York: 1804 Books. p. 49. ISBN 9781736850084.
  24. ^ Lin, Justin Yifu; Yang, Dennis Tao (2000). "Food Availability, Entitlements and the Chinese Famine of 1959-61". The Economic Journal. 110 (460): 136–158. doi:10.1111/1468-0297.00494. ISSN 0013-0133. JSTOR 2565651.
  25. ^ Shang, Changfeng (2009). "三年经济困难时期的紧急救灾措施". 《当代中国史研究》 (in Chinese) (4). Archived from the original on 6 November 2020 – via Chinese University of Hong Kong.
  26. ^ Gao, Mobo (2018). Constructing China: Clashing Views of the People's Republic. Pluto. p. 11. doi:10.2307/j.ctv3mt8z4. ISBN 978-1-786-80242-2. JSTOR j.ctv3mt8z4. S2CID 158528294.
  27. ^ Central Intelligence Agency (31 July 1964). "Communist China's Domestic Crisis: the Road to 1964" (PDF). Freedom of Information Act Electronic Reading Room: 82.
  28. ^ Chen, Yixin (January 2015). "The Study of China's Great Leap Forward Famine in the West" (PDF). Journal of Jiangsu University (Social Science Edition) (in Chinese). 17 (1). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 May 2021. Retrieved 29 July 2020 – via Chinese University of Hong Kong.
  29. ^ a b c Dikötter, Frank (2011). "Response [Sites of Horror: Mao's Great Famine]". The China Journal (66): 163. doi:10.1086/tcj.66.41262812. ISSN 1324-9347. JSTOR 41262812. S2CID 141874259. It is fine to query my figures, but one also has to explain why every historian who has spent a long time in the archives has reached a very high figure, from 38 million by Yang Jisheng to ... Yu Xiguang, who after two decades of archival research puts it at 55 million.
  30. ^ Yu, Xiguang (2005). 大躍進・苦日子上書集 [Great Leap Forward: A Collection of Letters about the Tough Days] (in Chinese). Shidai chaoliu chubanshe. ISBN 978-9-889-85499-7.
  31. ^ Yu, Xiguang (6 May 2008). "大跃进" [Great Leap Forward]. Boxun (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 16 November 2022. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  32. ^ Becker, Jasper (1996). Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine. The Free Press. ISBN 978-0-6848-3457-3.
  33. ^ "Autocratic Ghosts and Chinese Hunger". George Mason University.
  34. ^ a b Dikötter, Frank. Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958–62. Walker & Company, 2010. p. 333. ISBN 0-8027-7768-6
  35. ^ Akbar, Arifa (17 September 2010). "Mao's Great Leap Forward 'killed 45 million in four years'". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 29 October 2010. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  36. ^ Dikötter, Frank. Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958–62. Walker & Company, 2010. p. 298. ISBN 0-8027-7768-6
  37. ^ Dillon, Michael. "Collective Responsibility". The Times Literary Supplement 7 January (2011), p. 13.
  38. ^ a b Ó Gráda, Cormac (2011). Dikötter, Frank (ed.). "Great Leap into Famine: A Review Essay". Population and Development Review. 37 (1): 191–202. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4457.2011.00398.x. ISSN 0098-7921.
  39. ^ Meyskens, Covell F. (2020). Mao's Third Front: The Militarization of Cold War China. Cambridge University Press. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-108-78478-8.
  40. ^ Garnaut, Anthony (2013). "Hard facts and half-truths: The new archival history of China's Great Famine". China Information. 27 (2): 223–246. doi:10.1177/0920203X13485390. S2CID 143503403.
  41. ^ Strauss, Valerie; Southerl, Daniel (17 July 1994). "How many died? New evidence suggests far higher numbers for the victims of Mao Zedong's era". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  42. ^ Buckley, Chris (25 April 2014). "Chen Yizi, a Top Adviser Forced to Flee China, Dies at 73". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  43. ^ Riskin, Carl (1998). "Seven questions about the Chinese famine of 1959–1961". China Economic Review. 9 (2): 111–124. doi:10.1016/S1043-951X(99)80009-1.
  44. ^ a b c Hong, Zhenkuai. 有关大饥荒的新谬说(二). Yanhuang Chunqiu. Archived from the original on 3 November 2020. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  45. ^ Veg, Sebastian (2019). Popular Memories of the Mao Era: From Critical Debate to Reassessing History. Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 978-9-888-39076-2.
  46. ^ Mao, Yushi (Fall 2014). "Lessons from China's Great Famine" (PDF). Cato Journal. 34 (3).
  47. ^ "A hunger for the truth: A new book, banned on the mainland, is becoming the definitive account of the Great Famine", chinaelections.org, 7 July 2008 Archived 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ a b Gráda, Cormac Ó (2013). Jisheng, Yang; Xun, Zhou (eds.). "Great Leap, Great Famine: A Review Essay". Population and Development Review. 39 (2): 333–346. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4457.2013.00595.x. ISSN 0098-7921. JSTOR 41857599. S2CID 154275320.
  49. ^ a b Yang, Jishen. 关于大饥荒年代人口损失的讨论. Yanhuang Chunqiu (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 13 May 2018. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  50. ^ "Shanghai Jiaotong University Institute of Humanities". shss.sjtu.edu.cn. Archived from the original on 1 November 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  51. ^ Gráda, Cormac Ó (2015). Eating People Is Wrong, and Other Essays on Famine, Its Past, and Its Future. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-400-86581-9.
  52. ^ Smil, Vaclav (1999). "China's great famine: 40 years later". The BMJ. 319 (7225): 1619–1621. doi:10.1136/bmj.319.7225.1619. PMC 1127087. PMID 10600969.
  53. ^ "Judith Banister". conference-board.org. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  54. ^ Banister, Judith (1987). China's Changing Population. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-804-71887-5.
  55. ^ Peng, Xizhe (1987). "Demographic Consequences of the Great Leap Forward in China's Provinces". Population and Development Review. 13 (4): 639–670. doi:10.2307/1973026. ISSN 0098-7921. JSTOR 1973026.
  56. ^ Paine, Sarah C. M. (2015). Nation Building, State Building, and Economic Development: Case Studies and Comparisons: Case Studies and Comparisons. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-46409-9.
  57. ^ Jinglian, Wu; Guochuan, Ma (2016). Whither China?: Restarting the Reform Agenda. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-190-22317-5.
  58. ^ Hilts, Philip J. (11 July 1984). "Chinese Statistics Indicate Killing of Baby Girls Persists". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  59. ^ Jiang, Zhenghua (1986). 中国人口动态估计的方法和结果 (PDF). 西安交通大学学报 (in Chinese) (3). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 July 2012.
  60. ^ Yao, Shujie (1999). "A Note on the Causal Factors of China's Famine in 1959–1961". Journal of Political Economy. 107 (6): 1365–1369. doi:10.1086/250100. S2CID 17546168.
  61. ^ Houser, Daniel; Sands, Barbara; Xiao, Erte (1 February 2009). "Three parts natural, seven parts man-made: Bayesian analysis of China's Great Leap Forward demographic disaster". Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. 69 (2): 148–159. doi:10.1016/j.jebo.2007.09.008. ISSN 0167-2681.
  62. ^ Patnaik, Utsa (2007). The Republic of Hunger and Other Essays. Merlin. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-850-36606-8.
  63. ^ Jingxian, Sun (April 2016). "Population Change during China's 'Three Years of Hardship' (1959 to 1961)" (PDF). Contemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations. 2: 453–500.
  64. ^ Yang, Songlin (2021). "There Were 2.6–4 Million Deaths in the Three Years of Difficulty in Excess of Normal Years". Telling the Truth: China's Great Leap Forward, Household Registration and the Famine Death Tally. Singapore: Springer. pp. 117–131. doi:10.1007/978-981-16-1661-7_7. ISBN 978-9-811-61661-7. S2CID 236692549.
  65. ^ a b Chen, Tingwei (1 August 2010). 三年困难时期"代食品运动"出台记. People's Daily (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 11 October 2017. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  66. ^ Lin, Justin Yifu; Yang, Dennis Tao (2000). "Food Availability, Entitlements and the Chinese Famine of 1959–61". The Economic Journal. 110 (460). Royal Economic Society: 143. doi:10.1111/1468-0297.00494.
  67. ^ Holmes, Leslie. Communism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press 2009). ISBN 978-0-199-55154-5. p. 32 "Most estimates of the number of Chinese dead are in the range of 15 to 40 million."
  68. ^ a b c Translation from "A hunger for the truth: A new book, banned on the mainland, is becoming the definitive account of the Great Famine". Archived 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine, chinaelections.org, 7 July 2008 of content from Yang Jisheng, 墓碑 --中國六十年代大饑荒紀實 (Mu Bei – Zhong Guo Liu Shi Nian Dai Da Ji Huang Ji Shi), Hong Kong: Cosmos Books (Tian Di Tu Shu), 2008, ISBN 978-9882119093 (in Chinese)
  69. ^ a b Bernstein, Richard (5 February 1997). "Horror of a Hidden Chinese Famine". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 5 March 2009. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
  70. ^ Becker, Jasper (1997). Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine. Free Press. p. 352. ISBN 978-0-68483457-3.
  71. ^ Dikötter, Frank (2010). "36. Cannibalism". Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958–1962. pp. 320–323. ISBN 978-0-80277768-3.
  72. ^ "Chapter Four Cannibalism (Late 1959–Early 1961)". The Great Famine in China, 1958–1962: A Documentary History. Yale University Press. 2012. pp. 59–71. ISBN 978-0-300-17518-9. JSTOR j.ctt1nq1qr.
  73. ^ Yang 2012, passim.
  74. ^ a b c Lim, Louisa (10 November 2012). "A Grim Chronicle of China's Great Famine". NPR.
  75. ^ Becker 1997, passim.
  76. ^ "Mao's Great Leap Forward 'killed 45 million in four years'". The Independent. 23 October 2011. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  77. ^ a b c "The Great Leap Forward Period in China, 1958–1960". San Jose State University. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  78. ^ Dali L. Yang (1996). Calamity and Reform in China: State, Rural Society, and Institutional Change Since the Great Leap Famine. Stanford University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-8047-3470-7.
  79. ^ Ralph Thaxton (2008). Catastrophe and Contention in Rural China: Mao's Great Leap Forward Famine and the Origins of Righteous Resistance in Da Fo Village. Cambridge University Press. p. 125. ISBN 978-0-521-72230-8.
  80. ^ Kimberley Ens Manning; Felix Wemheuer; Chen Yixin (2011). "Under the Same Maoist Sky: Accounting for Death Rate Discrepancies in Anhui and Jiangxi". Eating Bitterness: New Perspectives on China's Great Leap Forward and Famine. UBC Press. p. 220. ISBN 978-0-7748-5955-4.
  81. ^ Ralph Thaxton (2008). Catastrophe and Contention in Rural China: Mao's Great Leap Forward Famine and the Origins of Righteous Resistance in Da Fo Village. Cambridge University Press. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-521-72230-8.
  82. ^ Lynch, Michael (2008). The People's Republic of China, 1949–76 (2nd ed.). London: Hodder Education. p. 57.
  83. ^ Yang 2012, p. 240.
  84. ^ Kimberley Ens Manning; Felix Wemheuer; Gao Hua (2011). "Food Augmentation Methods and Food Substitutes during the Great Famine". Eating Bitterness: New Perspectives on China's Great Leap Forward and Famine. UBC Press. p. 177. ISBN 978-0-7748-5955-4.
  85. ^ a b Dali L. Yang (1996). Calamity and Reform in China: State, Rural Society, and Institutional Change Since the Great Leap Famine. Stanford University Press. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-8047-3470-7.
  86. ^ Meng, Xin; Qian, Nancy; Yared, Pierre (1 October 2015). "The Institutional Causes of China's Great Famine, 1959–1961". The Review of Economic Studies. 82 (4): 1568–1611. doi:10.1093/restud/rdv016. ISSN 0034-6527.
  87. ^ Kung, James Kai-Sing; Chen, Shuo (February 2011). "The Tragedy of the Nomenklatura: Career Incentives and Political Radicalism during China's Great Leap Famine". American Political Science Review. 105 (1): 27–45. doi:10.1017/S0003055410000626. ISSN 1537-5943. S2CID 154339088.
  88. ^ Yang 2012, p. 87.
  89. ^ Yang 2012, p. 99.
  90. ^ a b Kimberley Ens Manning; Felix Wemheuer (2011). "'The Grain Problem is an Ideological Problem': Discourses of Hunger in the 1957 Socialist Education Campaign". Eating Bitterness: New Perspectives on China's Great Leap Forward and Famine. UBC Press. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-7748-5955-4.
  91. ^ Dali L. Yang (1996). Calamity and Reform in China: State, Rural Society, and Institutional Change Since the Great Leap Famine. Stanford University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-8047-3470-7.
  92. ^ Frank Dikötter (2010). Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958–1962. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-8027-7928-1.
  93. ^ Kimberley Ens Manning; Felix Wemheuer (2011). "Under the Same Maoist Sky : Accounting for Death Rate Discrepancies in Anhui and Jiangxi". Eating Bitterness: New Perspectives on China's Great Leap Forward and Famine. UBC Press. pp. 212–213. ISBN 978-0-7748-5955-4.
  94. ^ Kimberley Ens Manning; Felix Wemheuer (2011). "Under the Same Maoist Sky: Accounting for Death Rate Discrepancies in Anhui and Jiangxi". Eating Bitterness: New Perspectives on China's Great Leap Forward and Famine. UBC Press. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-7748-5955-4.
  95. ^ Kimberley Ens Manning; Felix Wemheuer (2011). "Under the Same Maoist Sky: Accounting for Death Rate Discrepancies in Anhui and Jiangxi". Eating Bitterness: New Perspectives on China's Great Leap Forward and Famine. UBC Press. pp. 216–218. ISBN 978-0-7748-5955-4.
  96. ^ a b c Qian, Zhengying (13 June 1985). "关于黄河、长江、淮河、永定河防御特大洪水方案的报告(摘要)". National People's Congress (in Chinese). Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  97. ^ "新闻分析:做好黄河防汛工作为何不能掉以轻心?". The Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China (in Chinese). Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  98. ^ "中国历史上的水灾有哪些?". China Internet Information Center (in Chinese). Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  99. ^ "第六节 1958年黄河洪水–《中国灾情报告 1949–1995》-中国经济与社会发展统计数据库". CNKI (in Chinese). Retrieved 22 April 2020.[permanent dead link]
  100. ^ a b c d e "1958年黄河大水灾纪实". Dahe Wang (大河网) (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 3 July 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  101. ^ a b "历史上的五次黄河水灾". Dahe Wang (大河网) (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 22 November 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  102. ^ "黄河防洪概述". People's Daily (in Chinese). 11 October 2005. Archived from the original on 13 September 2007. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  103. ^ Bowman, John S (2000). Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. Columbia University Press. p. 72. ISBN 0-231-11004-9. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  104. ^ "230,000 Died in a Dam Collapse That China Kept Secret for Years". OZY. 17 February 2019. Archived from the original on 2 May 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  105. ^ "Massive new dams remind China of human price of 'tofu constructions'". The Globe and Mail. Archived from the original on 23 June 2014. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  106. ^ a b Fu, Shui. "A Profile of Dams in China" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 September 2019.
  107. ^ a b Zhao, Xiaoxia (2018). ""水利大跃进"的历史考察 – 以江苏省为例" (PDF). Twenty-First Century – via Chinese University of Hong Kong.
  108. ^ Xiang, Wei-Ning (1 March 2020). "The Red Flag Canal: a socio-ecological practice miracle from serendipity, through impossibility, to reality". Socio-Ecological Practice Research. 2 (1): 105–110. Bibcode:2020SEPR....2..105X. doi:10.1007/s42532-019-00037-z. ISSN 2524-5287. PMC 8150154. PMID 34778717.
  109. ^ "The Red Flag Canal". The Red Flag Canal. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  110. ^ Hays, Jeffrey. "Great Leap Forward: Mobilizing the Masses, Backyard Furnaces and Suffering". Facts and Details. Archived from the original on 26 November 2019. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  111. ^ "China farmers recall bitter days of famine for dam". Reuters. 27 February 2009. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  112. ^ Mao, Yushi (2014). "Lessons from China's Great Famine" (PDF). Cato Institute.
  113. ^ Gao, Suhua. "1951~1990年全国降水量距平变化图". Yanhuang Chunqiu (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 9 August 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  114. ^ a b Houser, Daniel; Sands, Barbara; Xiao, Erte (2009). "Three parts natural, seven parts man-made: Bayesian analysis of China's Great Leap Forward demographic disaster". Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. 69 (2): 148–159. doi:10.1016/j.jebo.2007.09.008.
  115. ^ "Tombstone: The Great Chinese Famine, 1958–1962". Association for Asian Studies. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  116. ^ Ó Gráda, Cormac (2009). Famine: A Short History. Princeton University Press. p. 242. ISBN 978-0-691-12237-3.
  117. ^ a b Becker 1997, p. 122.
  118. ^ Becker 1997, p. ???.
  119. ^ Yang, Jishen (2008). Tombstone: The Great Chinese Famine, 1958-1962 (Chinese Version) (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  120. ^ Formosa Food Air Drop On Chinese Mainland (1961), retrieved 14 July 2023
  121. ^ "Taiwan Drops Food on China". The New York Times. Vol. CX, no. 37776. 28 June 1961. p. 41. Retrieved 14 July 2023 – via TimesMachine.[permanent dead link]
  122. ^ a b "七千人大会". People's Daily. Archived from the original on 19 September 2019. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  123. ^ a b "Chinese Foreign Policy Database". Wilson Center Digital Archive. Archived from the original on 22 June 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  124. ^ a b MacFarquhar, Roderick (1997). The Seven Thousand Cadres Conference. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780192149978.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-167008-4. Archived from the original on 23 May 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  125. ^ a b "Three Chinese Leaders: Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai, and Deng Xiaoping". Columbia University. Archived from the original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  126. ^ Denhardt, Janet Vinzant; Denhardt, Robert B. (2007). The New Public Service: Serving, Not Steering. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 978-0-7656-2181-8.
  127. ^ "Liu Shaoqi (1898-1969) | CUHK Digital Repository". Chinese University of Hong Kong. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  128. ^ a b Dittmer, Lowell (1981). "Death and Transfiguration: Liu Shaoqi's Rehabilitation and Contemporary Chinese Politics". The Journal of Asian Studies. 40 (3): 455–479. doi:10.2307/2054551. JSTOR 2054551. S2CID 153995268.
  129. ^ "The Man Who Re-Invented China | Origins: Current Events in Historical Perspective". Ohio State University. 17 September 2012. Archived from the original on 25 July 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  130. ^ "邓小平纪念网". People's Daily (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 5 May 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  131. ^ Zhou, Christina; Xiao, Bang (1 December 2018). "40 years on from the 'experiments' that transformed China into an economic superpower". ABC News. Archived from the original on 24 April 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  132. ^ Palmer, Brian (2 April 2014). "How China Went From Famine After Famine to Feast". Slate. Archived from the original on 21 May 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  133. ^ "一段不容忽视的历史:大饥荒". BBC (in Chinese). Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  134. ^ Chang, Gene Hsin; Wen, Guanzhong James (1997). "Communal Dining and the Chinese Famine of 1958–1961". Economic Development and Cultural Change. 46 (1): 1–34. doi:10.1086/452319. ISSN 0013-0079. JSTOR 10.1086/452319. S2CID 154835645.
  135. ^ Zhao, Ziyang; Du, Daozheng (21 March 2015). "《杜导正日记》出版: 道出许多赵紫阳不为人知的秘密". Independent Chinese PEN Center (in Chinese). Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  136. ^ Lin, Yunhui. "三年大饥荒中的人口非正常变动". Yanhuang Chunqiu (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 5 September 2019.
  137. ^ Tian, Jiyun (26 March 2013). "万里谈困难时期的安徽:非正常死亡人口三四百万". Phoenix New Media (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 7 February 2015.
  138. ^ Gao, Hua (2004). "从《七律·有所思》看毛泽东发动文革的运思". Chinese University of Hong Kong (in Chinese). Yanhuang Chunqiu. Archived from the original on 28 July 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  139. ^ Sue Williams (director), Howard Sharp (editor), Will Lyman (narrator) (1997). China: A Century of Revolution. WinStar Home Entertainment.
  140. ^ Demeny, Paul; McNicoll, Geoffrey, eds. (2003), "Famine in China", Encyclopedia of Population, vol. 1, New York: Macmillan Reference, pp. 388–390
  141. ^ Amartya Kumar Sen (1999). Development as freedom. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-289330-7. Archived from the original on 3 January 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  142. ^ Wiener, Jon. "How We Forgot the Cold War. A Historical Journey across America" Archived 26 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine University of California Press, 2012, p. 38.
  143. ^ Škof, Lenart (2015). Breath of Proximity: Intersubjectivity, Ethics and Peace. Springer. p. 161. ISBN 978-94-017-9738-2.

Further reading

[edit]