SovRom
{{Short description|1945–1956 type of economic enterprise in Romania}}
{{Communist Romania}}
The SovRoms (plural of SovRom) were economic enterprises established in Romania following the communist takeover at the end of World War II, in place until 1954–1956 (when they were dissolved by the Romanian authorities).
In theory, SovRoms were joint Romanian-Soviet ventures aimed at generating revenue for reconstruction,Cioroianu, p.68, 70 and were created on a half-share basis in respect to the two states;Rîjnoveanu, p.1 however, they were mainly designed as a means to ensure resources for the Soviet side, and generally contributed to draining Romania's resources (in addition to the war reparations demanded by the armistice convention of 1944 and the Paris Peace Treaties,Cioroianu, p.68, 71, 73; Rîjnoveanu, p.1 which had been set at 300 million United States dollarsCioroianu, p.73—see Romania during World War II). The Soviet contribution in creating the SovRoms lay mostly in reselling leftover German equipment to Romania, which was systematically overvalued.Alexandrescu, p.40-41
History
=Creation, structure, and effects=
File:Акция_Совромпетроль.jpg Sovrompetrol stock certificate, Bucharest, 1946]]
An agreement between the two countries regarding the establishment of common enterprises was signed in Moscow on May 8, 1945,Alexandrescu, p.39; Rîjnoveanu, p.1 at a time when Romania found itself in economic isolation.Alexandrescu, p.39
The first SovRom to be created (on July 17, 1945), was Sovrompetrol, which had as its objective the exploitation of petroleum in Prahova County areas and the oil refineries in Ploiești.Cioroianu, p.68 By 1947, it was responsible for 37% of oil drilling, some 30% of the total production of crude oil, and over 36% of refined oil, controlling 37% of internal oil supplies and 38% of external ones.
Sovrompetrol was followed by Sovromtransport and Tars (transportation), and later by Sovrombanc (banking and commercial monopoly), Sovromlemn (wood processing), Sovromgaz (natural gas), Sovromasigurare (insurance), Sovromcărbune (coal exploitation in the Jiu Valley and other areas), Sovromchim (chemical industry), Sovromconstrucţii (construction materials), Sovrommetal (iron mining — around Reșița), Sovromtractor (future {{ill|Tractorul|ro|Uzina Tractorul Brașov}}, in Brașov), Sovromfilm (importing Soviet cinema productions), Sovrom Utilaj Petrolier (producing oil refining equipment) and Sovromnaval (shipbuilding in Constanța, Giurgiu, and Brăila).
Most notoriously, Sovromcuarț (or Sovromquarțit, Sovrom Kvartit), while ostensibly producing quartz, as its name suggested,Alexandrescu, p.39-40; Cioroianu, p.69-70 was in fact engaged in the mining of uranium ore.Banu, p.28-29; Cioroianu, p.70 Sovromcuarț started operating in 1950 at the Băița mine in Bihor County, with a workforce of 15,000 political prisoners. After most of them died of radiation poisoning, they were replaced by local villagers, who did not know what they were mining.Khrushchev, p. 720 Another facility operated by this SovRom was the Ciudanovița uranium mine in Caraș-Severin County, which employed around 10,000 people in the early 1950s.{{cite news|url=https://adevarul.ro/stiri-locale/hunedoara/dosarele-x-din-orasul-fantoma-al-uraniului-2259249.html|title=Dosarele X din orașul-fantomă al uraniului. Experiența paranormală trăită de un român în adâncuri|lang=ro|first=Daniel|last=Guță| newspaper=Adevărul|date=April 18, 2023|access-date=March 7, 2024}}{{cite news|url=https://www.romania-actualitati.ro/stiri/analize/epopeea-uraniului-banatean-de-la-exportul-in-urss-in-farfurie-id87423.html|title=Epopeea uraniului bănățean de la exportul în URSS, în farfurie|lang=ro| publisher=Radio România Actualități|first=Mario| last=Balint|date=August 24, 2016|access-date=March 7, 2024}} In secrecy,Banu, p.29; Cioroianu, p.70 Romania delivered 17,288 tons of uranium ore to the Soviet Union between 1952 and 1960,Banu, p.30 which was used, at least partly, in the Soviet atomic bomb project.Cioroianu, p.70 Uranium mining continued until 1961.Diehl All ore was shipped outside Romania for processing, initially to Sillamäe in Estonia; the uranium concentrate was then used exclusively by the Soviet Union.
By 1952, 85% of Romanian export was directed at the Soviet Union.Cioroianu, p.372-373 The total value of goods{{specify|date=July 2012}} passed by Romania to the Soviet Union surpassed by far the demanded war reparations, being estimated at 2 billion dollars.Roper, p.18
Special circumstances also enhanced the negative effects of SovRoms on Romanian economy: the severe drought and famine outbreaks of 1946,Cioroianu, p.71-72 coupled with the severe devaluation of the leu — culminating in a forced stabilization through monetary reform (1947).Cioroianu, p.72-74
=Ending=
The SovRoms' end, evidence of the relative emancipation of the Romanian Workers' Party from Soviet control, ran parallel to the De-Stalinization process; it was approved by Nikita Khrushchev and carried out by Miron Constantinescu (head of the Planning Board).Cioroianu, p.208
Discussions aimed at winding down the SovRoms began in March 1953.Țiu The first measure was taken in 1954 (through accords signed in March and September): Soviet shares in 12 of the 16 enterprises were taken over by the Romanian state, in exchange for a sum to be paid in installments of merchandise exports (in 1959, the debt was set at over 35 billion lei).Alexandrescu, p.40 Payments were completed in 1975. The initial sum at which the Soviet side estimated its contribution was 9.6 billion lei, in contrast to the 2.9 billion lei at which it had been valued by Romanian sources;Alexandrescu, p.41 discussions on the matter reduced the sum to a total of 5.3 billion lei, which was construed by the two sides not as a corrected result, but as a concession owing to past irregularities in SovRom activities. At the same time, the Soviet Union announced that it gave up interests in formerly German-owned enterprises and equipment on Romanian soil, for which Romania paid 1.5 billion lei as compensation (deducted from the total 5.3 billion).
The last two remaining SovRoms, Sovrompetrol and Sovromcuarț, were disbanded in 1956.Banu, p. 31; Rîjnoveanu, p.1 However, the Romanian government signed an agreement that would replace Sovromcuarț with a new state-owned company which was to carry on the mining and processing of uranium ore, delivering its entire output to the Soviet Union.Banu, p. 31; Diehl This successor company was itself dissolved in 1961. Soviet investment in Sovromcuarț was evaluated to a debt of 413 million rubles, which were to be paid by Romania over a 10-year period (starting with 1961).Banu, p.29
The gesture was used by First Secretary Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, who had previously ensured the SovRom's efficiency,Roper, p.22 as a means to gain popularity with Romanian citizens and, in parallel, to advertise the idea that Romania had the sufficient “requirements” for socialism after completing nationalization.Cioroianu, p.71, 74-76; Rîjnoveanu, p.1
See also
Notes
{{Reflist|3}}
References
- [https://archive.today/20070420032558/http://files.osa.ceu.hu/holdings/300/8/3/text/54-2-156.shtml "Soviet-Rumanian Relation in the Light of Recent Events in Hungary and Poland", November 1956], at the Blinken Open Society Archives
- Ion Alexandrescu, "1945-1956: Din «cleștele» German — în brațele «fratelui» de la răsărit. Societățile mixte sovieto-române (Sovrom)" ("1945-1956: From the German's «Tongs» — into the Eastern «Brother»'s Arms. Mixed Soviet-Romanian Societies (Sovrom)"), in Dosarele Istoriei, 3/1996
- Florian Banu, "Uraniu românesc pentru «marele frate»" ("Romanian Uranium for the «Big Brother»"), in Dosarele Istoriei, 9/2005
- Adrian Cioroianu, Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc ("On Marx's Shoulders. An Introduction into the History of Romanian Communism "), Editura Curtea Veche, Bucharest, 2005. {{ISBN|973-669-175-6}}
- Peter Diehl, [http://www10.antenna.nl/wise/439-440/chapter1.html "Uranium Mining in Europe", Chapter 1], 1995
- Sergei Khrushchev, Nikita Khrushchev, Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev, Penn State University Press, University Park, 2004. {{ISBN|0-271-02332-5}}
- Carmen Rîjnoveanu, [https://web.archive.org/web/20080624195137/http://www.servicehistorique.sga.defense.gouv.fr/07autredossiers/groupetravailhistoiremilitaire/pdfs/2003-gthm.pdf "Romania's Policy of Autonomy in the Context of the Sino-Soviet Conflict", in NATO and the Warsaw Pact — The Formative Years 1948-1968, 2003 Conference comments and papers, Czech Republic Military History Institute, Militärgeschichtliches Forscheungamt]
- Stephen D. Roper, Romania: The Unfinished Revolution, Routledge, London, 2000. {{ISBN|90-5823-027-9}}
- {{in lang|ro}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20120404100451/http://www.adevarul.ro/actualitate/adevaratul_ceausescu/Deputatul_Ceausescu_a_votat_entuziast_nationalizarea_0_554945074.html Ilarion Țiu, "Deputatul Ceaușescu a votat entuziast naționalizarea" ("Deputy Ceaușescu Enthusiastically Voted for Nationalization")], in Adevărul, September 16, 2011
External links
- {{in lang|ro}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20060228010911/http://membres.lycos.fr/dgrecu/Sov.Htm Grecu Dan, Salvate de la coșul de gunoi ("Rescued from the Garbage Bin")] — SovRoms in postal history
Category:1945 establishments in Romania
Category:1956 disestablishments in Romania
Category:Socialist Republic of Romania