GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
State Planning Committee of the USSR

State Planning Committee of the USSR

Central economic planning agency of the Soviet Union

Soviet UnionFounded 1921 · Ceased 1991government
34
LOW

of 100 · declining trend · Some good traits but inconsistent

Standing

34/100

Raw Score

29/85

Confidence

67%

Evidence

Broad

About

Gosplan was the Soviet Union's central planning agency, responsible for translating party and government economic objectives into five-year and annual plans. Its record combines large-scale mobilization and industrial coordination with weak public accountability, coercive planning contexts, chronic shortages, distorted incentives, and eventual breakdown of the planning model.

Closed historical institution. Goodness alignment is mixed-to-concerning: public-service language and mobilization capacity were real, but stakeholder care, transparency, correction, and restraint were limited by authoritarian governance and plan-command incentives.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview20%(5/25)
Contribution to Others20%(6/30)
Personal Discipline40%(4/10)
Reliability100%(7/5)
Stability Under Pressure47%(7/15)

Gosplan showed a real institutional commitment to public economic planning and mobilization, but its alignment is limited by coercive social consequences, low accountability, distorted reporting incentives, chronic shortages, and inability to reform before dissolution.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Moral framework2/5

Publicly articulated socialist planning mission, but subordinated to party-state priorities.

Mission alignment2/5

Consistent pursuit of state planning mission, with mixed human consequences.

Accountability language1/5

Limited independent accountability to affected citizens.

Contribution to Others

Workers public welfare2/5

Industrial and public-development aims existed, but consumer welfare and worker experience were often constrained by targets and shortages.

Vulnerable groups1/5

Rural and vulnerable communities bore severe costs during coercive mobilization.

Public outcomes2/5

Major industrial outcomes and recovery capacity, offset by chronic shortages and social harm.

Harm mitigation1/5

Thin evidence of effective harm correction within the planning institution.

Personal Discipline

Principled restraint1/5

Central planning showed little observable restraint when political priorities demanded extraction.

Public obligation2/5

Operated under a declared public economic obligation rather than private profit seeking.

Non extractive discipline1/5

Institutional practice often facilitated extraction and rationing rather than disciplined protection of stakeholders.

Reliability

Transparency2/5

Extensive planning records existed, but public transparency and truth-telling were politically constrained.

Promise followthrough2/5

Plans mobilized action but many targets were missed, revised, or manipulated.

Governance reliability2/5

Durable bureaucracy but low independence from authoritarian political power.

Truthfulness correction1/5

Purges and bargaining incentives weakened honest feedback and correction.

Stability Under Pressure

Crisis response3/5

Strong mobilization capacity in high-priority and crisis contexts.

Reform capacity2/5

Late reforms acknowledged limits but did not restore institutional viability.

Long term adaptation2/5

Long-lived institution, but mature planning lagged and ultimately dissolved.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1921

State planning commission established

The Council of People's Commissars established Gosplan to institute and coordinate a unified state plan for the economy.

Created a durable central planning apparatus.

high
1928

Comprehensive planning role expands with First Five-Year Plan

Gosplan moved from advisory influence toward comprehensive planning as the First Five-Year Plan called for rapid industrialization and sharp reduction of the private sector.

Central planning became the framework for national economic mobilization.

very_high
1932

Rapid industrialization coincides with catastrophic rural harm

Academic summaries of the first plan note major industrial progress but also catastrophic famine tied partly to the extraction of food from the countryside to support rapid industrialization.

Industrial capacity rose while social harm and coercive extraction severely damaged vulnerable populations.

very_high
1937

Planner independence constrained by Stalin-era purges

Mark Harrison notes that Stalin purged Gosplan in 1930, 1937, and 1949 to keep planners obedient and loyal, limiting institutional independence and truth-telling capacity.

Reduced independent accountability and reinforced political subordination.

high
1948

Renamed State Planning Committee while acronym retained

The agency name changed from State Planning Commission to State Planning Committee in 1948 while retaining the Gosplan acronym.

Institutional continuity continued under postwar Soviet administration.

medium
1960

Material-balance planning governs allocation

Gosplan used material-balance methods to reconcile planned outputs with available materials, labor and finance, working through ministries and enterprise-level targets.

Enabled large-scale administrative coordination but created bargaining, delays and target manipulation.

high
1980

Mature planning shows manipulation, shortages and lag

Scholarly work links mature Soviet planning to planning from achieved levels, indicator manipulation, soft budget constraints, shortages, and lag behind Western economies in the 1970s and 1980s.

Institutional incentives undermined efficiency, honesty and social welfare delivery.

high
1985

Perestroika retreats from centralized planning

Gorbachev's perestroika sought to curtail central planning and shift more decisions toward enterprises, profit-and-loss considerations, and market-like mechanisms.

Acknowledged planning failures but did not produce a stable replacement before Soviet collapse.

high
1991

Gosplan dissolved during Soviet collapse

Gosplan ceased to exist in 1991 as Soviet central control eroded and the Soviet Union broke apart.

Closed the central planning agency's institutional life.

very_high

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

First Five-Year Plan social costs

1932

Rapid industrialization and collectivization-era extraction produced severe rural harm including famine conditions.

Response: The planning system continued to prioritize mobilization targets.

negative

Stalin-era political pressure

1937

Purges constrained planner independence and made truth-telling politically dangerous.

Response: Gosplan remained subordinate to political leadership.

negative

Perestroika reform pressure

1985

Centralized planning was curtailed amid economic stagnation and reform efforts.

Response: Partial retreat from detailed central planning without durable recovery.

mixed

Progression

crisis years

Mature planning and incentive distortion: The system became more routine, bureaucratic and vulnerable to target manipulation, shortages and soft budget constraints.

declining

current stage

Late reform and dissolution: Perestroika acknowledged system limits, but Gosplan did not recover as a durable institution before Soviet collapse.

closed

early years

Foundation and limited advisory role: Created to coordinate a unified economic plan during a period when practical market concessions still existed.

forming

growth years

Command planning expansion: First Five-Year Plan shifted Gosplan into national mobilization and comprehensive planning.

expanding

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Long institutional continuity
  • Large-scale coordination capacity
  • Resource mobilization for industrialization, war recovery and high-priority sectors

Concerns

  • Targets and indicators vulnerable to manipulation
  • Limited public accountability
  • Central priorities often outweighed local welfare and consumer needs
  • Soft budget constraints and shortages became persistent system features

Evidence Quality

5

Strong

2

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: broad

Draft institutional profile based on public historical sources; admin review required before publication.