The New Economic Policy (NEP) was Lenin's 1921 program that temporarily allowed small-scale private enterprise and peasant grain sales in Soviet Russia, retreating from the strict state control of War Communism to revive the economy after the Russian Civil War.
The New Economic Policy (NEP) was Lenin's 1921 answer to a Soviet economy in freefall. After years of World War I, revolution, and civil war, plus the forced grain requisitioning of War Communism, Russia faced famine, peasant revolts, and worker unrest (the 1921 Kronstadt Rebellion was the loudest warning sign). The NEP let peasants sell surplus grain on the open market, allowed small private businesses and traders (the so-called NEPmen) to operate for profit, and kept only the "commanding heights" of the economy, like heavy industry, banking, and foreign trade, in state hands.
Here's the part the AP exam cares about most. The NEP was an ideological compromise. A regime built on Marxist-Leninist theory was openly tolerating capitalism inside a communist state. Lenin framed it as a strategic retreat, one step back to take two steps forward. It worked in the short term, stabilizing food supplies and winning back peasant support, but it created tensions (and a new class of small capitalists) that Stalin would later crush with collectivization and the Five-Year Plans.
The NEP lives in Topic 8.3, The Russian Revolution and Its Effects (Unit 8: 20th-Century Global Conflicts) and supports learning objective 8.3.A, which asks you to explain the causes and effects of the Russian Revolution. The NEP is one of the clearest "effects" you can cite. It shows that building a communist state was messy in practice, that the Bolsheviks had to bend Marxist theory to survive, and that the regime's economic direction swung dramatically between Lenin and Stalin. If you can explain why a Marxist government allowed markets in 1921, you understand the gap between revolutionary ideology and political reality, which is exactly the kind of analysis AP Euro rewards.
Keep studying AP Euro Unit 8
War Communism (Unit 8)
The NEP only makes sense as a reaction to War Communism, the Civil War-era policy of seizing grain and nationalizing everything. War Communism won the war but wrecked the economy and turned peasants against the regime, so the NEP reversed its harshest parts.
Five-Year Plans (Unit 8)
Stalin killed the NEP in 1928 and replaced it with the Five-Year Plans, rapid state-driven industrialization plus forced collectivization. The NEPmen and prosperous peasants (kulaks) the NEP had created became Stalin's targets, a cause-and-effect chain MCQs love.
Russian Civil War (Unit 8)
The Civil War between the communists and their opponents is the direct context for the NEP. By 1921 the Bolsheviks had won militarily but were losing the peace, with famine and rebellions like Kronstadt showing the regime needed economic concessions to hold power.
Bolshevik Revolution (Unit 8)
The NEP tests whether the Bolshevik Revolution's promises could survive contact with reality. A regime founded on Marxist-Leninist theory ended up permitting private profit within four years of taking power, which is a great piece of evidence for any LEQ about revolutionary outcomes.
The NEP shows up most often in multiple-choice questions about the early Soviet state. Common stems ask why the NEP was an ideological compromise (a communist regime allowing capitalist practices), what pressures forced Lenin's hand (the Kronstadt Rebellion and peasant discontent after War Communism), and which group emerged under the NEP only to be targeted during Stalin's collectivization (NEPmen and kulaks). For free-response writing, the NEP is strong evidence in essays about the effects of the Russian Revolution or change over time in interwar Europe. The 2018 LEQ on Europe in the period 1918 to 1939 is exactly the kind of prompt where the NEP-to-Stalinism shift helps you show change within the Soviet Union. The skill being tested isn't reciting the policy; it's explaining the causation (Civil War devastation → NEP → Stalin's reversal).
These are opposites, and the exam tests whether you know which is which. War Communism (1918-1921) was total state control, with grain seized from peasants and industry nationalized to win the Civil War. The NEP (1921-1928) was the retreat from that, restoring limited markets and private trade to fix the damage. Easy check: War Communism takes the grain, the NEP lets peasants sell it.
The NEP was Lenin's 1921 policy that allowed peasants to sell surplus grain and let small private businesses operate, while the state kept control of heavy industry, banking, and foreign trade.
It replaced War Communism after famine, peasant uprisings, and the Kronstadt Rebellion showed the Bolsheviks were losing popular support at the end of the Civil War.
The NEP was a deliberate ideological compromise, since a regime founded on Marxist-Leninist theory was permitting capitalist practices to survive politically and economically.
It worked in the short run by stabilizing food production and winning back peasant support for the communist regime.
Stalin ended the NEP in 1928 and replaced it with the Five-Year Plans and collectivization, targeting the NEPmen and kulaks the policy had created.
On the exam, use the NEP as evidence for the effects of the Russian Revolution (LO 8.3.A) and for change over time in interwar Europe.
The NEP was Lenin's 1921 program that allowed limited private enterprise and peasant grain sales in Soviet Russia to rebuild the economy after the Civil War, while the state kept control of major industry. It appears in Topic 8.3 as an effect of the Russian Revolution.
No, Lenin didn't abandon communism. He framed the NEP as a temporary, strategic retreat, allowing small-scale capitalism while the state held the "commanding heights" like heavy industry and banking. That tension is exactly why exam questions call it an ideological compromise.
They're opposites. War Communism (1918-1921) seized grain from peasants and nationalized industry to win the Civil War; the NEP (1921-1928) reversed course, letting peasants sell surplus grain and small businesses operate for profit.
By 1921 War Communism had produced famine, peasant revolts, and the Kronstadt Rebellion, where sailors who once backed the Bolsheviks rose against them. Lenin introduced the NEP to restore food production and shore up the regime's survival.
Stalin abandoned the NEP in 1928, launching the Five-Year Plans for rapid industrialization and forced collectivization of agriculture. The NEPmen and kulaks who had prospered under the NEP were targeted and eliminated as class enemies.