rdfs:comment
| - The Grand Yarphese Plan was a social and economic reform plan between 1996 and 1999 in the Grand Yarphese Republic. The plan was initiated in industrial Bangkok, and spread through Yarphei. Led by Trầng Chúp Long, its main motive was to convert the economy into an industrial and service-based modern society of communism, through the process of industrialization and collectivisation. The campaign was based on the Theory of Productive Forces. Since then, Yarphei has taken a path of internal capitalism, with tight control on foreign trade, as a result of the plan's failure.
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abstract
| - The Grand Yarphese Plan was a social and economic reform plan between 1996 and 1999 in the Grand Yarphese Republic. The plan was initiated in industrial Bangkok, and spread through Yarphei. Led by Trầng Chúp Long, its main motive was to convert the economy into an industrial and service-based modern society of communism, through the process of industrialization and collectivisation. The campaign was based on the Theory of Productive Forces. During the mandatory practice of collectivization, lifestyle changed considerably. Unlike the Great Leap Forward, the plan was put into practice in cities as well as rural areas. Private farming or industry was outlawed, with anyone caught participating branded as counterrevolutionary. While the economy was harmed slightly, lifestyles changed completely. Under the pressure of violence, social opinion, and torture, it was necessary to comply with all orders. The result was catastrophe. Due to haze and pollution during the 1997 wildfires, as well as the 1997 East Asian Financial Crisis, several displacements in addition to famine led to the failure of the plan. Since then, Yarphei has taken a path of internal capitalism, with tight control on foreign trade, as a result of the plan's failure.
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