The slogan proclaimed by Nikita Khrushchev exactly fifty years ago, "Catch up with and overtake America," had such a profound effect on his country's mentality that Russians today still measure everything that happens in Russia against the standards set by America.
The catchphrase "catch up with and overtake" (dognat' i peregnat' in Russian) was popular in the USSR as early as the 1920-1930s so popular, in fact, that the traditional Russian male name Ignat was quickly joined by the derivatives Dognat and Peregnat. At the 15th Party Congress in December 1927, Joseph Stalin declared, "Lenin was right when he said as early as September 1917, before the seizure of power by the Bolsheviks, that by founding a dictatorship of the proletariat, we can and should 'catch up with advanced countries and overtake them economically.' The Party's task is to speed up the tempo of the development of socialist industry and to strengthen it in the near future on the basis of the creation of the favorable conditions necessary for catching up with and overtaking the leading capitalist countries."
Although Stalin compared tsarist Russia and the Soviet Union to America in terms of growth rates in his speech, on that occasion the US simply served as a typical example of a leading capitalist country (particularly since America's economic growth in the period before the stock-market crisis of 1929 was distinguished by its striking speed). The Bolsheviks were no less concerned with catching up with and overtaking Germany, France, or Great Britain, because the issue was not one of competition between the USSR and any given country but of socialism pitted against capitalism.
At succeeding Bolshevik Party Congresses, the task of "catching up with and overtaking" capitalist countries chiefly in industrial manufacturing was invariably repeated as the main goal of the Soviet economy. With the advent of the Second World War, the actual achievement of this goal temporarily lost much of its urgency, since the position taken by official Soviet propaganda was that the economy of the USSR had lost the equivalent of two Five-Year Plans in other words, that the capitalist countries themselves were using military means to interfere with the Soviet Union's race to overtake them. Nevertheless, the
idea of matching and surpassing the development of capitalist countries never disappeared, and the Soviet government never missed a chance to invent unusual measures by which the USSR could be shown to have pulled ahead in the race. For example, at the 19th Party Congress in 1952, Lavrenty Beria claimed, "While the USSR has increased its industrial production by 39 times
in the period of Soviet rule, England needed 162 years (from 1790 to 1951) to achieve the same result, and France has increased its industrial production by only 5.5 times in the last 90 years. As for the United States of America, they
have increased their manufacturing of industrial products by only 2.6 times over the last 35 years."
Thus, the Soviet authorities continued to jostle for position not only with the US but also with the other capitalist countries who were allied with the Soviet Union in the coalition against Hitler. Increasingly, however, Soviet propaganda took to claiming that the spark of war was struck mainly by the United States and that the Americans, as the leaders of world imperialism and thus the USSR's chief enemies, were using other capitalist countries in pursuit of their own aggressive ends. These capitalist countries even began to enjoy something akin to sympathy from the Soviet Union: as Central Committee Secretary Georgy Malenkov said at the same Party Congress in 1952, "While pursuing imperialist policies towards England, France, and other capitalist countries, the United States of
America still has the indecency, to put it lightly, to present itself as a true friend of these countries. What a good friend! It perches itself above its younger partners, it robs and enslaves them, lashing them from behind and about the ears."
Gradually, the Bolsheviks began to lean towards the idea that it was specifically America that had to be caught and overtaken. When Soviet athletes participated in the Olympics for the first time in 1952, their task was to best not the teams of the various capitalist countries, or even the capitalist world as a whole, but the
American team. Soviet propagandists noted with satisfaction afterwards that their team had succeeded, even though their figures for "top-place finishes" were questionable, to say the least: the Soviet team was reported to have won 122 top spots (versus 99 for the Americans), even though a total of only 106 medals were awarded at the Games.
Finally, at an agriculture conference in May 1957, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev articulated the challenge specifically: "Catch up with and overtake America." At that moment, the context referred to the per-capita production of
meat, butter, and milk, but Khrushchev also intended the slogan to resonate in the Soviet economy far beyond the boundaries of the agricultural sector. At an exhibition showcasing American domestic technology in Moscow's Sokolniki Park in the summer of 1959, Khrushchev got into the famous "Kitchen Debate" with Richard Nixon, who at the time was the American vice president. Nixon demonstrated that the US surpassed Russia in the production of color televisions, while Khrushchev stubbornly repeated "No, our color televisions are better!" while gurgling with laughter. It was during the discussion with Nixon at the exhibition that Khrushchev pronounced the words that would guarantee his notoriety in the US and become a symbol of the economic and political competition between the USSR and the US: "We'll get you!" (literally, "We'll show you Kuzma's mother," an idiomatic Russian expression implying a threat,
which Khrushchev used again in his famous speech at the United Nations in 1960). At the exhibition, Soviet citizens at the exhibit had the opportunity to become acquainted with the preliminary results of this competition, such as
free samples of Coca-Cola (or perhaps it was Pepsi Soviet citizens were not entirely up to speed on the finer points of the American beverage market). The first fellow who made it to the head of the line and was presented with a glass of the American drink was mobbed by his fellow citizens, who all clamored to know how it tasted: "Revolting!" he cried and immediately ran to the end of the line to queue for another glass.
Soon after the exhibition, Nikita Khrushchev visited the United States and took the opportunity to explicate the rationale of the competition for his American hosts. In Pittsburgh on September 24, 1959, he declared: "We have a very popular slogan in our country right now 'catch up with and overtake the United States.'
This slogan has even frightened several of your fellow citizens, who see in it a threat against America. But what kind of 'threat' does this pose to you, to Americans? Our economic interests do not clash
We will stand up for ourselves, for our native land, and we are certain that we will catch up with and overtake you
We are warning you, as honest partners in competition, to gird
your loins, because otherwise you might find yourselves behind us
." And in a speech broadcast on American television on September 27, the Soviet leader said, "Bear in mind that the average annual speed of industrial growth in the
Soviet Union is three to five times greater than [in America]. Thus, in the next 10-12 years, we will surpass the United States both in absolute volume of industry and in per capita production.
And in agriculture this goal will be achieved significantly sooner."Khrushchev's American visit was the topic of a wide Soviet propaganda campaign, and a popular joke soon took root in the USSR that testified to the fact that Soviet citizens were starting to get fed up with the shrill and constant exhortations to catch up with and overtake America. According to the joke, US President
Dwight Eisenhower suggests to Nikita Khrushchev that they see who will catch and overtake whom in a 100-meter race. The fit Eisenhower covers the
distance easily, while paunchy Nikita barely manages to puff to the finish line a few minutes later. The Soviet newspaper Pravda reports on the event: "US President Eisenhower and our dear Nikita Sergeevich participated in an athletic
contest; Nikita Sergeevich captured second place, while the US president finished second to last."
Khrushchev's visit also made a big impression on the Americans, especially since the Soviet leader constantly touted Soviet successes in space, which he openly linked to the Soviet Union's possession of a large number of intercontinental ballistic missiles of which, he told the Americans, "you still have practically none." For its part, the US set itself the task of catching up with and overtaking the USSR in space and of not losing the arms race. The US also did not neglect to compete with the USSR in sports and education.
For post-Soviet Russia's citizens and politicians, the legacy of the Khrushchev period has been a habit of both appropriately and inappropriately comparing Russia with America, though without Nikita Sergeevich's particular turns of phrase, such as "the indices for your country (America) are the highest ceiling in the capitalist world" or "you keep riding on your same old horse we're riding a new, fresh, socialist horse, and it will be easier for us to catch up with you and overtake you."




