Journal of History Culture and Art Research 5 The growth of the population of the Uzbek SSR is inextricably linked with the
increase in the production of raw cotton and the expansion of cultivated areas.
Since the 1960s, cotton growing has developed rapidly in the republic, and the
peak of this process occurred in the 1980s. During this time, the population of
Uzbekistan SSR more than doubled - from 8 million people in 1960 to 19 million
people in 1987. Thus, during the period of the Soviets, a mechanism was put into
operation that allowed the growth of the republic's population to grow much
faster than the ability to meet the growing material needs of the state. By 1991,
when Uzbekistan gained independence, the population of the republic already
exceeded 20 million people.
Another important factor should be noted here. The majority of the
population of the republic lived in rural areas, while in 1989, 74% of the
population in the RSFSR lived in cities. The standard of living in cities in the Soviet
Union was much higher than in the countryside. The highest material supply and
education of the population was among the population of those republics of the
USSR, where the urban population exceeded or was approximately equal to the
rural population. In the Uzbek SSR, the level of urbanization was low, the level of
modernization was low, and the level of material well-being was low.
The increase in socio-demographic problems has also caused other
problems. Thus, in the late 1980s, religiosity and nationalism flourished in Central
Asian republics, in particular, in a number of densely populated regions of
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and southern Kyrgyzstan. Intolerance, the emergence of
the idea of building a state with Islamic rules is the result of the conscious
concentration of a part of the population in remote areas and their forced
occupation by using only the land as a salvation from the current situation. Even
in the Soviet era, this situation created conditions for the emergence of low-
income strata of the population loyal to tradition in Uzbekistan. This worsened
the chances of the republic to have the potential of highly qualified personnel
specialized in several fields. Consequently, the development of cotton growing
was inextricably linked not only with the development of all sectors of the
national economy of the Uzbek SSR, but also with the growth of the culture and
well-being of the Uzbek people. Central Asian researcher S. Abashin describes the
ethnic stereotypes that arose as a result of the "cotton farming" policy of the
USSR and cotton prosperity as follows:
"In order to ensure the economic independence of the USSR, the Soviet
leadership deliberately began to form a cotton monopoly in Central Asia. At the
same time, in contrast to, say, the cultivation of grain, cotton requires a lot of
labor, so the population of Central Asia was kept in the countryside by various
coercions. And the entire Central Asian industry and urban culture was created by
the same forced migration of people who had just been liberated from the
European part of the USSR, by the way, from agriculture. In other words, the state
contributed to the preservation of one group in the "agrarian" sector and the