Nope.
Peasants
They were inefficient and did not produce enough for the countrys needs.
collective farms
The collective's membership.
No, the word 'farm' is not a collective noun, farm is a singular, common noun. A collective noun is a word to group nouns for people or things, such as a crowd of people or a herd of cattle. Some collective nouns for farms are a cooperative of farms or even a collective of farms.
State farms are agricultural enterprises owned and operated by the government, while collective farms are cooperatives where farmers pool their resources and work together on the same land. State farms are managed by government officials, while collective farms are typically managed by elected committees of farmers. State farms focus on efficiency and productivity, while collective farms emphasize communal ownership and sharing of resources.
either state farms, consumer farms, corporate owned farms, or family owned farms
organized into state farms and collective farms
A state farm is owned and operated by the government, while a collective farm is owned collectively by a group of individual farmers. State farms focus on large-scale industrial agriculture, while collective farms emphasize communal ownership and cooperative labor. State farms are typically more centralized and bureaucratic in structure, while collective farms involve more decentralized decision-making among the member farmers.
The Government
Only to the extent that a collective farm may or may not include a livestock farm. Most livestock farms are not part of a collective farm, though.
Farmers didn't really like it because USSR took farmers land to make collective farms and they didn't really get payed.