(1958–1962) remains the deadliest man-made disaster in human history, claiming an estimated 15 to 45 million lives. This catastrophic period was the direct result of the Great Leap Forward , an ambitious social and economic campaign intended to rapidly transform China from an agrarian society into an industrial communist superpower. Key Drivers of the Catastrophe
: While official figures suggest around 15 million deaths, historians like Frank Dikötter, author of Mao's Great Famine , place the toll as high as 45 million due to starvation, exhaustion, and state violence. Mao's Great Famine
: Local officials, desperate to meet impossible state targets, inflated production figures. This led the central government to over-procure grain, leaving the rural population with nothing to eat. Impact and Legacy : Local officials, desperate to meet impossible state
: Launched by Mao Zedong to "walk on two legs" by simultaneously modernizing industry and agriculture. : The famine was exacerbated by the diverted
: The famine was exacerbated by the diverted labor of millions from farming to industrial projects like "backyard steel furnaces," which produced useless metal while crops rotted in fields.