AN
A-Z OF MARXISM
Preface
This
compendium of Marxist ideas and practices is aimed
at the newcomer to
the socialist movement who may be
unfamiliar with
socialist
terminology. We have included
cross-referencing, suggested books for
further reading
and links to relevant websites at the end of most
entries.
Included
are many biographical entries of individuals
and organisations of
interest to the socialist movement.
The inclusion of any of these
should not necessarily
be understood as an endorsement of their ideas
and
practices. Likewise, the suggested books and websites
may
contain views which are not necessarily the same
as those of the
Socialist Party.
It
will be obvious that there are some errors,
omissions and unworthy
inclusions. We make no claim
to comprehensive, final and definitive
truth.
This compendium can and should be better.
We therefore invite
suggestions and constructive criticisms
for use in future editions of
this compendium.
Education
Department
November
2008
The
Socialist Party of Great Britain
52
Clapham
High Street, London, SW4 7UN
www.worldsocialism.org/spgb
Abundance.
A situation where resources are sufficient,
or more than sufficient,
to satisfy human needs; whereas scarcity
is a situation where resources
are insufficient to meet human needs.
It is because
abundance is possible that socialism can be established.
In
capitalist economics human wants are said to be unlimited, so that
abundance is impossible. Economists infer that because wants e
xceed
the poverty imposed by the wages system then scarcity and
capitalism
must always exist. (See also NEEDS.)
Reading
Murray
Bookchin, Post-scarcity
Anarchism, 2004
Accumulation
of capital. The
driving force of capitalism
is the accumulation of capital through
the extraction of surplus
labour, as surplus value, from work in
productive employment.
The accumulation of capital is obtained by an
increase in the
stock of means of production, and invested money
capital, from
surplus value.
In
capitalist economics this process is often described as capitalists
having a subjective preference for future consumption (i.e. present
investment) at the expense of consumption in the present.
However,
the imperative to accumulate operates independently of
the will of
individual capitalists: it is imposed on them by competition
in the
world market. After receiving their privileged income, capitalists
re-invest surplus value in the means of production, thereby
reproducing
capital on an expanded scale. (See also CAPITAL.)
Reading
Michael
Lebowitz, Beyond
Capital, 2003
Alienation.
Karl Marx argued that human self-alienation arises
from capitalist
society and has four main aspects:
-
Workers are
alienated from the
product of their labour, since
-
others own what they
produce and
they have no effective control over it because they are workers.
-
Workers are alienated
from their
productive activity. Employment
is
forced labour: it is not the satisfaction of a human need.
- Workers
are alienated from their
human nature, because the first two aspects of alienation deprive their
work of those specifically human
qualities that
distinguish it from the activity of other animals
- The worker
is
alienated from other
workers. Instead of truly human
relations between people, relations are governed by peoples’
roles as
agents in the economic
process of capital accumulation.
(See
also FETISHISM; HUMAN
NATURE.)
Reading
Bertell
Ollman, Alienation,
1976 (online at www.nyu.edu/projects/ollman/books/a.php)
Anarchism.
A general term for a group of diverse and often contradictory
ideologies. All strands of anarchist thought however tend to see the
source of human oppression and exploitation in external authority in
general and the state in particular. Socialists, on the other hand,
see oppression and exploitation in the social relationships of
capitalism (which includes the state). There is a superficial
resemblance between anarchist-communism and socialism – but
it
is superficial. All anarchists agree that the working class cannot
(or should not) organise consciously and politically to capture state
power, preferring instead either insurrection or ignoring the state.
(See also BAKUNIN; KROPOTKIN; PROUDHON; STIRNER.)
Reading
Paul
Thomas, Karl
Marx and
the Anarchists, 1980
An
Anarchist FAQ: www.infoshop.org/faq/
Ancient
society.
‘In
broad outline, the Asiatic, the ancient, feudal and modern bourgeois
modes of production may be designated as epochs marking progress in
the economic development of society’ (Marx’s
Preface to
A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy,
1859). Marx’s list of historical epochs is not comprehensive
(it does not mention primitive communism), nor is it how social
development has everywhere taken place (North America has never known
feudalism). Ancient (Graeco-Roman) society reached its greatest
extent in the second century AD, with the Roman Empire encompassing
most of Europe, northern Africa and the Middle East. In ancient
society the predominant relations of production were the master and
slave of chattel slavery. However, a society is not identified merely
by its class relations: it is rather a specific mode of appropriation
of surplus labour. Independent producers who were the forerunner of
the medieval serf produced the surplus labour, appropriated as
taxation. As the Roman Empire declined chattel slavery increased, but
the increasing demands placed on the independent producers by an
expanding and costly empire brought about (together with external
invasion) internal collapse.
Reading
G.E.M.de
Ste. Croix, The
Class
Struggle in the Ancient Greek World,
1997
Lewis
H. Morgan, Ancient
Society, 1877
(online
at http://marx.org/reference/archive/morgan-lewis/ancient-society/index.htm)
Asiatic
society. In the
1859 Preface (see above), Marx had designated the Asiatic as one of
the epochs marking progress in the economic development of society.
He believed that the Asiatic mode of production was based on a class
of peasant producers rendering tax-rent (in the form of money or
produce) to a landlord state. Marx gave the example of Mughal India,
though the ‘Asiatic’ mode of production could also
be
found in Africa and pre-Columbian America. Marx said the consequences
of this mode of production were despotism and stagnation. Asiatic
society also goes under the name of ‘Hydraulic
Empire’
and ‘Oriental Despotism’. (See also STALINISM.)
Reading
S.H.
Rigby, Marxism
and
History, 1998
Karl
Wittfogel, Oriental
Despotism: A comparative Study of Total Power,
1957
Bakunin,
Mikhail
(1814-1876). Bakunin was a collectivist anarchist who opposed
authority from the point of view of peasants and workers. He thought
that a spontaneous uprising would sweep away the state, but his
belief in the cleansing benefits of violence was mystical:
‘Let
us then put our trust in the eternal spirit which destroys and
annihilates only because it is the unfathomable and eternally
creative source of all life. The lust of destruction is also a
creative lust.’
(The
Reaction in Germany,
1842. Note that the last sentence is often mistranslated as
‘The
urge to destroy is also a creative urge’.)
Revolutionary
violence, it is claimed, would create a new society organised as a
federation of communes with an individual’s income being
equal
to their work. Bakunin’s conspiratorialism and adventurism
brought him into conflict with Marx in the First International. It
ended with Bakunin being expelled in 1872. One consequence of this
was that, to this day, anarchist criticism of Marxism centres on the
alleged authoritarianism Marx displayed in the dispute. But the
dispute was much more than a mere clash of personalities. In the
first place, Bakunin rejected all forms of political action;
Marx’s
insistence on the need to gain political power was anathema.
Secondly, Bakunin believed that the state must be destroyed by
conspiratorial violence; Marx’s proposed
‘dictatorship of
the proletariat’ was rejected on the grounds that it would
result in a new form of tyranny.
Since
Marx’s day, however, the ‘dictatorship of the
proletariat’ has taken on a meaning which he never intended
and
anarchists have seized on it as proof of the authoritarian nature of
Marxian socialism. But this is due to Lenin’s distortion of
the
concept in the aftermath of the Russian revolution. For Marx the
‘dictatorship of the proletariat’ meant democratic
control of the state by a politically organised working class; it
didn’t mean rule by a vanguard party, as Lenin claimed.
Nevertheless, Marx put forward this concept in the circumstances
prevailing in the nineteenth century, which in certain respects no
longer apply.
In
his Conspectus
of
Bakunin’s ‘Statism and Anarchy’
(1874), Marx argued that, so long as a class of capitalists exist,
the working class must make use of the state (‘the general
means of coercion’) to dispossess them of the means of
production. This would be the most effective way of changing society
because it minimises any potential for violence. With a socialist
working class in control of the states through their use of their
socialist parties, international capitalism can be replaced by world
socialism. It is of course a great irony that anarchists should
condemn this proposed course of action as potentially authoritarian,
given their recipe for bloody civil war by waging violence against
the state (or what amounts to the same thing, trying to change
society whilst ignoring the state). In this respect they are closer
to the Leninists than they might realise. (See also ANARCHISM;
MARXISM.)
Reading
Mark
Leier, Bakunin:
The
Creative Passion,
2006
Bakunin Archive: http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/bakunin/Bakuninarchive.html
Banks.
Financial intermediaries which accept deposits and lend money. Banks
and other financial institutions do not create wealth: their profits
are ultimately derived from surplus value created in the production
process.
Capitalist
economics mostly maintains that banks can create money by making
loans. But if this were true then no bank would ever get into
financial difficulty; they would simply pull themselves up by their
own bootstraps by creating the required credit and money. The history
of the collapse of banks shows that they cannot create money. (See
also INTEREST; LABOUR
THEORY OF VALUE.)
Bolshevism.
At the second Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party
(RSDLP), held in London in 1903, a vote was taken on the composition
of the editorial board of Iskra, the Party newspaper. The vote gave a
majority to Lenin’s group, who then assumed the name
‘Bolsheviki’ (the majority). The other wing of the
RSDLP
were known as the ‘Mensheviki’ (the minority), led
by
Julius Martov. These two titles are misleading, however, since what
really separated the two wings of the RSDLP were the Party’s
conditions of membership. Under Lenin’s influence, the
Bolsheviks believed that, because the working class by themselves
could only achieve a trade union consciousness, workers needed to be
led to socialism by a vanguard party of professional revolutionaries.
The Mensheviks, especially Martov, were critical of the elitist and
highly undemocratic nature of Bolshevism. The
Bolsheviks
seized power in Russia during the October 1917 revolution. (See
also LENINISM.)
Reading
Paul
Mattick, Anti-Bolshevik
Communism, 1978
(online
at www.marxists.org/archive/mattick-paul/1978/introduction.htm)
Capital.
Capital is a social relation that expresses itself as a form of
exchange value. As money capital it constitutes the accumulated
unpaid surplus labour of the past appropriated by the capitalist
class in the present. Capital can also take the form of a sum of
commodities (machinery, raw materials, labour power, etc.) used in
the reproduction of exchange values.
In
capitalist economics capital is defined as an asset from which an
income can be derived, even if only potentially (a house, for
example). From this it follows that capital has always existed and
always will, and that inanimate things can be productive. However, it
is only under certain historical and social conditions that capital
comes into existence: specifically, when the means of production are
used to exploit wage labour for surplus value. (See also CAPITALISM.)
Reading
David
Harvey, The
Limits to
Capital, 2006
David
Harvey, Reading
Marx's Capital, online at http://davidharvey.org/
Capitalism.
A system of society based on the class monopoly of the means of
production and distribution, it has the following six essential
characteristics:
-
Generalised commodity
production, nearly
all wealth being produced for sale on a market.
- The
investment of capital in production with a view to obtaining a
monetary profit.
- The
exploitation of wage labour, the source of profit being the unpaid
labour of the producers.
- The
regulation of production by the market via a competitive struggle for
profits.
- The
accumulation of capital out of profits, leading to the expansion and
development of the forces of production.
- A
single world economy.
Reading
A.
Buick & J. Crump, State
Capitalism, 1986
Michael
Perelman, The
Invention of Capitalism, 2000
Capitalist
class (or Bourgeoisie).
The capitalists personify capital. Because they possess the means of
production and distribution, whether in the form of legal property
rights of individuals backed by the state or collectively as a
bureaucracy through the state, the capitalist class lives on
privileged incomes derived from surplus value.
The
capitalists personally need not - and mostly do not - get involved in
the process of production. Social production is carried on by
capitalist enterprises which are overwhelmingly comprised of members
of the working class. (See also CLASS.)
Reading
Hal
Draper, Karl
Marx's Theory of Revolution, Vol. 2: The Politics of Social Classes,
1979
China.
Mao Zedong (or Mao Tse-tung) helped to form the Chinese Communist
Party (CCP) in 1921. After the Second World War all the major Chinese
cities, previously controlled by the Japanese, fell into control of
the nationalists, the Kuomintang, led by Chiang kai-shek. However,
the Kuomintang soon became discredited in the eyes of the peasants
and by 1947 civil war broke out between the Communists and the
Kuomintang. In September 1949 Chiang kai-shek and other Kuomintang
leaders fled to Taiwan. On 1 October 1949 Mao proclaimed the
inauguration of the Peoples’ Republic of China.
Mao
launched the disastrous Great Leap Forward (1958-59) in an attempt to
hasten economic development. He also instituted the Cultural
Revolution (1966) to re-establish revolutionary fervour and get rid
of his opponents. Mao modelled the development of Chinese industry on
Russian State capitalism; and this model of development continued
after the Sino-Soviet split in 1960. Since Mao’s death in
1976
the development of capitalism in China, on a more market-orientated
basis, has continued under the tight control of the CCP. (See also MAO; MAOISM; STATE
CAPITALISM.)
Reading
John
Keay, China:
A History,
2008
History
of China: www-chaos.umd.edu/history/toc.html
Class.
People are divided into classes according to their social
relationship to the means of wealth production and distribution.
These classes have changed according to changing social conditions
(e.g. slaves and masters, peasants and lords). In capitalism people
are divided into those who possess the means of production in the
form of capital, the capitalist class, and those who produce but do
not possess, the working class (which includes dependants).
The
working class, as they have no other property to sell on a regular
basis, live by selling their labour power for a wage or a salary.
This class therefore comprises unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled,
professional, and unemployed workers; it includes those at various
stages of the reproduction cycle of labour power, such as
schoolchildren, housewives and pensioners. This class runs society
from top to bottom. The capitalist class, on the other hand, does not
have to work in order to get an income. They draw rent interest and
profit (surplus value) because they own the means of life.
Of
course there are other social groups such as peasants and small
proprietors, but these are incidental to capitalism. As a system of
society that predominates throughout the world, capitalism is based
on the exploitation of the working class by the capitalist class
through the wages system. Nor does the number of jobs in management
and the professions alter the situation; for the most part they too
are workers compelled to sell their labour power and suffer
unemployment. Even if there has been some separation of ownership and
control of capitalist enterprises, the capitalists still maintain a
privileged income through their ownership; they still possess but do
not produce. (See also CLASS
CONSCIOUSNESS; CLASS STRUGGLE; WORKING
CLASS.)
Reading
Keith
Graham, Karl
Marx, Our
Contemporary, 1992
Class-consciousness.
The objective social position of the working class is that they stand
in an antagonistic relation to the capitalist class. When the working
class become aware of this antagonism, the subjective dimension of
class, they can abolish capitalism and establish socialism. As Marx
put it, workers would develop from a class ‘in
itself’ (a
common class position but without workers being aware of it), to
become a class ‘for itself’ (a collective awareness
among
workers of their class position).
Class-consciousness
develops mainly out of the working class’s everyday
experiences
of the contradictions of capitalism (poverty amidst plenty, etc.).
These contradictions are, in turn, derived from the most basic
contradiction of capitalism: the contradiction between social
production and class ownership of the means of production. (See also CLASS; CONTRADICTION; IDEOLOGY.)
Class
struggle.
‘The
history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class
struggle’ (Communist Manifesto). Marx and Engels later
qualified this to refer to written history in order to take account
of early primitive communist societies in which class divisions had
not yet emerged. In ancient society the struggles were between slave
owners and slaves; in feudal society between lords and serfs; and in
capitalism, capitalists and workers.
These
struggles have been over the distribution of the social product, the
organisation of work, working conditions and the results of
production. The class struggle is more than a struggle over the level
of exploitation, however. Ultimately it is a struggle over the
ownership and control of the means of production and distribution.
Throughout history, classes excluded from the ownership and control
of the means of production and distribution have been driven by their
economic situation to try to gain such ownership through gaining
political power. (See also CLASS; HISTORY.)
Commodity.
A commodity is an item of wealth that has been produced for sale.
Commodities have been produced in pre-capitalist societies but such
production was marginal. It is only in capitalism that it becomes the
dominant mode of production, where goods and services are produced
for sale with a view to profit. Under capitalism the object of
commodity production is the realisation of profit when the
commodities have been sold; these profits are mostly re-invested and
accumulated as capital. Commodities can be reproduced, and this
includes the uniquely capitalist commodity of human labour power.
(See also LABOUR
POWER; LABOUR
THEORY OF VALUE.)
Reading
A.
Filho & B. Fine, Marx’s
‘Capital’,
2003
Common
ownership. If
everyone owns the means of wealth production and distribution then,
to put it another way, nobody owns them. The concept of property in
the sense of exclusive possession then becomes meaningless. Common
ownership is a social relationship and not a form of legal property
ownership. This social relationship will be one of equality between
people with regard to the control of the use of the means of
production. In practical terms, common ownership means democratic
control of the means of production by the whole community. Common
ownership is therefore synonymous with democracy. (See also DEMOCRACY.)
Communism. The word
‘communism’ originated in the
revolutionary
groups in France in the 1830s. At about the same time, Owenite groups
in Britain were first using the word ‘socialism’.
Marx
and Engels used both words interchangeably. In fact, in Marx and
Engels’ earlier years on the continent they usually referred
to
themselves and the working class movement as communist; later in
Britain as socialist. In his Critique
of the Gotha Programme
(1875), Marx made a distinction between two stages of
‘communist
society’, both based on common ownership: a lower stage, with
individual consumption being rationed, possibly by the use of
labour-time vouchers, and a higher stage in which each person
contributes to society according to ability and draws from the common
stock according to needs. In both stages, however, there would be no
money economy or state.
Lenin,
in his State
and
Revolution (1917),
made famous the description of these two stages as
‘socialism’
and ‘communism’ respectively, in which there would
be a
money economy and state in the transitional society of
‘socialism’.
Socialists use the words socialism and communism interchangeably to
refer to the society of common ownership, thereby denying the
Leninist claim that there is a need for a transitional society. (See
also SOCIALISM; TRANSITIONAL
SOCIETY.)
Reading
A.
Buick & J. Crump, Non
Market Socialism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,
1987
George
Lichtheim, A
Short
History of Socialism,
1983
Communist
Party. In 1848
Marx’s Manifesto
of the Communist Party
(now somewhat misleadingly called the Communist
Manifesto) was
published by the Communist League. In the Manifesto,
Communists are said to be distinctive only in always emphasising
‘the
common interests of the entire proletariat’.
In
Russia the Bolshevik section of the Russian Social Democratic Labour
Party changed its name to the Russian Communist Party (Bolshevik),
after its seizure of power in 1917. From 1952 it was called the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). The Communist Party of
Great Britain (CPGB) was formed in 1920 and took its political line
(and, until its demise, a lot of its money) directly from Moscow.
During the 1970s many European Communist Parties began to re-assess
their bloody, anti-working class history. One by one they adopted
‘Eurocommunism’ and attempted to distance
themselves from
the CPSU and their Stalinist past. Following the fall of the Kremlin
Empire in 1989, however, the Communist parties lost all credibility
and many changed their name and ideology. Though suppressed by
Yeltsin in 1991, the Russian Communist Party retains its name but is
now more a supporter of market capitalism than state capitalism. In
Britain the CPGB became the Democratic Left, a pressure group for
various reforms, before collapsing completely after a few years. The
tradition of the old CPGB is carried on by the Communist Party of
Britain, which publishes the Morning Star. There is also a new CPGB
which publishes the Weekly Worker, but
this
group merely usurped the name when the old CPGB dropped it; they are
a Leninist sect which is not in the CPGB tradition). (See also BOLSHEVISM; COMMUNISM;
RUSSIA.)
Reading
Stuart
Macintyre, A
Proletarian Science,
1986
Communist
Party of
Britain: www.communist-party.org.uk/index.php
Contradiction.
In capitalist society there is a contradiction, or conflict of
material interests, between the class monopoly of the means of wealth
production and distribution and the social process of production.
Capitalism, in other words, subordinates production to privileged
class interests; profits take priority over needs. From this
essential contradiction of capitalism others follow, such as: famine
amidst plenty, homelessness alongside empty buildings, pollution as a
way of ‘externalising’ (i.e. reducing) costs and
maximising profits, and so on.
Socialist
society will end these contradictions because it will bring social
production into line with social ownership and therefore into line
with social needs. (See also CLASS
CONSCIOUSNESS.)
Co-operatives.
Enterprises which are nominally jointly owned and controlled by their
members. The origins of the co-operative movement go back to Robert
Owen in the early nineteenth century. As an alternative route to
socialism it has been a failure, although the modern co-operative
movement continues to draw inspiration from examples such as
Mondragon in Spain.
Some
supporters of capitalism are also supporters of co-operatives. They
see them as a way of mitigating the class struggle and persuading
workers that they have an interest in accepting
‘realistic’
(i.e. lower) wages. However, co-operatives do not give workers
security of employment or free them from exploitation.
Co-operatives
cannot be used as a means for establishing socialism. As long as the
capitalist class control political power, which they will be able to
continue to do for as long as there is a majority of non-socialists,
capitalist economic relations (commodity production, wage labour,
production for profit, etc.) will be bound to prevail and these will
control the destiny of co-operatives. Co-operatives usually only
flourish to the extent that they can be successfully accommodated
within capitalism. (See also CAPITAL; OWEN.)
Crises.
Capitalist production goes through a continuous cycle of boom, crisis
and depression. A boom is a period when most industries are working
to full capacity and unemployment is correspondingly low. A crisis is
the sudden break that brings the boom to an end. A depression is the
decline of production and increase of unemployment that comes after
the crisis. It is important to recognise the difference between the
two latter stages of the trade cycle, because the factors that govern
the period up to the crisis and the crisis itself are different to
the factors which operate during the period of depression.
A
booming economy will go into a phase of
‘over-trade’ when
a key industry, or a number of industries, find that they have
produced more than they can sell at a profit in their particular
market. Then comes the sudden crisis followed by depression. This
cycle is natural for capitalism and does not mean that something has
gone wrong with the economy. The trigger for the global financial
crisis of 2008 is to be found in overproduction in the US housing
market. (See also DEPRESSIONS; SAY'S
LAW.)
Reading
Simon
Clarke, Marx’s
Theory of Crisis, 1994
Cuba.
The national liberation movement in Cuba succeeded with an assault on
Fort Moncada on 26 July 1953 and ended with the seizure of power by
Fidel Castro and his July 26 Movement on 2 January 1959. This
overthrew the corrupt and brutal regime of Fulgencio Batista.
After
the revolution, in February 1960, a trade and credit agreement with
Russia was signed. In April, Russian oil began to arrive in Cuba and,
when the American-owned oil companies refused to refine it, Castro
confiscated the Texaco, Shell and Standard Oil refineries. Between
August and October 1960 Castro nationalised virtually all
American-owned properties and most large Cuban-owned businesses. In
October the United States announced a total trade embargo with Cuba.
So, to survive the economic isolation, Castro looked towards the
‘Communist bloc’.
In
April 1961, the day before the Bay of Pigs invasion, Castro
officially declared that Cuba’s revolution was
‘socialist’.
By a convenient coincidence, and with no previous interest in
left-wing ideology, in December 1961 Castro announced that he was now
a ‘Marxist-Leninist’. In October 1965 the Communist
Party
of Cuba was formed. However, for several years it had no programme or
statutes (its first Congress was held ten years later, in December
1975), and was essentially an organisational extension of
Castro’s
personal authority. Brought to power by mass support for national
liberation, Castro and his ruling party, and since 2008 his brother
Raul as leader, continue the development of national state
capitalism. (See also NATIONAL
LIBERATION.)
Reading
Robin
Blackburn, Slavery
and
Empire: The Making of Modern Cuba,
1978
International
edition of the Communist Party of Cuba Newspaper: www.granma.cu/ingles/index.html
Darwin,
Charles
(1809-1882). Born and educated at Shrewsbury, passing on to Cambridge
university to study theology. He sailed on the naturalist expedition
in the Beagle (1831-1836),
and
on
returning he spent over twenty years developing his hypothesis that
species evolve by the process of natural selection. In 1859 his
theories were published in On
the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the
Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life (usually
abbreviated to Origin
of Species). His
theories created a major sensation, and their influence went far
beyond the biological sciences, helping to create the scientific
outlook of the late nineteenth century.
Marx
thought very highly of Origin
of Species and sent
Darwin a presentation copy of Capital.
But he did not, as sometimes claimed, offer to dedicate Capital to
Darwin. Rather
it
was Marx's son-in-law, Edward Aveling, who offered to dedicate one of
his own books to Darwin. Darwin never read Capital and he
rejected
Aveling’s offer. (See also DARWINISM.)
Reading
Janet
Browne, Darwin’s
Origin of Species,
2006
Darwin
online: http://darwin-online.org.uk/
Darwinism. Darwin’s view
of organic evolution through natural selection. More specifically, it
is the ‘theory that evolution is guided in adaptively
nonrandom
directions by the nonrandom survival of small random hereditary
changes’ (Richard Dawkins). However, Darwinism has become
confused with the notions of ‘survival of the
fittest’
and ‘social Darwinism’.
In
the fifth edition of Origin
of Species (1869), at
the suggestion his friend and colleague, Alfred Russel Wallace,
Darwin first introduced the notorious phrase ‘survival of the
fittest’. Wallace had taken this phrase from the writings of
Herbert Spencer, a well known champion of free market capitalism in
late nineteenth century Britain. In Spencer’s social
philosophy, which would later be called ‘social
Darwinism’,
social organizations operate on exactly the same principles as
biological organisms. But Darwin had never taken any of Spencer's
ideas on social evolution seriously and the phrase ‘survival
of the fittest’ is at odds with Darwin's own ideas about
natural selection by adaptation.
Reading
Richard
Dawkins, A
Devil's
Chaplain, 2003
Anton Pannekoek, Marxism
And Darwinism, 1909
(online
at: www.marxists.org/archive/pannekoe/1912/marxism-darwinism.htm)
De
Leon, Daniel
(1852-1914). De Leon joined the Socialist Labour Party in the United
States in 1890. As editor of the SLP paper The People, De Leon was an
outstanding advocate of Marxism until his death in 1914. In 1903 a
Socialist Labour Party was formed in Britain, which broke away from
the SDF a year before the SPGB, and modelled its ideas on the
industrial unionist policy of De Leon and the American SLP. On the
political front, De Leon firmly rejected reformism and argued for the
capture of political power solely to establish socialism; and on the
industrial unionist front he argued for a revolutionary trade
unionism. In 1905 he joined in founding the Industrial Workers of the
World (the ‘Wobblies’), a syndicalist organisation.
(See
also SYNDICALISM.)
Reading
Stephen
Coleman, Daniel
De
Leon, 1990.
De
Leon online: www.slp.org/De_Leon.htm
Democracy.
A term which originated in ancient Greece where it meant rule by the
citizens (which excluded the majority - foreigners, women and
slaves). In the modern Western world, ‘liberal
democracy’
means little more than regular elections in which competing political
parties put up candidates for government office, offering voters the
chance to choose between marginally different sets of policies. This
is to be preferred to those conditions in countries where even these
limited rights do not exist. However, ‘liberal
democracy’
does not constitute a meaningful conception of democracy. Socialists
argue that all governments, no matter how well-intentioned or
enlightened, in trying to administer the capitalist system as a whole
(‘the national interest’), usually pursue policies
that
favour the capitalist class. It is in this sense that the United
Nations has declared 15 September as the ‘International
Day of Democracy’.
In
socialist society the machinery of government of the states of the
world can have given way to democratic administration at local,
regional and global levels. Real democracy will involve equality
between all people with regard to the control of the use of the means
of production. (See also COMMON OWNERSHIP;
DICTATORSHIP; PARLIAMENT.)
Reading
Keith
Graham, The
Battle of
Democracy, 1986
Depression (or Recession). Capitalist
production
goes through continuous cycles of boom, crisis and depression. In a
boom some industries, encouraged by high profits, produce more than
can be profitably sold in a particular market. A crisis then occurs.
And, if the combined effect is large enough, it is followed by a
depression as other industries get sucked into the downward spiral of
unsold commodities and falling profits. Businesses then curtail
production, or close down altogether, and lay off workers. Eventually
the conditions for profitable production are restored (less
competition as competitors go bust, an increased rate of
exploitation, higher profits, etc.) and business booms … but
only to repeat the cycle. (See also CRISES.)
Reading
Simon
Clarke, Marx’s
Theory of Crisis, 1994
Dialectic.
For Socrates it was teasing out the threads of an argument by asking
questions. In Hegel's philosophy it was the development of the idea
through history. With Marx and Engels, however, there is some dispute
as to what their version of the dialectic means, or even if they were
both talking about the same thing. This apparent confusion is
compounded by Plekhanov's term ‘dialectical
materialism’,
a phrase not used by Marx or Engels, yet this was designated the
official philosophy of state capitalist Russia in the years after the
Bolshevik revolution.
For
Marx it seems that his dialectic has two main features. Firstly, it
is a philosophy of internal
relations. Capitalism
is a system constituted by its social relations of production, and a
change to one relationship will have consequences for the whole
system. This philosophical viewpoint tries to understand that
process. Secondly, it is a method of abstraction.
The key social relationships of capitalism (e.g. value, commodity,
class) depend upon, but are not reducible to, material objects. They
can only be comprehended as abstractions but they are nonetheless
real and can affect our lives profoundly when they mean that
profit-making takes priority over human needs. According to Bertell
Ollman:
‘Dialectics
is not a rock-ribbed triad of thesis-antithesis-synthesis that serves
as an all-purpose explanation; nor does it provide a formula that
enables us to prove or predict anything; nor is it the motor force of
history. The dialectic, as such, explains nothing, proves nothing,
predicts nothing, and causes nothing to happen. Rather, dialectics is
a way of thinking that brings into focus the full range of changes
and interactions that occur in the world.’
(See
also HEGEL; MARXISM.)
Reading
Bertell
Ollman, Dance
of the
Dialectic, 2003
(online
at www.nyu.edu/projects/ollman/books/dd.php)
Dictatorship.
Under a dictatorship the traditional forms of working class political
and economic organisation are denied the right of legal existence.
Freedom of speech, assembly and the Press is severely curtailed and
made to conform to the needs of a single political party that has for
the time being secured a monopoly in the administration of the state
machine.
The
concept of the ‘dictatorship of the proletariat’
has a
central place in Leninist thought. The phrase was used by Marx and
Engels to mean the working class conquest of political power. In State
and Revolution
(1917), however, Lenin wrote of the ‘dictatorship of the
proletariat under the guidance of the party’. The Leninist
theory of the vanguard party leads inevitably to the dictatorship
over the proletariat. (See also DEMOCRACY; LENINISM.)
Reading
Hal
Draper, Karl
Marx’s
Theory of Revolution: Dictatorship of the Proletariat,
1987
Draper
on DOP: http://marxmyths.org/hal-draper/article2.htm
Direct
action. A form
of civil disobedience in which people seek immediate remedies to
political, social and environmental problems. Modern direct action
movements, which can be violent or non-violent, often combines Green
and anarchist strands of thought and urges people to organise at
local level and avoid indirect electoral activity.
The
direct action criticism of the socialist argument for gaining
political power rests on disillusionment fostered by
capitalism’s
inability to solve its own problems, and a belief that the capitalist
class would use the state to violently crush a majority decision to
establish socialism. On the other hand, this is contradicted by their
claim that the ruling class will give in to pressure from below from
grass-roots groups who have not shown that they represent the
majority view. (See also ANARCHISM; ECOLOGY; GREENS)
Reading
Earth
First!
Direct
Action: http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/
Ecology.
In 1871 a German biologist, Ernst Haeckel, coined the word
‘ecology’.
It derives from the Greek word ‘oikos’ meaning
‘house’
or ‘habitat’ and can be defined as the study of
relationships between organisms and their environment or natural
habitat.
Under
the present economic system production is not directly geared to
meeting human and environmental needs but rather to the accumulation
of profits. As a result, not only are basic needs far from satisfied
but also much of what is produced is pure waste. For instance, all
the resources involved in commerce and finance, the mere buying and
selling of things and those poured into armaments. Moreover,
capitalist states, industries and even individuals are encouraged by
competition in the market to externalise their costs
(‘externalities’
as economists call them) by dumping unwanted waste products into the
environment. The whole system of production, from the methods
employed to the choice of what to produce, is distorted by the
imperative to accumulate without consideration for the longer term
and global factors that ecology teaches are vitally important. The
overall result is an economic system governed by blind economic
forces that oblige decision-makers, however selected and whatever
their personal views or sentiments, to plunder, pollute and waste.
If
we are to meet our needs in an ecologically acceptable way we must
first be able to control production - or, put another way, able to
consciously regulate our interaction with the rest of nature - and
the only basis on which this can be done is the common ownership and
democratic control of the means of production, with production solely
for human and environmental needs. (See also GREENS;
ZERO
GROWTH.)
Reading
Paul
Burkett, Marx
and
Nature, 1999
David
Pepper, Eco-socialism,
1993
Economic
Calculation Argument.
The claim made by the Austrian
economist Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) and others that, in the
absence of market prices, a socialist society would be unable to
make rational choices concerning the allocation of resources. But as
Robin Cox points out, this argument merely amounts to the tautology
that ‘only
a market
economy is able to perform economic calculations couched in market
prices’
and that it
is ‘reading
into
socialism the functional requirements of capitalism’.
In reality it is the wasteful, destructive and exploitative
capitalist system that is incapable of rationally allocating
resources. That is why the Socialist Party exists and constitutes the
case for socialism.
Socialism
will be a system of production for use in direct response to needs,
without the need for society-wide planning for all production. The
operational basis for this system would be calculation in kind (e.g.
tonnes, kilos, litres) instead of monetary calculation. (See also ABUNDANCE; ECONOMICS; PRICE.)
Reading
Robin
Cox, The
“Economic Calculation” controversy: unravelling of
a
myth, 2005
(online
at: www.cvoice.org/cv3cox.htm)
Economics.
The study of the production and distribution of wealth in capitalist
society (also known by its older and more accurate name, political
economy). Under capitalism wealth production is governed by forces
based on exchange value which operate independently of human will and
which impose themselves as external, coercive laws when people make
decisions about the production of wealth. In other words, the social
process of wealth production under capitalism is an economy governed
by economic laws and studied by a special discipline, economics.
Socialism
will re-establish conscious human control over wealth production;
therefore, socialism will abolish capitalism’s economic laws
and so also ‘the economy’ as the field of human
activity
governed by their operation. Hence socialism will make economics
redundant. (See also MARKET; SOCIALISM.)
Reading
MIA
Glosssary of Economics:
www.marxists.org/glossary/subject/frames/basic-economics.htm
Engels,
Friedrich
(1820-1895). Born in what is now called Wuppertal, Germany, the
eldest son of a textile capitalist. Engels was trained for a career
as a merchant, but in 1841 he went to Berlin and became closely
involved in the Young Hegelians, a group of left-wing philosophers
with whom Marx had also been involved. In 1842 Engels became a
communist (before and independently of Marx) and went to Manchester
to work in his father’s business. In England he became
interested in Chartism and the struggles of the English working
class. His researches, and his socialist conclusions, were recorded
in The
Condition of the
Working Class in England
(1844). Engels and Marx agreed to produce a political satire: The
Holy Family (1845)
marked the beginning of a life-long collaboration. Engels and Marx
began writing The
German Ideology in
November 1845 and continued work on it for nearly a year before it
was abandoned unfinished, as Marx put it, to ‘the gnawing
criticism of the mice’ (teeth marks of mice were subsequently
found on the manuscript). This work contains an attack on the Young
Hegelians (the German ideology in question) and in so doing they set
out the basic principles of the materialist conception of history.
Engels helped Marx to write the Manifesto
of the Communist Party,
published by the Communist League in 1848. To some extent, this work
derives from a piece Engels wrote in catechism form the previous
year, Principles
of
Communism. Engels and
Marx then became active in radical journalism during the upheavals
that followed the revolutions of 1848.
In
1850 Engels re-joined the family firm in Manchester, where he stayed
until 1870, helping Marx financially and journalistically. Engels
also developed his own lines of interest, especially in the natural
sciences, and one result of his studies was published in 1927 as Dialectics
of Nature.
In 1878 he was able to retire and move to London. As Marx became less
politically active due to ill health, so Engels took on more
responsibility for setting out 'our joint position.' In 1878 Anti-Duhring
appeared, and three chapters from it were published as Socialism,
Utopian and Scientific
in 1880. This latter work proved to be immensely popular within the
growing socialist movement as a general exposition of Marxism. Engels
continued to pursue his own lines of interest and in 1884 The
Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State
was written and published. And in 1888, in Ludwig
Feuerbach and the End of Classical German Philosophy,
Engels explained his philosophy of nature and history. However, after
Marx’s death in 1883 Engels spent most of his time editing
Marx’s notes for volumes two and three of Capital,
published in 1885 and 1894 respectively. Engels also spent his last
few years acting as an adviser to the parties of the Second
International, before dying of cancer in 1895. (See also MARX; MARXISM.)
Reading
M.
Steger & T. Carver, Engels
After Marx,
1999
Rubel
on Marx and
Engels: http://marxmyths.org/maximilien-rubel/article.htm
Equality.
Socialism will be a system of society based on the common ownership
of the means of production. Common ownership will be a social
relationship of equality between all people with regard to the
control of the use of the means of production. This establishes a
classless society. Socialism does not mean equality of income or
reward, nor does it mean equality by a re-distribution of personal
wealth.
Contrary
to popular myth, Marx and Engels did not frame their arguments for
socialism in terms of material equality. In fact they rejected
demands for levelling down as ‘crude communism’. As
Allen
Wood has pointed out, they did not criticise capitalism because
poverty is unevenly distributed, but because there is poverty where
there need be none, and that there is a privileged class which
benefits from a system which subjects the majority to an artificial
and unnecessary poverty. And in his Critique
of the Gotha Programme
(1875), Marx argued that communism would run along the lines of
‘From
each according to ability, to each according to needs’. This
is
not an egalitarian slogan. Rather, it asks for people to be
considered individually, each with a different set of needs and
abilities. (See also COMMON OWNERSHIP.)
Reading
Allen
Wood, Karl Marx, 2004
Exchange
value. A
relative magnitude which expresses the relationship between two
commodities. The proportion in which commodities tend to exchange
with each other depends upon the amount of socially necessary
labour-time spent in producing them. Commodities actually sell at
market prices that rise and fall according to market conditions
around a point regulated by their value and, more specifically, their
price of production. (See also LABOUR
THEORY OF VALUE; PRICE OF
PRODUCTION; VALUE.)
Exploitation.
A morally neutral term, as used by socialists, to denote the
historically specific form of the extraction of surplus labour.
Feudalism was based on the appropriation of surplus labour as feudal
tribute (in the form of money, produce or labour services) from the
peasantry. Capitalist enterprises buy workers’ labour power
for
a wage or a salary which is more or less equal to its value but
extract labour greater than the equivalent of that wage or salary.
This surplus labour takes the form of surplus value and is the source
of profit. But it is important to remember that, because surplus
value is socially produced, an employee is not just exploited by
their particular employer. Exploitation is a class relationship only:
the capitalist class exploit the working class. (See also CLASS; LABOUR POWER; SURPLUS
VALUE.)
Fabian
Society.
Established in 1884 to ‘permeate’, first the
Liberal
Party, then the Labour Party, with ideas on the need for state
capitalism. Among the early Fabians were George Bernard Shaw, H.G.
Wells and Sidney and Beatrice Webb. Fabians called themselves
‘socialist’ (although their political outlook was
largely
derived from Utilitarianism) and believed that
‘socialism’
(i.e. state capitalism) could be brought about only after a long
process of social reform -- a belief that Sidney Webb termed
‘the
inevitability of gradualness.’ The Society played a minor
part
in the formation of the Labour Party, but in 1918 the Labour Party
adopted a constitution that was mostly written by Sidney Webb. Today
the Society is little more than a ‘think-tank’ for
the
Labour Party.
According
to George Lichtheim, the title ‘Fabian Society’
appears
to have been suggested by Frank Podmore, a founder member:
‘It
was a reference to the elderly Roman commander Fabius Cunctator,
famous for his extreme caution in conducting military operations,
especially when matched against Hannibal. Some of the earliest tracts
of the Society bore a motto (composed by Podmore) which ran in part:
“For the right moment you must wait, as Fabius did most
patiently, when warring against Hannibal, though many censured his
delays; but when the time comes you must strike hard, as Fabius did,
or your waiting will be in vain and fruitless.” Closer
acquaintance with
Roman history might perhaps have induced Podmore to inquire where and
when Fabius “struck hard”: there is no record of
such an
occurrence. Malicious critics of Fabianism have been known to hint
that there may have been something prophetic, or at least symbolic,
in this misreading of history and that anyone who expects Fabians to
“strike hard” for socialism or anything else is
quite
likely to have to wait until Doomsday.’
(See
also GRADUALISM; LABOUR
PARTY; WEBB S&B.)
Reading
George
Lichtheim, A
Short
History of Socialism,
1983
Fabian
Society: http://fabians.org.uk/
Fascism. The
term fascismo was coined
by the Italian Fascist
dictator
Benito Mussolini and Hegelian philosopher Giovanni Gentile. It is
derived from the Italian word fascio, which means ‘bundle’
or ‘union’. Fascism was - and
is -
an
authoritarian, nationalistic and anti-socialist political ideology
that preaches the need for a strong state ruled by a single political
party led by a charismatic leader. The term is often applied to other
similar political movements, such as German Nazism; but racism and
anti-Semitism, though it did exist, did not play a prominent role in
Italian fascism. (See also DICTATORSHIP; RACISM.)
Reading
Roger
Eatwell, Fascism:
A
History, 1996
Giovanni
Gentile & Benito
Mussolini, The
Doctrine of Fascism,
1932
(online
at www.worldfuturefund.org/wffmaster/Reading/Germany/mussolini.htm)
Feminism.
Feminist theories of womens’ oppression and inequality have
been developed largely within the liberal tradition of political
philosophy. Demands have usually been formulated on the basis of
moral arguments relating to legal rights and justice, and ignoring
the economic conditions that render such claims meaningless within
the context of capitalism. ‘Socialist’ feminists,
while
recognising the importance of class, have become bogged down in
reformism; in effect their demand is to be wage slaves equally with
men. ‘Radical’ feminists attack patriarchy, not
class, as
the source of women’s oppression.
While
it is undeniable that most women experience certain forms of
oppression and discrimination as a result of their gender, to suffer
from sexism at all it is usually necessary to be a member of the
working class; it is not normally a problem for female members of the
capitalist class. The socialist movement, being based on a class
analysis of capitalism, provides a motivation for women’s
liberation since socialism can only be achieved with the majority
support of women and of men. (See also REFORMISM; SEXISM.)
Reading
Vincent,
A., Modern
Political
Ideologies, 1992
The
Feminist eZine: www.feministezine.com/feminist/index.html
Fetishism.
In capitalist society fetishism arises because the relations based on
the exchange value of commodities control workers and their products.
Exchange value is a direct relation between products, and indirectly,
through them, between the workers. To the workers, therefore, the
relations between them appear not as direct social relations but as
what they really are - material relations between people and social
relations between things.
In
capitalist society commodities are produced primarily for exchange,
for their exchange value. Therefore it is exchange value that will
determine production and distribution, and the workers own products
confront them as alien objects ruling over them.
In
socialist society this mystical veil over social production will be
lifted and in its place there will be direct social relations between
people and their products. (See also ALIENATION.)
Reading
Marx
on The
Fetishism
of Commodities:
www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/ch01.htm#S4
Feudal
society. In his
Preface to A
Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy
(1859), Marx designated the feudal as one of the epochs marking
progress in the economic development of society. As a system of
society, feudalism flourished in Europe in the Middle Ages, though it
existed elsewhere and at different periods. The feudal mode of
production was based on the effective possession (but not necessarily
legal ownership) of some of the means of production by the peasantry.
Within this manorial organisation of production the lords
appropriated the surplus labour of the peasants as feudal rent (in
the form of rent in kind, money, labour or taxes) using political
force and religious ideology as the means of control.
Reading
Rodney
Hilton, The
Transition
from Feudalism to Capitalism,
1985
Forces
of production.
What can be broadly understood as technology, the forces of
production include materials, machinery, techniques and the work
performed by human beings in the production of wealth. (See also HISTORY; RELATIONS
OF PRODUCTION.)
Freedom.
According to classical liberal political philosophy, freedom is the
absence of direct physical constraint; freedom being essentially
negative, it is always freedom from something. This point of view
ignores poverty, unemployment and wage labour as examples of
constraints and lack of freedom.
Under
capitalism, however, the working class are unfree. Although
individual workers may have some ‘freedom’ of
action (to
change jobs, for example), as a member of the working class we are
coerced into selling our labour power, or taking on any of the roles
involved in the reproduction of labour power, such as student,
housewife or pensioner. Because the capitalist class own the means of
life, workers cannot escape from their class position in society: we
are wage slaves.
For
socialists, freedom is self-determination. On the new basis of common
ownership, democratic control and production solely for
self-determined needs, socialism will be a society in which the free
development of each is the condition for the free development of all.
(See also CAPITALISM; SOCIALISM.)
General
strike. The
British general strike of 4 - 12 May 1926 was provoked by the
mine-owners who, faced with an adverse market for coal, demanded a
cut in wages and an increase in working hours from the mineworkers.
The Miners’ Federation, led by A.J. Cook and others, asked
the
TUC to bring out all the major industries, in line with a resolution
supporting the miners carried at the 1925 Congress. The Conservative
government, with Stanley Baldwin as Prime Minister, had prepared for
the strike by recruiting special constables and setting up the
strikebreaking Organisation for the Maintenance of Supplies. During
the strike millions of workers came out in support of the miners. The
government monopolised the means of propaganda, however, and the BBC
suppressed news that might have embarrassed the government. Director
General of the BBC, John Reith (knighted for his services the
following year), wrote in his diary after the strike:
‘
They
want to be
able to say that they did not commandeer us, but they know that they
can trust us not to be really impartial.’ (Quoted
in On
Television,
by Stuart Hood, 1997.)
After
nine days the General Council of the TUC called off the general
strike, betraying every resolution upon which the strike call was
issued and without a single concession being gained. The miners were
left alone to fight the mine-owners backed by the government with the
tacit approval of the TUC and the Parliamentary Labour Party led by
Ramsey MacDonald. The miners stayed out until August before being
forced by starvation to accept the mine-owners’ terms of
reduced wages (below 1914 level) and an increase in the working day
by one hour.
The
General Strike cannot be used to get socialism. To get socialism
requires a class conscious working class democratically capturing
state power to prevent that power being used against them. In 1926,
the very facts that the government were in power, that millions of
workers had supported them and other capitalist political parties
(including the Labour Party) less than two years before at the
general election, showed that socialism was not on the political
agenda. Workers who would not vote for socialism will not strike for
it. (See also STRIKES;
SYNDICALISM.)
Reading
Chronology
of general strikes: www.sonic.net/~figgins/generalstrike/
Government.
The government of the modern state is but a committee for managing
the common affairs of the whole capitalist class. Socialism will be a
system of society without government but with democratic
administration by the whole community. (See also STATE.)
Gradualism.
Reformist political action which, according to those who advocate it,
will gradually transform capitalism into
‘socialism’,
without the need for class conscious workers’ political
action.
In Britain the leading gradualist thinkers were in the Fabian
Society, formed in 1884; but nowadays there are numerous left-wing
organisations fulfilling a similar role. Gradualism was adopted by
the Labour Party and its ideology has always been explicitly
anti-Marxist, though it is doubtful whether New Labour would still
claim to be gradualist. (See also FABIAN
SOCIETY; REFORMISM.)
Reading
George
Lichtheim, A
Short
History of Socialism,
1983
Gramsci,
Antonio
(1891-1937). Born in Sardinia, Gramsci won a scholarship in 1911 to
the University of Turin. In 1913 he joined the Italian Socialist
Party (PSI) and, under the influence of the writings of Georges
Sorel, became a syndicalist. Bowled over by the Russian revolution,
Gramsci helped to found the Italian Communist Party (PCI) in 1921 and
became its general secretary (and a Member of Parliament) in 1924. He
was arrested in 1926 and remained a prisoner of the fascists until
his death in 1937. But while a prisoner he set out his theories in
the Prison
Notebooks,
published posthumously. For Gramsci, ‘organic
intellectuals’
had a key role to play in social transformation. They would arise
from within the working class and had an organisational function,
articulating the cultural politics that would allow the working class
to establish its hegemony. In Gramsci’s version of Leninism,
the ‘war of movement’ typified by the Russian
revolution
was appropriate for similarly underdeveloped countries; but in the
more advanced capitalist societies a ‘war of
position’
would allow the revolutionary party, via its intellectuals and
alternative hegemony, to lead the working class to
‘socialism’.
Gramsci’s
theories are very popular with modern leftists, since they appear to
put some distance between Leninism and Stalinism. But Gramsci himself
never repudiated Stalinism in practice. (See also LENINISM.)
Reading
Steven
Jones, Antomio
Gramsci,
2006
Gramsci's
writings: http://www.marxists.org/archive/gramsci/index.htm
Greens.
In Britain the Green Party (formerly the Ecology Party) explains the
cause of the environmental crisis, varyingly, on technology,
‘overpopulation’, human greed and consumerism. Some
Greens even blame capitalism. The Greens are a ‘broad
church’
and so lack a coherent and consistent political thought. But they
generally see the solution to the environmental crisis in the
election of a Green government committed to reforming the present
growth-orientated industrial economy into a decentralised,
democratically-run and ecologically-sustainable economy. While
awaiting the election of such a government the Green Party
concentrates, like Greenpeace and other conservationist
organisations, on advocating reform measures to try to protect nature
and the environment.
We
are up against a well-entrenched economic and social system based on
class and property and governed by coercive economic laws. Reforms,
however well meaning or determined, can never solve the environmental
crisis - the most they can do is to palliate some aspect of it on a
precarious temporary basis. They can certainly never turn capitalism
into a democratic, ecological society. (See also ECOLOGY;
OVERPOPULATION; REFORMISM.)
Reading
David
Pepper, Eco-socialism,
1993
Green
Party: http://www.greenparty.org.uk/news
Hardie,
James Keir
(1856 - 1915). Born in Lanarkshire,
Scotland, the son of a ship’s
carpenter. Self-educated, Hardie worked in the pits from the age of
10 and became a miners’
leader before he was 20. He was the founding Chairman of the Scottish
Labour Party in 1888, and was elected as an Independent Labour MP for
West Ham in 1892. Hardie formed the Independent Labour Party
(independent, that is, from the Liberal Party and the ‘Lib-Lab’
MPs) in 1893, and played a leading part in the creation of the Labour
Representation Committee in 1900, which became the Labour Party in
1906. He lost his seat at West Ham in 1895 but became an MP for
Merthyr Tydfil from 1900 until his death in 1915. Hardie became the
first Chairman and Leader of the Parliamentary Labour Party in 1906. Hardie mouthed
socialist
phrases
but in practice pursued the interests of capital, and this included
support for capitalism’s wars. After initially opposing the
Great War of 1914-1918 he changed his mind. Hardie told his
electorate in Merthyr:
‘May
I once again revert for the moment to the ILP pamphlets? None of them
clamour for immediately stopping the war. That would be foolish in
the extreme, until at least the Germans have been driven back across
their own frontier, a consummation which, I fear, carries us forward
through a long and dismal vista… I have never said or
written
anything to dissuade our young men from enlisting; I know too well
all there is at stake… If I can get the recruiting figures
for
Merthyr week by week, which I find a very difficult job, I hope by
another week to be able to prove that whereas our Rink meeting gave a
stimulus to recruiting, those meetings at the Drill Hall at which the
Liberal member or the Liberal candidate spoke, had the exactly
opposite effect.’
(Merthyr Pioneer, 28th November, 1914.)
(See
also LABOUR
PARTY.)
Reading
Caroline
Benn, Keir
Hardie,
1992
Hegel,
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
(1770-1831). Born in Stuttgart, the son of a revenue officer. From
1818 until his death Hegel was Professor of Philosophy at Berlin
University. Hegel was a liberal who approved of constitutional
monarchy and was not the state-worshipper he is often accused of
being, though some of his followers did interpret his philosophy as a
justification for the autocratic Prussian monarchy. His written
works, such as his main work on politics, Philosophy
of Right (1821), are
notoriously obscure. Hegel’s
philosophy is a form of idealism, according to which all that really
exists are ideas. He interpreted politics, history, law, morality,
religion and so on, in terms of the development of ideas; he sought
the original idea of a particular subject and then examined how it
had developed logically (that is, dialectically) throughout history.
As
a student at Berlin after Hegel’s death, Marx had come under
his influence, especially when Marx was briefly involved with the
Young Hegelians, a group of left wing philosophers who used a
modified version of Hegel’s philosophy as a radical critique
of
politics and religion. Marx publicly made his break with Hegelian
philosophy in his Introduction to A
Contribution to the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right,
published in 1844. Marx then went on to argue that the explanation of
social development lay not in the development of ideas but in the
development of the material conditions of life. In 1845 Marx and
Engels collaborated to produce The
German Ideology, which
sets out the basic principles of this materialist conception of
history.
But
despite Marx’s criticisms of Hegelian philosophy many
commentators insist on emphasising his intellectual debt to Hegel, to
the extent of claiming that Hegel’s philosophy stood
‘right
side up’ is a necessary condition for explaining
Marx’s
method. Lenin even went as far as to claim that you cannot properly
understand Marx’s Capital
unless you have first fully grasped the arguments of Hegel’s Science
of Logic.
There is also the controversial issue of the dialectic that is
associated with Hegel and Marx. Of course Hegel had some influence on
Marx, and a modified version of the dialectic did play a part in
Marx’s method for investigating social development (see 1873
Afterword to Capital).
Seen in the context of the whole body of Marx’s writings,
however, this can be seen in proper perspective with all the other
influences on Marx. (A case can be made out for Aristotle having at
least as much influence on Marx, because Aristotle's legacy dominated
so much philosophy at that time – including Hegel).
Marx’s
work can be understood and assessed in its own right. (See also DIALECTIC; MARX; MARXISM.)
Reading
Stephen
Houlgate, An
Introduction to Hegel, 2005
Hegel
online: http://hegel.net/
History.
The history of societies since the break up of primitive communism
has been one of class struggles. These struggles between the
exploiting class and the exploited class have been over the
distribution of the social product, the organisation of work, working
conditions and the results of production. Socialists view these
struggles in the context of the development of the forces and
relations of production, and analyse social development with a view
to taking informed political action. (See also CLASS STRUGGLE; FORCES
OF PRODUCTION; RELATIONS
OF
PRODUCTION.)
Reading
Keith
Graham, Karl
Marx, Our
Contemporary, 1992.
S.H.
Rigby, Marxism
and
History, 1998
Human
nature.
Socialists make a distinction between human nature and human
behaviour. That people are able to think and act is a fact of
biological and social development (human nature), but how they think
and act is the result of historically specific social conditions
(human behaviour). Human nature changes, if at all, over vast periods
of time; human behaviour changes according to changed social
conditions. Capitalism being essentially competitive and predatory,
produces vicious, competitive ways of thinking and acting. But we
humans are able to change our society and adapt our behaviour, and
there is no reason why our rational desire for human well being and
happiness should not allow us to establish and run a society based on
co-operation. (See also ALIENATION; NEEDS.)
Reading
Norman
Geras, Marx
and Human Nature, 1983
Hyndman,
Henry Mayers
(1842-1921). An Eton educated
capitalist. Hyndman played a leading role in the setting up of the
Democratic Federation in 1881, which was an association of
radical-liberal clubs. Later that same year he claimed to be
converted to Marxism after reading Capital.
Afterwards he
wrote and published his own interpretation of Marxism, England
for
All, without mentioning Marx by
name. Hyndman’s biographer,
Tsuzuki, suggests that this work is ‘a
text-book of English “Tory Democracy” rather than
of
continental Social Democracy‘.
It
was Hyndman’s hostility towards liberalism rather than his
supposed Marxism that led the Democratic Federation to become the
Social Democratic Federation in 1884. Nevertheless, this organisation
did much to popularise Marxism in Britain, and included in its
membership Eleanor Marx, Belfort Bax, Tom Mann, John Burns and
William Morris.
By
December 1884 a group including William Morris and Eleanor Marx, fed
up with Hyndman’s arrogance, seceded from the SDF to form the
Socialist League. A second revolt led to the formation in 1903 of the
Socialist Labour Party. Another revolt against Hyndman’s
opportunism led to the creation of the Socialist Party of Great
Britain in 1904.
In
1911 Hyndman
established the British Socialist Party when the SDF combined with
parts of the Independent Labour Party. However, Hyndman split the
British Socialist Party by supporting the British side in the First
World War. Hyndman then formed the National Socialist Party, of which
he was leader until his death. (See
also IMPOSSIBILISM; SOCIALIST
LABOUR PARTY; SOCIALIST PARTY.)
Reading
Chushichi
Tsuzuki, H.M.
Hyndman
and British Socialism,
1961
Obituary
in the
January
1922 Socialist Standard: www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/etheory/1905-1985/22Hyndman.htm
Idealism.
Any philosophical theory according to which the material world is
created by, or is dependent upon, ideas or the mind.
Idealism
is a form of ideology that distorts our understanding of the everyday
world we experience. The ideas of a given epoch are the product of
social conditions of that epoch. As these conditions change so do the
ideas. That is why moral outlooks have undergone such fundamental
changes over the centuries. As materialists, socialists do not deny
the causal efficacy of ideas; indeed, we are engaged in a battle of
ideas to establish socialism. But, without practical action, ideas
alone will not bring about the desired change. (See also HEGEL; IDEOLOGY; MATERIALISM.)
Ideology.
The socialist concept of ideology refers to general claims about the
nature of a society's superstructure and, more specifically, a
distortion of thought that stems from, and conceals contradictions
within, capitalist society.
In
capitalism profits take priority over needs, so that people starve
while food rots, people go homeless while buildings are empty, people
remain unemployed while needs are unmet, and so on. Because people
are unable to solve these contradictions within capitalism they tend
to project them in ideological forms of consciousness; that is to
say, in ideas which effectively conceal or misrepresent the existence
and character of these contradictions. Accordingly, profit-taking is
held to be justified as risk-taking for the capitalists, so that
starvation, homelessness, unemployment and the rest are the price
paid for ‘good economics’. By concealing
contradictions
ideology contributes to their reproduction and therefore serves the
interests of the capitalist class.
Marx
criticised capitalist economics because it is an ideology that stems
from, and conceals, the social relations of production beneath the
surface appearance of commodity exchange in the market. The free and
equal exchange of values in the market conceals the unfree and
unequal nature of wage labour in its social relation to capital. Marx
believed that it was the role of scientific socialism to penetrate
the surface of social phenomena and reveal their inner workings.
(See
also CONTRADICTION; IDEALISM;
SCIENCE.)
Reading
Terry
Eagleton, Ideology,
2007
Ideology
Study Guide: www.autodidactproject.org/guidideo.html
Imperialism.
Towards the end of the nineteenth century there was a growing
tendency towards the formation of trusts and combines associated with
what came to be known as imperialism. J.A. Hobson, a liberal, tried
to account for this development in Imperialism
(1902). He claimed that monopolistic industries restricted output in
the home market, in order to raise prices and profits, and therefore
have to seek foreign outlets for investments and markets. For this
purpose, he alleged, they get governments to colonise foreign
territories. R. Hilferding, a German Social Democrat, further
developed this line of argument in Finance
Capital (1910). He
gave a detailed account of the supposedly unstoppable growth of
monopoly in industry and banking, but carried it much further,
crediting the banks with dominating industry and the cartels and
dividing up world markets among themselves. V.I. Lenin made use of
the work by Hobson and Hilferding for his own Imperialism:
The Highest Stage of Capitalism
(1916). According to Lenin, imperialism had five essential
characteristics: (1) the concentration of production and capital,
leading to the domination of the world economy by big monopolies; (2)
the merging of bank and industrial capital and the consequent rise of
a financial oligarchy; (3) the especially important role of the
export of capital; (4) the division of the world among monopolistic
associations of international capitalists; (5) the completion of the
territorial division of the world among the great imperialist powers.
Lenin thought that these factors would make wars increasingly
inevitable.
Hobson,
Hilferding and Lenin all failed to allow for the sectional divisions
of interest in the capitalist class throughout the world. Some
capitalists have an interest in exports (and most of
Britain’s
exports are now to ‘developed’ countries); while
some
capitalists have an interest in imports (and Britain is now a net
importer of goods). And while monopolies can charge monopoly prices
and get monopoly profits, the rest of the capitalists object to being
held to ransom. For this reason many national governments and
supra-national organisations (such as the European Union) have
legislated or directly intervened to control monopolies. (See also LENINISM.)
Reading
Anthony
Brewer, Marxist
Theories of Imperialism,
1990
Impossibilism.
‘Possibilism’ and
‘impossibilism’ were terms
used in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to refer to
different wings of the Social Democratic parties.
‘Impossibilists’
were those Social Democrats who struggled solely to achieve the goal
of socialism, while ‘possibilists’ were those
Social
Democrats who concentrated their efforts on reforming capitalism.
Eventually the impossibilists either split away from the Social
Democratic parties or abandoned impossibilism as the price for
remaining a Social Democrat. Impossibilists from the Social
Democratic Federation formed the Socialist League in 1884, the
Socialist Labour Party in 1903, and the Socialist Party of Great
Britain in 1904. (See also SOCIALIST
LABOUR PARTY; SOCIALIST PARTY.)
Reading
M.
Rubel & J. Crump, Non-Market
Socialism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,
1987
Chushichi
Tsuzuki, 'The
"impossibilist revolt" in Britain: the origins of the
S.L.P. and the S.P.G.B',
International
Review of
Social History 1, 1956
Inflation.
continuous increase in the general level of prices caused by an
excess issue of inconvertible paper currency (properly called
‘currency inflation’). is the result of the action
of
governments printing and putting into circulation hundreds of
millions of pounds of additional paper money not backed by gold, that
is above and beyond that needed for production and trade.
There
are other factors affecting prices. During periods of good trade
prices rise and during periods of bad trade they fall. And a monopoly
can charge a higher than normal price. Furthermore, the required
amount of currency rises with the growth of population, production
and trade, and falls with monetary developments such as the growth of
the banking system, the use of cheques and credit cards. But a
persistent increase in the cost of living is the sole responsibility
of governments when they issue more currency than is needed for
economic transactions to take place.
Wage
increases cannot cause inflation. For unless market conditions change
in their favour, employers cannot raise prices further simply because
they have had to pay higher wages. If employers could recoup wage
increases by raising prices, there would be no point in their
resisting wage claims. The fact that businesses do resist wage claims
is because they increase costs and reduce profits. (See also KEYNESIAN
ECONOMICS; MONETARISM; PHILLIPS
CURVE)
Reading
Changes
in the Value of Money over time:
www.projects.ex.ac.uk/RDavies/arian/current/howmuch.html
Interest.
The price of money. Those capitalist enterprises that borrow money
capital to finance production pay to the lenders a portion of the
surplus value produced as interest. (See also BANKS;
PHILLIPS
CURVE; SURPLUS
VALUE.)
Internationals.
The First International (The International Working Men’s
Association, 1864 - 1876) was an international federation of working
class organisations. Founded in London, Marx and Engels were actively
involved and Marx drew up its Inaugural Address and Rules. At the
Hague Congress of 1872 there was a clash between Marx and the
anarchist Bakunin, which led to Bakunin being expelled and the
transfer of the seat of the General Council to New York. The First
International was dissolved at a conference in Philadelphia in 1876.
The Bakuninists tried to keep it going in Europe and the anarchists
later revived the IWMA as an anarchist international which exists to
this day.
The
Second International (1889 - 1914) was founded in Paris but was
dominated by the German Social Democratic Party (SPD). Unlike its
predecessor, this International claimed to be Marxist in outlook.
However, its early Congresses were especially concerned with Eduard
Bernstein’s ‘revisionism’,
which was opposed by the SPD’s
leading theoretician, Karl Kautsky. Delegates were sent from the
Socialist Party of Great Britain, soon after its formation, to the
Amsterdam Congress in August 1904; and after seeing the reformism
rampant, the SPGB refused to have anything more to do with it. In
1908 the British Labour Party was admitted. Although at Stuttgart
(1907) and at Copenhagen (1910) the International had passed
resolutions demanding joint action to prevent war, the various
national parties (excluding the Russian, Serbian and Hungarian
parties) of the International failed to respond in 1914. After its
collapse in the First World War the Second International was revived
in the 1920s as a loose association of Labour and Social Democratic
parties, and still functions as the ‘Socialist
International’.
The
Russian Communist Party established the Third International (1919 -
1943), also called the Communist International or Comintern. Based in
Moscow, the Comintern controlled the Communist parties that had
sprung up round the world. In 1931 the Comintern issued an
instruction that it was necessary to stop distinguishing
‘between
fascism and bourgeois democracy, and between the parliamentary form
of the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie and its open fascist
form’.
It was partly because the Communists in Germany followed this
instruction that Hitler was able to rise to power. The Comintern was
dissolved in 1943 to appease Stalin’s Western allies.
A
Fourth International was set up by Trotsky and his followers in 1938
in opposition to the Second and Third Internationals. Trotsky
predicted the rapid demise of Social Democracy and Stalinism. Because
of the failure of these and other predictions of Trotsky, the Fourth
International has been subject to serious infighting and splits. (See
also BAKUNIN; COMMUNIST
PARTY; KAUTSKY; REVISIONISM;
TROTSKYISM.)
Reading
Julius
Braunthal, History
of
the Internationals,
1966 - 1980
History
of the International Workingmen’s Association:
www.marxists.org/history/international/iwma/index.htm
Joint-stock
companies. Most
large-scale capitalist enterprises outside the state sector are
joint-stock companies. The ownership of invested capital as stocks
and shares entitles the owners to an unearned income of a proportion
of distributed profits in the form of dividends.
Justice. A central concept in
liberal political
philosophy in which people
get what they deserve. For socialists, as for Marx, this and
associated concepts (such as ‘rights’) are not so
much
wrong or false as not relevant for our purposes. Socialists operate
within a different frame of reference, employing different concepts
and asking different questions. To the liberal who is appalled by our
lack of concern for ‘justice’, we might equally ask
why
there is no role for the class struggle in liberal politics.
Nor
would socialist society have to be underpinned by some conception of
‘distributive justice’. From each according to
ability,
to each according to need, is a practical arrangement for meeting
self-defined needs. (See also EQUALITY.)
Reading
Allen
Wood, Karl
Marx,
2004
Kautsky,
Karl (1854 -
1938). Born in Prague, he became a Social Democrat while a student at
the University of Vienna. Kautsky was the leading theorist of the
German Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Second International. He
wrote the theoretical section of the Erfurt Programme adopted by the
SPD at its Congress in 1891. The Socialist Party of Great Britain
translated and published in 1906 and 1908 the first three parts of
this work but, on learning the contents of the fourth, refused to
publish it. The sticking point was his reformism. At the Lubeck
Congress of 1901 he opposed Bernstein’s
‘revisionism’
(that is, the rejection of Marxism in favour of gradualism). This
controversy was misleading, however, since Kautsky’s writings
showed that he did not oppose reformist activity and had a state
capitalist conception of ‘socialism’.
Kautsky,
nevertheless, was an outstanding populariser of Marx’s ideas.
He edited Marx’s Theories
of Surplus Value (1905
– 10) for publication, and gave his own introduction to
Marxian
economics in the very popular Economic
Doctrines of Karl Marx
(1925). He also applied the materialist conception of history in his Origins
of
Christianity
(1908) and other works. Kautsky opposed the Bolshevik seizure of
power in Russia in 1917, and he criticised Lenin’s
interpretation of the ‘dictatorship of the
proletariat’
as a distortion of Marxism. Lenin then publicly denounced him as a
‘renegade’. But Kautsky’s analysis in Dictatorship
of the Proletariat
(1918) shows a much better understanding of Marx’s views on
democracy and socialism than did anything Lenin ever wrote, despite
Kautsky’s reformism. (See also DICTATORSHIP;
INTERNATIONALS; REVISIONISM.)
Reading
Dick
Geary, Karl
Kautsky,
1988
Kautsky
online: www.marxists.org/archive/kautsky/index.htm
Obituary
of Kautsky in the January 1939 Socialist Standard:
www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/archive/kautsky%281939%29.pdf
Keynes,
John Maynard
(1883 - 1946). Born in Cambridge, educated at Cambridge University,
he became Baron of Cambridge in 1942. Keynes’ main work, The
General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money,
was first published in 1936. His chief concern expressed in this book
was the revolutionary consequences of heavy and sustained
unemployment. His fear was that capitalism would not survive the mass
unemployment of the 1930s. As Keynes wrote:
‘It
is certain that the world will not much longer tolerate the
unemployment which, apart from brief intervals of excitement, is
associated - and, in my opinion, inevitably associated - with
present-day capitalistic individualism.’
He
believed that free market, individualistic capitalism had to be
replaced by a more corporate form of capitalism if capitalism as a
system of society was to survive. He therefore advocated greater
government intervention in the economy to cure unemployment, and held
that this was justifiable as ‘the only practicable means for
avoiding the destruction of existing economic forms in their
entirety’. Keynes described Marx’s Capital
as ‘an obsolete economic textbook, which I know to be not
only
scientifically erroneous but without interest or application for the
modern world’ (A
Short View of Russia,
1925). But it is Keynes’ views that have not fared well.
Despite the fact that Keynes was a Liberal and an avowed defender of
capitalism, the Labour Party and most of the left-wing organisations
are still Keynesian in their economics. (See also INFLATION;
KEYNESIAN
ECONOMICS; UNEMPLOYMENT.)
Reading
J.M.
Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, 1936
(online
at: www.marxists.org/reference/subject/economics/keynes/general-theory/)
Robert
Skidelsky, John
Maynard
Keynes, 2004
Michael
Stewart, Keynes
and
After, 1991
Keynesian
economics (or Keynesianism).
The branch of capitalist economic theory associated with J.M. Keynes.
In general, Keynesian economics argues that:
In
his main work on economic theory, The
General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money
(1936), Keynes argued that increased government expenditure need not
be inflationary and that, indeed, the long term policy of governments
should be to ‘allow wages to rise slowly whilst keeping
prices
stable’. He thought the real enemy was the revolutionary
potential of mass unemployment.
After
the Second World War the Labour, Liberal and Tory parties all became
Keynesian. Their common outlook was expressed in the policy adopted
by the Labour Party at its Annual Conference in 1944:
‘If
bad trade and general unemployment threaten, this means that total
purchasing power is falling too low. Therefore we should at once
increase expenditure… We should give people more money and
not
less to spend.’
All
the main political parties pledged themselves to maintain
‘full
employment’ and prevent inflation. In the years immediately
following the war unemployment was unusually low, but this was mainly
due to the post-war reconstruction and some of Britain’s
competitors being temporarily knocked out of the world market. The
Keynesian economist Joan Robinson admitted that the post-war boom
would have happened anyway and for those reasons.
However,
from the mid-1950s onwards unemployment had been on an upward trend,
rising to 1.5 million in 1976 under a Labour government. It was in
1976 that the Labour Prime Minister, James Callaghan, told the Labour
Party Annual Conference:
‘We
used to think you could spend your way out of a recession and
increase employment by boosting government spending. I tell you in
all candour that this option no longer exists.’
Not
only did Labour and Tory governments fail to secure ‘full
employment’;
they also failed to prevent inflation. Under the Labour government of
1974-79 the general price level rose by 112%. The Tory government
elected in 1979 had formally abandoned Keynesian economics. But they
still inflated the currency to pay for government spending, and in
the following decade prices rose by over 100%. During the same period
unemployment increased to over 3 million.
Inflation
is caused by governments - Labour and Tory - financing their
increased expenditure by printing and putting into circulation
hundreds of millions of pounds of excess paper money. They did this
in the vain hope that it would prevent unemployment rising, ignoring
the fact that unemployment generally is caused by a failure of
profitability. (See also INFLATION; KEYNES; MONETARISM; UNEMPLOYMENT.)
Reading
Paul
Mattick, Marx
and
Keynes, 1971
Kropotkin,
Peter Alexeyevich
(1842 - 1921). Born in Moscow
into a noble family, he was educated at an elite military school and
served as an army officer. He resigned his commission in 1867 and
became an anarchist in 1872. Kropotkin was imprisoned for his
propaganda activities in Russia in 1874, but escaped two years later
and lived in Western Europe until 1917. In France he founded and
edited Le
Révolté,
was arrested again in 1883,
but was released early, in 1886. He then went to England and helped
to found the anarchist paper Freedom in London. A
prolific writer, Kropotkin is an example of a thinker in the
anarchist trend called ‘anarcho-communist’. His
books can
be recommended: The
Conquest of Bread
(1892), Fields,
Factories and Workshops
(1899) and, above all, Mutual
Aid (1902). (See also ANARCHISM.)
Reading
Kropotkin,
Mutual
Aid, 1902
(online
at: http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/kropotkin/mutaidcontents.html)
Martin
Miller, Kropotkin,
1979
Labour
Party. In 1900,
representatives from the ILP, SDF, Fabians and other organisations
joined trade unionists in setting up the Labour Representation
Committee, to establish ‘a distinct Labour Group in
Parliament’. In the 1906 general election 29 out of the 50
LRC
candidates were successful and it was decided later in that year to
change their name to the Labour Party. Lloyd George, a Liberal,
claimed that the name alone was worth a million votes.
At
the start the Labour Party was intended merely as a trade union
pressure group in Parliament. It had no socialist pretensions, and
was indeed merely the tail end of the Liberal Party. Nearly every
Labour MP returned before the First World War owed his election to
Liberal votes in accordance with a shady deal Ramsay MacDonald had
made with the Liberals. In 1918, under the influence of the Fabians,
the Labour Party adopted a new constitution that included the now
rejected Clause Four. This clause in fact committed it not to
socialism, but to state capitalism which was the real aim of the
Fabians.
The
first Labour government, kept in power with Liberal support, was in
office from January to November 1924. The second Labour government,
returned in 1929, again had Ramsay MacDonald as Prime Minister. He
had promised to reduce unemployment, then standing at 1,164,000. But
within a year it had gone up to 1,911,000, and in two years it had
more than doubled, at the record level of 2,707,000. In 1931 the
Cabinet were split over what was to be done about the economic
crisis. The upshot was that the Labour Prime Minister, MacDonald,
formed a National Government along with Liberal and Tory leaders, and
the Labour Party was split in two.
When
in 1945 Labour were returned with an overall majority they set about
nationalising a large section of industry; but those who thought that
state capitalism coupled with a Labour government was in the
interests of workers soon learned the truth. In administering
capitalism Labour did what was required to protect and further the
interests of the British capitalists. They retained war-time
legislation banning strikes; they sent troops into the docks; they
put striking gas workers and dockers on trial; they imposed wage
restraint and then a wage freeze; they introduced peace-time
conscription for the first time; they began the development of the
British atomic bomb; they sent troops to help American imperialism in
Korea - but they did not solve the housing problem as Bevan had
promised.
Elected
in 1964 and 1966, Labour were once again able to show their
commitment to capitalism - another wage freeze, incomes policy
legislation, proposed trade union legislation (‘In
Place of Strife’,
dropped in the face of a storm of union protest) and a tougher
immigration bar. In 1974 Labour was elected with Harold Wilson again
as Prime Minister. In the same year Labour’s
Chancellor, Denis Healy, had said: ‘We
will squeeze the rich until the pips squeak’.
But over the next two years the richest 10% of the population
increased their share of the wealth from 57.5% to 60.6%. During the
Labour government 1974 - 1979 unemployment went up from 628,000 to
1,299,000, while the general price level rose by 112%. It was a
Labour government led by James Callaghan, trying to hold wage
increases down to half the increase in the cost of living, that led
to the ‘Winter of
Discontent’ (1978 -
1979) and the sending in of troops to break the firemens’
strike.
After
defeat at the polls with Michael Foot (1983) and Neil Kinnock (1987
and 1992) as leaders, the Labour Party had moved away from policies
favourable to state capitalism towards openly accepting market
capitalism. Under the leadership of Tony Blair (1994 - 2007) Labour
remodelled itself as ‘New
Labour’ and Labour
governments (1997 - ) have not been afraid to pursue the interests
of the capitalist class, including offensive wars against Iraq and
Afghanistan. Now with Gordon Brown as leader and Prime Minister,
Labour are still the enemy of labour.
The
evolution of the Labour Party is a practical confirmation of the
theoretical case against reformism. With a working class that has
never at any time understood or wanted socialism, the Labour Party,
instead of gradually transforming capitalism in the interests of the
workers, has itself been gradually transformed from a trade union
pressure group into an instrument of capitalist rule. (See also FABIANS; NATIONALISATION;
REFORMISM; SOCIALIST
LABOUR PARTY; TRADE
UNIONS.)
Reading
Labour
Party
online: www.labour.org.uk/
H.
Pelling & A. Reid, A
Short History of the Labour Party,
2005
Labour
power. The
capacity to do useful work which creates value in the form of
commodities. Workers sell their labour power to capitalist
enterprises for a wage or a salary. As a commodity, labour power has
an exchange value and a use value, like all other commodities. Its
exchange value is equal to the sum total of the exchange values of
all those commodities necessary to produce and reproduce the labour
power of the worker and his or her family. The use value of labour
power is its value creating capacity which capitalist enterprises buy
and put to work as labour. However, labour power is unlike other
commodities in that it creates value. During a given period it can
produce more than is needed to maintain the worker during the same
period. The surplus value produced is the difference between the
exchange value of labour power and the use value of the labour
extracted by the capitalists. (See also COMMODITY;
EXCHANGE
VALUE; WAGES.)
Labour
theory of value.
The labour theory of value explains how wealth is produced and
distributed under capitalism, and how the working class is exploited.
Human labour power applied to nature-given materials is the source of
most wealth. The wealth produced, however, belongs not to the workers
but to those who own and control the means of wealth production and
distribution (land, factories, offices, etc.). Wealth production
under capitalism generally takes the form of commodities produced for
sale at a profit.
The
value of a commodity is determined by the amount of socially
necessary labour time required under average conditions for its
production and reproduction. Subject to any monopolies or government
subsidies, it is around a point regulated by value that the price of
a commodity fluctuates according to supply and demand. (See also CAPITAL; COMMODITY; VALUE.)
Reading
A.
Filho & B. Fine, Marx’s
‘Capital’,
2003
Frequently
Asked Questions about the Labour Theory of Value:
www.dreamscape.com/rvien/Economics/Essays/LTV-FAQ.html
Law.
Most laws are a set of state-sanctioned commands with the overall aim
of conserving the power and privilege of the ruling class. The
capitalist state, including its judiciary and police, exist to
protect the prevailing capitalist property relations. This becomes
obvious with certain aspects of the class struggle, such as strikes
and picketing, The capitalists and their apologists want the workers
- those excluded from owning more than relatively insignificant
amounts of property - to regard the state as protector of rich and
poor alike and for everyone to be equal before the law. In reality,
the state historically developed as an instrument of class rule and
the capitalists’ monopoly of the means of life ensures that
the
law can never be impartial. If capitalist property is threatened the
law must defend it above everything else, or else the whole legal
system is threatened. This is why the modern state and its laws arose
and puts into context the incidental laws which may not seem to be
directly necessary for class rule - for example, laws dealing with
health and safety at work.
Of
course, capitalism being the essentially vicious and anti-human
society that it is, laws may seem to be a permanent necessity to
protect us from some of our fellow workers. But there is no reason
why, on the new basis of material sufficiency and social
co-operation, human behaviour can be very different. In world
socialism there will no doubt be various democratic procedures for
dealing with unacceptable behaviour, but there will definitely be no
state and its laws. (See also HUMAN NATURE;
STATE.)
Reading
Hugh
Collins, Marxism
and
Law, 1986
Leadership.
Working class emancipation necessarily excludes the role of political
leadership. The World Socialist Movement has an absolute need of
supporters with understanding and self-reliance. Even if we could
conceive of a leader-ridden working class displacing the capitalist
class from power such an immature class would be helpless to
undertake the responsibilities of democratic socialist society. (See
also CLASS
CONSCIOUSNESS.)
Left-wing.
A term which comes from the old French legislature, referring to that
section of the membership sitting on the left side of the chamber (as
viewed from the president’s chair) holding progressive
liberal
opinions.
Socialists
reject the conventional method of political analysis that seeks to
understand politics in terms of ‘left’ or
‘right’.
The left and right are different only to the extent that they provide
a different political and organisational apparatus for administering
the same capitalist system. This includes those on the left who aim
for socialism some time in the distant future but in the meantime
demand some form of transitional capitalism. For this reason the
World Socialist Movement cannot be usefully identified as either
‘left-wing’ or ‘right-wing’.
Reading
M.
Rubel, & J. Crump, Non-Market
Socialism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,
1987
Lenin,
V.I.
(1870-1924). Real name: Vladimir Ilich Ulyanov. Born in Simbirsk
(called Ulyanovsk after the 1917 revolution, but since 1991 renamed
Simbirsk), the son of a school inspector. At sixteen years of age his
eldest brother Alexander was hanged for complicity in a plot to
assassinate the Tsar. Soon after, Lenin devoted himself to
anti-Tsarist revolutionary activity, was arrested, and spent three
years in prison in Siberia. In 1900 Lenin joined Plekhanov in Geneva
and the following year he adopted the pseudonym
‘Lenin’.
He helped to set up a newspaper, Iskra
(The Spark), which would articulate anti-Tsarist opinion and
activity. Lenin set out what he saw as the necessary organisational
structure for a revolutionary political party under an autocracy in What
Is To Be Done?
(1902). In 1903 he became the leader of the Bolshevik wing of the
Russian Social Democrats.
After
the revolution of March 1917 Lenin returned to Petrograd (as St
Petersburg was renamed because of its German connotations, which
became Leningrad, and has now reverted to St Petersburg) in a sealed
train provided by the German army. No doubt they counted on Lenin and
the Bolsheviks spreading disaffection amongst the Russian army. But
after an abortive coup in July he fled to Finland. Lenin then put to
paper his views on the state and the socialist revolution, based on
his theory of imperialism and giving special emphasis to his
interpretation of the ‘dictatorship of the
proletariat’,
in State
and Revolution
(1917). He returned to Petrograd in October and led the Bolsheviks to
power with a successful coup.
As
head of the new government Lenin was preoccupied with the chaos
produced by an external war with Germany and an internal civil war.
His response was to re-emphasise ‘democratic
centralism’
in which the ‘dictatorship of the proletariat’ came
under
the increasingly totalitarian control of the vanguard party. However,
since the number of people in any country who wanted socialism was
very small (Russia especially), the Bolsheviks had no choice but to
develop some form of capitalism. When he died from a stroke in
January 1924, most of the main feudal obstacles to capitalist
development had been removed, together with all effective political
opposition.
With
his concepts of the ‘dictatorship of the
proletariat’ and
the leading role of the vanguard party, and a transitional society of
‘socialism’, Lenin distorted Marxism and thereby
severely
damaged the development of a socialist movement. Indeed, Leninism
continues to pose a real obstacle to the achievement of socialism.
(See also LENINISM.)
Reading
Neil
Harding, Lenin’s
Political Thought,
1982
Lenin
online: www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/index.htm
Leninism.
According to Stalin, Leninism is ‘Marxism in the era of
imperialism and of the proletarian revolution … Leninism is
the theory and tactics of the dictatorship of the proletariat in
particular’ (Foundations
of Leninism, 1924).
Accordingly, this ideology is often referred to as
‘Marxism-Leninism’. This, however, is a
contradiction in
terms: Marxism is essentially anti-Leninist. But not everything Lenin
wrote is worthless; for example, his article entitled The
Three Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism
(1913), contains a concise exposition of Marxism. Why, then, is
Leninism objectionable? Because, for socialists, it is
anti-democratic and it advocates a course of political action which
can never lead to socialism.
In What
Is To Be Done?
(1902) Lenin said: ‘the history of all countries shows that
the
working class, exclusively by its own efforts, is able to develop
only trade union consciousness’. Lenin argued that socialist
consciousness had to be brought to the working class by professional
revolutionaries, drawn from the petty bourgeoisie, and organised as a
vanguard party. But in 1879 Marx and Engels issued a circular in
which they declared:
‘When
the International was formed we expressly formulated the battle cry:
The emancipation of the working classes must be conquered by the
working classes themselves. We cannot, therefore, co-operate with
people who openly state that the workers are too uneducated to
emancipate themselves and must be freed from above by philanthropic
big bourgeois and petty bourgeois.’
Nor
is this an academic point, since the history of Leninism in power
shows that allowing elites to rule ‘on behalf of’
the
working class is always a disaster. Working class self-emancipation
necessarily precludes the role of political leadership.
In State
and Revolution
(1917) Lenin said that his ‘prime task is to re-establish
what
Marx really taught on the subject of the state’. Lenin argued
that socialism is a transitional society between capitalism and full
communism, in which ‘there still remains the need for a
state…
For the state to wither away completely, complete communism is
necessary’. Moreover, Lenin claimed that according to Marx
work
and wages would be guided by the ‘socialist
principle’
(though in fact it comes from St Paul): ‘He who does not work
shall not eat.’ (Sometimes this is reformulated as:
‘to
each according to his work’.) Marx and Engels used no such
‘principle’; they made no such distinction between
socialism and communism. Lenin in fact did not re-establish
Marx’s
position but substantially distorted it to suit the situation in
which the Bolsheviks found themselves. When Stalin announced the
doctrine of ‘Socialism in One Country’ (i.e. State
Capitalism in Russia) he was drawing on an idea implicit in
Lenin’s
writings.
In State
and Revolution,
Lenin gave special emphasis to the concept of the
‘dictatorship
of the proletariat’. This phrase was sometimes used by Marx
and
Engels and meant working class conquest of power, which (unlike
Lenin) they did not confuse with a socialist society. Engels had
cited the Paris Commune of 1871 as an example of the dictatorship of
the proletariat, though Marx in his writings on this subject did not
mention this as an example, since for him it meant conquest of state
power, which the Commune was not. Nevertheless, the Commune impressed
itself upon Marx and Engels for its ultra-democratic features -
non-hierarchical, the use of revocable delegates, etc. Lenin, on the
other hand, tended to identify democracy with a state ruled by a
vanguard party. When the Bolsheviks actually gained power they
centralised political power more and more in the hands of the
Communist Party.
For
Lenin the dictatorship of the proletariat was ‘the very
essence
of Marx’s teaching’ (The
Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky,
1918). Notice, however, that Lenin’s Three
Sources article -
referred to above - contains no mention of the phrase or
Lenin’s
particular conception of the dictatorship of the proletariat. And for
modern Leninists this concept, in Lenin’s interpretation, is
central to their politics. So, for its anti-democratic elitism and
its advocacy of an irrelevant transitional society misnamed
‘socialism’, in theory and in practice, Leninism
deserves
the hostility of workers everywhere. (See also BOLSHEVISM;
COMMUNIST
PARTY; IMPERIALISM; LENIN;
RUSSIA; TRANSITIONAL
SOCIETY; VANGUARD.)
Reading
Neil
Harding, Leninism,
1996
Non-Leninist
Marxism: Writings on the Workers Councils
, 2007
Luxemburg,
Rosa
(1871-1919). Born in Russian Poland, she moved to Germany where she
made a name for herself as an opponent of Bernstein’s
revisionism in the German Social Democratic Party (SPD). Her pamphlet Social
Reform or
Revolution (1899) was
an attack on the view that capitalism could be gradually transformed
into socialism by a process of social reform. A courageous agitator,
she was arrested many times. The
Socialist Standard for
January 1907 carried a report of Luxemburg’s trial at Weimar
and commented:
‘Well
done “red Rosa”; you have grandly expressed the
sentiments of the class-conscious workers of the world and may you
live to see the Social Revolution accomplished.’
But
Luxemburg was not opposed to all reforms; she agreed with the SPD’s
tactic on reform: that the working class should be encouraged to
struggle for them in order to prepare itself for the eventual capture
of political power. By 1910, however, it became obvious to her that
reformism was not confined to Bernstein but included Kautsky, Bebel
and other leaders of the SPD. She still did not blame advocating
reforms as such and in fact her answer to the danger of reformism was
to involve the workers themselves in a ‘mass
strike’. This was a
tactic she had picked up from the 1905 revolution in Russia in which
she had participated.
In
her main theoretical work, The
Accumulation of Capital
(1913), Luxemburg argued that capitalism would collapse due to its
inability to sell an ever increasing surplus product over and above
what the workers could buy back. She believed that as capitalism
approached this point the growing economic instability would cause
the working class to establish socialism before the point of collapse
was actually reached. However, she made the mistake of assuming that
the level of demand was determined exclusively by consumption whereas
in fact it is determined by consumption plus investment (capitalist
spending on new means of production as opposed to consumer goods for
themselves).
Luxemburg
led the opposition to the First World War in Germany, and eventually
helped to form a new party, the Spartacus League. She had to spend
most of the war in prison and it was there that she wrote the classic
socialist statement against the war, the Junius
Pamphlet (1915). She
had already criticised Lenin for his conception of a centralised
vanguard party in Organisational
Questions of Russian Social Democracy
(1904). She had also criticised Lenin for his insistence on the right
of nations to self-determination - even describing Marx’s
demand for Polish independence as ‘obsolete and
mistaken’.
And yet the differences between Luxemburg and Lenin are often
exaggerated. In The
Russian Revolution
(1918), she again criticised the Bolsheviks for their attitude
towards democracy; but in other respects her sympathies are
unmistakable: ‘the future everywhere belongs to
Bolshevism’,
she concluded.
Rosa
Luxemburg was freed from prison in late 1918 and participated in an
armed uprising in Berlin. In January 1919 soldiers responsible to the
SPD government murdered her and Karl Leibknecht.
Reading
Luxemburg
online: www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/index.htm
Norman
Geras, The
Legacy of
Rosa Luxemburg, 1985
Mao
Zedong (or Mao
Tse-tung) 1893-1976. Born in the Hunan province of south central
China; Mao’s father was a poor peasant who became rich from
trading in grain. Mao helped to form the Chinese Communist Party
(CCP) in 1921. He led the Long March (1934-35) to Yanan where, after
the collapse of the Japanese army, he defeated the Nationalists and
proclaimed the People’s Republic of China in 1949. As
‘Chairman
Mao’ he instituted the disastrous Great Leap Forward
(1958-59)
and the Cultural Revolution (which was at its height from 1966-68 but
lasted several more years). After Mao’s death in 1976 there
was
a power struggle within the CCP, starting with the putting down of
the ‘Gang of Four’ (which included Mao’s
widow).
(See also CHINA; MAOISM.)
Reading
J.
Halliday & J. Chang, Mao:
The Unknown Story, 2005
Mao
online: www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/index.htm
Maoism.
This term is never used in China or by its supporters elsewhere. What
is called ‘the thought of Mao Zedong’ is a
synthesis of
Leninism, China’s economic backwardness and Chinese
philosophy.
Mao
was basically a peasant revolutionary. At the time of the Chinese
revolution (1949) the great majority of the population were peasants.
Mao believed that the peasantry were discontented enough to be the
agency of China’s capitalist revolution. In his Report
of an Investigation into the Peasant Movement in Hunan
(1927), Mao admitted that the coming revolution would not be
socialist: ‘To overthrow these feudal forces is the real
objective of the revolution’.
His
argument, derived from Lenin, was that capitalist development could
be quickly telescoped into a 'socialist' society. Mao administered
China’s capitalist industrialisation on the basis of a
predominantly peasant population, combating the resulting
contradictions (class struggles) with a state bureaucracy under
strict CCP control and attempting to justify this by drawing on
various elements of eastern philosophies. In On
Contradiction (1937)
Mao argued that class struggles would continue within a
‘socialist’
society and that the subjective will of the masses could overcome
objective obstacles to economic development.
The
key role assigned to the peasantry has meant that Maoism has been
widely used as an ideology of peasant revolution in Third World
countries. (See also CHINA; MAO.)
Reading
Brantly
Womack, The
Foundations
of Mao Zedong’s Political Thought,
1982
Marx,
Karl Heinrich
(1818-1883). Born in Trier, southwest Germany, Marx was the son of a
lawyer and raised as a Protestant Christian. He was a student at Bonn
and Berlin universities before taking his Doctorate at Jena in the
philosophy of science in ancient Greek philosophy. At Berlin he had
come under the influence of Hegel’s philosophy. Marx was
briefly but actively involved with the Young Hegelian movement which
produced a radical liberal critique of religion and Prussian
autocracy. Marx then took up journalism, and at some point in late
1843 to early 1844 he became a communist while living in Paris. Marx
set out his new ideas, for self-clarification, in the Economic
and Philosophical Manuscripts
(1844). Just before he was expelled from Paris for being a subversive
Marx had met Engels for the first time.
In
Brussels, Marx and Engels sought to ‘settle
accounts’
with their ‘former philosophical conscience’,
Hegelian
philosophy, and in so doing established the basic principles of their
materialist theory of history in The
German Ideology
(1845). After being initially impressed with the anarchist Proudhon,
Marx launched an attack with The
Poverty of Philosophy
(1846), his first published work. As a member of the Communist
League, Marx wrote their Manifesto
of the Communist Party
(1848). After being journalistically involved in the revolutions of
1848, Marx and his family moved to London. There he wrote two
analyses of the 1848 revolutions: The
Class Struggles in France
(1850) and The
Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte
(1851).
During
the 1850s Marx intensified his study of political economy, courtesy
of the British Museum Library. His main source of income during this
period was Engels; but though often in dire poverty Marx was not the
idle sponger he is sometimes made out to be. Marx was in fact a
journalist for twenty years and was twice a newspaper editor
(Rheinische Zeitung, 1842-3, Neue Rheinische Zeitung, 1848-9). He
wrote about 700 articles (many quite lengthy) up to 1862 when he gave
up journalism.
The
first result of Marx’s study in Britain of political economy
came in a manuscript first published in 1941 under the title Grundrisse
(Outlines). In 1859 A
Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy
was published. This contains a Preface in which Marx gave a summary
of the ‘general result’ which served as a
‘guiding
thread’ for his empirical studies; and this Preface also
contains the only auto-biographical account of Marx’s
intellectual development we have. In 1865 Marx delivered a report to
the General Council of the First International, later published as a
pamphlet under the title Value,
Price and Profit,
arguing against the view that higher wages cannot improve the lot of
the working class. In 1867 volume 1 of Capital
(subtitled: A
Critique
of Political Economy)
was published; volumes 2 and 3 were edited for publication
posthumously by Engels.
As
well as Marx’s theoretical concerns, moreover, he was a
political activist. He was deeply involved in the First
International, serving on its General Council from 1864 to 1872.
After the bloody suppression of the Paris Commune, Marx became
notorious through his defence of the Commune in The
Civil War in France
(1871). He corresponded with socialists world-wide but, for the last
several years of his life, Marx’s health had deteriorated to
the point where political work was impossible.
It
is from Marx and Engels that we get that body of thought known as
‘Marxism’. This comprises the labour theory of
value, the
materialist theory of history and the political theory of the class
struggle. These are tools of analysis, which have been further
developed and modified by socialists, to explain how the working
class are exploited under capitalism and how world socialism will be
the emancipation of our class. The validity of Marx’s
theories
is independent of Marx the man. Nonetheless, criticisms of Marx have
been made because of the misinterpretations and distortions of
Marxism that have occurred in the twentieth century. (See also ENGELS; MARXISM.)
Reading
Marx
online: www.marxists.org/archive/marx/
Francis
Wheen, Das
Kapital,
2006
Francis
Wheen, Karl
Marx: A
Life, 1999
Marxism.
The socialist theory formulated by Marx and Engels and further
developed by socialists. Marx regarded himself as having given
expression, in theory, to a movement that was already going on; it
was the direct product of the recognition of the class struggle and
the anarchy of production in capitalist society. Socialist theory
arose in opposition to capitalism, but expressed itself in terms of
already existing ideas. Marx’s close collaborator, Engels,
identified three intellectual trends that they were able to draw
upon:
-
Utopian socialism
(Fourier, St. Simon,
Owen)
- German
philosophy (Hegel, the Young Hegelians)
- Classical
political economy (Adam Smith, David Ricardo)
Socialist
theory was a critical blending together of these three tendencies in
the light of the actual class struggle.
The
utopian socialists provided a constructive criticism of capitalism
(its private property, competitiveness, etc.) and some interesting
ideas about the possibilities of socialism (dissolving the
distinction between town and country, individual self-development,
etc.). But, lacking an adequate understanding of the class nature of
society and social change, they were unable to see socialism as
anything other than an ideal society, one that could have been
established at any time. What was needed was a politics that
acknowledged the class struggle.
An
adequate theory of society and social change is what Marx was to
contribute to socialist theory, providing it with a scientific basis.
Hegelian philosophy tried to explain history, law, political
institutions and so on, in terms of the development of ideas. Marx
inverted this method and argued that the explanation lay not in the
development of ideas, but in the development of social classes and
their material conditions of life. Marx’s method for studying
the general process of historical change is called the materialist
conception of history.
By
1844 Marx had become a socialist and had reached the conclusion that
the anatomy of ‘civil society’ (i.e. capitalism)
was to
be sought in political economy, in economics. Marx studied the
classics of British political economy, Adam Smith and particularly
David Ricardo. In Ricardo’s labour theory of value the value
of
a commodity was said to be determined by the amount of labour used in
producing it. Profits, according to some of Ricardo’s
followers, represented the unpaid labour of the workers; and so it
was said that workers were not paid their full value and were cheated
by their employers. Marx’s version of the labour theory of
value explained exploitation, not by the capitalists cheating the
workers, but as the natural result of the workings of the capitalist
market. Marx pointed out that what the workers sold to the
capitalists was not their labour, but their labour power; workers
sell their skills, but have to surrender the entire product to the
employer. Workers are exploited even though we are generally paid the
full value of what we have to sell. Marx produced a theory of how the
capitalist economy functioned which is still broadly acceptable
today.
The
Socialist Party has further developed Marx’s theories, and
has
made plain where it disagrees with Marx. We do not endorse
Marx’s
ideas regarding struggles for national liberation, minimum reform
programmes, labour vouchers and the lower stage of communism. On some
of these points the Socialist Party does not reject what Marx
advocated in his own day, but rejects their applicability to
socialists now. There are other issues upon which the Socialist Party
might appear to be at variance with Marx, but is in fact only
disputing distortions of Marx’s thinking. For example, the
‘dictatorship of the proletariat’ is usually
understood
in its Leninist interpretation. Indeed, it is a tragedy of
world-historical proportions that Marx has been Leninized; what is
basically a method of social analysis with a view to taking informed
political action by the working class, has had its name put to a
state ideology of repression of the working class. Instead of being
known as a tool for working class self-emancipation, we have had the
abomination of ‘Marxist states’.
Undeterred
by these developments, the Socialist Party has made its own
contributions to socialist theory whilst combating distortions of
Marx’s ideas. In the
light of all the above, the three main Marxist theories can be
restated as:
-
The political theory of
class struggle
- The
materialist theory of history
- The
labour theory of value
Marxism
is not only a method for criticising capitalism; it also points to
the alternative. Marxism explains the importance to the working class
of common ownership, democratic control and production solely for use
and the means for establishing it. And while it is desirable that
socialist activists should acquaint themselves with the basics of
Marxism, it is absolutely essential that a majority of workers have a
working knowledge of how capitalism operates and what the change to
socialism will mean. (See also CLASS STRUGGLE;
ENGELS; HISTORY;
LABOUR
THEORY OF VALUE; MARX; SOCIALIST
PARTY.)
Reading
Keith
Graham, Karl
Marx, Our
Contemporary: Social Theory for a Post-Leninist World,
1992
Marxism
online: www.marxists.org/archive/marx/
Materialism.
In philosophy this is the view that everything that exists is, or at
least depends upon, matter. In Marx’s theory of history,
however, materialism is usually referred to in a somewhat different
sense. Marx called his theory the materialist conception of history,
and he never used the terms ‘historical
materialism’
(Engels’ term) or ‘dialectical
materialism’
(Plekhanov’s term). In The
German Ideology
(1845), Marx had stated the materialist principles that were to serve
as a guiding thread for his research: living people, their activities
and their physical conditions of life. It is in this practical sense
of the word (not in its acquisitive sense) that socialists are
materialists in their outlook. (See also HISTORY;
IDEALISM.)
Reading
Z.A.
Jordan, The
Origins of
Dialectical Materialism,
1967
(online
at: http://marxmyths.org/jordan/article.htm
Anton
Pannekoek, Materialism
And Historical Materialism, 1942
(online
at: www.marxists.org/archive/pannekoe/materialism/index.htm)
Means
of production.
Land, factories, railways, offices, communications, etc. A mode (or
system) of production is constituted by its forces and relations of
production. The forces of production in capitalism include means of
production and labour power. (See also FORCES
OF PRODUCTION; RELATIONS
OF
PRODUCTION.)
Monetarism.
A capitalist economic theory which holds that increases in the
‘money
supply’ cause inflation. Indeed, persistent inflation is
always
a question of the ‘money supply,’ defined precisely
as
the supply of currency (notes and coins). Monetarists, however,
usually include bank deposits in their definition of ‘money
supply’. This is absurd since it attributes to banks the
ability to create new purchasing power, whereas all they can do is
redistribute existing purchasing power from their depositors to their
borrowers. Only the central state can create new purchasing power, in
the form of more currency.
The
emergence of monetarism in the 1970s can be largely attributed to
Milton Friedman. He has wrongly labelled Karl Marx a monetarist:
‘Let
me inform you that among my fellow Monetarists were Karl
Marx’
(Observer,
26.9.82).
Marx
explained inflation on the basis of his labour theory of value. With
convertibility (into gold) the price level is determined by the total
amount of gold in circulation. Although prices rise and fall
according to market conditions, there is no inflation (a sustained
increase in the general price level). But with inconvertibility the
required level of currency is determined by the total amount of
commodities in circulation. If there is an issue of currency in
excess of this amount, prices rise.
Of
course, capitalism without inflation, as in the nineteenth century,
no more solves working class problems than does capitalism with
inflation, as in the years since the end of the Second World War.
(See also INFLATION; KEYNESIAN
ECONOMICS.)
Reading
History
of Economic Thought, on Monetarism:
http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/schools/monetar.htm
Money.
Historically, money developed on the basis of private property and
the exchange of commodities. Money can function as a means of
exchange, a measure of value, a general equivalent, a standard of
price, a store of value.
Reading
Samezo
Kuruma, Marx's
Theory of the Genesis of Money,
2008
Morality.
The rules which ought to govern human behaviour. Socialists are
indignant about the effects of capitalism on people and the
environment. However, the case for socialism is not grounded in
morality but in material class interests. Marxism reveals, as no
other theory can, how capitalism came into being, what its dynamics
are, why it must exploit and what it must be replaced with. Morality
does not exist in a timeless social and economic vacuum; the current
(basically liberal) notions of rights, obligations, justice, etc.
misrepresent the exploitative social relations of capitalism and are
inappropriate to the struggle for socialism.
In
all societies there must be rules of conduct or the society would
fall to pieces. Thus in a socialistsociety,
when it has been established, there will also be rules of conduct in
harmony with its social basis.
The moral outlook will be the custom, based on voluntary co-operation
with common ownership and democratic control of the means of life.
(See also IDEOLOGY; MARXISM;
SCIENCE.)
Reading
Steven
Lukes, Marxism
and
Morality, 1985
Morris,
William
(1834-1896). The son of capitalist parents, he became a pioneer
Marxian socialist. While a student at Oxford in the 1850s he was
involved with a group of romantic artists known as the
pre-Raphaelites because they reckoned that painting had degenerated
after the Middle Ages with Raphael, the first Reformation painter.
Morris tried his hand at painting but became more famous as a poet,
though he was involved in a wide variety of arts and crafts.
Morris
began his political life in the Radical wing of the Liberal Party. In
the 1880 general election he worked for the return of Gladstone, but
soon became disillusioned with the new Liberal government. In 1883 he
joined the Democratic Federation, an association of working class
radical clubs formed in 1881. Soon after Morris joined, it changed
its name to the Social Democratic Federation, proclaiming Socialism
as its aim and Marxism as its theory, though in fact it never did
outlive its radical-Liberal origins as it continued to advocate the
same reforms of capitalism. Morris set about studying Marxism and
there can be no doubt that he did understand Marx’s ideas
well
enough to be regarded as a Marxist. But that was not all. John Ruskin
had defined ‘art’ as the expression of
man’s
pleasure in his labour. Morris wholeheartedly endorsed this
definition of art, with its implication that people would produce
beautiful things - things of everyday use, not mere decorations - if
they enjoyed their work. It was recognition that capitalism denied
most people pleasure in their work that led him to become a
socialist.
Hyndman,
the man who had been largely instrumental in founding the Democratic
Federation, was an authoritarian and tried to run the SDF as his
personal organisation. This led to discontent and eventually, at the
end of 1884, to a split in which Morris became the key figure in the
breakaway Socialist League. Unlike the reformist SDF, the Socialist
League saw its task as simply to make socialists. As Morris wrote:
‘Our
business, I
repeat, is the making of socialists, i.e., convincing people that
socialism is good for them and is possible. When we have enough
people of that way of thinking, they will find out what action is
necessary for putting their principles into practice. Until we have
that mass of opinion, action for a general change that will benefit
the whole people is impossible’
(Where
Are We Now?,
1890).
Morris
found himself as the main theorist of the Socialist League. He never
denied that the working class could capture political power,
including parliament; but his refusal to advocate the use of
parliament to get reforms upset a group, including Marx’s
daughter Eleanor, who in the end broke away from the Socialist
League. This left Morris at the mercy of the real
anti-parliamentarians and anarchists, who eventually came to dominate
the League with their advocacy of violence and bomb throwing. In 1890
Morris and the Hammersmith branch seceded, carrying on independent
socialist activity as the Hammersmith Socialist Society.
William
Morris was an outstanding socialist activist: he frequently toured
the country giving talks and wrote a prodigious amount of literature,
culminating in his masterpiece about a socialist utopia, News
from Nowhere (1890).
He died in 1896, but eight years later the Socialist Party was formed
from a group that broke with the SDF (and for much the same reasons
as the League). The Socialist Party, when formulating its Declaration
of Principles in 1904, drew heavily upon the Manifesto
of the Socialist League
that was drafted by Morris. (See also HYNDMAN; IMPOSSIBILISM; SOCIALIST
PARTY.)
Reading
S.
Coleman & P. O’Sullivan, William
Morris and News from Nowhere: A Vision for Our Time,
1990
Morris
online: www.morrissociety.org/
Nation.
Name given by their rulers or would-be rulers to a collection of
people with a distinct culture usually but not always based on a
common language. The geo-political entity of the state and its
machinery of government are not necessarily the same as the nation;
and this forms the ideological basis for nationalism - the belief
that a nation should become a state. (See also NATIONALISM;
STATE.)
Nationalisation.
The wages system under new management. Nationalisation is state
capitalism and does not differ from private capitalism as far as the
exploitation of the workers is concerned. They still need their trade
unions, and the strike weapon, to protect themselves from their
employers.
The
Socialist Party has never supported nationalisation. It is not
socialism, nor is it a step towards socialism. (See also STATE CAPITALISM.)
Reading
A.
Buick & J. Crump, State
Capitalism, 1986
Nationalism.
An ideology which emphasises the distinctiveness of a nation and
usually points to its statehood. Nationalist movements arose with the
development of capitalism and the state. In the nineteenth century,
Karl Marx supported some nationalist movements because they were
historically progressive in that they served the class interests of
the rising bourgeoisie in its struggle against the traditional
aristocracy. In the twentieth century, nationalism is associated with
movements for ‘self-determination’ and
‘ethnic
cleansing’.
Socialists
do not support movements for national liberation. Certainly socialism
will allow the fullest linguistic and cultural diversity, but this
cannot be achieved through nationalism. Marxism explains how workers
are exploited and unfree, not as particular nationalities, but as
members of a class. To be in an ‘oppressed
minority’ at
all it is usually necessary to first belong to the working class.
From this perspective, identifying with the working class provides a
rational basis for political action. The objective is a stateless
world community of free access. Given that nationalism does nothing
to further this understanding, however, it is an obstruction to world
socialism. (See also NATION; STATE;
STATE CAPITALISM.)
Reading
Nigel
Harris, National
Liberation, 2002
NationalismWatch.org: www.nationalismwatch.org/
Needs.
Wants of the means of living. Needs have a physiological and a
historical dimension. Basic physiological needs derive from our human
nature (e.g. food, clothing and shelter), but historically
conditioned needs derive from developments in the forces of
production. In capitalism, needs are manipulated by the imperative to
sell commodities and accumulate capital; basic physiological needs
then take the historically conditioned form of
‘needs’
for whatever the capitalists can sell us. The exact type of
‘needs’
current will depend on the particular stage of historical
development.
In
socialism, a society of common ownership, democratic control and
production solely for use, human beings will be ends in themselves
and consumption will take place according to their self-defined
needs. (See alsoHUMAN
NATURE.)
Reading
Agnes
Heller, The
Theory of
Need in Marx, 1976
Michael
Lebowitz, Beyond
Capital, 2003
Organic
composition of capital.
The ratio of constant to variable capital (c/v). Constant capital is
that money invested in machinery, buildings and raw materials. In the
process of production their value is only transferred to the finished
product. Variable capital is that money invested in labour power and
is so called because this is the part of the total capital that
increases in value in the process of production. An understanding of
the organic composition of capital is important for ascertaining the
rate of profit. (See also CAPITAL; LABOUR
POWER.)
Overpopulation.
In his Essay
on the
Principle of Population as it Affects the Future Improvement of
Society, first
published in 1798, the Reverend Thomas Malthus argued that population
growth always tended to outstrip the growth in food supply, with the
result that periodically population growth was checked by famine,
disease and war. It was, and still remains, a very popular apology
for the poverty of capitalism.
Karl
Marx showed that there is no such thing as a general law of
population that applied to all societies and to all times. At times
under capitalism there seemed to be overpopulation and at others
underpopulation. But this had nothing to do with the birth rate. It
was a feature that appeared at the various stages of the business
cycle. In depressions there were more people than jobs offered by
capitalist industry. In booms, on the other hand, there was a
comparative shortage of workers - as in the years after the Second
World War when immigrants were recruited to make up the shortage.
It
was not just a question of the number of people; moreover,
productivity had to taken into account. Beginning with the industrial
revolution, technological development increased social productivity
so that more food was provided for the increasing population.
However, food is not produced directly to meet human needs but rather
for profit. Capitalism is a system of artificial scarcity, so
creating poverty amidst potential abundance and the illusion that
there are too many people and not enough to go around. (ABUNDANCE; ECOLOGY; GREENS.)
Reading
United
Nations, Population Division:www.un.org/esa/population/unpop.htm
Owen,
Robert
(1771-1858). Born and died in Newtown, Wales. In 1800 he became a
partner in a mill at New Lanark, Scotland, and was able to show in
practice that people work better if their living and working
conditions are improved. This confirmed the theory he was to set out
in A
New View of
Society (1813), that
the establishment of a better society was all a question of changing
the environment. At first he addressed his pleas to the manufacturers
and aristocrats; but when this failed he turned to establishing
communitarian colonies, mostly in America, and most of which failed.
In later years he was to be a formative influence on the co-operative
movement and helped found the Grand National Consolidated Trades
Union in 1834.
The
term ‘socialist’ is found for the first time in the
Owenite Co-operative
Magazine of November
1827. For Owen and his followers, ‘social’
signified
‘co-operation’ and a socialist supported
co-operation.
They criticised the private enterprise and competition that produced
poverty, unemployment and crime. In their proposed ‘Villages
of
Co-operation’, private property, money, the Church, the legal
and penal systems were all to be abolished and common ownership
introduced. Owen’s labour standard of value was to determine
the distribution of goods, though some would be given according to
need. In the 1830s some of his followers established ‘labour
bazaars’ where workers brought the products of their labour
and
received in exchange a labour note which entitled them to take from
the bazaar any items which had taken the same time to produce. These
bazaars were failures, but the idea of labour-time vouchers, or
‘labour money’, appeared in substantially similar
forms
in France with Proudhon, in Germany with Rodbertus and in England
with Hodgskin and Gray. The idea was also to appear in Marx’s Critique
of the
Gotha
Programme (1875). This
proposition has been seized upon by left-wingers as proof that Marx
presumed the use of money in the early phase of communism. But in
this work, as elsewhere, Marx is clear that communism (in its early
and mature phases) will be based on common ownership and have no use
for money:
‘Within
the co-operative society based on the common ownership of the means
of production, the producers do not exchange their products.’
Marx
was quite adamant that his and Owen’s suggested labour-time
vouchers would not function as money:
‘Owen’s
“labour-money”, for instance, is no more
“money”
than a ticket for the theatre. Owen presupposes directly associated
labour, a form of production that is entirely inconsistent with the
production of commodities. The certificate of labour is merely
evidence of the part taken by the individual in the common labour,
and of his right to a certain portion of the common produce destined
for consumption’
(Capital, Vol. 1).
‘These
producers may… receive paper vouchers entitling them to
withdraw from the social supplies of consumer goods a quantity corresponding
to their
labour-time. These vouchers are not money. They do not
circulate’
(Capital, Vol. 2).
Marx
only suggested labour-time vouchers as a possibility; given the low
level of development of the productive forces, he believed that this
was one way of regulating individual consumption. The objective was,
for Marx and Owen: from each according to ability, to each according
to need. And this is now realisable, as soon as a majority wants it.
For Owen in the early nineteenth century the problem of the
underdevelopment of the forces and relations of production was even
more acute; and it is probably for this reason that he did not
recognise the existence of the class struggle. This is why Marx and
Engels called his ideas (along with those of Fourier and Saint-Simon)
‘Utopian Socialism’. (See also CO-OPERATIVES;
UTOPIAN
SOCIALISM.)
Reading
Keith
Taylor, The
Political
Ideas of the Utopian Socialists,
1982
Owen
online: http://robert-owen.midwales.com/
Parliament.
Subject to certain commitments to the European Union, Parliament is
the centre of power in Britain. It makes the laws and provides for
their enforcement.
The
Socialist Party has has always insisted that parliament can and
should be used in the process of
establishing
socialism - not because we are parliamentarians, but because we are
democrats. The basic function of the state, controlled by parliament,
is to protect the interests of the capitalist class. For working
class emancipation it will be necessary to gain control of the state
through parliamentary action, in order to dispossess the capitalists
of the means of production. When a majority of the working class are
socialist they can use parliament by sending elected delegates there
to formally carry out the socialist revolution, thereby neutralising
the legitimacy and effectiveness of any counter-revolution.
Left-wing
criticism of the parliamentary road points to the failure of Labour
governments and similar regimes around the world. But these point up
the futility of reformism, of a largely non-socialist working class
voting for governments to administer the profit system. The working
class has never tried to capture political power for socialism. Of
course, the insurrectionist left wing reject the parliamentary road
because they reject democracy; they expect violence because, being a
minority, they must impose their views on the rest of society -
including the working class. (See also DEMOCRACY;
STATE.)
Peasantry.
Those who work on the land and possess their means of production:
tools and the land itself. Peasants had to pay a rent or a tribute to
maintain their possession of the land. Production by the peasantry
takes place outside capitalist social relations and no surplus value
is created. (See also FEUDAL SOCIETY.)
Phillips
curve. After the
economist
A.W. Phillips (1914-1975), the theory that there is a trade-off
between inflation and unemployment: governments could have either
higher inflation and lower unemployment or
lower inflation and higher unemployment. Until the 1970s, that is,
when Britain and many other states had both rising inflation and
rising unemployment (so-called ‘stagflation’). That
discredited the Phillips Curve, but basically the same idea is still
being pushed by politicians, union leaders, some economists and the
Bank of England.
In
the modified version of the Phillips Curve, inflation and
unemployment levels are said to be controlled by interest rates,
through the Bank of England (as ‘lender of last
resort’)
setting their base rate which will determine the interest rate in
other financial institutions and their charges for loans and
mortgages. Allegedly, if the Bank of England sets higher interest
rates this will deter inflation but will also deter investment and
job creation. On the other hand, lower interest rates are said to
allow inflation to rise but also increase investment and job
creation. However, this explanation confuses cause and consequence.
When the general price level is steadily rising, financial
institutions will need to offer an interest rate which is above the
inflation rate, otherwise depositors will lose out in real terms. In
other words, interest rates are largely a reflection of inflation,
not its cause.
Persistent
inflation is the sole responsibility of governments when they issue
more currency than is needed for economic transactions to take place.
Inflation, apart from extreme exceptions, has no bearing on
unemployment levels; the rate of unemployment is determined by the
functioning of the labour market and the profitability of production.
(See also INFLATION; INTEREST;
UNEMPLOYMENT.)
Popper,
Karl
(1902-1994). Philosopher of science and critic of Marxism. He argued
that the test of a scientific theory is not whether it can be
verified, since no amount of observations can verify it, but that it
is open to being falsified by experience. A theory is said to be
scientific if it fits the facts and generates predictions capable of
being proved wrong. Popper thought that his philosophy could
demarcate between science and non-science but is not itself a
scientific theory (so the objection ‘What falsifies the
falsifiability principle?’ is entirely misplaced). Popper's
explanation of the logic of scientific discovery has been widely
influential, but it is overshadowed by Thomas Kuhn's explanation of
how science is actually conducted in practice. Kuhn argues that
normal science is governed by paradigms which dictate what kind of
scientific work should be done and what kinds of theory are
acceptable. Eventually normal science produces a series of anomalies
which cannot be explained within a paradigm, leading to a scientific
revolution (‘paradigm shift’) as the old paradigm
is
replaced by a new one.
In The
Open Society
and
Its Enemies (1945)
Popper claimed that Marxism is not a scientific theory since it
cannot be falsified, or else when it was falsified its supporters
shifted their ground to protect their theory. His attack on Marxism
was based partly on a misunderstanding of what Marx wrote and partly
on the experience of the Communist Party in Russia. Popper concluded
that the totalitarian nature of the Communist Party in action in
Russia showed that Marx’s theories were totalitarian, rather
than the more plausible conclusion that the Communist Party’s
claim to be Marxist was and is false.
Popper
criticised Marx using a misquotation in his book The
Poverty of Historicism
(1957). Popper attacked the notion that there are laws of human
development, and that knowing these laws enable us to predict the
future course of human history. He misquoted from Marx’s Capital,
where he says the aim is ‘to lay bare the economic law of
motion of human society’ (i.e. any human society). Marx
actually wrote that his aim was to lay bare the economic law of
motion of ‘modern society’ (i.e. capitalist
society). The
economic law of capitalism, Marx’s law of value, is in fact
quite specific to capitalism. The Socialist Party does not claim to
predict the future course of human history; but we do claim to know
how capitalism operates and what it is and is not capable of doing.
(See also MARXISM; SCIENCE.)
Reading
Bryan
Magee, Popper,
1997
Popper
online: http://elm.eeng.dcu.ie/~tkpw/
Thomas
Kuhn, The
Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 1996
Kuhn
online: www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/us/kuhn.htm
Price.
What must be given in exchange for something. According to capitalist
economic theory, prices are the means for determining the rational
allocation of resources in a money economy. But, in fact, prices are
not intended for the purpose of organising production. The function
of pricing is to fix costs with a view to making profit. In practice,
costing and pricing are ultimately about calculating the exploitation
of labour, enabling the capitalist class to live and accumulate
capital from the wealth that the working class produces but does not
consume. (See also PROFIT.)
Prices
of production.
In Marxian economic theory the ‘price of
production’ is
the price sufficient to yield the average rate of profit on capital
advanced. Actual market prices fluctuate around prices of production
through the equalisation of profit rates. (See also LABOUR THEORY OF VALUE.)
Primitive
accumulation.
The historical process by which capitalism came into existence. This
entailed the transformation of the use of existing means of
production into their use in capitalist production. This did not
initially require any additional accumulation of means of production
or new technology, just their operation according to new social
relations. Once this had occurred the process of competitive
accumulation gathered its own momentum.
For
capitalist economic history, Britain became the first industrial
nation ‘spontaneously’; that is, without the help
of
direct state intervention. This interpretation, however, does
violence to the history of violent expropriation of the agricultural
population from the land. The state did critically intervene in the
interests of the emerging capitalists in two ways:
-
Enclosure movements,
enforced by the
state, dispossessed the peasantry of both common and individual land
usages. The landless labourer was created.
-
Wage
legislation and systems of social security, most notably the Poor Law
Amendment Act of 1834, forced long hours and factory discipline on
the landless labourer. This turned the landless into wage labourers.
It
is important to note, though, that the creation of capitalism in
Britain has been somewhat different than on the continent. The
forcible dispossession of the peasantry from the land was more
extensive than in the rest of Europe. For this reason a much larger
proportion of the population was transformed into wage labourers in
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Nevertheless, the formation
of a class of wage labourers out of the agricultural population
remains an important starting point for an analysis of primitive
accumulation. (See also FEUDAL SOCIETY.)
Reading
Rodney
Hilton, The
Transition
from Feudalism to Capitalism,
1976
Michael
Perelman, 'The
Theory of Primitive Accumulation' from
The Invention of Capitalism,
2000 (online at www.csuchico.edu/~mperelman/primitive_accumulation.htm)
Primitive
communism.
Propertyless, stateless, classless, moneyless society based on common
ownership before the advent of class society. Most of human history
has been in the stage of primitive communism, before the rise of
class society about 8,000 to 10,000 years ago. Even now there are a
few primitive communist tribes surviving on the outskirts of
capitalism in Asia, Africa and South America. The usual reason why
socialists insist on the evidence for primitive communism is not
because they provide a model for the future - they had undesirable
features such as poverty - but because they show that property is not
an inevitable and eternal feature of human society. (See also PROPERTY.)
Reading
Maurice
Bloch, Marxism
and
Anthropology, 2004
Productive
and unproductive labour.
Productive labour is that employment which creates surplus value for
the capitalist, whereas unproductive labour does not. For example, a
chef employed by a capitalist to work in his hotel is productive,
whereas if that same chef were employed to work in the
capitalist’s
home she would be unproductive. Nowadays, though, most unproductive
labour is carried out in the state sector of the economy.
The
distinction is useful for analysing the structure of capitalism. For
instance, it sets theoretical limits for the size of the state sector
of the economy, since this must be paid out of the surplus value
arising from productive labour. No value judgement is implied on the
importance or worth of either type of work and the working class
carries out both productive and unproductive labour.
Productivity.
The relationship between the production of goods and services and the
inputs of resources used to produce them. But there is often
confusion about what constitutes ‘production’. In
everyday language a car is said to be ‘produced’ by
the
workers who assemble it, and the bread to be
‘produced’
by workers in the bakery. However, the labour of these workers is
only a part of all that required to produce cars and bread. As Marx
put it:
‘We
must add
to the quantity of labour last employed the quantity of labour
previously worked up in the raw material of the commodity, and the
labour bestowed on the implements, tools, machinery and buildings
with which such labour is assisted’
(Wage, Price and Profit,
chapter VI).
Let
us assume that the ‘previous’ hours of labour
needed to
produce a commodity are 80, and that the ‘last’
hours are
20 - a total of 100 hours. Let us further assume that without
additional investment, but merely by simplifying the last operation,
it becomes possible to reduce the necessary hours from 20 to 10. It
then only takes 90 hours in all, in place of 100. Productivity will
have risen by about 11 per cent. But if
‘productivity’ is
calculated - wrongly - on the last operation only, it will appear to
have increased by 100 per cent. Would anyone be so foolish as to look
at in that way? Well, yes, it often happens. A news report about the
introduction of a new machine operated by two people instead of the
former ten will be presented as ‘two do the work of
ten’,
as if the making and maintenance of the machine did not absorb
additional labour. So productivity in that example will be said,
wrongly, to have been multiplied by five.
As
Marx explained, the amount of labour that is saved is not the whole
saving on the last operating process, but the difference between that
amount and the additional labour required for the new equipment
(Capital,
vol. 1, chapter 15). (See also LABOUR
THEORY OF VALUE.)
Profit.
That part of the social surplus value which is appropriated by
capitalist enterprises. The rate of profit is calculated on the ratio
of surplus value to the total capital invested (s/c+v). Distributed
profits as dividends form part of the privileged income of the
capitalist class. However, because of the pressure of competition
from other capitalist enterprises, most profits are re-invested and
accumulated as capital.
Capitalist
economics attempts to explain profit in two ways:
(a)
By buying
cheap and
selling dear. Some
sellers can profit in this way, but the seller's gain is exactly
offset by the buyer's loss. The total amount of value in existence
remains unchanged. If all sell dear then they cannot buy cheap and
all lose as buyers exactly what they gain as sellers. Exchange, in
this explanation, is a zero-sum game.
(b)
As a reward, either
for the sacrifice of present consumption for investment by the
capitalists, and/or as a reward for risking their capital in
investment. Professor David McLellan attacks the labour theory of
value by claiming that ‘it overlooks the fact that capital
accumulation requires deferred consumption, and capital therefore
unavoidably commands a premium over and above the labour it
embodies’
(The
Blackwell
Encyclopaedia of Political Thought,
1991). However, this is an attempt at justification
of profit as reward, not an explanation of the source
of profit, which is what the labour theory of value is concerned
with.
Generally
speaking, vast personal fortunes and the social accumulation of
capital can only be satisfactorily explained as the result of the
unpaid labour of the working class being appropriated by the
capitalist class in the form of profit. (See also EXPLOITATION; LABOUR
THEORY OF VALUE; SURPLUS VALUE.)
Proletariat.
The working class ‘who, having no means of production of
their
own, are reduced to selling their labour power in order to
live’
(Communist
Manifesto,
1848). This of course includes everyone involved in the reproduction
cycle of labour power: wage and salary earners but also students,
housewives, pensioners, and so on. (See also LABOUR
POWER; WORKING
CLASS.)
Property.
Ownership rights. These rights are socially determined and therefore
vary from society to society. Property rights are a reflection of the
social relations between people, because they define who does and who
does not have legal access to their use - in particular, the means of
life. Under capitalism, the main right to property is the right to
draw an unearned income from the ownership of land and invested
capital. The working class is propertyless in the sense of not having
any regular income sufficient to live on other than through the sale
of their labour power.
Socialism
will be a propertyless society in the sense of there being no
ownership rights, or exclusion rights, to the use of the means of
production, because it will be based on common ownership and
democratic control. (See also COMMON
OWNERSHIP.)
Reading
Alan
Ryan, Property,
1988
Proudhon,
Pierre-Joseph
(1809-1865). A self-educated French artisan. The term
‘anarchism’
was first used in Proudhon’s book What
is Property? (1840),
in which he gave the famous reply: ‘Property is
theft’.
However, he did not mean this phrase to be taken literally, as Marx
did in his attack on Proudhon in The
Poverty of Philosophy,
1847. Proudhon was in fact in favour of private ownership. He made a
distinction between ‘property’ and
‘possession’;
and he rejected property - the capitalist right to draw rent,
interest and profit through ownership of the means of production. He
favoured possession: individuals could have exclusive use of land and
tools on the condition that they did not live on unearned income. In
Proudhon’s conception of an anarchist society individuals
would
have an equal right to possess, based on a
‘mutualist’
system of equivalent exchange between self-governing producers and
financed by free credit. Marxian socialism, therefore, is rejected on
the ground that it would violate the right to possess by establishing
common ownership.
Proudhon
was critical of some aspects of property society (unearned income,
the state), but not others (commodity production, capital). And this
remains true of most anarchists today. (See also ANARCHISM.)
Reading
Alan
Ritter, The
Political
Thought of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon,
1980
Proudhon
online: http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/proudhon/proudhonbio.html
Racism.
The beliefs that people of one ‘race’ are superior
to
another. It often results in hostility towards the race thought of as
inferior and in the practice of discrimination, persecution, and, in
some cases mass murder. According
to the United Nations
conventions, there is no distinction between the term ‘racial
discrimination’
and ‘ethnic
discrimination’.
There
is no scientific foundation for racism, which is a prejudice
diverting the working class from the real cause of modern
society’s
problems. There is only one biological race of people on this planet:
the human race (Homo sapiens). Moreover, we are all Africans: modern
humans have evolved out of migrant Africans over many thousands of
years. Historically, the doctrines of anti-Semitism and white
supremacy originated as weapons to defend pre-capitalist systems of
exploitation. On occasions the modern state has sponsored racism, but
it is a double-edged sword and potentially disruptive to the economy
(as in apartheid South Africa, for example). The market is colour
blind, and employers usually want to recruit from the largest
possible pool of labour power. But working class existence is always
insecure, especially in times of slump, and those workers who
migrated in boom times (as, for instance, workers from the Indian
sub-continent and the West Indies, induced by the Minister of Health
in the 1950s, Enoch Powell) became the scapegoats.
To
the extent that socialist ideas permeate the minds of the working
class wherever they may be; to the extent that workers realise that
their interests are in common irrespective of
‘race’, and
opposed to the interests of the capitalist class irrespective of
their ‘race’, to that extent they will reject
racism and
work for the emancipation of all people. (See also FASCISM;
CLASS
CONSCIOUSNESS.)
Reading
Race,
Racism and the Law: http://academic.udayton.edu/race/
Reformism. The policy of
supporting reforms,
either as a way of ‘improving’
capitalism or as a means to socialism. The Socialist Party has
formulated the following propositions on this issue:
(See
also PARLIAMENT; REVOLUTION.)
Relations
of production.
Classes in society are determined by the possession or non-possession
of a means of production. In capitalist society it is the relations
of production which constitute the capitalist class and the working
class. (See also CLASS; FORCES OF
PRODUCTION.)
Religion.
Marx described religion thus:
‘Religion
is
the sigh of the oppressed, the feeling of a heartless world, and the
soul of soulless circumstances. It is the opium of the
people…
The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is
the demand for their real happiness. The demand to give up the
illusions about their condition is a demand to give up a condition
that requires illusion. The criticism of religion is therefore the
germ of the criticism of the valley of tears whose halo is
religion’
(Introduction to A
Contribution to the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right, 1844).
It
is to be noted however that this psychological critique of the social
function of religion could have been put forward by an Enlightenment
philosopher of the eighteenth century, and many modern anti-socialist
atheists could concur. Marx never developed a specifically socialist
(or indeed ‘Marxist’) analysis of religion.
Socialists
share in the Enlightenment inheritance of respect for reason and
evidence against its traditional foe, religion. But at the same time
we recognise that the main source of irrationality and exploitation
in the modern world is to be found in the capitalist system of
society. For socialists, therefore, the struggle against religion
cannot be separated from the struggle for socialism. We fight
religious superstition wherever it is an obstacle to socialism, but
we are opposed to religion only insofar as it is an obstacle to
socialism.
Reading
AC
Grayling, Against
All
Gods, 2007
Christopher
Hitchens, God
Is Not
Great, 2007
Rent.
Ground rent is a portion of surplus value paid to the owner of land
for its use by a capitalist enterprise. House rent is a price for
hiring accommodation; it is not a portion of surplus value. (See also SURPLUS VALUE.)
Revisionism.
A term coined by the opponents of Eduard Bernstein in the German
Social Democratic Party (SPD) at the end of the nineteenth and the
beginning of the twentieth centuries to describe his reformism.
Bernstein,
a close friend of Engels, spent many years in exile in London and it
has been suggested that he was influenced by Fabian gradualism. He
attacked the main principles of Marxism and called upon the SPD to
recognise that they were in reality only a reform party. He suggested
that they be honest with themselves and drop their ultimate
commitment to the capture of political power for socialism and
instead concentrate on getting reforms within capitalism by working
through parliament. The SPD turned down Bernstein’s
suggestions
but the decision meant nothing as far as the party’s
practical
policy was concerned. They retained their paper commitment to the
socialist revolution (formally abandoned in 1959) but continued their
day-to-day reformist practices. (See also FABIANS;
GRADUALISM; INTERNATIONALS; REFORMISM.)
Reading
Bernstein
online: www.marxists.org/reference/archive/bernstein/index.htm
George
Lichtheim, A
Short
History of Socialism,
1983
Revolution.
To many, the word ‘revolution’ conjures up images
of
violent insurrection. All it means is a complete change, without any
implication as to how that change is to come about. The Socialist
Party stands for a revolution in the basis of society, a complete
change from class to common ownership of the means of production:
this social revolution to be carried out democratically by the use of
political power. It is possible for a majority of socialist workers
to win power through democratic institutions, by the use of the
ballot and parliament, for the purpose of carrying out the socialist
revolution. Therefore we stand for democratic revolutionary political
action. (See also DEMOCRACY; PARLIAMENT; REFORMISM.)
Russia.
Socialism has never existed in Russia or anywhere else. The Bolshevik
left, however, maintain that the revolution of November 1917 was
socialist. But, as the Socialist
Standard at the time
and subsequent years show, this position is untenable:
‘Is
this huge
mass of people, numbering about 160,000,000 and spread over eight and
a half millions of square miles, ready for socialism? Are the hunters
of the north, the struggling peasant proprietors of the south, the
agricultural wage slaves of the Central Provinces, and the industrial
wage slaves of the towns convinced of the necessity and equipped with
the knowledge required, for the establishment of the social ownership
of the means of life? Unless a mental revolution such as the world
has never seen before has taken place, or an economic change has
occurred immensely more rapidly than history has ever recorded, the
answer is “No!” ’
(Socialist Standard,
August 1918.)
‘We
have often
stated that because of a large anti-socialist peasantry and vast
untrained population, Russia was a long way from socialism. Lenin has
now to admit this by saying: “Reality says that State
capitalism would be a step forward for us; if we were able to bring
about State capitalism in a short time it would be a victory for
us”
(The Chief Task of Our Times)… If we are to copy Bolshevik
policy in other countries we should have to demand State capitalism,
which is not a step to socialism’
(Socialist Standard,
July 1920).
‘Both
Trotsky
and Stalin draw up their programmes within the framework of state and
private capitalism which prevails in Russia’
(Socialist
Standard,
December 1928).
‘[all
the
Bolsheviks] have been able to do is to foster the growth of State
capitalism and limit the growth of private capitalism’
(Socialist
Standard,
July 1929.)
Since
the collapse of the Russian Empire after 1989, state capitalist
monopoly has given way to a Western-style ‘mixed
economy’,
with many of the former Party bosses as bosses of the new privatised
businesses. Now that the sham of Russian
‘socialism’ has
passed into history, workers in Russia can join in the struggle for
the real thing. (See also BOLSHEVISM; COMMUNIST
PARTY; LENINISM; SOCIALISM;
STATE
CAPITALISM; TRANSITIONAL
SOCIETY.)
Reading
A.
Buick & J. Crump, State
Capitalism, 1986
Russia
online: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia
Say’s
Law
(or Say’s
Law of Markets).
Named
after the
French
economist Jean-Baptiste Say (1767-1832), this is usually interpreted
as saying that ‘supply creates its own demand’; or
more
precisely, that the normal state of an economy is equilibrium in
which total demand equals total supply. However, if this were a valid
explanation of how the economy works there would never be crises and
mass unemployment. As Marx pointed out, ‘no one directly
needs
to purchase because they have just sold’ (Capital,
Volume 1, Penguin edition, pp208-209). Capitalism is based on the
competitive accumulation of profits. A competitive disequilibrium
between sales and purchases is the normal state of the economy, and
with it goes capitalism's crises, mass unemployment and the anarchy
of the market. (see also CRISES; KEYNESIAN
ECONOMICS.)
Reading
J.B.
Say online: http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/profiles/say.htm
Sexism.
Discrimination because of gender. Reforms have been passed in Britain
to counter sexism, the Equal Pay Act (1970) and the Sex
Discrimination Act (1975) in particular. The victims of sexism are
usually to be found only in the working class. Female capitalists are
not socially inferior to working class men or women and female
capitalists do not usually suffer discrimination.
Socialism
will include the liberation of women in its struggle for human
emancipation. This will not come about in an automatic or inevitable
way. A political organisation whose object is socialism cannot permit
sexism (any more than racism) within its ranks on the grounds that
nothing can be done now and that the problem will be resolved
‘after
the revolution’. For a socialist party to be credible, it
must
embody the attitudes, values and practices that it seeks to institute
in society at large. (See also FEMINISM.)
Science.
In academia and capitalist production a theory is said to be
‘scientific’ if its has been peer-reviewed and
approved
by practising scientists. In socialist theory, however, science means
something different. According to Marx, ‘all science would be
superfluous if the outward appearances and essences of things
directly coincided’ (Capital,
Vol. 2, Ch. 48); and ‘that in their appearances things often
represent themselves in inverted form is pretty well-known in every
science except political economy’ (Capital,
Vol. 1, Ch. 19). Marx argued that his scientific method penetrated
the surface of capitalist social relations to reveal their inner
workings. His labour theory of value shows the exploitative nature of
capitalism, whereas political economy takes capitalism at face value
as the free and equal exchange of commodities in the market.
Marx’s
method of scientific investigation consists in uncovering the real
underlying and often unobservable mechanisms of exploitation. This is
to be contrasted with ‘positivist’ accounts of
science
which demands that science can only deal with empirically observable
phenomena. (See also IDEOLOGY; POPPER.)
Reading
A.F.
Chalmers, What
Is This
Thing Called Science?,
1999
Science
Resource
Online: www.scienceresourceonline.com/
Social
democracy.
Originally synonymous with Marxian socialism, it now usually stands
for reformism, the ‘mixed economy’ and welfare
state
capitalism.
The
change came from divisions within the German Social Democratic Party
at its founding Conference at Gotha in 1875, and the subject of
Marx's withering Critique
of the Gotha Programme
(1875). Marx attacked the Programme for claiming that the capitalist
state and economy could be reformed in working class interests. The
social democratic position was more fully set out by Bernstein in the
debate over ‘revisionism’, which was an explicit
rejection of Marxism in favour of reform. In Britain, the Fabian
C.A.R. Crosland further elaborated social democracy (and for much the
same reasons as Bernstein) in The
Future of Socialism
(1956), where he argued that Keynesian economics would lead to
greater social equality. (See also KEYNESIAN
ECONOMICS; REFORMISM; REVISIONISM; SOCIALISM.)
Reading
Kevin
Morgan, Rethinking
Social Democracy, 2005
A List
of Social
Democratic Parties: www.broadleft.org/socdem.htm
Socialism.
The term ‘socialist’ is found for the first time in
the
Owenite Co-operative
Magazine of November
1827, where it stands for a society of common ownership. Marx and
Engels used the words ‘socialism’ and
‘communism’
interchangeably to refer to a society of common ownership. Marx and
Engels gave few other details about what they thought socialism would
be like. However, they both wrote at length about what they thought
socialism would not
be like via a critique of ‘other socialisms’. The
‘other
socialisms’, according to Hal Draper, were:
-
Utopian Socialism.
Saint-Simon, Fourier
and Owen gave useful criticisms of existing society and interesting
possibilities for a future society, but they were politically
naïve
about how this was to come about.
- Sentimental
Socialism. Not a school of socialism as such but a tendency to be
found in various schools, substituting the power of love, humanity or
morality for the class struggle
- Anarchism.
Stirner, Proudhon and Bakunin were criticised for failing to see the
authoritarianism inherent in the anti-democratic nature of anarchism.
- Reactionary
Anti-capitalisms. All those who yearn for a pre-capitalist
‘golden
age’ of harmony, plenty etc., as found for example in the
writings of Thomas Carlyle.
- Boulangism.
After General Georges Boulanger in France, an arch-opportunist and a
forerunner of ‘National Socialism’.
- Bismarckian
Socialism (or ‘State Socialism’). In late
nineteenth
century Germany the Bismarck regime introduced nationalisation and
social-welfare reforms. To a large extent this was an attempt to
undermine and ‘steal the thunder’ of growing
support for
the reformist German Social Democratic Party.
It
is this latter Bismarckian, statist conception of socialism which has
become world famous. But the policies pursued by such ‘socialist’
regimes in practice - nationalisation, social welfare provision, free
compulsory education, etc. - have also been pursued by openly
pro-capitalist governments. There is nothing inherently
anti-capitalist about these reforms, or any of the measures pursued
by any Labour/Social Democratic/’Socialist’
government worldwide; and, indeed, as a whole they were merely a form
of state capitalism. We in the World Socialist Movement stick to our
principles and the original meaning of socialism: common ownership,
democratic control and production solely for use. We do so not
because we are dogmatic but because our socialist theory consistently
provides an insightful analysis of the contradictions of capitalism,
because of the repeated failure of the alternatives put in to
practice, and because the prospect of socialism as the meeting of our
real needs provides the motivation. (See also ANARCHISM;
COMMUNISM; MARXISM;
OWEN; SOCIALIST
PARTY; TRANSITIONAL
SOCIETY; UTOPIAN
SOCIALISM.)
Reading
J.
Crump & M. Rubel, Non-Market
Socialism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,
1987
Hal
Draper, Karl
Marx’s
Theory of Revolution: Critique of Other Socialisms,
1990
Socialist
Labour Party.
On 4th November 1995 Arthur Scargill, President of the National Union
of Mineworkers, presented a discussion paper to a meeting of trade
union activists and other campaigners in London. In this paper
Scargill called for the establishment of a Socialist Labour Party,
‘on the basis of class understanding, class commitment and
Socialist policies’ (Future Strategy for the Left, November
1995). On 4th May 1996 the Socialist Labour Party was launched. What
led Scargill to resign from the Labour Party and set up a new party
was Labour’s decision in 1995 to amend its constitution by
replacing Clause 4 with a new aim which committed it to support
‘the
enterprise of the market’, ‘the rigour of
competition’
and ‘a thriving private sector’. He is right to say
that
New Labour cannot be supported by those who call themselves
socialist.
Clause
4, however, was never a definition of socialism. What it was - and
was meant to be by the Labour leaders of the time who drew it up -
was a commitment to nationalisation, or state capitalism, to be
achieved ‘for the workers’ by the actions of the
Parliamentary Labour Party. It was a rejection not of capitalism as
such, but only of one institutional form of capitalism (private
enterprise) in favour of another (state enterprise). Production was
to continue to be for the market and workers were to continue to work
for wages, only this was to take place under the direction of the
state. The Fabian, Sidney Webb, who was mainly responsible for
writing the constitution and its Clause 4, would have been horrified
to learn that this was regarded as a ‘class
commitment’.
Ideologically,
the new SLP is more obsolete than the old De Leonist SLP in Britain,
founded in 1903 on an industrial unionist policy until its effective
demise in 1921 when most of the members joined the newly formed
Communist Party. At least the old SLP had a better grasp of the way
the capitalist economy functions, and would never have deluded
themselves, as Scargill does, by claiming that a ‘British
government’ could abolish unemployment ‘even within
a
capitalist society’ (Guardian,
15/01/96). The new SLP represents the same old statist reformism of
the past. We’ve seen it and it doesn’t work. (See
also DE
LEON; LABOUR
PARTY.)
Reading
Raymond
Challinor, The
Origins
of British Bolshevism,
1977
SLP
online: www.socialist-labour-party.org.uk/index.htm
Socialist
Party. The
Socialist Party of Great Britain was formed on 12th June 1904 by a
hundred or so members and former members of the Social Democratic
Federation who were dissatisfied with the policy and structure of
that party.
The
SDF had been formed in 1884, under H.M. Hyndman’s leadership,
and spent much of its time campaigning for reforms. The opportunism
and arrogance of Hyndman led to a break-away later in 1884 when a
number of members, including William Morris and Eleanor Marx, set up
the Socialist League which soon unfortunately ceased to be of use
when it was dominated the anarchists. A second revolt led to the
formation in 1903 of the Socialist Labour Party, following the
industrial unionist policy of Daniel DeLeon and the American
Socialist Labour Party.
Another
revolt against Hyndman’s dominance of the SDF was organised
by
a group of women and men dismissively called
‘impossibilists’.
After they failed to reform the SDF, some were expelled and branches
dissolved. After the April 1904 SDF Conference in Burnley a meeting
took place in London to establish a new organisation. The Socialist
Party was founded with a policy and structure so that what happened
in the SDF would be impossible. The Socialist Party is thoroughly
democratic, including its internal affairs with all meetings being
open to members and non-members. In fact, the party’s
existence
has been a practical refutation of those who argue that all
organisations must degenerate into bureaucratic rule.
An
Object and Declaration of Principles, drawn from the Manifesto of the
Socialist League drafted by William Morris, was adopted at its
foundation and has remained unaltered ever since. This is a testament
to the validity of the Object and Principles, but its original
language has been retained because it is also an important historical
document. In September 1904 the Socialist Standard was issued and has
been published every month since. Together with our companion parties
overseas we use the umbrella name, World Socialist Movement.
The
Socialist Party has made a number of distinctive contributions to
political debate. Here are our most significant contributions:
Reading
David
A. Perrin, The
Socialist Party of Great Britain,
2000
M.Rubel
& J. Crump, Non-Market
Socialism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,
1987
Socialist
Party
online: www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/
Socially
necessary labour.
The labour-time required to produce a commodity in a particular
branch of industry under average conditions. Not to be confused with
‘necessary labour’ - the labour-time required to
reproduce the value of labour power. (See also LABOUR
THEORY OF
VALUE.)
Stalin,
Josef Vissarionovich
(1879-1953). Born in Georgia under the family name Dzhugashvilli, the
son of a cobbler. After training to be a priest, he joined the
Bolsheviks in 1904 and was co-opted to the Bolshevik Central
Committee in 1912. In 1913 his Marxism
and the Nationalities Question
was published, in which he defended Bolshevik organisation for all
the nationalities in the Russian Empire. He became editor of Pravda
in 1917 and helped the Bolsheviks win power in Petrograd during the
October 1917 revolution. In 1922 he was appointed General Secretary
of the Communist Party, and after the death of Lenin in 1924 defeated
the successive oppositions of Trotsky, Zinoviev and Bukharin. By 1929
Trotsky had been exiled, Stalin was leader of the party and state,
and the first of the five year plans had begun. In the 1930s he
ruthlessly pursued state capitalist industrialisation and
collectivisation, at the cost of millions of lives, and in 1936
announced that Russia was ‘socialist’. He was
denounced
in Khruschev’s ‘secret speech’ in 1956,
and in 1961
his body was removed from the Kremlin to a plain grave. (See also STALINISM.)
Reading
Isaac
Deutscher, Stalin,
1990
The
Stalin
Society: www.stalinsociety.org.uk/
Stalinism.
Originally a reference to the dictatorship which existed in Russia
under Stalin from the late 1920s to his death in 1953. In particular,
it is used by Trotskyists to refer to their opponents in the
Communist Parties loyal to Stalin and his successors in the USSR. Now
it is an epithet applied to any dictatorial regime.
Stalin
was able to rise to power because Lenin had already laid the
groundwork. He had effectively silenced all opposition and
centralised power in the hands of the Communist Party. Whoever
controlled the party controlled the state. And when in the 1930s
Stalin announced the doctrine of ‘socialism in one
country’
he was able to draw upon an idea implicit in Lenin’s
writings.
But Stalin himself had written an article in 1906 in which he said
the following:
‘Future
society will be socialist society. This also means that with the
abolition of exploitation, commodity production and buying and
selling will also be abolished and, therefore, there will be no room
for buyers and sellers of labour power, for employers and employed -
there will be only free workers…Where there are no classes,
where there are neither rich nor poor, there is no need for a state,
there is no need also for political power, which oppresses the poor
and protects the rich. Consequently, in socialist society there will
be no need for the existence of political power’ (Anarchism
or Socialism?).
In
comparing what Stalin wrote in 1906 with what he later claimed was
‘socialism’ it can be seen to what extent he and
the
so-called Communist Parties everywhere have distorted the original
meaning of the word and dragged it through the mud. (See also STALIN.)
Reading
A.
Buick & J. Crump, State
Capitalism, 1986
Stalinism
online: www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/index.htm
State.
The state is essentially a coercive machine (police, judiciary, armed
forces, schools, etc.) for conserving the monopoly by the capitalist
class of the wealth taken from the workers in a geographical area.
This puts us at odds with the views of the
‘pluralists’
who argue that power is (or should be) diffused throughout a
plurality of institutions in society (trade unions, pressure groups,
etc.) and that the state is neutral in relation to the class
struggle. However, history shows how the state evolved:
‘The
ancient
state was, above all, the state of the slave owners for holding down
the slaves, just as the feudal state was the organ of the nobility
for holding down the peasant serfs and bondsmen, and the modern
representative state is an instrument for exploiting wage labour by
capital’ (Engels, Origin
of the
Family,
Private Property and the State,
1884).
Moreover,
the state and its machinery of government will have no place in a
socialist society:
‘The
society
that organises production anew on the basis of the free and equal
association of the producers will put the whole state machine where
it will then belong: in the museum of antiquities side by side with
the spinning wheel and the bronze axe’ (Engels, Anti-Duhring,
1878). (See also GOVERNMENT.)
Reading
Paul
Thomas, Alien
Politics:
Marxist State Theory Retrieved,
1994.
State
capitalism. The
wages system under new management. State ownership or nationalisation
is not socialism, nor is it a step towards socialism. Capitalism is
not just a particular form of property holding, but is essentially an
impersonal economic mechanism; impersonal in the sense that it is a
mechanism that operates independently of the will of people and
imposes itself on them as an external force.
State
capitalism and private capitalism have never existed as pure forms of
society; every country has its own historically developed mix. But
the main features of a model of state capitalism, drawn from
historical examples, are as follows:
Reading
A.
Buick & J. Crump, State
Capitalism, 1986.
Stirner,
Max (pseudonym
of Johann Casper Schmidt, 1806-1856). A German schoolteacher, writer
and individualist anarchist. He opposed all authority on egotistical
grounds. But Stirner took this line of argument to its logical
conclusion. In his claims for absolute egoism he rejects not only the
state but society itself. This nihilistic attitude was clearly
expressed in his main work, The
Ego and His Own,
(1844):
‘I,
the egoist, have not at heart the welfare of this “human
society”. I sacrifice nothing to it. I only utilise it: but
to
be able to utilise it completely I must transform it rather into my
property and my creature - i.e., I must annihilate it and form in its
place the Union of Egoists.’
Most
of The
German Ideology
(1845), by Marx and Engels, is a reply to Stirner’s ideas.
They
argued for socialism in which the free development of each is the
condition for the free development of all; and it was not an attempt
to subjugate the individual to some monstrous collectivity, as
Marxism is so often portrayed in anarchist caricatures. As for
Stirner, his ideas would be impossible to put into practice. The
required ‘Union’ contradicts his egoist viewpoint:
the
co-operative nature of the modern productive process is inescapable.
But this doesn’t stop so-called
‘Libertarians’
today making private property a virtue in the manner of Stirner,
though they would rather not spell out his nihilistic conclusions.
(See also ANARCHISM.)
Reading
Paul
Thomas, Karl
Marx and
the Anarchists, 1985
Stirner
online: www.nonserviam.com/stirner/
Strikes.
In their use of strikes, workers need to recognise certain basic
facts about capitalism: that (except on rare occasions when the
government chooses to turn a blind eye) the law will be enforced
against strikers; that the unions’ ability to halt production
is of little use during a depression when employers are themselves
restricting or halting it; and that the financial resources of the
employers are much greater than those of the unions. When the
employers consider the issue of sufficient importance to warrant
all-out resistance, the unions cannot hope to win by an indefinite
strike. This was shown in the hopeless months-long strike of the
firemen (1977-78) when the Labour government used troops as
strike-breakers, and the miners’ strike (1984-85) when the
Tory
government used the police force to break the strike. (See also GENERAL STRIKE.)
Surplus
Value. Ground
rent, interest and profit form the surplus value produced by wage
labour. Workers are constrained to selling their labour power for a
wage or a salary, but during their time in employment they can
produce a value greater than their wages and salaries. Because the
capitalist class owns the means of life and their products, they
appropriate this unpaid surplus when the commodities are sold on the
market.
The
rate of exploitation (rate of surplus value) is the ratio of surplus
labour (surplus value) to necessary labour (variable capital), (s/v).
(See also CAPITAL; EXPLOITATION;
LABOUR
POWER; VALUE.)
Reading
A.
Filho & B. Fine, Marx’s
‘Capital’,
2003
Syndicalism.
The English rendering of the French word for trade unionism. More
specifically, a movement to secure ownership of the means of
production by the workers through ‘direct action’ -
that
is, strikes in general and the general strike in particular.
Its
chief architect was Fernand Pelloutier (1867-1901), secretary of the
Federation des Bourses du Travail. Its most influential theorist was
Georges Sorel (1847-1923) in his Reflections
on Violence (1908).
Syndicalism was powerful in France in the years leading up to the
First World War, to a lesser extent in Britain during the same period
and in the USA with the ‘Wobblies’ (Industrial
Workers of
the World), established in 1905 as ‘one great industrial
union
… founded on the class struggle’. Syndicalism was
influential in Spain during the Civil War, but is only active now
anywhere as anarcho-syndicalism. (See also GENERAL
STRIKE; STRIKE; TRADE
UNIONS.)
Reading
Bob
Holton, British
Syndicalism 1900-1914: Myths and Realities,
1976
Anarcho-syndicalism
online: www.anarchosyndicalism.net/index.php
Taxation.
In the long run taxes are a burden on the capitalist class only.
Wages and salaries (not some theoretical gross, but what is actually
received, what the employer invests as ‘variable
capital’)
corresponds more or less to the cost of maintaining and reproducing
the working skills which employees sell to employers. During their
time in employment employees perform surplus labour, they create
surplus value which belongs to the employer. The upkeep of the state
and its machinery of government ultimately fall on surplus value, or
incomes derived from surplus value, through taxation. Moreover, it is
in the interest of the ruling class to maintain the state apparatus
because it maintains their dominant social position - though of
course that doesn’t stop them complaining about the cost and
demanding cuts in its running charges.
Rises
in tax (direct and indirect), by increasing the cost of maintaining
employees and their skills, are generally passed on, through the
operation of market forces, to employers in the form of increased
money wages and salaries. (See also LABOUR
POWER; STATE.)
Trade
unions.
Organisations of employees who have joined together to improve and
defend their pay and conditions of work. Necessary as they are under
capitalism, the unions are strictly limited in what they can achieve
for their members within the capitalist system of society out of
which unions arose and within which they operate. Capitalist private
companies and state capitalist nationalised industries are both
operated for the purpose of making a profit and they cannot long
survive without it. Trade unions cannot push wages up to a level that
prevents profits being made. When companies are marketing their
products profitably a union can hope to win concessions by
threatening to halt production and interrupt the flow of profits. But
against a firm nearing bankruptcy, or during a depression when firms
generally are curtailing production, laying off workers or closing
down whole businesses, the strike is a blunted weapon.
Even
in central and local government, where the issue of profitability may
not appear to arise, workers cannot isolate themselves from
developments in the forces of production and are compelled to remain
competitive in terms of pay and conditions with workers in the rest
of the economy. The class struggle affects all employees. (See also CLASS STRUGGLE; STRIKE;
WAGES.)
Reading
Henry
Pelling, A
History of
British Trade Unionism,
1992
TUC
history
online: www.unionhistory.info/index.php
Transformation
problem. Many
economists (including some who claim to be
Marxist) maintain that
prices cannot be transformed from values in the way Marx described in Capital.
The critics make a couple of assumptions about Marx’s theory
of
value. First, it is assumed that value and price must
be two separate systems. Second, it is assumed that inputs into
production and the outputs that subsequently emerge must
be valued simultaneously, and the input and output prices must
be equal.. When these assumptions are made, so the critics claim,
Marx’s theory of value becomes ‘internally
inconsistent’
and breaks down.
However,
these assumptions are mistaken. In Marx’s theory, value and
price are interdependent; profit exists when, but only when, surplus
labour has been performed. The assumption that value and price must
be two separate systems implies that there can be profit without
surplus labour, which is a major misinterpretation of Marx’s
theory. And the assumption concerning simultaneous valuation and the
equal prices of inputs and outputs flatly contradicts the main
principle upon which Marx’s value theory is founded, that
value
is determined by labour-time.
It is because valuation necessarily involves labour-time
that input and output prices can differ. Andrew Kliman has shown that
the ‘internal inconsistencies’ appear when the
theory is
viewed as a simultaneous valuation and disappear when not viewed as a
simultaneous valuation. In short,
the critics have misunderstood
Marx’s theory of value.
(See also LABOUR
THEORY OF VALUE; PRICE; VALUE.)
Reading
Andrew
Kliman, Reclaiming
Marx's “Capital”, 2007
Transitional
society. The
idea of a transitional society called ‘socialism’
was
made famous by Lenin, though others such as William Morris
also
accepted the idea. In
Lenin’s
Political Thought
(1981), Neil Harding claims that in 1917 Lenin made ‘no
clear
delineation’ between socialism and communism. But in fact
Lenin
did write in State
and Revolution
(1917) of a
‘scientific distinction’ between socialism and
communism:
‘What
is usually called socialism was termed by Marx the
“first”,
or lower, phase of communist society. Insofar as the means of
production become common property, the word
“communism” is also
applicable here, providing we do not forget that this is not complete
communism.’
The
first sentence of this quote is simply untrue and Lenin probably knew
it was. Marx and Engels used the terms socialism and
communism
interchangeably to refer to the post
-revolutionary society of common
ownership of the means of production. It is true that in his Critique
of the Gotha Programme
(1875) Marx wrote of a transition between a lower phase of communism
and a higher phase of communism.
Marx held that, because of the low level of economic development (in
1875), individual consumption would have to be rationed, possibly by
the use of labour-time vouchers (similar to those advocated by Robert
Owen). But in the higher phase of communism, when the forces of
production had developed sufficiently, it would be according to need.
It is important to realise, however, that in both phases of
socialism/communism there would be no state or money economy. Lenin,
on the other hand, said that socialism (or the first phase of
communism) is a transitional society between capitalism and full
communism, in which there is both a state and money economy.
According to Lenin:
‘It follows that under communism there
remains for a time not only bourgeois right, but even the bourgeois
state, without the bourgeoisie!’ But Lenin and his followers
failed to see what this would involve. In effect, the theory of
‘socialism’ as a transitional society was to become
an
apology for state capitalism.
(See also
CAPITALISM; LENINISM; SOCIALISM;
STATE
CAPITALISM.)
Reading
Adam
Buick, The
Myth
of the Transitional Society,
1975
(online
at: http://bataillesocialiste.wordpress.com/english-pages/1975-the-myth-of-the
-transitional-society-buick/)
Trotsky,
Leon (real
name: Lev Davidovich Bronstein, 1879-1940). The son of
moderately
well-off peasant farmers in the southern Ukraine. As a student at the
Universityof Odessa he became an anti-Tsarist revolutionary. He soon
fell foul of the authorities and was sentenced to prison and exile in
Siberia from where he escaped in 1902 using the name of one of his
jailers on his false identity card. This name - Trotsky - he was to
use for the rest of his life.
Trotsky
played a prominent part in the 1905 revolt that followed
Russia’s
defeat in the
Russo-Japanese war, being elected the Chairman of the
St. Petersburg soviet. He denounced Bolshevism as a formula for a
‘dictatorship over the proletariat’ and tended to
favour
the Mensheviks until he returned to Russia after the February
revolution in 1917, and together with Lenin led the October
insurrection and the civil war which followed. After Lenin’s
death Trotsky was gradually eased out of power, finally ending up in
exile in Mexico. In 1930 he wrote The
History of the Russian Revolution.
Trotsky led the opposition movement against the supposed
‘betrayal’
of the revolution by the Stalinist bureaucracy, as set out in The
Revolution Betrayed
(1936). In 1938 Trotsky and his followers founded the Fourth
International which, in the opening words of its manifesto written by
Trotsky, declared that: ‘The world political situation is
chiefly characterised by historical crisis of the leadership of the
proletariat’. In 1940 an agent of Stalin assassinated Trotsky
with an ice axe (not an ice pick, as many writers claim). (See also TROTSKYISM.)
Reading
David
Renton, Trotsky,
2004
Trotsky
online: www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/index.htm
Trotskyism.
A variant of Leninism. (All Trotskyists are Leninists, but not all
Leninists
are Trotskyists.) Trotsky’s contribution to Leninism
is ‘the theory of the permanent revolution’which
argued
that, because of Russia’s economic backwardness, the minority
working class had to seize the initiative and revolutionise society
through capitalism to ‘socialism’. At the same
time,
progress was dependent on a successful revolution in Europe. Of
course, the revolution in Europe failed to materialise. But
Trotskyites maintained that Russia was a post-capitalist
‘degenerate
workers state’ in which a bureaucracy had usurped political
power from the working class but without changing the social basis
(nationalisation and planning).This separation of economic base and
political superstructure contradicts Marx’s writing on this
subject.
Trotsky’s
theory clashes with Stalin’s
doctrine of ‘socialism
in one country’, and
it is typical of Trotskyism that it defines itself in terms of
individuals. Not for them the materialist theory of history but
rather the Great Man theory of history: not an account of objective
social development but how Trotsky lost out to Stalin in a power
struggle for the leadership. This approach ignores the problems
inherent in Leninist ideology and, indeed, the dictatorial tendencies
within Trotsky’s own
writings. Lenin laid the basis for Stalin’s
rule and it is a moot point how much Trotsky would have differed.
Trotsky stood for a one-party dictatorship.
Trotsky
set up the Fourth International in 1938 on the basis of his
prognoses. Most of these turned out to be mistaken; most notably, the
alleged rapid demise of Social Democracy and Stalinism, and the
spread of fascist regimes throughout the world. Nevertheless,
Trotskyist groups continue to abound, all committed to the cult of
the leader. For instance, John Callaghan records how Tony
Cliff’s
leadership of the International Socialists permitted abuses
‘…
such as the decisions to launch the Right to Work campaign (late
1975) and the Socialist Workers’ Party (late 1976) without
consulting the membership’
(emphasis added).
The
Socialist Workers’ Party, and the more orthodox Trotskyist
groups, support reforms on the grounds that they are
‘transitional
demands’. These reform demands are said to be different from
those of Labour and Social Democratic reforms in that Trotskyists are
under no illusion that the reforms demanded could be achieved within
the framework of capitalism. They are posed as bait by the vanguard
party to get workers to struggle for them,on the theory that the
workers would learn in the course of the struggle that these demands
could not be achieved within capitalism and so would come to struggle
(under the leadership of the vanguard party) to abolish capitalism.
Actually,
most rank-and-file Trotskyists are not as cynical as they pretend to
be here: in
discussion with them you gain the clear impression that
they share the illusion that the reforms they advocate can be
achieved under capitalism (as, indeed, some of them could be). In
other words, they are often victims of their own
‘tactics’.
(See also LENINISM; TROTSKY.)
Reading
John
Callaghan, British
Trotskyism, 1984
Trotskyism
online: www.marxists.org/history/etol/
Underconsumption.
A situation where, it is alleged, there is insufficient demand in the
economy leading to crisis and depression. In one form or another this
belief informs the Keynesian theory of unemployment. However, crises
are usually the result of a failure of profitability, and not the
lack of markets or an inability to buy back what is produced. Marx
warned against trying to explain crises in terms of the
workers’
lack of purchasing power:
‘
… crises
are always prepared by precisely a period in which wages rise
generally
and the working class actually gets a larger share of that
part of the annual product which is intended for consumption’
(Capital,
volume 2, chapter 20, section 4).
(See
also CRISES; KEYNESIAN
ECONOMICS. SAY'S
LAW.)
Reading
Simon
Clarke, Marx's
Theory
of Crisis, 1994
Unemployment.
Capitalist economics identifies different types of unemployment:
Capitalist
economics never identifies profitability as even a theoretically
possible cause of
unemployment. This shows how ideologically loaded
capitalist economics is. What is the
‘opportunity cost’
of the enforced idleness of millions while unmet needs abound?
(See
also CRISES; DEPRESSIONS;
KEYNESIAN
ECONOMICS.)
Uneven
development.
Industrial development is not evenly spread over the world.
In
Europe, North America, Australasia, the Pacific Rim, the vast
majority of the population live and work under capitalist conditions
of production for profit and the wages system, while in some parts of
the world capitalist industry is only an oasis in the midst of a desert
of less developed agriculture. In between are countries in
varying stages of industrial development. As yet not all mankind are
propertyless wage-workers, many of the remainder being peasants
exploited by landlords and moneylenders.
To
say that a major part of mankind are not living under capitalist
conditions as wage earners is not to say that their lives are not
affected by that system. Price fluctuations in the world market
directly touch on their standard of living and they cannot escape the
consequences of wars between capitalist powers. In view of this and
in view of the fact that the bulk of the world’s wealth is
produced in the capitalist parts, we can say that capitalism is the
predominant social system in the world today.
We
don’t need to wait for capitalist production to predominate
everywhere before socialism can be established. World socialism has
been possible for many years now, for as many in fact as its
industrial basis has existed. As soon as the workers of the world
want to, they can establish common ownership of the means of
production. For the same reason,socialists do not support movements
for ‘national liberation’ which aim to gain
political
power in the less developed countries and, of necessity, pursue
policies of capitalist development.
The
very idea of socialism, a new world society, is clearly and
unequivocally a rejection of all nationalism. Those who become
socialists will realise this and also the importance of uniting with
workers in all countries. The socialist idea is not one that could
spread unevenly. (See also NATIONALISM.)
Use
value. The use
value of a good or service is its power to satisfy a human desire.
Under capitalist commodity production, however, their use value is
secondary to their exchange value. Commodities are produced primarily
to be exchanged, for their exchange value. (See also EXCHANGE
VALUE; VALUE.)
Utopian
socialism. A
term used to describe the ideas of Claude Henri de Saint
Simon
(1760-1825), Francois-Charles Fourier (1772-1837) and Robert Owen
(1771-1858).
They
provided interesting criticisms of existing society (competitiveness,
the cause of crime, etc.) and useful ideas for a future society
(individual self-realisation, co-operation, etc.), but were politically
naïve about how this was to come about. Owen, for
example, appealed to the ruling class for their implementation. (See
also OWEN; SOCIALISM.)
Reading
B.
Goodwin & K. Taylor, The
Politics of Utopia,
1982
Value.
A social relationship between people which expresses itself as a
material
relationship between things. The value of a commodity is
determined by the quantity of
socially necessary abstract labour time
needed for its production and reproduction.
Price is the monetary
expression of value.
(See also COMMODITIES;
LABOUR
THEORY OF VALUE; PRICE OF
PRODUCTION.)
Reading
Andrew
Kliman, Reclaiming
Marx's “Capital”,
2007
Vanguard.
In the Communist
Manifesto (1848), Marx
and Engels wrote of the
communists’ understanding of ‘the
line of march, the conditions and the ultimate results of
the
proletarian movement’, which they conceived as ‘the
self-conscious, independent
movement of the immense majority in the
interest of the immense majority’.
This
is to be contrasted with Lenin’s view. Although there is more
than one version of the
party to be found in Lenin’s writings,
all of them envisage a centralised vanguard leading
the working
class. In his What
is
to be Done? (1902),
Lenin argued that class-consciousness had to be brought to the
workers ‘from without’ by professional
revolutionaries
organised as a vanguard, as a body capable of leading the working
class to ‘socialism’. Because workers on their own
can
only develop trade union consciousness, on this view,
self-emancipation is impossible.
Hal
Draper has argued that Lenin was making explicit what was already
implicit in the
politics of the Second International generally and
Kautsky in particular. If that is the case,
then this would mark an
important difference between the Socialist Party and the Second
International, along with the Socialist Party’s rejection of
the Second International’s reformism.
(See also BOLSHEVISM; LEADERSHIP;
LENINISM; SECOND
INTERNATIONAL)
Hal
Draper, The Myth
of Lenin's Concept
of The Party:
www.marxists.org/archive/draper/1990/myth/myth.htm
Violence.
A new world society of democratic voluntary co-operation can only be
established by democratic voluntary co-operation. By its very
description, such a society
cannot be imposed nor could people be led
into it. Unlike Leninist and other left-wing
groups who advocate
violence because they rely on minority support, socialists rely on
the legitimacy conferred by majority understanding, support and
participation. And this
is why it is reasonable to suppose that this
process will be peaceful. However, socialists
are not pacifists.
Should an anti-democratic minority try to impose its will on a
majority-expressed decision for socialism then the majority can
defend themselves with force,
if necessary. (See also DEMOCRACY.)
Wages.
A wage or a salary is the price of the human commodity labour power,
the capacity to work. Because workers are compelled to work for their
employers for a duration of time,being exploited, the wages system
is literally a form of slavery and the working class are wage slaves.
(See also EXPLOITATION;
LABOUR
POWER.)
War.
Capitalism is the cause of the rivalries that led to war in the
modern world.
In general, these conflicts between states and within
states (‘civil’ wars) are over property.
Specifically, it
is competition over markets, sources of raw materials, energy
supplies, trade routes, exploitable populations and areas of
strategic importance. Within each state in the world there is a
conflict of interests over social priorities. But all over the world
there are conflicts of interest between states which lead to war when
other means fail.
Of
course wars took place in class societies before capitalism existed.
These wars, however, can generally be attributed to the absolute
shortages of the past. In our own age the problem is a different one.
Now the means exist for producing enough to supply the needs of all.
With international capitalism, however, we have the problem of
artificial scarcity created
by the capitalist system of production.
Social production takes place for profit, not directly for human
need. It is this global system of competitive accumulation that
creates the rivalry that leads to war. (See also VIOLENCE.)
Reading
A
Global Timeline of War: www.warscholar.com/Timeline.html
Wealth.
A product of human labour, acting upon nature-given materials, that
is capable of satisfying needs. This identifies wealth with
use-value. But capitalism is a society where wealth becomes a
commodity having exchange value also, and sometimes only a
socially- bounded use-value that is peculiar to this society
–
as with nuclear weapons.
Webb,
Beatrice (1858-1943) and Sidney (1859-1947). As prominent members of
the Fabian Society both were involved in the establishment of the
Labour Representation Committee (1900) which, in 1906, became the
Labour Party. In 1918 the Labour Party adopted a constitution
(rejected in 1995) which was mostly written by Sidney. More
well-known in their own time for their researches in social and
economic history, the main intellectual influence on Beatrice came
from Herbert Spencer, whereas Sidney (from 1929 Baron
Passfield) was more
influenced by
Jeremy Bentham.
They
both had a very poor opinion of the working class. Beatrice wrote:
‘We
do not
have faith in the “average sensual man”, we do not
believe that he can do much more than describe his
grievances, we
do
not think that
he can prescribe the remedies… We wish to
introduce the professional expert’
(Our
Partnership, 1948).
(See
also FABIAN
SOCIETY; GRADUALISM; LABOUR
PARTY.)
Reading
Webbs
online: www.lse.ac.uk/library/archive/webb/webb_exhibition.htm
Welfare
state. In 1942
the Report on Social Insurance and Allied Services by Sir
William
Beveridge (later Lord Beveridge) was published to widespread acclaim.
All the
main political parties hailed the Report as the basis for a
restructured and improved social provision for the working class
after the war against Germany had been won. The
Socialist Party
analysed the purpose and nature of the Beveridge proposals in a
pamphlet
called Beveridge
Re-Organises Poverty.
This pamphlet quoted the Tory MP Quentin
Hogg (later Lord Hailsham)
and his advice on the necessity of social reform within
capitalism -
‘if you do not give the people social reform, they are going
to
give you social
revolution’ - and suggested that the Beveridge
recommendations were best judged
in the light of the wave of working
class discontent which followed the 1914-18 war,
which the capitalist
class and their political representatives feared might be repeated.
The
actual content of the Report and the proposals it put forward for
social reform were,
as the Times
put it, ‘moderate enough to disarm any charge of
indulgence’
(2 December 1942).
In large part the reforms aimed at providing an
efficient working framework for the replacement of the unbalanced and
disparate system of poor relief previously in existence in Britain.
In fact a familiar claim of Beveridge at the time was that his
proposals would be cheaper to administer than the previous
arrangements. As he put it in his Report:
‘Social
insurance and the allied services, as they exist today, are conducted
by a complex of disconnected administrative organs,
proceeding on
different principles, doing invaluable service but
at a cost in money and trouble and anomalous treatment of identical
problems for which there is no justification’ (page
6, emphasis
added).
Many
of Beveridge’s proposals were already effectively in force
for
a significant number of workers, but the Report recommended the
introduction of a unified, comprehensive and contributory scheme to
cover loss of employment, disablement, sickness and old age. An
enlargement of medical benefits and treatments was proposed, as was a
plan for
non-contributory allowances to be paid by the state to
parents with dependent children.
This
latter scheme was criticised in another Socialist Party pamphlet
called Family
Allowances:
A Socialist Analysis,
which demonstrated how Beveridge’s proposed
Family Allowances
would be of principal benefit to the employing class, not the
wage
and salary earners. This scheme would allow employers to make
across-the-board
wage reductions as wages had previously had to take
account of the entire cost
of the maintenance and reproduction of
workers and their families, even though the
majority of workers at
the time had no dependent children to provide for. The
Family
Allowances plan was a scheme based on targeting provision on those
workers
actually with children. Family
Allowances: A Socialist Analysis explained:
‘wages
must provide not only an existence for the worker himself, but also
enable
him to rear future generations of wage workers to take his
place. It is quite
logical therefore from a capitalist point of view
to raise objection to a condition
which in a large number of cases
provides wages “adequate” to maintain children
for those
who in fact possess no children.’
In
outlining the case for universal state benefits and health care, the
Beveridge Report was undoubtedly of some benefit to sections of the
working class who, for one reason or another,had found themselves
outside the existing scheme of provision. But as the case of Family
Allowances demonstrated some of the gains for the working class were
more apparent than real.
As
the Socialist Party was able to predict, the recommendations of
Beveridge and, for that matter, the modifications that have been made
to the various branches of the welfare state in the past 60 years,
have not succeeded in solving the poverty problem. Particularly since
the end of the post-war boom in the late 1960s (the ‘golden
age’ of
capitalism?),the problems of poverty and income inequality have
accelerated. The health services and social security have to be paid
for ultimately out of the profits of the capitalist class, generally
via taxation (the burden of which in the last analysis falls on the
bosses) or borrowing. In an increasingly competitive and
crisis-ridden global economy, the welfare state becomes a luxury they
cannot afford. (See also REFORMISM.)
Reading
Pat
Thane, The
Foundations
of the Welfare State,
1996
Workers’
councils.
Advocated by some left-wingers as the means to fight
capitalism,overthrow it, and establish and administer socialist
society.
Workers’ councils comprised of delegates from workplaces
would
co-ordinate the struggle. Workers' councils may indeed have a role to
play, but their social base is too narrow (many workers operate
outside the workplace) to effect a social revolution, and socialists
insist that the overthrow of capitalism must involve the
capture
of
state power.
Workers’
councils are to be distinguished from Works’ Councils. The
latter are currently
being sponsored by the European Union, as a
means to ‘industrial democracy’, by encouraging
workers
to be more competitive and productive in conjunction with their
bosses. (See also DEMOCRACY.)
Reading
Serge
Bricaner, Pannekoek
and
the Workers’ Councils,
1978
Working
class. All
those who are excluded from the ownership and control of
the means of
wealth production and distribution and depend for their existence on
wages
and salaries or incomes derived from them. In Britain this is
over 90% of the population,
the remainder being mostly the capitalist
class – those who live on unearned income
derived from their
ownership of land and invested capital.
As
shorthand, socialists sometimes refer to the working class as wage
slaves or wage
and salary earners. This, however, is a way of
bringing out the importance of wage
labour for capitalism, and is not
a value judgement by socialists on the worth or
importance of the
workers not employed. The life-blood of this system is the pumping
of
surplus value out of wage labour. But in fact employees constitute
only about half
the total number of the working class. Of necessity,
there are many roles within the
orking class that are needed to
facilitate the reproduction cycle of labour-power,
such as
schoolchildren, housewives, pensioners and so on. The whole working
class
is involved in creating, maintaining and reproducing labour
power. For the benefit of the
capitalist class. (See also CAPITALIST
CLASS; CLASS.)
Reading
E.P.
Thompson, The
Making of
the English Working Class,
1991
Zero
growth.
Capitalism is primarily an economic system of competitive capital
accumulation out of the surplus value produced by wage labour. As a
system it must
continually accumulate or go into crisis.
Consequently, human needs and the needs of
our natural environment
take second place to this imperative. The result is waste,
pollution,
environmental degradation and unmet needs on a global scale. The
ecologist’s
dream of a sustainable ‘zero growth’
within capitalism will always remain just that, a dream.
However,
on the new basis of common ownership, democratic control and
production
solely for use, socialist society will be able to sustain
a stable and sympathetic relationship with nature. After clearing up
the mess left by capitalism and a possible initial increase in
production to eliminate poverty, production can be expected to settle
down and level off at a level sufficient to provide for human and
environmental needs.
(See also ECOLOGY; NEEDS;
SOCIALISM.)
Reading
David
Pepper, Modern
Environmentalism: An Introduction,
1996
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