The
basis of any society is the way its members are organised for the
production and distribution of wealth. Where a section of society
controls the use of the means of production, then there is a class
society. Another way of putting this is that the members of this
section or class own the means of production, since to be in a
position to control the use of something is efectively to own it,
whether or not this is accompanied by some legal title deed.
Picture:
Burnham
It
follows that a classless society is one in which the use of the means
of production is controlled by all members of society on an equal
basis, and not just by a section of them to the exclusion of the
rest. James Burnham put this rather well in a passage in his book The
Managerial Revolution:
“For
a society to be
'classless'
would mean that within society there would be no group (with the
exception, perhaps, of temporary delegate bodies, freely elected by
the community and subject always to recall) which would exercise, as
a group, any special control over access to the instruments of
production; and no group receiving, as a group, preferential
treatment in distribution”
In
a classless society every member is in a position to take part, on
equal terms with every other member, in deciding how the means of
production should be used. Every member of society is socially equal,
standing in exactly the same relationship to the means of production
as every other member. Similarly, every member of society has access
to the fruits of production on an equal footing.
Once
the use of the means of production is under the democratic control of
all members of society, class ownership has been abolished. The means
of production can still be said to belong to those who control and
benefit from their use, in this case to the whole population
organised on a democratic basis, and so to be “commonly owned” by
them. Common ownership has been defined as:
“A
state of affairs in
which no
person is excluded from the possibility of controlling, using
and managing the means of production, distribution and consumption.
Each member of society can acquire the capacity, that is to
say, has the opportunity to realise a variety of goals, for example,
to consume what they want, to use means of production for the
purposes of socially necessary or unnecessary work, to administer
production and distribution, to plan to allocate resources, and to
make decisions about short term and long term collective goals.
Common ownership, then, refers to every individual’s potential
ability to benefit from the wealth of society and to participate in
its running” (Jean-Claude Bragard, An Investigation of Marx’s
Concept of Communism, his emphasis).
Even
so, to use the word “ownership” can be misleading in that this
does not fully bring out the fact that the transfer to all members of
society of the power to control the production of wealth makes the
very concept of property redundant. With common ownership no one is
excluded from the possibility of controlling or benefiting from the
use of the means of production, so that with reference to them the
concept of property in the sense of exclusive possession is
meaningless: no one is excluded, there are no non-owners.
Picture:
Earth with open gates.
We
could invent some new term such as “no-ownership” and talk about
the classless alternative society to capitalism being a
“no-ownership” society, but the same idea can be expressed
without having to do this if common ownership is understood as being
a social relationship and not a form of property ownership. This
social relationship—equality between human beings with regard to
the control of the use of the means of production—can equally
accurately be described by the terms “classless society” and
“democratic control” as by “common ownership” since these
three terms are only different ways of describing it from different
angles. The use of the term “common ownership” to refer to the
basic social relationship of the alternative society to capitalism is
not to be taken to imply therefore that common ownership of the means
of production could exist without democratic control. Common
ownership means democratic control means a classless
society.
When
we refer to the society based on common ownership, generally we use
the term “socialism”, though we have no objection to others using
“communism”, since for us these terms mean exactly the same and
are interchangeable.
Not
state ownership
Common
ownership is not to be confused with state ownership, since an organ
of coercion, or state, has no place in socialism. A class society is
a society with a state because sectional control over the means of
production and the exclusion of the rest of the population cannot be
asserted without coercion, and so without a special organ to exercise
this coercion. On the other hand, a classless society is a stateless
society because such an organ of coercion becomes unnecessary as soon
as all members of society stand in the same relationship with regard
to the control of the use of the means of production. The existence
of a state as an instrument of class political control and coercion
is quite incompatible with the existence of the social relationship
of common ownership. State ownership is a form of exclusive property
ownership which implies a social relationship which is totally
different from socialism.
Common
ownership is a social relationship of equality and democracy which
makes the concept of property redundant because there are no longer
any excluded non-owners. State ownership, on the other hand,
presupposes the existence of a government machine, a legal system,
armed forces and the other features of an institutionalised organ of
coercion. State-owned means of production belong to an institution
which confronts the members of society, coerces them and dominates
them, both as individuals and as a collectivity. Under state
ownership the answer to the question “who owns the means of
production?” is not “everybody” or “nobody” as with common
ownership; it is “the state”. In other words, when a state owns
the means of production, the members of society remain non-owners,
excluded from control. Both legally and socially, the means of
production belong not to them, but to the state, which stands as an
independent power between them and the means of production.
The
state is not an abstraction floating above society and its members;
it is a social institution, and, as such, a group of human beings, a
section of society, organised in a particular way. This is why,
strictly speaking, we should have written above that the state
confronts most members of society and excludes most of
them from control of the means of production. For wherever there is a
state, there is always a group of human beings who stand in a
different relationship to it from most members of society: not as the
dominated, nor as the excluded, but as the dominators and the
excluders. Under state ownership, this group controls the use of the
means of production to the exclusion of the other members of society.
In this sense, it owns the means of production, whether or not this
is formally and legally recognised.
Picture:
the state.
Another
reason why state ownership and socialism are incompatible is that the
state is a national institution which exercises political control
over a limited geographical area. Since capitalism is a world system,
the complete state ownership of the means of production within a
given political area cannot represent the abolition of capitalism,
even within that area. What it does mean is the establishment of some
form of state capitalism whose internal mode of operation is
conditioned by the fact that it has to compete in a world market
context against other capitals.
Since
today capitalism is worldwide, the society which replaces capitalism
can only be worldwide. The only socialism possible today is world
socialism. No more than capitalism can socialism exist in one
country. So the common ownership of socialism is the common ownership
of the world, of its natural and industrial resources, by the whole
of humanity. Socialism can only be a universal society in which all
that is in and on the Earth has become the common heritage of all
humankind, and in which the division of the world into states has
given way to a world without frontiers with a democratic world
administration as well as local and regional democracy.
ADAM
BUICK
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