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Although
the word socialism is itself more or less modern, its meaning can be
said to go back to early religious sects of the ancient world and was
taken up by religious dissidents in mediaeval times. Words attributed
to John Ball during the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 capture its
meaning very well: “My friends, things cannot go well in England,
nor ever, until everything shall be held in common, when there shall
be neither vassal nor lord and all distinctions levelled, when lords
shall be no more masters than ourselves.”
But
it was not until the 19th Century that the concept of
socialism (or communism) was developed by utopian socialists and then
more systematically by Marx and Engels. Since the early 19th
Century socialism has meant an alternative, classless society which
can be set out under three main headings as follows:-
1.
Common Ownership.
2.
Democratic Control.
3.
Production solely for use.
These
features of socialist society would be dependent on each other and
could only operate together as basic parts of an integrated social
system. In combination, these define a way of organising society
that in every important aspect of production, distribution, decision
making and social administration, is clearly distinguished from the
operation of capitalist society.
1.
Common ownership means that the entire structure of production and
all natural resources be held in common by all people. This means
that every person will stand in equal relationship with every other
person with respect to the means of producing the things we need to
live, that is, mines, industrial plants, manufacturing units, all
land and farms, and all means of transport and distribution. This
also means the common ownership of all natural resources. Perhaps
“common ownership” is partly a misnomer because what is meant is
that means of production and resources would not be owned by anyone. In
place of the property relationships of owners and non-owners,
means of production will simply be available to the whole community
to be used and developed solely for the needs of all people.
2. Democratic control means that social policy would be
decided by
communities. In place of rule by governments, public decisions would
be made by people themselves. One great advantage of democratic
practice in socialism would be not only the organisation of decision
making but also the freedom to carry out those decisions. This
freedom of action would arise from direct control of community
affairs following the enactment of common ownership and removal of
the economic constraints of the capitalist system. Without powers of
action decision-making is meaningless.
3. Production solely for use means just what it says. People
in
socialism would be free to co-operate voluntarily with each other in
producing goods directly for the needs of the community. This would
be useful labour co-operating to produce useful goods solely for
consumption. Production solely for use would replace production for
sale at a profit. Things produced for sale under the capitalist
system are of course intended to supply a need of one kind or another
but as commodities they are produced primarily with a view to money
gain and the increase of money capital. As a general rule the market
system is a system of ‘no profit no production’. In socialism
this profit motive would be entirely removed. In a moneyless
socialist society the factors of production would operate only in a
useful form and not as economic categories with a price. Labour
would not be wage labour serving the interests of an employer but
would be free labour. People at work would be creating only useful
things and not economic values from which profit is derived.
There
should be no doubt that these basic features that define socialism
clearly distinguished it from the capitalist system. Common ownership
of means of production would be in direct opposition to private,
corporate or state ownership; democratic control would be
fundamentally different from rule by governments; production for
needs would be in direct opposition to production for sale at a
profit. These contrasting features of the two systems cannot be
operated together; they are mutually exclusive. The mistaken idea
that they can be operated together has been a major cause of
political confusion about what socialism means.
Production
solely for needs
What
is meant by needs should not be understood as mere personal
consumption. It should not suggest a rampant consumerist culture.
Production for needs would include a wide range of considerations
such as the need to protect and conserve the environment. In
defining socialism we should emphasise that it will provide for one
vital need in a way that is impossible under the capitalist system.
This is the need of peoples throughout the world to bring the
organisation of their community affairs under their own democratic
control and to develop them in the interests of the whole community.
It
was with the emergence of the capitalist system that society lost its
direct control of its productive resources. In previous societies,
accepting that they were ruled by privileged classes in their own
interests, it was often the case that production was at near maximum
capacity given the technology and resources available and this
determined what could be distributed. In times of good harvests the
whole community could benefit in some shape or form. But with the
development of the capitalist system this was eroded as what is
produced depends crucially on what can be sold. This means that
distribution through sale in the markets determines production and
this is always less than what could be produced.
Market
capacity is inherently unpredictable. If too many goods are produced
for a market and they remain unsold, a crisis and recession may occur
with reduced production, increased unemployment, bankruptcies, and
large scale writing-off of capital values. Despite the many attempts
that have been made, no theory of economic management has ever been
able to predict or control the anarchic conditions of the market
system. This is rule by market forces which serve minority interests
and which generate the insecurities, crises and conflicts that shape
the way we live. The fact that we have great powers of production
that cannot be organised and fully used for the benefit of all people
has devastating consequences and is at the root of most social
problems.
In
this way, the capitalist system places the production of goods and
services, on which the quality of all our lives depends, outside the
direct control of society. Contrary to this, a socialist system
would bring the entire organisation of production and distribution
under democratic social control.
Social
class
A
further basic distinction between the two systems is that whereas the
capitalist system is inherently class ridden, in socialism, social
relationships of common ownership and equality will end class
divisions. Much discussion of class centres on various sociological
differences between groups which may be useful for some purposes.
However, sociological differences can tell us little when seeking to
explain how production is organised
Some
evidence may suggest, superficially, that we live in a society of
greater equality. For example, we can accept that not so long ago
“toffs” were people who played golf and went on motoring
holidays, touring the Continent. Now, many people from all walks of
life do these things. This shows that these pursuits have become
relatively cheaper and that some working people are now able to enjoy
them, but this in no way alters the economic relationships of
production. It does not alter the economic, class relationship
between capital and labour which dominates the way we live. At the
point of production, the workers and their employers who may be
sharing a golf course in their leisure time remain in a relationship
of conflicting economic interests which, whilst it continues, must
always condemn our society to the class divisions of strife and to
the many ugly comparisons that we see of poverty amidst luxury. Class
is a social relationship that invades and has a corrupting influence
on every part of our lives.
An
economic definition of class based on the categories of capital and
labour in a system of commodity production is basic to our
explanation of how we produce and distribute wealth and the economic
motives that are involved. Social class defined as economic
relationships is a key to how the operation of the market puts profit
before needs and places constraints on all our activities. Our lives
and the quality of our society depend upon our relationships of
production and on the services we can provide. An analysis using
economic/class categories tells us who gets what from the pool of
wealth that is made available and how a privileged class has
accumulated great wealth and property; it therefore explains the
great social differences that we see about us.
In
addition, we find that increasingly, giant global corporations own
and control the world production of goods and services together with
the natural resources of the planet. The sole object is to amass
greater concentrations of capital and to increase their economic and
political powers.
We
live in a society of deep class divisions with a conflict of economic
interests between those who work the productive system and those who
own it. This economic conflict can only be reconciled by the
relationships of equality and cooperation that would integrate the
community in socialism.
Whilst
it is right to feel outrage at the great class divisions that exist
socialists do not come to this question in a negative spirit of class
hostility. The aim is to end it. Class conflict has gone on for too
long; there has been too much strife and we have to heal the wounds
of history through entirely democratic means.
Class
society is both morally and materially indefensible. It need not
linger on and on as part of an outdated system. An ethical society
would be one in which all people would live their lives, free from
the disadvantages of under privilege and class injustice. To live in
a classless society would be in the interests of all its members.
Freedom for every person to develop their skills and talents on equal
terms could benefit everyone. Equality has the potential to enrich
all our lives and would be a basis for a true community of shared
interests.
Socialism
– a human-centred way of life
Having
set out what socialism means, and having set out features that
distinguish it clearly from capitalism, these can be summarised as
one all important difference. Whereas the capitalist system works
for sectional economic ends that are alien to the interests of the
whole community, a socialist system would be wholly dedicated to the
interests of all people. There would also be a difference of
complexity and simplicity. Whereas, working within the complex
economic limitations of the market system, our endeavours are
frustrated and often blocked by the barriers of costs, in a socialist
society, communities would be free to set up their goals and then
organise their resources of labour, materials and technology to
achieve them in a straightforward way. People in socialism would
need only to work with the material factors of production and not any
economic factors.
Given
the control of human affairs that a socialist system would bring,
people in socialism would be able to take charge of their destiny.
What is undeniable is that we are a species with great talents. In
science, technology, in art, crafts and design we can call upon a
wide range of great skills. The point now is to release these for
the benefit of humanity.
PIETER
LAWRENCE
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