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Editorial
It is sometimes argued that the kind of
destitution and abject poverty that existed in the 1930s and earlier is
no longer to be found in developed capitalist countries like the UK.
Nowadays, the argument goes, workers take holidays abroad, have homes
with several TVs and computers, and can spend large parts of their
leisure time on shopping expeditions. It is fair to respond to these
obervations by making two main kinds of point.
Firstly, that workers are in fact by no means as well off as such a
sketch implies. In England alone, for instance, there are a hundred
thousand homeless families, few of whom take holidays abroad.
Many migrant workers, here for fruit-picking, earn £70 for
a six-day week when various deductions are taken into account (Guardian
5 June). They cannot even afford to buy the strawberries they pick. The
UK minimum wage is a mere £5.05 per hour for those over 21, and
around a million workers are on the legal minimum - few home computers
for them. A couple of years ago, it was claimed by a trade union that
employees in British supermarkets would have to work 94 hours a week to
earn the national average wage.
So low pay is by no means a thing of the past.
Secondly, how well off workers are in terms of wages is not the
whole picture. The insecurity caused by redundancies and the fear of
redundancies, the short-term contracts now so widely used, the boring
dead-end 'McJobs', the ever-present fear of production being moved to
other countries with lower wage rates - all these undermine workers'
sense of well-being. Nearly one person in six in Britain is described
as depressed, while over a million are mentally ill and receiving
incapacity benefit. Such is the stress and hassle of living under
capitalism. At the same time hospitals close and trained medical staff
are made unemployed, while overall levels of sickness show no sign of
decreasing. The amount of debt is also an indication of how badly off
workers really are. Eight million people have over £10,000 of
unsecured debt (that is, excluding a mortgage); a third of these say
that their debt situation has had an adverse effect on their health or
relationships. This year perhaps as many as 100,000 people will declare
themselves bankrupt as a means of escaping from their financial
problems.
Thus it cannot be said that capitalism has raised workers' living
standards to a level where they no longer have to concern themselves
with how high their wages are or how secure their position in society
is.
Poverty and worry about the future are built in to capitalism as far as
the working class are concerned.
Moreover, if you take a global perspective, you can see that
things are even worse. Half the world's population live on less than
two dollars a day, and many on far less. Every day one person in five
goes hungry. Over a billion people have no reliable water supplies and
more than twice that number lack sanitation. Statistics like this can
be multiplied for ever: the essential point is that an incredibly large
part of the earth's population lead lives of numbing poverty and
precariousness.
At the same time, a relatively small number of people are rich beyond
the imaginations of ordinary people. A few hundred billionaires own as
much wealth as the world's poorest 2.5 billion people.
The inequality which exists under world capitalism is simply
breathtaking, and it is increasing: the world has never been so unequal
as it is today. Governments exist essentially to defend the interests
of the rich and powerful. Wars are fought to serve their interests too,
whether to gain access to oil or to deny such access to others, or to
open up some area to so-called free trade.
This is the way the world is. But it should not and need not be
this way. Instead, the world could be run on Socialist lines, without
rich or poor, without wages or money, without countries or governments.
If you think this sounds like a better way of organising things,
contact the Socialist Party and see how you can help to bring it about.
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Introducing The Socialist Party
The Socialist Party is like no other political party in Britain.
It is made up of people who have joined together because we want to get
rid of the profit system and establish real socialism.
Our aim is to persuade others to become socialist and act for
themselves, organising democratically and without leaders, to bring
about the kind of society that we are advocating in this journal.
We are solely concerned with building a movement of socialists
for socialism.
We are not a reformist party with a programme of policies to patch up
capitalism.
We use every possible opportunity to make new socialists. We publish
pamphlets and books, as well as CDs, DVDs and various other informative
material.
We also give talks and take part in debates; attend rallies, meetings
and demos; run educational conferences; host internet discussion
forums, make films presenting our ideas, and contest elections when
practical.
Socialist literature is available in Arabic,Bengali, Dutch, Esperanto,
French, German, Italian, Polish,Spanish, Swedish and Turkish as well as
English.
The more of you who join the Socialist Party the more we will be able
to get our ideas across, the more experiences we will be able to draw
on and greater will be the new ideas for building the movement which
you will be able to bring us.
The Socialist Party is an organisation of equals. There is no leader
and there are no followers. So, if you are going to join we want you to
be sure that you agree fully with what we stand for and that we are
satisfied that you understand the case for socialism.
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Socialist Standard July 2006 Page3
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