Cuba’s
wage system
Earlier
this year, when in June the Cuban government, now under Fidel
Castro’s brother Raul, announced a new
system of wage payments, the Guardian (13 June) wrote that
Cuba had “abandoned its egalitarian wages
system”. This brought a response (20
June) from Helen Yaffe, author of Ermesto Che Guevara: The
Economics of Revolution:
“In
reality, there has never been an ‘egalitarian
wage system’ (i.e. one where every worker
was paid the same): Che Guevara himself devised a new salary scale,
introduced in 1964, with 24 different basic wage levels, plus a 15%
bonus for over-completion”.
In
other words, Cuba never had practised wage equality, not even when
Guevara was Minister of Industry. Not that socialists favour equal
wages. As long as the wages system – the
sale of people’s working skills for money – exists there will be a
different price
for the different types of skill. We want the abolition of the whole
wage system, an end to the buying and selling of people’s
working abilities, and the application of the principle “from
each according to their ability, to each according to their needs”.
Yaffe
made a claim about this too:
“Like
Marx himself, Che recognised the socialist principle: ‘From
each according to his ability, to each according to his work’ – which your article
associates
exclusively with Raul. Cuba has never claimed to be communist and
therefore never embraced the principle ‘from
each according to his ability, to each according to his need’,
which expresses the attainment of communist society”.
While
it is true that Marx thought that it would not have been possible to
implement “to each according to needs”
immediately had a “co-operative society
based on the common ownership of the means of production”
been established in his day, he never drew a distinction between a
socialist society (where this principle couldn’t
yet be applied) and a communist society (where it would be). He
actually spoke of two “phases”
of the same society, which he called “communist
society”. Engels and the later socialist
movement adopted the term “socialist
society”, but both terms referred to the
same type of society; they are interchangeable.
In
any event, the temporary measure until distribution according to
needs became possible which Marx mentioned in the private notes he
wrote in 1875 known as The Critique of the Gotha Programme was
a system of “labour-time vouchers”.
This would probably have proved unworkable but it was not the same as “to each according to their work”.
It would have been “to each according to
their working time”, with people
being given a consumption voucher based on the time spent at work not
for the particular kind of work they did. There wouldn’t
be 24 different levels, just one. An engineer and a cleaner who put
in the same number of hours would get the get the same number of
consumption vouchers. In this sense it would have been “egalitarian”.
But
what Lenin, Stalin, Castro and Guevara called “socialism”
did not even correspond to Marx’s “first
phase of communist society” since it was
based on the state, not the common, ownership and control of the
means of production, the majority remaining propertyless and having
to sell their working skills to live. As the state was controlled by
the leaders of a minority vanguard party, these leaders became in
effect the employers of the excluded majority. As employers they had
to devise some system of pricing the different kinds and qualities of
labour-power they purchased. Hence schemes such as Guevara’s
and the one just introduced in Cuba. This was state capitalism, not
socialism/communism.
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