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Socialism

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Title: Socialism


1
Socialism
2
Reasons for socialism
  • Socialism emerges as a reaction to social and
    economic conditions created by 19th Century
    industrial capitalism.
  • Linked to the rise of a new class of industrial
    workers who experienced the poverty and
    degradation of early industrialisation.
  • Socialism was a critique of liberal market
    society and capitalism.
  • Early socialism offered a radical alternative to
    capitalism and aimed at its removal. Early
    socialist parties had a tendency therefore to
    advocate revolution.
  • As the late 19th century approached there were
    improvements in working class living conditions
    and the advance of political democracy leading
    to the integration of the working class into
    society. In place of revolution, socialist
    parties increasingly adopted legal means to
    achieve power.. Hence the split between
    revolutionary and parliamentary socialists.
  • Reformist socialists seeking to work within the
    system came to accept capitalism as the best
    means of generating wealth.
  • In the 20th century socialism spread to Latin
    America, Asia and Africa where there had been
    little experience of industrialisation, there it
    became associated with anti and post colonial
    liberation movements.
  • At the end of the 20th Century, socialism was
    best by crises- the fall of communism 1989 was a
    severe blow to the credibility of an ideology
    which placed emphasis on state planning.
    Sovcislist increasingly accepted the
    inevitability of the globalised economy which
    rendered state intervention to achieve broad
    social and economic goals reedundant.

3
The core themes
4
Community
  • Cooperation has greater practical and moral value
    than individual self striving (collectivism).
  • Humans are bound together by common bonds of
    sympathy and comradeship or fraternity.
  • Humans are moulded by the society to which they
    belong and therefore owe obligations to it.
  • Wealth is collectively produced and therefore
    should be shared.
  • Individual self striving undermines the
    community.
  • Collectivism- not exclusively socialist but based
    on belief that collective action has greater
    practical and moral worth than individual self
    striving.

5
Cooperation
  • Cooperation is natural as humans are social
    animals.
  • Competition encourages selfishness and encourages
    them to deny their social nature.
  • Humans can be motivated by moral as well as
    material incentives.
  • Moral desire to work for common good encourages
    sympathy and empathy towards others thereby
    strengthening the community whereas individual
    self striving undermines this and produces
    conflict.

6
Equality
  • Commitment to equality is the defining aspect of
    socialism.
  • Inequality in society is a reflection of unequal
    structure of non socialist societies.
  • Inequality arises out of unequal treatment.
    Justice demands that people are treated equally.
  • Common ownership rather equality of opportunity
    as the latter perpetuates social inequality.
  • Equality strengthens community and
    reduces/removes divisions which undermine the
    community.
  • Needs satisfaction- everyone has the same basic
    needs such as food and shelter and social
    justice is about satisfying the basic needs of
    all in society.

7
Social Class
  • Society is divided into classes defined by socio
    economic circumstances. This is the most
    important way in which humans identify themselves
    and nationalism is more artificial because it
    denies the significance of social class.
  • Socialism is most identified with the working
    class and its struggle both political and
    economic for liberation. The aim however is to
    establish an egalitarian society and therefore
    divisions or classes will disappear.
  • Socialists are divided on nature an importance of
    class, Marx saw the proletariat differences were
    irreconcilable. However reformist socialists
    aimed for amelioration of the differences between
    classes via social reform and unlike Marx
    therefore saw class and capitalism as a permanent
    feature of society.
  • Socialist identification with the working class
    has declined- the durability of capitalism and
    the emergence of differences within the working
    class including the development of an aristocracy
    of labour means the working class is not solid.
    Also the shift from industrial to service sector
    economies has led to a sharp decline in the size
    of the manual working class in the west. The
    embourgeosiement of the working class with the
    adoption of middle class lifestyles based on car
    and home ownership.

8
Common Ownership
  • Competition and inequality the product of private
    ownership.
  • Private property is morally corrupting as it
    produces greed and negates communal obligations.
  • Private property leads to wealth inequality and
    class conflict.
  • Socialists seek common ownership of productive
    wealth or capital- banks, land, industry.
  • As wealth is collectively produced it is immoral
    that any one or group of individuals should be in
    exclusive possession of it.
  • Private ownership means that productive wealth
    cannot be used for the benefit of the community
    and this leads to poverty, as the owners of
    productive wealth seek to maximise their profits.
  • Marx wrote that the production of the means of
    subsistence ( that which is necessary too
    survive) was the most important of human
    activities and that people were defined by and
    achieved a sense of their self worth from their
    labour. However, private ownership means that
    workers were working not for themselves and the
    community but for the interests of the owner,
    hence they were alienated from their labour.
  • Socialists disagree as to what common ownership
    means and the degree to which it should be
    implemented. Marx understood it to mean the
    community of workers collectively owning the
    means of productive wealth- cooperatives such as
    the Coop Movement started in Rochdale Lancs 1844.
    Socialist regimes such as Eastern Europe before
    the fall of communism interpreted it as state
    ownership. In the west e.g. UK post 1945 the
    commanding heights were taken under public
    ownership but the bulk of the economy remained in
    private hands (Social democracy)

9
Why were early socialists attracted to the idea
of revolution?
  • Early industrialisation C19 led to especially
    harsh new work practices especially exploitation.
    The expanding urban landscape created by
    industrialisation was especially bleak with
    massive social problems such as overcrowding in
    slums.
  • There were limited alternatives for the working
    class as for much of the 19th century they were
    excluded from voting.
  • Socialists viewed the state as oppressive
    designed to protect and promote the interests of
    the property owning class and to keep the masses
    down. Therefore many socialists peaceful
    methods as these would not remove the
    exploitative state.
  • Revolution or armed struggle was also a
    convenient way in the Third World to mobilise
    populations against colonial rule by western
    powers. Franz Fanon in Wretched of the Earth
    argued that colonial rule had bred a sense of
    inferiority among Africans and that this could
    only be purged by the experience of armed
    struggle.
  • Only through revolution and the overthrow of the
    state could society begin afresh and create a new
    socialist utopia.
  • Marx believed that since each social class was
    governed by its own interests, the only way to
    establish socialism was to overthrow the
    capitalist state as the bourgeoisie capitalist
    class in whose interests it operated would never
    willingly or peacefully surrender power.
  • To elaborate on Marx- classes were antagonistic-
    under capitalism, the mode of production was
    designed to produce goods/services for profit
    which were either transformed into further
    investment or used as income all for the benefit
    of the capitalist class. This was antagonistic
    because the workers served only the interests of
    the capitalist class whose interest was to keep
    wages as low as possible to maximise profit.
    Because classes were thus antagonistic, the only
    way for change was through revolution.
  • Against those social democrats who argued for the
    peaceful parliamentary road towards socialism,
    Lenin wrote in State and Revolution 1917 to
    decide once every few years which member of the
    ruling class is to repress and crush the people
    through parliament- this is the real essence of
    bourgeois parliamentarianism, not only in
    parliamentary-constitutional monarchies but also
    in the most democratic republics.

10
Agrarian (revolutionary) socialism
  • Socialism developed not only as a critique of
    capitalism but also of urban industrial society.
    The socialist ideal was born in European
    countries in transition from traditional
    societies to modern ones. In this sense,
    socialism were focused backwards on what was
    thought to have been a communal cooperative
    fraternal way of life which had to be recreated.
    Populist (Narodnik- Narod is the Russian word for
    people) socialism which emerged in late C19
    Russia essentially opposed to industrialisation,
    urbanisation and individualism (seen as western
    imports) and sought to re-establish roots in a
    traditional agrarian collectivist society.
    Unlike Marxism and Leninism which are focused on
    teleological goals ( in some state of perfection
    in the future) it was reactionary often espousing
    a supposed ideal state in which the peasant had
    an exemplary relationship with nature.

11
Why has revolutionary socialism tended towards
dictatorship?
  • Marx believed that repression was a feature of
    the state whose sole purpose was to uphold the
    interests of the ruling elite. Although he
    argued that the need for a repressive state would
    disappear once class differences were removed,
    nevertheless he argued that once capitalism was
    overthrown it was necessary for the new
    proletarian order to establish a dictatorship of
    the proletariat in order to prevent counter
    revolution and to create the egalitarian society
    based on common ownership.
  • Use of force to achieve power encouraged the new
    rulers to apply it as a method of rule- power
    grows out of the barrel of a gun Mao Zedong
  • Revolutionary parties had necessarily adopted
    militaristic and hierarchical structures in order
    to plan revolution and continued to apply this to
    forging the new state.
  • David Lane- The Rise and Fall of State Socialism
    on Stalinism it became a developmental ideology.
    Society was mobilised by the communist party and
    the advance to a communist mode of production was
    to be achieved through state ownership, control
    and coercion. This was a reflection of the
    failure of the world revolution envisaged by
    Lenin 1917 to materialise and the fact that
    Russia was in Marxist interpretation both
    socially and economically underdeveloped.

12
What are the key features of Marxs theory of
History?
  • The emphasis on materialism- the production of
    the means of subsistence is the most important of
    all human activity and therefore underpins the
    structure of society.. All other aspects-
    political, legal, cultural and religious are
    explained by reference to economic factors.
  • Historical change was driven by dialectical
    materialism (phrase first used post Marx by
    Plekhanov)- basically inequality of access to
    resources creates conflict and leads to change.
    Capitalism depends on the existence of an
    exploited labouring class- proletariat which
    produces the wealth for the owners of the means
    of productive wealth. Capitalism therefore sowed
    the seeds of its own destruction as the
    proletarian class would eventually rise up and
    establish an egalitarian society based on common
    ownership.
  • Marxs theory was teleological- it invested
    History with a purpose and that the triumph of
    socialism was inevitable. In this sense by
    producing a formula for history, he turned it
    into a science. This would only happen once
    society had evolved via a series of epochs-
    primitive communism, slavery, feudalism,
    capitalism In each case inequality of access a
    to the means of productive wealth led to
    conflict- dialectical materialism which led to a
    higher stage of social development. Marx
    therefore envisaged an end to history as with
    socialism there would be no competing classes or
    social groups.

13
Why did Marx believe that capitalism was doomed?
  • Humans are alienated. They are forced to work
    not for what they need but for the profit of the
    owner/manager. They are alienated from their
    work because they are forced to work under
    supervision and alienated from their fellow
    worker because they are encouraged to be self
    interested.
  • Society would become progressively dominated by
    two competing classes- the bourgeoisie which
    owned and controlled the means of productive
    wealth and the proletariat. The relationship
    between classes must be antagonistic- the
    capitalist can only make a profit by paying the
    worker less than the value of their work (surplus
    value). The above means that economic
    exploitation is central to the effective working
    of the capitalist system.
  • Capitalism was notoriously inefficient means of
    running the economy. There would be recurring
    bouts of overproduction and recession which
    worsened each time as rate of profit would fall.
    This would contribute to the immiseration of the
    proletariat and the concentration of ownership
    and therefore the expansion of the proletariat.
  • The proletariat through its immiseration would
    develop class consciousness and realise the key
    to its liberation lay in the overthrow of the
    capitalist order. This could only be achieved by
    the realisation that the interest of the members
    of the proletariat lay in cooperation with each
    other. Eventually, a classless society based on
    common ownership would be established. There
    would be no exploitation and class antagonism
    and classes would disappear and the state would
    wither away.

14
Capitalism- sowed the seeds of its own destruction
  • Marx believed that capitalism created the
    proletariat- its antagonist and revolutionary
    successor- it would develop in size and strength
    and organisation and consciousness as capitalism
    itself developed. It would develop from a class
    in itself to a class for itself. A progressive
    simplification of class forces was underway as
    intermediate petty-bourgeois elements were
    swallowed up by the class polarization into the
    two great hostile camps of bourgeoisie and
    proletariat . The hostility would reach its
    decisive hour in conditions of capitalist crisis
    and proletarian pauperisation when the
    proletariat would emancipate itself through a
    revolution of the immense majority from the final
    form of class oppression and antagonism.

15
Why did Marx believe that the dictatorship of the
proletariat was necessary?
  • The proletarian revolution had not immediately
    led to the end of class antagonisms, there was
    the threat of bourgeois counter revolution and
    hence the need for a state.
  • The need for the restructuring of society along
    egalitarian lines.
  • Not all repressed groups achieved class
    consciousness simultaneously- Marx saw the
    industrial proletariat as gaining this first but
    what about the peasantry. Trotsky wrote that the
    liberation of the peasantry had to await the
    proletarian revolution.
  • The dictatorship of the proletariat was a
    temporary state as once an egalitarian society
    was established repression which Marx saw as the
    purpose of any state would become unnecessary as
    there would no longer be competing classes.

16
What are the criticisms of Marx?
  • The belief that history was teleological left
    little scope for free will.
  • Marx contradicted himself- On the one hand wrote
    about violent revolution as the model of social
    change Force is the midwife of every old society
    pregnant with a new one (Das Kapital). However,
    at other times, he advocated a peaceful
    transition- 1872 Amsterdam Speech he allowed the
    possibility of peaceful constitutionalism. This
    was also followed up by Engels who in 1895 wrote
    the mode of struggle of 1848 is today obsolete.
    Here he was reflecting on the electoral successes
    of the SPD in Germany. Harington (1928-1989) in
    Socialism Past and Future- In those societies
    where democratic rights were repressed he Marx
    and Engels insisted that the violent option had
    to be kept open. But in those countries like
    France, Britain and the United States Engels
    wrote in 1891 there was a real possibility of a
    peaceful and democratic transition to the new
    society
  • Marxs predictions imbued in 20th century Marxist
    leaders an absolute certainty in their conviction
    in their views and inclined them towards
    dictatorship and the implementation of policies
    with scant regard for human consequences.
  • Orthodox communism revised the ideas of Marx in
    significantly important ways. In What is to be
    done (1902) Lenin argued that left the
    proletariat were incapable of independently
    developing class consciousness. It required the
    formation of a vanguard revolutionary party to
    educate the workers that the key to their
    salvation lay not in pressure for better wages
    and conditions (trades unionism) but the
    overthrow of the capitalist state. Lenin wrote
    modern socialist consciousness can arise only on
    the base of profound scientific knowledgeThe
    vehicle of science is not the proletariat but the
    bourgeois intelligentsia it was in the minds of
    individual members of this stratum that modern
    socialism originated and it was they who
    communicated it to the more intellectually
    developed proletarians Latterly, communist
    parties when they achieved power were preoccupied
    with addressing issues of social and economic
    backwardness.
  • The state far from withering away becomes the
    engine for social and economic change. A clear
    example of this was Stalin's Russia 1928-1953
    whereby the economy was transformed via a series
    of industrial five year plans. The state rather
    than the people themselves owned and controlled
    the means of productive wealth.
  • Capitalism far from being on the verge of
    collapse, proved durable. Those states where
    Marx predicted revolution failed to succumb. In
    a more developed economy, capitalism diversified
    and the working class became more integrated.
    Into the rest of society.
  • Modern Marxists have even questioned the
    emphasis on class struggle. Arguing for a need
    to address an increasingly pluralistic and
    individualistic society they have shifted focus
    onto a wider range of struggles in the new social
    movements such as the womens movement,
    ecological movement, gay and lesbian movement etc

17
More on Lenin and the need for a revolutionary
vanguard party.
  • What is to be Done (1902) The history of all
    countries shows the working class exclusively by
    their own efforts are able to develop only trades
    union consciousnesstrades unionism means the
    ideological enslavement of the workers by the
    bourgeoisie. Our task, the task of social
    democracy is to divert the working class movement
    from the spontaneous trade unionist striving and
    to bring it under the wing of revolutionary
    social democracy
  • Writing in 1920, Lenin wrote the dictatorship of
    the proletariat cannot be exercised through the
    whole of that class because in all capitalist
    countries the proletariat is still so divided, so
    degraded and so corrupt in parts that an
    organisation taking on the whole proletariat
    cannot directly exercise proletariat
    dictatorship. It can be exercised only by a
    vanguard

18
More on Lenin
  • Lenin argued that imperialism had made capitalism
    global (Imperialism the Highest Stage of
    Capitalism). This meant that backward countries
    were subject to capital penetration by the more
    advanced. Lenin therefore argued that the first
    strike against capitalism would happen in its
    weakest link of the capitalist chain. As early
    as 1882, in their preface to the Russian edition
    of the Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels noted
    that revolution in Russia could be the spark for
    revolution in the West. Lenin now argued that
    since world capitalism was no longer able to
    contain itself (exported abroad) its survival
    depended on extract surplus from the periphery
    and when exploitation of that ended (revolution)
    the contradictions inherent in capitalism would
    inevitably lead to its collapse elsewhere.
  • In the April Theses 1917 he wrote Any day may
    come the crash of European Imperialism. The
    Russian Revolution which you have carried out has
    laid the foundations for it and opened a new
    epoch. Long live the world wide socialist
    revolution.
  • Letters on Tactics (1917) The bourgeois
    revolution (February 1917) is completed. April
    Theses- Russia is passing from the first stage of
    the revolution which owing to the insufficient
    class consciousness and organisation of the
    proletariat placed power in the hands of the
    bourgeoisie to the second stage which must place
    power in the hands of the proletariat and the
    poorest peasants
  • In the summer of 1917 he wrote We stand on the
    threshold of a world wide proletarian revolution.
    If we come out now we shall have on our side all
    proletarian Europe

19
Criticisms of Marx (contd)
  • Nowhere in classical Marxism is there a developed
    account of socialist political systems. He
    leaves unanswered basic questions of the nature
    of representation, accountability, organisation
    of political compromise and opposition
  • The reason for the above vacuum is Marxist belief
    that a distinct political machinery is only
    required in a divided society of classes. In
    State and Revolution (1917) written on eve of
    Bolshevik revolution, Lenin wrote that a Marxist
    revolution would destroy the state and then be
    followed by a system of popular self government
    on the commune model which would be a
    decentralised and participatory democracy all
    will govern in turn and will soon become
    accustomed to no one governing However in
    practice Leninism reflected a tradition (Marxist)
    which offered democracy without division since
    class divisions disappear What exactly did Marx
    mean when he wrote of the dictatorship of the
    proletariat? The actual characteristics of the
    revolutionary exercise of power by the
    proletariat as envisaged by Marx remained a
    source for dispute. Even Marx appears to have
    contradicted himself, in the March Address (1850)
    he wrote the task of the revolutionary party is
    to carry through the strictest centralisation.
    However later in 1871 in The Civil War In France
    he eulogised the decentralised democracy of the
    Paris Commune. Therefore, in Lenins Russia,
    behind the account of a self managing society
    there lurks the state power of the armed worker,
    authoritarianism, democratic centralism of rule
    by a single party and a repressive state
    bureaucracy. Where socialist revolutions have
    been successful a one party state has invariably
    emerged. At the beginning of the 20th Century,
    Marxism could present itself in terms of
    universal humanism at the end of century every
    Marxist state was a dictatorship.
  • The dilemma for socialists concerns attempts to
    retain the working class as the key actor and
    the failure of the latter to act in a way
    expected of it. Feminism is the ideology which
    has identified the limited stereotype of
    socialisms traditional actor as male, manual and
    muscular.

20
How socialists came to deviate over ways and means
  • Pre 1914 English socialism which rejected Marxs
    analysis was an exception to the European
    socialist tradition.
  • Pre 1917 in Europe there was an open orthodoxy
    socialists could support parliamentary or
    revolutionary means but could still be united
    under support for Marxist beliefs. European
    socialists could all call themselves social
    democrats. The 2nd International agreement that
    the socialist parties would oppose a European war
    however almost without exception they supported
    their governments 1914.
  • The Bolsheviks in Russia did not and with the
    seizure of power 1917 Marxism became Marxist
    Leninism a closed orthodoxy with an official
    interpretation and backed by the apparatus of a
    totalitarian state.. Social Democracy became
    distinct from revolutionary socialism- indeed in
    1918, to signify his break from the former, Lenin
    renamed his party Communist. For Lenin, the
    term social democracy became a disparaged term an
    effective accommodation with capitalism.
  • Indeed, 1914 and 1917 represented a schism, post
    war the left became divided into a reformist
    right (socialist) and revolutionary left
    (communist) At the 3rd International 1919,
    attending parties were required to adopt the
    label communist as opposed to social democrat
    and to declare war against the entire bourgeois
    world and its social democrat allies. Social
    Democracy became distinct from communism because
    it was committed to reformism in place of
    revolution
  • After 1945, social democrat parties moved further
    towards reformism and a permanent accommodation
    with liberal capitalism ( Bad Godesberg programme
    of the West German SPD 1959). Post 1945,
    European social democratic parties out rightly
    abandoned the use of violence as a means to
    power, socialism was defended as a social ideal,
    inseparable from parliamentary democracy,
    abandonment of state property in the means of
    production in favour of a mixed economy and
    finally a total opposition to communism.

21
Over what do socialists disagree?
  • The importance and extent of public ownership
  • Socialism is about equality but of what kind and
    how much?
  • Industrialisation- Fourier favoured a return to a
    more organic community, the populist/social
    revolutionary tradition in C19 and late Tsarist
    Russia saw the peasant commune as the basis of
    socialism and rejected Max analysis of the need
    for industrialisation as the necessary
    foundations of socialism as necessitating the
    immiseration of the people and therefore immoral.
    However, Saint Simon was excited by the
    potential of industrialisation once released from
    its individualistic constraints.
  • Is socialism about libertarian and self managing
    communities or the replacement of chaos and waste
    of unregulated capitalism with socialist
    planning. This tends to be statist and
    centralist. Socialist planning can be seen as
    part of the Enlightenment tradition with the
    triumph of reason over chaos. This very much
    encapsulates the Fabian view of elite management
    elite of unassuming experts (Beatrice Webb)
  • Is socialism scientific ( a comprehensive and
    self contained method of social analysis yielding
    a body of truths) or is it utopian (ethical)

22
Scientific versus Ethical socialism
  • Scientific
  • Socialism is immanent (predicated)
  • Socialism builds down from the state- state
    socialism
  • Organisational socialism of order, planning and
    bureaucracy
  • Revolutionary rupture
  • Marxism was a repudiation of socialism as a moral
    doctrine- it was a rigid doctrine of economic
    laws and historical determinism
  • Ethical
  • Socialism attached to human energy and will
  • Socialism builds up from the community
  • Libertarian and direct democracy
  • Self management
  • Reformist tradition of improvement and persuasion

23
Why did ideas of evolutionary socialism develop?
  • Rise in wages and living standards from late C19
    helped to deradicalise many of the working class.
  • Integration of the working class into mainstream
    society via development trades unions etc which
    can campaign for better wages and conditions.
  • Extension of the franchise.
  • Revolutionary socialism therefore remains in
    politically and economically backward areas.
  • Optimism that socialism was inevitable via the
    ballot box as working class became an ever larger
    of electorate.. This was based on the
    presumption that socialist parties were the
    natural home of the working class who in turn
    represented the largest group in the population.
    Once in power, socialist parties would be able to
    transform society alongside socialist lines.
  • Ideas of evolutionary socialism were known as
    gradualism. This ballot box socialism found
    expression in the tactics of Eduard Bernstein in
    Evolutionary socialism (1898) who believed that
    the German socialist party- SPD would be able to
    move away from revolutionary tactics.
  • Another form of gradualism was the Fabian Society
    founded in UK in 1884. It was elitist being
    based on middle class membership. It believed
    that the way to introduce socialism was by
    converting elite groups as socialism which
    emphasised planning was more rational than
    capitalism. Fabians rejected Marxs strategy of
    class revolution as wholly inappropriate to
    English conditions.
  • Fabians offered a strategy of resolute
    constitutionalism (Shaw) based on an alternative
    historical analysis to that of Marx in that the
    state was being captured both locally and
    centrally for collectivist purposes. Sidney Webb
    in Fabian Essays No philosopher now looks for
    anything but the gradual evolution of the new
    order from the old, without break of continuity
    or abrupt change of the entire social tissue at
    any point during the process

24
Why did gradualism fail?
  • To win elections in order to implement a
    socialist programme, democratic socialist parties
    had to broaden their appeal and therefore water
    down socialist policies.
  • Working class has declined in developed post
    industrial societies. The working class is not
    monolithic. J.K. Galbraith in The Culture of
    Contentment argued that material affluence and
    economic security had inclined large sections of
    the electorate to be politically conservative.
  • Realisation that capitalism is durable and the
    best means of producing wealth has led to
    socialist parties to advocating policies to make
    the market work more efficiently rather than to
    abolish it.
  • Even in power, socialist parties confronted with
    entrenched vested interests which limit their
    power to implement change. Miliband referred to
    the state system meaning those in state
    institutions and from the same backgrounds as
    business people capable of blocking radical
    socialist parties.

25
What are the main features of social democracy?
  • Social democracy endorses liberal democratic
    principles believing in change via constitutional
    means. Social Democracy embraces liberal
    democratic values. In the majority of cases,
    communist regimes came to power not through
    popular risings- even then nor parliamentary and
    dictatorship folowed.but through establishment
    via outside force or in case of Cuba and Zimbabwe
    a populist leader announces Marxist/Leninist
    principles after assume power.
  • Capitalism is accepted as the only viable means
    of producing wealth.
  • Capitalism is morally defective as it is
    associated with inequality and poverty.
  • Defects of capitalism can be rectified by the
    state through economic and social engineering.
  • 1960-73 esp, the social democratic consensus
    centred on welfare state, advanced social policy,
    full employment. I.e. increase the real income
    of wage earners and a developed social security
    system.
  • Keynesian ideas seemed to offer the rational
    economic foundations- it seemed to allow the
    state to simultaneously generate economic growth
    and to satisfy the aspirations for social
    justice. Indeed, Keynesianism the flagship of
    social democratic parties made possible the
    marrying/satisfying three contradictory interests
    ( sectional interests of the working class,
    interests of capital, interests of the national
    community in the general well being.
  • A key feature of social democracy is equal
    participation of all members of society in the
    benefits of education and health (universalism).
    Principle behind the NHS free at the point of
    need.
  • Improvement in the public infrastructure.
  • Nation state is a meaningful unit of rule in that
    it has the capacity to regulate economic and
    social life within its borders.
  • Why was the post war period (1945) favourable
    for the social democratic consensus?
  • a. Laissez-faire capitalism had become
    discredited by the inter war Great
  • Depression.
  • b. There had been acclimatisation to the idea of
    an active and interventionist state in
  • war time- note in GB sectors such as mining
    and transport were nationalised for
  • the duration.
  • c. The immense task of post war reconstruction
    favoured state investment.

26
Main features of Social Democracy (Contd)
  • Post 1945, social democrats one after the other
    progressively and definitively abandoned their
    anti capitalist credo. The state was regarded
    less and less as an instrument of a transition to
    socialism and increasingly as an instrument for
    the regulation of capitalism and social
    protectionism. Common throughout the
    transformations of social democracy, throughout
    its History a common theme- the state and the
    promotion of the interests of disadvantaged
    groups.

27
Why did social democracy deviate from fundamental
socialism
  • In place of Marxists who offered scientific and
    theoretical critique of capitalism, social
    democracy is influenced more by ethics. Humans
    are bound together by ties of empathy, compassion
    etcwhereas Marxists argued that behaviour
    determined by economic circumstances.
  • Ethical socialism often influenced by religious
    teachings. The latter found a particular
    resonance in the development of British socialism
    in late C19 and C20. This is a significant
    deviation from Marxist and soviet style state
    communism which is secular based seeing religion
    as a tool by the ruling class to subjugate the
    proletariat.
  • There is far less theoretical cohesion in
    revisionist socialism. Social democracy can mean
    extending equality and public ownership or it can
    mean accepting need for market efficiency and
    individual self reliance.
  • Fundamental socialism believes that capitalism is
    irredeemable whereas revisionist socialism
    accepted that capitalism was the best means of
    generating wealth. Only a selected part of the
    economy was taken under state ownership, the
    focus was on Keynesian style regulation of
    largely capitalist economies in order to maintain
    growth and high employment. The focus was on
    welfarism as a means of reforming and humanising
    capitalism.
  • Fundamental socialists see exploitation as
    central to capitalism whereas Crosland in The
    Future of Socialism (1956) argued that under
    modern capitalism the old style exploitative
    relationship owner/manager versus worker had been
    replaced by the development of the practice of
    scientific management- ownership was divorced
    from control and professional managers were more
    interested in efficient running of businesses
    than in exploitation.
  • Social democracy or revisionist socialism by
    embracing liberal democracy is a reaction against
    the repressive statist regimes established in
    Eastern Europe where fundamentalist goals are
    implemented regardless of consequences for human
    rights.
  • Crosland- The Future of Socialism- we stand in
    Britain on the threshold of mass abundanceif our
    present rate of economic growth continues,
    material want and poverty and deprivation of
    essential goods will gradually cease to be a
    problem
  • Crosland attacked the very notion that the form
    of ownership was the decisive determinant of the
    workers alienated position in society. The
    argument was directed against those in the Labour
    Party who dogmatically asserted the inherent
    virtues of public as opposed to private
    ownership- by the mid fifties socialists
    certainly understood that a completely
    nationalised economy in the USSR did not give
    working people control over the means of
    production. Crosland accepted that recognised
    that someone other than the workers must
    ultimately make the production decisions.

28
What was the crisis of Social Democracy?
  • Social Democracy depended on the ability of
    capitalism to generate continuous economic growth
    and therefore the resources to pay for welfare
    policies. With the onset of global recession
    1970s onwards, western governments were left with
    choices between policies which generated growth
    e.g. tax cuts or those which focused on meeting
    the needs of an expanded welfare budget generated
    by rising unemployment. Indeed where western
    governments met the crisis by traditional
    Keynesian policies to stimulate demand-
    reflationary policies to create more investment
    and jobs the effect was capital flight and
    inflation. Indeed, the failure of reflationary
    policies in various western states meant G.
    Moschonas In the Wake of Social Democracy the
    parties of reform previously hegemonic found
    themselves without guidebook or compass
  • Social Democracy was also affected by the
    declining electoral viability of socialism with
    the shrinkage of the traditional working class
    throughout 1980s ad 90s. Post 1945 the tide of
    democracy flowed with progressive politics but
    since 1980s with what JK Galbraith referred to as
    the contented majority.
  • The rise of globalisation and the integration of
    world economy meant that the ability of the state
    to manage the economy was reduced. Capital was
    fluid and excessive state controls could see it
    flowing to more congenial environments.
  • The collapse of communism in Eastern Europe and
    market reforms in the remaining socialist states
    meant that there was no alternative to
    capitalism. This led to the decline in
    confidence in the cybernetic model of the state.

29
Reasons for collapse of state socialism in
Eastern Europe
  • Economic decline- esp from 1975 falling rates of
    growth compared with the west, leads to public
    dissatisfaction with standard of living a major
    impetus for reform.
  • Decline in regime loyalty- By 1960 Russia mainly
    urban and a rising professional middle class
    dependent on rising levels of educational
    attainment since 1959 leads to a larger
    proportion of the population more receptive to
    the move to a market economy.
  • Decline in regime support- the professional
    classes increasingly disenchanted with their
    lowly status in a regime which triumphed the
    workers. Stalins regime peasant based,
    Khrushchev the unskilled workers.
  • Failure of economic resource management and
    weakening of political support led to public
    dissatisfaction and a serious undermining of the
    ideological justification for the regime.
  • A crisis of legitimacy- under Gorbachev economic
    reforms entailing the growth of markets
    undermined the leading role of the party and the
    system of command planning. According to David
    Lane The Rise and Fall of State Socialism-
    Marxist-Leninist ideology was broken by the
    political leadership under Gorbachev.
  • External- Communist state falling behind the
    west- cultural contamination from the west TV,
    car, rock music sex.

30
What are the key elements of the Third Way?
  • Top down state intervention of the old socialist
    models is no longer viable. The acceptance of
    the market over the state and a realisation of
    the implications of globalisation.
  • There is an acceptance that capitalism has
    mutated into an information society or
    knowledge economy which places a premium on IT,
    individual skills, labour and market flexibility.
    It aims to build on rather than reverse the neo
    liberal revolution 1980s/90s away from Keynesian
    demand management.
  • Emphasis on community and moral responsibility.
    Here it rejects absolute individualism but is
    closer to communitarian liberalism of the New
    Liberalism of the later C19. Cornerstone belief
    of which is that rights and responsibilities are
    inextricably linked.
  • Third Way has a consensus view of society over
    class differences that bind members of society.
  • Emphasis is on social inclusion over commitment
    to equality. There is far greater stress
    therefore on equality of access over
    egalitarianism. Welfare should be targeted to
    socially excluded and should follow the modern
    liberal approach of helping people to help
    themselves or a hand up not a hand out (Bill
    Clinton).
  • An enabling state- one which concentrates on
    investing in infrastructure of the economy and
    strengthening skills and knowledge of the
    workforce. The government seeks to shape peoples
    attitudes, values and skills rather than carry
    out a programme of social engineering.

31
G Moschonas on New Labour
  • Consistency with left wing social reform
  • Measures of social democratic inspiration to
    reduce feelings of insecurity, renew contact
    party and the electorate
  • E.G
  • Minimum Wage
  • One off tax windfall profits privatised utilities
    to finance unemployment programmes including
    welfare to work
  • Several New deals e.g. counter youth unemployment
    and to counter social exclusion
  • Increase spending on health and education
  • Family tax credit
  • Legalisation of recognisation of the right to
    unionise
  • Consistency with neo liberal macro economic
    policy
  • Priority given to fight against inflation
  • Independence given to the Bank of England e.g. to
    set interest rates
  • Accept previous Conservative government budget
    controls
  • Selective withdrawal of the state from economic
    and social affairs
  • Complete absence of an industrial policy
  • Deregulation and labour market flexibility

32
Is socialism dead?
  • Marx predicted the fall of capitalism however,
    the state ruled by a socialist party- China
    underpins the west by providing consumer goods
    cheaply for western markets and bankrolls US
    debt. The domination of capitalism globally
    depends on the existence of a ruling Chinese
    communist party that gives de-localised
    capitalist enterprises cheap labour lower prices
    and deprives workers of the right to unionise.
  • Moschonas In the Wake of Social Democracy the
    pursuit of the policies of deregulation and
    competitive rigour by social democracy has for
    the first time in its history directly challenged
    what was most clear, hallowed and enduring in all
    its ideological and political traditions, the
    socially and economically active role of the
    state and the interests of the most disadvantaged
    groups in the population.
  • In its conscious and explicit adhesion to a
    moderately but clearly neo liberal mode of
    regulation, social democracy has made the
    decisive ideological leap for the first time so
    openly and systematically it has elevated the
    market and devalued the utility of the
    economically active state

33
Is Socialism Dead? Contd
  • In the race for competitive disinflation and
    reform, the governmental left has departed in
    practice from defence of the interests of wage
    earners and particularly the poorest of the poor.
    Social Democracy has thus been transformed from
    a political force for the moderate promotion of
    equality within a socio economic system that is
    by definition inegalitarian into a force for the
    moderate promotion of inequality. In other
    words, it has been transformed from a force that
    has long since renounced its anti-capitalist
    vocation into a force that today is even
    abandoning its moderately anti-plutocratic
    vocation.
  • Today more than ever social democracy depends on
    the quality of its political appeal, leadership
    candidates, tactical compromises, programme and
    record in government.
  • It is an electorally unstable force and capable
    of flexible strategic responses. Contemporary
    Social Democracy is slight therefore it lacks
    the ambition, the vision and the solid bases
    (support electoral) to seriously challenge the
    established structures of power and influence
    both national and international.

34
Is socialism dead?
  • However, what about the capitalist crisis with
    the credit crunch and global recession? Sales of
    Das Kapital and the Communist Manifesto have
    soared since 2008. In 2008 a Reuters report
    showed that 52 of East Germans believed the free
    market was unsuitable and 43 wanted socialism
    back.
  • The Marxist historian, Eric Hobsbawm has written
    that the destabilising effects of capitalism
    would, at some point, lead to a development which
    can no longer be described as capitalism, but
    very different from the traditional models of
    socialism of the soviet era, instead involving a
    shift from private appropriation to social
    management on a global scale. Note rise of new
    employment practices such as zero hours contracts
    where people have jobs but wait to be called in
    by employers.
  • Moschonas- modern social democracy a widely neo
    liberalised social democracy seeks modestly to
    mitigate the most extreme effects of neo
    liberalism the social counterpart to liberal
    macro economic policies would be less easy to
    conceive and apply without social democracys
    popular and reformist tradition and without its
    rootedness in popular classes and the trades
    unions. Various aspects of contemporary social
    democracy are more than a mere left wing tint.
    Social measures, a more consultative approach to
    economic policy, some consideration of trades
    union interests, a more environmentally friendly
    policy, a greater openness to cultural
    liberalism
  • Moschonas I therefore find it difficult to
    accept as has been said of New Labour that the
    new social democracy has no substance and
    represents nothing but submission to the right

35
Marcuse/Harrington and the New Left?
  • Reflecting on post WW Marcuse wrote
  • We are struggling against a society that has
    succeeded in eliminating poverty and suffering to
    a degree that the previous stages of capitalism
    never attained
  • Harrington Socialism Past and Future The people
    are held enthralled by golden chains, by the
    satisfaction of false, manufactured needs they
    are victimised by a technology that manipulates
    them every moment of the night and day they have
    become visionless, conformist, pragmatic. At the
    same time, there are the less subtle more
    old-fashioned forms of repression turned against
    the external politics in the third world and the
    internal lumpen proletariat of minorities in the
    ghettoes
  • Harrington- Since society has become controlled
    and one dimensional, how would the liberation
    come about? Who would accomplish it? Marcuse
    peoples from the opposite ends of the social
    spectrum, the privileges- the students, the
    middle class hippies, the revolutionary and
    highly educated working class of technicians-
    would rebel against a domination that suppressed
    their interests and the outcasts, the lumpen
    would join in the attacks against simpler and
    more brutal forms of exploitation. The Third
    World was where the new proletariat which would
    finally accomplish the Marxist purpose was being
    born
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