Socialism has gone beyond the patchwork of anti-capitalist slogans,
utopian proposals, and romantic hopes. One group of workers co-opting a factory
in a capitalist society doth not a revolution maketh. Let's imagine a single
factory closes down, and is occupied, taken over and self-managed by its
workers. This may or may not be a good thing; Even those most critical of
self-management would not begrudge workers trying to survive, although some may
argue occupying to demand a higher severance package would be a better approach
than assuming management of a failing firm. But a single act like this doesn't
challenge the totality of capitalist relations, it would just swap a vertically
managed firm for a horizontally managed one, leaving the 'totality' of the
system unchanged.
However, if factory
takeovers were happening on a mass scale, such that they could start doing away
with commercial/commodity relations between them; and at the same time there
were mass refusals to pay rent/mortgages and militant defence of this
resistance from the States subsequent coercion subsequent... And if this was
happening across several countries then we might be looking at a social movement
at the level of toppling state power, superseding commercial relations, making
possible social reproduction (housing, food, health) without mediation by
money, self-management of the activities necessary for this (rather than
self-management of commodity production and wage labour). This would only be
the case to the extent the movement grows and extends; if it was contained
within a couple of countries say, then the movement could go into reverse and
the acts may lose their revolutionary transformative character.
Self-management of production within capitalism can be seen
as an integral part of the revolutionary process only if it becomes part of a
greater social political movement where capitalism is challenged in other ways
and only if there are as soon as possible moves made to abolish wages and
markets. Self-managed industry operating under a market system by definition
does not involve the undermining of exchange relations, value - workers are
continuing to sell their labour-power on the market; their relationship to
capital is little different to if they worked for a private capitalist.
Another argument which comes up when discussing struggles
against the closure of workplaces due to unprofitability or capital flight is
that the conditions that made the business unprofitable doesn't vanish, so long
as the workplace still exists to sell stuff on the market (and workers continue
to sell their labour-power on the market). The most that can be achieved by
occupying and self-managing the workplace in such a context is to keep on
working, competing with other producers on the market, subject to the same
market conditions that made the workplace close in the first place only with
workers enforcing pay cuts and job cuts on themselves, rather than a boss doing
it.
Defenders of capitalism often say that socialists fail to
recognise gains under capitalism that make socialism unnecessary. This sort of
criticism is considered superficial, not because its claim to progress under
capitalism is unfounded but because it fails to meet the major point of
socialism that, whatever the record of economic progress under capitalism, the
existence of private property and the profit motive inherently limit the
potential of capitalism to serve human needs in an adequate way.
Socialism tends not to offer a blueprint of the future organisation
of society and hold the belief that working people, once given the chance, are
able to democratically choose their own path. Socialism remains an impossible
dream only to those who denounce it as utopian even though every advance in
technology and science turns the potential into more of a reality that is
possible to realise. Today's production of goods in abundance and the
accompanying knowledge, have transformed the utopias of an earlier time into
practical alternatives to our everyday existence. The trouble with capitalism
is that in this system production is for exchange not consumption. The merchants
offer food to sell, not for people to eat. If you've got money to buy this food
then you won't starve. If you have no money you will. This explains famine in
Africa and the slow increase in malnutrition starting to show itself in Europe.
It's a shortage of money not a shortage of food.
Inside a socialist society the major aim initially will be
to produce enough food to feed everyone. That's all of us; the whole of humanity,
all over the globe. Planned production worldwide will do away with malnourishment
and starvation forever. Capitalism could never achieve this spectacular
improvement in everyday life if they lasted another hundred years, because they
only produce things to sell. That is the sad heart of this miserable life
destroying system called capitalism. It's just production for exchange, so the
ruling class can collect the profits contained in the commodities they sell.
They have no interest in people's needs. Just their own greed for profit. We
need is more and more planned production, so that all human needs can be
satisfied and humanity grow, mentally and physically, so that its enormous and
as yet untapped potential can begin to be realised. It's the same with health
and education. With communism we will produce more hospitals and better schools
so that everyone can have a proper chance to grow. We will produce better
people and a better society!
No comments:
Post a Comment