Economically the world has become one, yet workers remain
separate and isolated, atomised consumers instead of communities. The current
economic crisis, the incompetence and corruption of capitalist corporations and
politicians, has led some commentators to declare that these elites are
discredited and that this development creates an opening for the socialists. There
is some truth in this view, illustrated by polls that suggest that people in
the United States and around the world are becoming more skeptical of
capitalism and supportive of what they believe to be socialism than anyone
could have imagined just a few years ago. Socialism is no longer a dirty word
and Marx is no longer the despised demon he once was.
The interests of capitalists lie not in the defense of a
mythical free market but in making profit. When their profit-making is served
by measures that interfere with the free market, capitalists will favor and
aggressively push for them. This also explains the bank bailouts. The problem
with the Wall Street bailouts that have fueled people’s anger is that they are
symptomatic of the inherently undemocratic nature of the capitalist economic
system. This undemocratic nature derives from the ability of the capitalists to
use their control of wealth and the State to pursue their interests. Capitalism
allows capitalists to leverage their economic power into policy outcomes that
benefit themselves. Even well-intentioned policies are inevitably shaped and
constrained by the imperatives of capital accumulation. Capitalism is
economically undemocratic because it is a class society that exploits workers, whereby
all human beings find themselves enslaved by an abstract social logic that they
are forced to reproduce through their daily social and economic activity. It is
namely this subordination of all people, (including capitalists), to the
imperatives of profitability and accumulation that accounts for the inability
of the “invisible hand” of the capitalist market to deliver the benefits
promised by Adam Smith and his followers. When the goal of profit is paramount,
nature becomes no less subordinated to the logic of capital than people
themselves. Natural ecosystems become degraded and depleted faster than they
can regenerate themselves. It is a process of ecocide. Capitalism is also
undemocratic by virtue of the fact that it tends to subordinate the majority of
society to the dictates of capitalist elites who are as economically and
politically powerful as they are numerically small. Their power enables
capitalist elites to shift the environmental cost of their economic activity
onto the rest of society.
Socialism allows all human beings to have an equal say over
the priorities the economy is called upon to serve. In contrast to capitalism’s
subordination of life outside people’s control socialism as economic democracy
promises to give people the ability to become the true authors of their
individual and collective lives. It does so because only an economically democratic
socialism can create an economic system with goals and priorities that are the
product of democratic deliberative processes rather than the blind logic of
capital accumulation. Socialist society must replace the pursuit of economic
expansion at any cost with a commitment to keep the physical scale of economic
activity never exceeds the ability of natural ecosystems to regenerate.
Rethinking socialism in terms of being an economic democracy
has the added benefit of making it easier to debunk those who declare socialism
contrary to individual freedom, made only too plausible by the
mis-identification of socialism with Soviet-style authoritarian
one-party-rule. Designating these regimes as socialism is a
terrible misnomer. Rather the economy being the democratic responsibility of
their citizens, determining priorities, the Soviet bloc were run by a
relatively small political and technocratic elite.
Capitalism’s crisis is already fueling the right-wing with
racism, nationalism and anti-immigration. To counter these forces and build a
better world, socialism as a vision of economic democracy must be urgently
emphasized and presented as the strategy of economic democratization which can
turn the popular struggles proliferating around the world today into the means
through which such a vision comes to life. What’s needed now is neither
fatalism nor utopianism, but a practical path towards socialism. We need to
convey the messages that emphasises the personal and community benefits of a
socialist society and a vision of an attractive future where human needs are
met. We need inspiring examples, engaging narratives, and opportunities for
learning and teaching. The transition to a socialist future deserves a
prominent, persistent place at the centre of public discourse. Those gloom and
doom preachers who say that only utter ruin and extinction, awaits us may be
correct. However, it need not as there are still a wide range of possible
futures. People have an option to change the system and choose another type of
society. The practical suggestions for socialism to adopt as sustainable are
far from new, what is original in its solutions is that their applicability
will be now actually possible. The true dreamers are those who believe in the utopianism of a green capitalism, that a sustainable sound ecological world is possible withing the restraints of market expansionism, capital accumulation, its planning short termism - its logic for existence.
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