Capitalism has failed. Across the entire world increasingly
desperate conditions exist for the vast majority—mass unemployment, poverty,
indebtedness, ever declining wages—are combined with the most fantastic levels
of wealth. CEOs make more in a day than their workers make in an entire year,
and hedge fund managers make more in an hour than most Americans make in their
entire lives. At the root of all the problems of modern society is capitalism,
in which everything is subordinated to the interests of a tiny elite. Under
capitalism, this tiny capitalist class dominates society by dividing the
working class and derives its vast wealth from the extraction of profit by
paying workers less than the value they produce. Every capitalist is committed
to raising productivity – increasing the amount of capital that can be squeezed
from each worker and confiscated by the employer. As more wealth is extracted
from the working class and concentrated in the hands of the one percent,
society becomes increasingly unequal. Counter-measures can slow the twin
process of capital accumulation and growing inequality, but it can be stopped
only by eliminating capitalism. Individual capitalists might see the value of a
fairer society, but any who chose to slow the rate of capital accumulation
would be replaced by others with no such concern. Capitalism has socialised
production and distribution i.e. commodities are produced socially by many
people, while the products and the value from their sales are privatised, appropriated
by the owners of the means of production. Socialism merely balances out the situation,
that is to say, production is still socialised, but the appropriation of the
value that is produced, including surplus value, is also socialised – all
people have a claim upon the goods. Thus society benefits as a whole from
common ownership.
Socialism means the extension of democracy to the foundation
of all of society for the general improvement of humanity. Many today wrongly
assume that the struggle for democracy in much of the world has been won. States
that claim to be democratic are taken at their word, or at least those with
universal suffrage and ‘free’ elections of representatives. This is because
democracy is conflated with elections, which are equated with democracy (while
occasionally paying lip service to referendums.) If people cannot gather in
assemblies to act directly, they can at least elect representatives to act on
their behalf: this is called “representative democracy”. The reality is quite
different. It replaces the rule of the people, by the people, for the people
with the rule of the self-proclaimed representatives of the people. Neither the
expansion of the electorate through universal suffrage nor electoral reform (of
the voting system, campaign finance, nomination rules, ballot access, media
access, etc.) changes the underlying oligarchic logic of elections. This does
not mean that socialists should oppose it but take cognition of its flaws.
Socialists argue that capitalism undermines democracy.
Human beings in a given society produce wealth, in various
forms, and this wealth is distributed among the members of society via various
institutions, laws and mechanisms. However, to speak about how and to whom
wealth is distributed inevitably leads to asking questions as to who produced
that wealth in the first place. Speaking about distribution without mentioning
production is simply useless. Capitalism is an exploitative mode of production
in which the capitalist class extracted "surplus value" from the working
class. For the first time in human history, labour power itself was sold as a
free commodity on the market. Workers are free to sell their labour power to
whatever capitalist chose to employ them. But the asymmetry of power in this
alleged "free exchange" is that while the capitalist class owns the
means of production, the working class only has their labour power to sell.
This asymmetry means that while capitalists pay labour a "living
wage," the value of this wage (the value of labour power) is always less
than the value of the commodities produced by the workers' labor -- if capital
could not make a profit it would not employ labour. Under capitalism, private ownership of the
means of production such as factories, machines and raw materials is what
determines the ownership of not only the commodities produced via those means
of production, but also the proceeds of the sales of the commodities. In other
words, shareholders and proprietors appropriate commodities they did not
produce, and pocket the profit from their sales. Workers' needs under
capitalism are always subordinate.
Realistically, there’s only one way to achieve workplace
democracy across the whole of society – a global working-class revolution that
takes collective control of production and eliminates the two-class system of
capitalism. Socialism is something far more comprehensive than a simple
redistribution of wealth but entails the expropriation, the seizure, of the
means of production by the working class. Then we could build a truly
cooperative society in which everyone is equally worthy to share life’s work
and life’s rewards.
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