Capitalism is a system in which the means for producing the
wealth (the land, the mines, factories, the machines, etc.) are in private
hands. A tiny handful of people own these “means of production” as they are called.
But they do not work them. The immense majority of the people own nothing (in
the sense that they can live on what they own) but their power to work.
By exploitation we mean living off the labour of other
people. There have been previous forms of exploitation. In slave society, the
slave-owners lived off the labour of the slaves who were their property. In
feudal society, the feudal lords lived off the forced labour of the serfs. In
capitalist society the worker is neither a slave nor yet a serf, i.e. forced to
do free, unpaid labour for a master. But he is exploited just the same, even
though the form of this exploitation is not so open and clear as was the case
with the slaves and the serfs.
The essence of exploitation under capitalism consists in this
— that the workers, when set to work with raw materials and machinery, produce
far more in values than what is paid out by the capitalists in wages. In short,
they produce a surplus which is taken by the capitalists and for which they are
not paid. Thus they are robbed of the values they produce. This is the source
of capitalist profit. It is on this surplus, produced by the workers, that the
capitalist lives in riches and luxury.
Capitalism is a system of booms and slumps
From the earliest days of its existence until today, capitalism has been marked by periodic slumps,
economic crises, depressions or recessions as they are called. Every seven to
ten years a crisis of greater or lesser severity has taken place, bringing with
it mass unemployment and misery for working people.
Capitalism is a system of exploiters and exploited, of rich
and poor.
The ending of injustices caused by class society in its
various forms, has long been the dream of mankind. It found expression in the
teachings of the early Christians, in the writings of men like John Ball, Thomas More, Robert Owen, the Chartists and the other pioneers of the
British workers movement. But so long as modern, large-scale factory production
did not exist, Socialism—which alone can end the exploitation of man by
man—could remain only a dream. It was capitalism, in the search for greater
profits, which mastered natural forces expanded the production of goods on an
enormous scale, united the scattered, individual production of men into highly
developed, large-scale factory production, thus establishing the basis on which
socialism can be built.
What will such a socialist society look like? How will
exploitation and oppression be ended?
The means of production—the factories, mines, land and
transport—are taken away from the capitalists. They are transformed into social
property by common ownership. This means that they belong to and are worked by
the whole of the people, that the fruits of production likewise become social
property, used to advance the standard of life of all the people. No longer can
some men (the capitalists) by virtue of the fact that they own the means of
production, live off (exploit) the labour of others (the working class). No
longer are the workers compelled to sell their labour power to the capitalists
in order to live. The workers are no longer property-less proletarians. They
now own the means of production and work them in their own interests and in the
interests of society. For society is now composed or workers by hand and brain,
i.e. of an associated body of wealth-producers. Production is planned to meet
the constantly rising material and cultural needs of the people. This is only
possible because the means of production have been taken out of the hands of
competing private owners, whose only concern was to produce what was
profitable, not what was needed by the people. Thus there is an end to crises,
slumps and unemployment, of poverty in the midst of plenty. Socialism means peace.
There are no longer capitalists who profit by war, who see in war the way to
secure sources of raw materials, markets and a chance to dominate the world.
Socialism is the only system in which the old definition of democracy as
“government of the people, by the people, for the people” becomes a reality.
Capitalist democracy is government of the people by the capitalists in the
interests of the capitalists. Socialism cannot be imposed on the people from
above. It develops from below, from the new opportunities which socialist
society provides to men and women to develop all their capacities in their own
interests and in the interests of society as a whole.
But capitalism by itself does not “evolve” into socialism.
It has to be transformed into socialism by the conscious action and struggle of
men and women. Capitalism creates the living social force which, by its very position in
capitalist society, is compelled to change capitalism into socialism. This
force is the working class s. The age-long dream of the thinkers
and the fighters of the past can only be transformed into reality when the
working class wages
the struggle to take political and economic power from the capitalist class
and, having succeeded in this, sets about building a socialist society.
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