Capitalism is not serving the majority of humanity.
Capitalism is an economic system which has as its goal the production of
capital. This capital is then used to produce more capital, ad infinitum. Anyone
who tells you that socialism can be just a cozier, nicer version of capitalism,
must be considered suspect.
Capitalism divides the persons engaged in work - producing
the goods and services upon which life depends - into two basic groups:
employers and employees. In capitalism, the former buy the labor power of the
latter. Employers hire employees in two distinct groups. One group (production
workers, blue-collar workers etc.) is set to work with tools, equipment and
work-spaces to transform raw materials into finished products, both goods and
services. The other group (enablers, white-collar workers etc.) is set to work
doing the necessary clerical, supervisory, security and managerial tasks that
support the first group to produce those finished products. Employers make all
key production decisions - what to produce, how and where - with little or no
input from employees. Employers likewise make all the key decisions about what
to do with the enterprise's profit or surplus. Employees again have little or
no power over the disposition of the profits their work achieves.
Let’s say that you’re getting paid $15 an hour by a business
owner in a stable, profitable firm. You’ve been working there five years, and
you put in about sixty hours a week. No matter what your job is like — whether
it’s easy or grueling, boring or exciting — one thing is certain: your labor is
making more (probably a lot more) than $15 an hour for your boss. That
persistent difference between what you produce and what you get back in return
is exploitation — a key source of profits and wealth in capitalism. And, of
course, with your paycheck you’re forced to buy all the things necessary for a
good life — housing, health care, child care, a college education — which are
also commodities, produced by other workers who are not fully remunerated for
their efforts either.
Socialists want a world without private property. We don’t
want a world without personal possessions— the things meant for individual
consumption and enjoyment. Instead, socialists strive for a society without
private property — the things that give the people who own them power over
those who don’t. That’s the socialist vision: abolishing private ownership of
the things we all need and use — factories, banks, offices, natural resources,
utilities, communication and transportation infrastructure — and replacing it
with social ownership, thereby undercutting the power of elites to hoard wealth
and power. And that’s also the ethical appeal of socialism: a world where
people don’t try to control others for personal gain, but instead cooperate so
that everyone can flourish.
The power created by private property is expressed most
clearly in the labor market, where business owners get to decide who deserves a
job and who doesn’t, and are able to impose working conditions that, if given a
fair alternative, ordinary people would otherwise reject. And even though
workers do most of the actual work at a job, owners have unilateral say over
how profits are divided up and don’t compensate employees for all the value
they produce. Socialists call this exploitation. Exploitation is not unique to
capitalism. It’s around in any class society, and simply means that some people
are compelled to toil under the direction of, and for the benefit of, others.
In a socialist society you and your fellow workers wouldn’t spend your day
making others rich. You would keep much more of the value you produced. This
could translate into more material comfort, or, alternatively, the possibility
of deciding to work less with no loss in compensation so you could go to school
or take up a hobby. That may sound like a pipe dream, but it’s entirely
plausible. Workers at all levels of design, production, and delivery know how
to make the things society needs — they do it every day. They can run their
workplaces collectively, cutting out the middle-men who own private property.
Indeed, democratic control over our workplaces and the other institutions that
shape our communities is the key to ending exploitation.
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