In
Socialism there will be no market, trade or barter. In the absence of
a system of exchange, money will have no function to perform.
Individuals will participate freely in production and take what they
need from what is produced. The fact that Socialism will be based on
common ownership does not mean that an individual will have no call
on personal effects. It means essentially that no minority will have
control over or possession of natural resources or means of
production. Individuals will stand in relation to each other not as
economic categories, not as employers and employees or buyers and
sellers, but simply as human beings producing and consuming the
necessary things of life. In Socialism
there will be a common interest in the planning and smooth operation
of production. Work will be a part of human co-operation in dealing
with practical problems. Work will be one aspect of the varied yet
integrated life of the community.
With
the change in the object of society, that is human welfare instead of
profit, man will freely develop agriculture and housing, produce
useful things and maintain services. As well as material production,
man will freely develop desirable institutions such as libraries,
education facilities, centres of art and crafts and centres of
research in science and technology. Once
produced, goods will be transported to centres of distribution where
all will have the same right of access to what is available according
to individual need. It will be a simple matter of collecting what is
required. As well as tradition and geography, it will be a matter of
organisation and practicality as to which things will require a
complex world division of labour for their production and which
things will be produced regionally.
The
insecurities of our present acquisitive society drive men and women
into ruthlessly selfish attitudes and actions which frustrate the
human need for co-operation. With success in this competitive race
goes a hollow pride; with failure there goes guilt and stigma.
Against this background the failure is general because where the
individual is isolated, co-operation breaks down.
Socialism
will establish a community of interests. The development of the
individual will enhance the lives of other men and women. Equality
will manifest attitudes of co-operation. The individual will enjoy
the security of being integrated with society at large. Socialism
will end national barriers. The human family will have freedom of
movement over the entire earth. Socialism would facilitate universal
human contact but at the same time would take care to preserve
diversity. Variety in language, music, handicrafts, art forms and
diet etc will add to all human experience.
Socialism will eliminate
alienation because its relationships and organisation will be centred
on human needs and not on economic forces external to human needs.
The whole community will relate on equal terms about the means of
production and the earth's resources and co-operate to produce goods,
services and amenities solely for use. This will be an association of
men and women in conscious control of their own lives, living for
themselves with the freedom to decide upon social projects and to
organise resources to complete those projects. Socialism places
people themselves at the centre of social organisation. Equality,
co-operation and democratic participation will bring productive
efficiency in response to human needs. But more than that, it will do
so in circumstances in which the self-directed individual will live
positively, integrating his own life with the development of the
whole community.
Socialism
will combine different methods of production where this might be
considered necessary by the community. It will deploy all its
resources more freely according to practicality and desirability
regardless of possibly different rates of working efficiency.
Socialism
will enjoy more people available for the production of useful wealth;
without the limits of market capacity it will enjoy greater use of
production methods; without price competition it will enjoy wider
selection of production methods; with the ending of national barriers
it will enjoy a more rational deployment of world resources; and
without capital investment it will enjoy greater adaptability of
social production.
Socialism
will combine all these practical advantages with all the criteria for
the selection of production methods according to need, such as
material necessity, the enjoyment of work, safety, care of the
environment, conservation.
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