Socialist Studies
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What
Socialism Means
Socialism
is the only system within which the problems which now face workers
can be solved; but what will it be like? Socialism is a system in
which the means of production and distributing wealth will be owned
by society as a whole. Under capitalism the land, factories, offices,
mines, railways and other instruments of production are monopolised
by a section of society only, who thus form a privileged class. Socialism
will end this, for, with the means of life owned in common by the
entire community, it will be a classless society in which the exploitation
and oppression of man by man will have been abolished. All human beings
will be social equals, free to run social affairs as they think fit.
Today
we cannot describe in detail daily life in a socialist society. Some
writers have tried to paint a picture of what life could, or should
be like, but it is a matter of opinion how successful they were. Drawing
up a detailed blueprint for Socialism is premature, since the exact
forms will depend upon the technical conditions and preferences of
those who set up and live in Socialism. Socialist Studies has always refused to play the futile game of constructing
blue-prints of future society but we can broadly define the essential
features of Socialism.
Socialism
can only be democratic. At one time Socialism was known also as "social
democracy", a phrase which shows well that democratic control
would extend to all aspects of social affairs, including the production
and distribution of wealth. There is an old socialist slogan which
speaks of "government over people" giving way to
"the administration of things"; meaning that the
public power of coercion, and the government that operates it, will
have no place in Socialism.
The
State, which is an organisation composed of soldiers, policemen, judges
and gaolers charged with enforcing the laws, is only needed in class
society for in such societies there is no community of interest, only
class conflict. The purpose of government is to maintain law and order
in the interests of the dominant class. It is in fact an instrument
of class oppression.
In
socialism there will be no classes and no built-in class conflicts:
everyone will have the same basic social interest. There will be genuine
social harmony and community of interest. In these circumstances there
is no need for any coercive machine to govern or rule over people.
The phrase "socialist government" is a contradiction
in terms. Where there is Socialism there is no government and where
there is government there is no Socialism.
Those
who wrongly assume that government and administration are one and
the same thing will have some difficulty in imagining a society without
government. A society without administration would indeed be impossible
since "society" implies that human beings organise
themselves to provide for their needs. But a society without government
is both possible and desirable. Socialism will in fact mean the extension
of democratic administration to all aspects of social life on the
basis of the common ownership of the means of production and distribution.
There will be administrative centres but they will merely be clearing-houses
for settling social affairs.
But
will not the administrators become the new ruling class? Democratic
organisation does indeed involve the delegation of functions to groups
and individuals. Such people will be charged by the community with
organising necessary social functions. They will be chosen by the
community and will be answerable to it. Those who perform the administrative
functions in Socialism would be in no position to dominate. They will
not be regarded as superior persons, as tends to be the case today,
but as social equals doing just an essential job. Nor will they have
at their command armies and policemen to enforce their will. There
will be no opportunity for bribery and corruption since everybody,
including those in administrative jobs, will have free access to the
stock of wealth set aside for individual consumption. The material
conditions for the rise of a new ruling class would not exist.
The
purpose of socialist production will be simply and solely to satisfy
human needs. Production solely for use will replace production for
the market with a view to profit, in line with the social basis that
the means for producing wealth will belong to and be under the democratic
control of the entire community. The production and distribution of
sufficient wealth to meet the needs of the socialist community as
individuals and as a community will be an administrative and organisational
problem. It will of course be no small problem but the tools for solving
it have already been created by capitalism.
Capitalism
has developed technology and social productivity to the point where
plenty for all can be produced. A society of abundance has long been
technically possible and it is this that is the material basis for
Socialism. Capitalism, because it is a class society with production
geared to profit-making rather than meeting human needs, cannot make
full use of the world-wide productive system it has built up over
the past two hundred or so years. Socialism, making full use of the
developed methods of production, will alter the purpose of production.
Men and women will be producing wealth solely to meet their needs,
and not for the profit of the privileged few.
Using
techniques for predicting social wants, at present prostituted to
the service of capital, socialist society can work out how much and
what sort of products and services will be needed over a given period.
Men and women will be free to discuss what they would like to be produced.
So with social research and after democratic discussion an estimate
of what is needed can be made. The next problem is to arrange for
these amounts to be produced. Capitalism, in modern computing machines,
input-output analysis and information technology, has developed the
techniques which socialist society can use.
When
the wealth has been produced, apart from that needed to renew and
expand the means of production, all will freely take what they feel
they need to live and enjoy life. This is what we mean by "free
access" There will be no buying and selling, and hence no
need for money. What communities and individuals want does not vary
greatly except over long periods and it will be a simple administrative
task to see that the stores are well-stocked with what people want.
If any shortages develop they will not last long. Planned reserves
will be produced as a safeguard against unforeseen natural disasters.
"From
each according to his ability, to each according to his need"
is another long-standing socialist slogan. It means what it says:
that men and women will freely take part in social production to the
best of their abilities and freely take from the fruits of their common
labour whatever they need.
Confronted
for the first time with this proposal for free distribution according
to need, many people are sceptical. What about the lazy man? Or the
greedy man? Who will do the dirty work? What will be the incentive
to work? These are objections socialists hear time and time again.
These are perhaps understandable reactions to what seems, to those
who have never thought about it, a startling proposition. As a matter
of fact, behind these objections, is a carefully cultivated popular
prejudice as to what human nature is. This is dealt in the section
"Is human nature a barrier to Socialism?" Suffice
it to say here the biological and social science and anthropological
research conclusively show that so-called human nature is not a barrier
to the establishment of Socialism.
Work,
or the expenditure of energy, is both a biological and a social necessity
for human beings. They must work to use up the energy generated by
eating food. They must work also to provide the food, clothing and
shelter they need to live. So in any society, be it feudal, capitalist
or socialist, men and women must work. The point at issue is how that
work should be organised. A very strong argument against capitalism
is that it reduces so central a human activity as work to the drudgery
it is for most people, instead of allowing it to provide the pleasure
it could, and would be in a socialist society.
To
suggest that work could be pleasant often raises a laugh; but this
only shows how much capitalism has degraded human life. Most, but
certainly not all work under capitalism is done in the service of
an employer so that people almost without thinking identify work with
employment. Working for an employer is always degrading, often boring
and unpleasant and sometimes unhealthy and dangerous. But even under
capitalism not all work, as we have defined it, is done in the course
of employment. Men and women are working when they clean their cars
or dig their gardens or pursue their hobbies -and enjoy themselves
at the same time. So close is the misleading association of work and
employment that many would not even regard such activities as work.
They think anything that is pleasant cannot by definition be work!
There
is no reason at all why the work of producing and distributing useful
things cannot be as enjoyable as are the leisure activities today.
The physical conditions under which work is done can be vastly improved.
So can the relations between people at work. Human beings, as free
and equal members of a socialist community, will no longer have to
sell their mental and physical energies to an employer for a wage
or a salary. The degrading wages system will be abolished so that
there will be no such thing as employment. Instead work will be done
by free men and women co-operating and controlling their conditions
of work, getting enjoyment from creating things and doing socially-useful
tasks.
In
socialist society there will be no social stigma attaching to any
kind of work. Nor will there be pressures, such as exist at present,
to continue - because they are cheap and therefore profitable to the
capitalist -industrial processes which are harmful or dangerous to
those engaged in them. In any event, with human needs and enjoyment
as the guiding principle, there will be no need for anybody to be
tied to the same job continuously. The opportunities for men ands
women to develop and exercise their talents and to enjoy doing so
will be immense.
Finally,
Socialism must be world-wide because the productive system which capitalism
has built up and which Socialism will take over is already international.
There will be no frontiers and people will be free to travel over
the whole earth. Socialism will mean the end to all national oppression
-and indeed in its current political sense to all "nations"
-and to discriminations on the grounds of race and sex. All the people
of the world wherever they live, whatever their skin colour, whatever
language they speak, really will be members of one vast human family.
Socialism will at last realise the age-old dream of a world-wide community
of interests.
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