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The Socialist Alternative: Real Human Development PDF

142 Pages·2010·0.91 MB·English
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Thank you for buying this ebook, published by NYU Press. Sign up for our e-newsletters to receive information about forthcoming books, special discounts, and more! Sign Up! About NYU Press A publisher of original scholarship since its founding in 1916, New York University Press Produces more than 100 new books each year, with a backlist of 3,000 titles in print. Working across the humanities and social sciences, NYU Press has award-winning lists in sociology, law, cultural and American studies, religion, American history, anthropology, politics, criminology, media and communication, literary studies, and psychology. The Socialist Alternative THE SOCIALIST ALTERNATIVE Real Human Development by Michael A. Lebowitz Copyright © 2010 by Monthly Review Press All rights reserved Lebowitz, Michael A. The socialist alternative : real human development / by Michael Lebowitz. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-58367-215-0 —ISBN 978-1-58367-214-3 (pbk.) 1. Socialism. I. Title. HX73.L4167 2010 335—dc22 2010019380 Monthly Review Press 146 West 29th Street, Suite 6W New York, New York 10001 www.monthlyreview.org www.MRzine.org 5 4 3 2 1 Contents Preface Introduction: Reinventing Socialism PART 1. THE SOCIALIST TRIANGLE 1. The Wealth of People 2. The Production of People 3. The Solidarian Society PART 2. BUILDING THE SOCIALIST TRIANGLE 4. The Being and Becoming of an Organic System 5. The Concept of a Socialist Transition 6. Making a Path to Socialism 7. Developing a Socialist Mode of Regulation Bibliography Notes Index For those who must struggle for a society in which wealth does not appear as an “immense collection of commodities” and where “the original sources of all wealth,” human beings and nature, are not destroyed. Preface A specter is haunting the world—the specter of barbarism. Of course, that prospect has always been latent in capitalism because nothing matters for capital but profits; however, the drive for quantitative expansion that is inherent in capitalism has now generated an ecological crisis. And, as the limits of Earth become apparent, there inevitably arises the question of who is entitled to command increasingly limited resources. To whom will go the oil, the metals, the food, the water? The currently rich countries of capitalism, those that have been able to develop because others have not? The impoverished producers in the world? Following the capitalist path, we can be certain that force will decide —imperialism and barbarism. The purpose of this book is to point to an alternative path. A path focused not upon quantitative growth but on the full development of human potential, not a path of barbarism but one of socialism. And the premise is that we desperately need a vision of that alternative. Because if we don’t know where we want to go, no path will take us there. To clarify and develop that vision, a number of concepts are explored in The Socialist Alternative: socialism as a process rather than a stage; human development as the core of socialism; the key link of human development and practice (which has as its implication the necessity for worker and community management); the understanding of the means of production as a social heritage that belongs properly to no subset of humanity; expansion of the commons in the construction of a solidarian society; socialist conditionality; socialist accountancy; and the socialist mode of regulation. Where did these ideas come from? Well, certainly a major source is Marx. Indeed, much here extends my discussion of the “political economy of the working class” set out in Beyond CAPITAL: Marx’s Political Economy of the Working Class (1992, 2003). Further, Marx’s Grundrisse is especially important for insights into socialism itself—both because of its concept of an organic system and the distinction between the becoming and the being of such a system, and also because its discussion of self-interest versus communality is an essential link between Marx’s earlier and later thoughts on this question. Another source of ideas for this book comes from the years I spent teaching comparative economic systems. Some of my reflections on the experience of twentieth-century socialist efforts appear in a 1991 article, “The Socialist Fetter: A Cautionary Tale,” where the concept of a socialist mode of regulation first surfaced (although not named as such until the following year). Indeed, the original conception of this book included a section on the “real socialism” of the USSR and Eastern Europe and one on the Yugoslav model; however, as I began to write about the question of real socialism, the section expanded from two chapters to five and was still growing! So, I decided to shift the analysis of these and other experiences to a separate project, Studies in the Development of Socialism. Nevertheless, readers will see clearly that the concept of socialism developed here is an alternative to both the real socialism of the Soviet model and the market self-management system of Yugoslavia. I was surprised, though, to recognize how much here is the product of my personal experiences and activity. Certainly, there is the echo of my time in the Students for a Democratic Society with its slogan that decisions be made by those who are affected by them. Further, my activity in the New Democratic Party (NDP) of Canada (an education into the limits of social democracy) is reflected in strategies posed here for struggle within capitalism. Greatly influenced by the Institute for Workers Control in the United Kingdom, I developed policies for the British Columbia NDP (where I served as economic policy chair and policy chair in the early 1970s) for opening the books of corporations to government and workers and nationalizing firms unwilling to accept these new ground rules for a “good corporate citizen”—a definite precursor of the concept of “socialist conditionality” discussed in this book. Similarly, some themes here return to my work on free buses and neighborhood government for the 1972 NDP electoral efforts in Vancouver and my involvement in community organizing. However, as will be seen, my experience in Venezuela has been most significant in shaping this volume. Not only the privilege of being present to learn from the exciting developments that have put socialism for the twenty-first century on the world agenda but also for the opportunity to participate in various ways, beginning in 2004, when I became advisor to the then-Ministry for the Social Economy. Some of my talks in Venezuela and reflections on the process there were included in Build It Now: Socialism for the 21st Century. Although Venezuela is unique in many ways because of its rentist economy and culture, many of the problems that have emerged in the context of trying to build socialism are not. And we need to go beyond the particulars of that case to prepare ourselves for struggle everywhere. Accordingly, The Socialist Alternative draws upon the Venezuelan experiment to develop a general vision

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“A good society,“ Michael Lebowitz tells us, “is one that permits the full development of human potential.” In this slim, lucid, and insightful book, he argues persuasively that such a society is possible. That capitalism fails his definition of a good society is evident from even a cursory
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