Socialism
Socialism
Socialism
5.1.1 Russian Revolution: The October Revolution of 1917 gave rise to a model of social, political and
economic organization in the form of Soviet Russia which was borrowed extensively by a wide range
of self-styled 'communist countries' ranging from China to Cuba. The Soviet order provided a challenge
to capitalism: in October 1961, Nikita Khrushchev, head of the Communist World Party of the Soviet
Union, claimed that in conditions of 'the crisis of world capitalism' the period of 'full-scale communist
construction' had begun. By 1980, self-defined Marxist-Leninist states accounted for a third of the
world's population and claimed 40 percent of its industrial production. In Russia, Mongolia,
China, Cuba, Yugoslavia, Albania, Vietnam, Laos and Kampuchea, the communists had fought their way
to power and had defended it at a great cost: in the USSR alone, over 20 million people perished
following the German invasion in the Second World War. Socialism appeared a solid, well-founded
system, it was a beacon to many radicals in the industrialized countries and it gave hope to the oppressed
in the Third World.
The word "socialism" was coined in 1832 by Pierre Leroux, editor of the Parisian journal, Le Globe. From
then on, "socialism" took on many different meanings, as the varieties of socialism grew and expanded,
from Western Europe to Russia, America, Asia, and Australia. Socialism is a political and economic
approach that calls for state-owned businesses and state-controlled distribution of wealth brought about
by democratic means. The doctrines of socialism also include demands for major industries, banking,
utilities, and natural resources to be nationalized as well as for nationalization of social services such as
health care.
"Socialism' is an ambiguous term. In its most general sense, it refers to an array of ideas and policies, the
most important of which are equality, a positive role of government as a distributive agency (particularly in
the provision of welfare) and the absence of political domination over the individual; public or social
ownership is usually considered to be a necessary condition to achieve the socialist objective. Socialism,
in a Marxist sense, is the first stage of Communist society. The latter is a classless society, based on
social harmony, in which the state has withered away and people receive 'according to their need'.
Socialism—defined as a centrally planned economy in which the government controls all means of
production—was the tragic failure of the twentieth century. Born of a commitment to remedy the economic
and moral defects of capitalism, it has far surpassed capitalism in both economic malfunction and moral
cruelty.
Socialism is a socio-economic system in which property and the distribution of wealth are subject to
control by the workers, either directly through popular collectives such as workers' councils, or indirectly
exercised on behalf of the people by the state, and in which Egalitarianism or equality is an important
goal. Thus, under socialism, the means of production are owned by the state, community or the
workers. Socialism is a society distinguished by a state-owned, more or less centrally administered
economy, controlled by a dominant communist party which seeks, on the basis of Marxism-Leninism and
through the agency of the state, to mobilize the population to reach a classless society. Socialism is
an important component of the socialist movement and tradition. As a political movement, it is
contended that socialism occupies the space between the beginning of capitalism and its mature form.
The term "socialism" is variously attributed to Pierre Leroux (1798-1871) or to Marie Roch Louis Reybaud
(1799-1879) or to Robert Owen (1771-1858) in the mid-19th Century. According to Frederick Engels
(1820-1895), by 1847, the term "socialism" usually referring to the Utopian philosophies of Robert Owen
and Charles Fourier (1772-1837), was considered quite respectable on the continent of Europe, while
"communism" was the opposite.
5.1.2 Powers of the State: Under socialism, the state has much more far-reaching powers than under
capitalism. Factories, communications, farms, transport and publishing are owned and controlled by the
state, as well as labour, police, education, military forces, trade and foreign relations. The state
bureaucracies are large, powerful and pervasive, and this is why this form of social organisation is often
called bureaucratic socialism. Socialism is a form of economic organisation which is set against markets
and private property. It believes that priorities should be decided by 'rational' politicians, not by the
'irrational' market, and as such is dependent on economic planning. Such regimes, where there is no
duality of economy and polity nor a widespread 'civil society' of non-state groups, tend to be
anti¬democratic and governed on a permanent basis by the sole legalparty, inevitably the communist
party.
Socialism could be considered a rule by the bureaucracy except for the important role of the communist
party. The communist party in a given state is officially the political representative of the people, the
means by which the 'dictatorship of the proletariat' is implemented. In practice, the communist party is
also organised bureaucratically, but in a way which penetrates the other state bureaucracies. In its role as
political executive of the state, the communist party organisation serves to control, and if necessary shake
up or purge, other bureaucracies in order to maintain the system of centralised political control and to
advance the goals of the state and the party.
5.1.3 One-party Rule: The system embodied one-party rule, an economy based overwhelmingly on state
ownership and, at least in theory, central state direction. In the official ideology, it was a socialist system,
ensuring greater rationality than the capitalist alternative and providing a more equitable, stable, and
prosperous future. Particularly from the 1970s, the terms 'real' or 'existing' socialism were used as a part
of the effort by those in power to rule out discussion of alternative models of socialism.
Both the world system approach associated with Immanuel Wallerstein and the "state capitalist"
interpretation of Alex Callinicos consider the socialist countries to be a part of the capitalist world
economic system. The world system orientation attempts to combine a Marxist capitalist ownership
paradigm of capitalism with a political-military state system. World system writers divide the world
economy into three sectors: the hegemonic core (the dominant "Western" capitalist countries), the
periphery (developing countries of the South) and the semi-periphery countries with industrial capacity
and national capital but not part of the capitalist core. Socialist countries were part of the semi-periphery.
There were no "socialist economies".
Wallerstein claims that the world capitalist economyincluded the entire world, including those states,
ideologically committed to socialism. Socialist systems, it is contended, were not socialist modes of
production, but interacted with the capitalist world economy. The socialist state, which exhibited some
features of socialism (e.g. employment security, comprehensive welfare provision), nevertheless
became a major player in capitalist accumulation, which in turn provided a basis for reintegration into the
world capitalist system. An analogy is made with socialist parties under capitalism: they are separate
from, but part of, capitalist economies; with time, trade unions have become functionally integrated parts
of modern capitalist societies.
With the establishment of community's control over the economy and integrated national planning,
socialism seeks to unite man with his work, free him from the control of blind forces of the capitalist
economy, and emancipate him from wage-slavery. In consequence, man is restored to the un-alienated,
un-crippled individual. Besides, socialism through fairer and planned economic arrangements allows
every man, freedom from material cares and anxieties, and thus enables him to explore the continent of
mind. In a socialist society alone where material hardships and environmental limitations do not hinder
spontaneity and freedom of human action, man's mental and spiritual development is possible. The
socialists through the establishment of social ownership of the means of production seek to build up an
egalitarian society. In socialist economy where there is no profit motive, resources will be directed into the
channels which are socially useful.
Others refer to socialism, emphasizing that the system drew inspiration from socialist thinking and
remained true to that in some features but endured an overbearing state in all spheres of life. This is the
best of the available characterizations, including recognition of the system's ideological origins but also its
distinctiveness from others within the Socialist tradition—most importantly, Western European social
democracy. It also indicates that this is more than a system of political power.
Political and economic structures were part of one coherent whole, and the links between them helped to
shape its strengths
and weaknesses.
Socialism in state could be considered rule by bureaucracy except for the important role of the communist
party. The communist party in a given state is officially the political representative of the people, the
means by which the 'dictatorship of the proletariat' is implemented. In practice, the communist party is
also organised bureaucratically, but in a way that penetrates the other state bureaucracies. In its role as
political executive of the state, the communist party organisation serves to control, and if necessary shake
up or purge, other bureaucracies in order to maintain the system of centralised political control and to
advance the goals of the state and the party. Socialist regimes have been called permanent war
economies, since even in the absence of external war they are politically organised like capitalist societies
during wartime. The wartime suppression of dissent under capitalism is the usual policy in state socialist
regimes. Likewise, the pervasive control of the economy by state bureaucracies under wartime capitalism,
the use of police and the military to maintain internal control, and generally the dominance of state power
are all normal characteristics of socialism.
5.1.4 Wars and Socialism: War has played a key role in the creation of socialism. The establishment of
the Soviet Union was made possible by the collapse of the Czarist army in First World War. After the
Bolsheviks took power, a number of governments supported a military attack on the fledgling Soviet
regime. To defend the new regime, the Russian army was reconstituted and expanded along traditional
hierarchical lines. Many Czarist military officers were restored to commands. Soon the Soviet military
forces were organisationally indistinguishable from their opponents. This process helped to militarise the
Soviet system. Many other state socialist regimes have been established following military
struggles. This includes wars of liberation against colonial powers as in the case of China and Vietnam,
and direct conquest by other state socialist military forces as in thecase of most states in Eastern Europe.
Perhaps most important in the militarising of socialism has been the squeezing of socialism into a state
mould. Essentially, when socialism encountered statism, statism prevailed. To survive in a state system,
including hostile capitalist states, socialism adopted a state form, which meant bureaucratisation and
militarisation. For this reason, the problem of challenging socialism and promoting democratic socialism
came to be closely linked with the problem of challenging the state and promoting self-management.
Supporters of socialism used to think that the worldwide triumph of socialism, even in a statist form, would
automatically lead to the abolition of war. That this is an illusion, is apparent from the wars and military
confrontations between the governments and military forces of China and the Soviet Union, China and
Vietnam, Vietnam and Kampuchea, and others. Until 1945, there was only one socialist state. Since
1945, almost all combat action by Soviet military forces has been against other socialist states, or against
the Soviet people.
5.2.3 Revolutionary socialism advocates the need for fundamental social change through revolution or
insurrection (rather than gradual reforms) as a strategy to achieve a socialist society. The Third
International, which was founded following the Russian Revolution of 1917, defined itself in terms of
Revolutionary Socialism but also became widely identified with Communism. Trotskyism is the theory of
Revolutionary Socialism as advocated by Leon Trotsky (1879-1940), declaring the need for an
international proletarian revolution (rather than Stalin's "socialism in one country") and unwavering
support for a true dictatorship of the proletariat based on democratic principles. Luxemburgism is another
Revolutionary Socialist tradition, based on the writings of Rosa Luxemburg (1970-1919). It is similar to
Trotskyism in its opposition to the Totalitarianism of Stalin, while simultaneously avoiding the reformist
politics of modern social democracy.
5.2.4 Utopian socialism is a term used to define the first currents of modern socialist thought in the first
quarter of the 19th Century. In general, it was used by later socialist thinkers to describe early socialist, or
quasi-socialist intellectuals who created hypothetical visions of perfect egalitarian and communalist
societies without actually concerning themselves with the manner in which these societies could be
created or sustained. They rejected all political (and especially all revolutionary) action, and wished to
attain their ends by peaceful means and small experiments, which more practical socialists, like Karl
Marx, saw as necessarily doomed to failure. But the early theoretical work of people like Robert Owen
(1771-1858), Charles Fourier (1772-1837) and Etienne Cabet (1788-1856) gave much of the impetus to
later socialist movements.
5.2.6 Market socialism is a term used to define an economic system in which there is a market economy
directed and guided by socialist planners, and where prices would be set through trial and error (making
adjustments as shortages and surpluses occur) rather than relying on a free price mechanism. By
contrast, a socialist market economy, such as that practiced in the People's Republic of China, where
major industries are owned by state entities, but compete with each other within a pricing system set by
the market and the state does not routinely intervene in the setting of prices.
5.2.7 Eco-Socialism (or green socialism or socialist ecology) is an ideology merging aspects of Marxism,
socialism, green politics, ecology and the anti-globalization movement. They advocate the non-violent
dismantling of capitalism and the State, focusing on collective ownership of the means of production, in
order to mitigate the social exclusion, poverty and environmental degradation brought about by the
capitalist system, globalization and imperialism.
5.3.2 Modern Phase: Modern socialism emerged in early 19th Century Britain and France, from a diverse
array of doctrines and social experiments, largely as a reaction or protest against some of the excesses of
18th and 19th Century capitalism. Early 19th Century socialist thought was largely Utopian in nature,
followed by the more pragmatic and revolutionary socialist and communist movements in the later 19th
Century. Socialism emerged in the nineteenth century as a reaction against the growth of industrial
capitalism and was linked to the development of the working class, otherwise known as the proletariat.
The proletariat suffered from exploitation by the middle class, otherwise known as the bourgeoisie. The
ruling class both degraded and caused poverty for the working class. Early socialists sought radical
change to industrial capitalism.
Fourier and Owen both subscribed to an early form known as Utopian socialism. This is a variant of
socialism that believes in the unlimited possibilities of human development in a perfect society. On the
other hand, Marx and Engels saw the fall of capitalism through revolution as inevitable. Some socialists
sought power not through revolution but through universal suffrage and continued reform. These
socialists were known as reformist/revisionist socialists and sought the end of the state through
evolutionary means rather than the revolutionary ones. This form of socialism was seen as more
'moderate' and believed in the 'inevitability of gradualism'. They sought change through parliamentary
means and formed parties to promote socialist thinking such as Robert Owen (1771-1858), Charles
Fourier (1772-1837), Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865), Louis Blanc (1811-1882) and Henri de Saint-
Simon (1760-1825) criticized the excesses of poverty and inequality of the Industrial Revolution, and
advocated reforms such as the egalitarian distribution of wealth and the transformation of society into
small Utopian communities in which private property was to be abolished.
5.3.3 Socialist Religious Movements: Some socialist religious movements, such as the Shakers in
America, also date from this period, as does the Chartist movement for political and social reform in the
United Kingdom (possibly the first mass working class movement in the world). It was Karl Marx, though,
who first employed systematic analysis (sometimes known as "scientific socialism") in an ambitious
attempt to expose Capitalism's contradictions and the specific mechanisms by which it exploits and
alienates. His ambitious work "Das Kapital", the first volume of which was published in 1867 with two
more edited and published after his death by Friedrich Engels (1820-1895), is modelled to some extent on
Adam Smith's, "Wealth of Nations", one of the cornerstones of capitalist theory. In it, he transforms
Smith's labour theory of value into his own characteristic "law of value" (that the exchange value of a
commodity is actually independent of the amount of labour required to appropriate its useful qualities),
and reveals how commodity fetishism obscures the reality of the capitalist society.
Marx and Engels, who together had founded the Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany in 1869,
were also responsible for setting up the Second International (or Socialist International) in 1889, as the
ideas of socialism gained new adherents, especially in Central Europe, and just before his death in 1895,
Engels boasted of a "single great international army of socialists".
Marxism after Marx's death in 1883 underwent qualitative changes at the hands of its followers who
belonged to various schools of thought. There were true socialists who defendedthe central Marxian
concepts like materialistic interpretation of history, the doctrine of class struggle, the inevitability of the
violent revolution to establish the dictatorship of the proletariat. These socialist came to be known as
revolutionary socialists in view of their commitment to the idea of revolution as a means of social and
political change.
On the other hand, there were socialists who accepted Marx as their source of inspiration, but at the
same time, introduced certain new ideas and interpretations in the Marxian theory so much so that
Marxism lost its revolutionary character. In view of their dual loyalties to the liberal ideas of justice, liberty
and non¬violent social change and Marxian ideas of social and economic equality, the evolutionary
socialists believed that although socialism was a superior doctrine to capitalism, the change-over to
socialism should be gradual and non-violent. In other words, while the revolutionary socialists believed in
the inevitability of the violent revolution as a pre-condition for setting up a dictatorship of the proletariat,
democratic/liberal/evolutionary socialists put their faith in a peaceful, gradual and constitutional change
aimed at the establishment of a socialist state.
The differences in the approach of these two schools of thought have been nicely summed up by
Ebenstein. If the whole economic system, he writes, be compared to a basket of eggs, communism (true
Marxian Socialism) burns the basket and scrambles all eggs at once—never to be unscrambled again.
Democratic or evolutionary socialism keeps the basket, and cooks only small orders of scrambled eggs at
one time, because it believes in Aristotle's wise counsel that the guest will judge better of a feast than the
cook.
5.3.4 Charles Fourier and Robert Owen: The year 1848 is considered to be the dividing line that marks off
one phase of socialism from the other. Charles Fourier (1772-1837), Robert Owen (1771-1858) etc., were
the principal exponents of Utopian socialism. They were not interested in political action for ushering in
socialist society, nor did they appeal to class fidelity of the multitude. These early socialists scorned the
politicians and politics. Through persuasion and example they wanted to convert the people to the
pressing need for a new social order. Owen, for example, through demonstration of humane and just
relations in his own mills, sought to inspire the people in a socialist vision. Believing that human character
depended on environment, Owen wanted to replace the competitive system by a co-operative one,
where justice and harmony would prevail. Significantly enough, "that a pre-Marx socialist is not
necessarily a Utopian, in the sense of having an understanding of the organic filaments of society, and of
its associative core, is shown by Saint-Simon (1760-1825)".
5.3.5 Marx and Engels: In 1848, Marx and Engels through the publication of "Communist Manifesto"
imparted a new insight to socialist theory, and sought to redefine socialism in tune with realities.
Socialist and communist theories grew out of the events and social conditions of the late 18th century and
early 19th century. This was the period when the Industrial Revolution swept across Western Europe. The
Industrial Revolution brought about the rapid expansion of industries through mass production. The
industrialization of Western Europe, however, led to deleterious consequences as companies
competed ferociously without regulation and exploited the growing class of industrial workers. As a
result, the living conditions of industrial workers deteriorated substantially by the middle of the 19th
century as poverty, squalor, and degradation grew.
As a political ideology, socialism rose to prominence during the 20th century Bolshevik, Leninist and later
Marxist-Leninist revolutions where single-party control over the state, and by extension, over the political
and economic spheres of society was justified as a means to safeguard the revolution against counter-
revolutionary insurrection and foreign invasion. The Stalinist theory of socialism in one country further
legitimized state-directed activity in an effort to rapidly mobilize the Soviet Union's resources to
industrialize its internal economy.
The scientific theories of Marx and Engels, as well as the expectations they generated, gave rise to the
formation of communist parties and to the intensification of social mobilization aimed at speeding the
historical process and bringing capitalism to an end. Some mobilizations were successful in achieving and
consolidating state power. Communist parties in power claimed to construct a socialist mode of
production within the limits imposed by their particular historical, geopolitical, natural, and other "real"
circumstances. Of significance in this regard was the success of the Russian Revolution of October 1917.
This was the first socialist revolution to succeed, and for the influence of its experimentation in construing
socialism all over the world, a critical case for the assessment of the supposed advantages of socialism
over capitalism. After some three years of civil war and chaos from the beginning of the Revolution, the
Bolshevik party under the leadership of Lenin consolidated power and instituted a new type of socio-
economic and political regime that was to highly influence world politics for some seven decades. By
1922, the distinctive features of this regime were already in place. Under the allegation that the state
embodies the collective, the socialist principle of collective ownership took the form of state ownership
over the most important means of production including natural resources, large-scale industry, transport,
and banking. For the "rational allocation of resources", a central planning commission was established, by
the state, and staffed with state personnel. The "dictatorship of the proletariat", a controversial concept for
Marxists appearing in Marx's writings as an inevitable political feature of the transition process to the
upper stage of communism, justified the legal suppression of all political parties other than the communist
—as a "temporary" measure of unspecified duration.
5.3.6 Socialism and Russian Economy: Russian Revolution was followed by civil war and terror, then by
the mobilization of the population to build an industrial society which led to economic growth, a full-
employment economy and relatively low
income differentials in the context of comprehensive state control. The state itself assumed a forceful
directing role. Coercion was a consequence; it is contended, of the continuation of internal war, of the
traditional lack of control over Russian rulers and of the external threat.
Socialism arose as an answer to Russian conditions and provided a form of industrialism which was an
alternative to capitalism and concurrently a counter culture to it. Its distinctive features included
public/state ownership rather than private, an ideological emphasis on equality rather than freedom,
an economy organized on a plan, control and direction from the centre rather than through a market,
and a collectivist and public form of personal integration rather than an individualist one. It is maintained
that Marxism-Leninism gave rise to an 'ethic of communism' similar in character to Weber's protestant
ethic of capitalism. Socialism, as it evolved between the two World Wars, was a coherent alternative to
the capitalist form of industrialization. In Almond's terms, Soviet socialism was a successful strategy of
modernization.
For more than sixty years after the Russian Revolution, enough evidence could be found in the
development of the Soviet Union and subsequent state socialist experiences to confirm to a considerable
degree, the expectations of early socialist thinkers on the advantages of collective over private ownership,
and of planned allocation over the market, for the development of the productive forces of society. While
during the 1930s, western capitalist economies were struggling with the worst of their economic
recessions, the economy of the Soviet Union grew at "unprecedented" rates, estimated at between 9 and
15 percent from 1928 to 1938. Soviet planners put particular emphasis on the development of heavy
industry, which allowed the construction of powerful war machinery. In turn, the Soviet Union
emerged victorious from WWII defeating a former industrial great power like Germany. Economic
growth in the Soviet Union and the then new socialist states in Europe also compared favourably with
developed capitalist economies for some thirty years in the post WWII period:
"Over the period 1950-80, the average annual rate of growth of the national income of the European
Socialist countries was 7 percent, compared with 4 percent attained by the capitalist world, and the
respective growth rates in industrial output were 8 percent and 5 percent. These countries' share in the
world's industrial output increased from less than 10 percent in 1938 to about 30 percent in 1970, and in
1978 it was about 31 percent (but according to some Socialist estimates, it was 37 percent)".
Especially during this period, the structure of the international system was marked by the worldwide
economic, military, and ideological rivalry between socialism and capitalism, symbolized by the Soviet
Union and the United States as the leading forces in each camp. A symbol of both the success of socialist
regimes in the development of science and technology and of the rough military parity of the two camps
was the Soviet launching of the first two satellites into space in 1957. In comparison of the two systems
during this span of time, socialist states often scored higher than capitalist states in terms of distributive
equality, full employment, and welfare indicators such as health and education. In part as a direct
consequence of the Soviet victory in War and in part because the Soviet way of development favourably
impressed revolutionary governments around the world, socialism expanded considerably from the mid-
1940s to 1980, reaching a hold across all geographical and cultural regions of the world. At the height of
socialism in the mid-1970s, some twenty six state governments in the world claimed to be building a
socialist regime. Scholars generally acknowledge that in fourteen of them a socialist regime was
consolidated.
Socialism is contrasted with forms of socialism that advocate direct self-management, adhocracy and
direct cooperative ownership of the means of production, such as libertarian socialism, anarchist
socialism, anarchist communism, syndicalism, free-market socialism, De Leonism, internationalism and
economic democracy. These forms of socialism are opposed to hierarchical technocratic socialism,
scientific management and state-directed economic planning.
Socialism, which may be described as the doctrine that all the affairs of men should be managed by the
government, regardless of individual choice—Marx, its founder, concluded that the only way to abolish the
class monopolies was to centralize and consolidate all industrial and commercial interests, all
productive and distributive agencies, in one vast monopoly in the hands of the State. The government
must become a banker, manufacturer, farmer, carrier, and merchant, and in these capacities must suffer
no competition. Land, tools, and all instruments of production must be wrested from individual hands,
and made the property of the collectivists. To the individual can belong only the products to be consumed,
not the means of producing them. A man may own his clothes and his food, but not the sewing machine
which makes his shirts or the spade which digs his potatoes. Product and capital are essentially
different things; the former belongs to individuals, the latter to the society. Society must seize the
capital which belongs to it, by the ballot if it can, by revolution if it must.
Once in possession of it, it must administer it on the majority principle, though its organ, the State, utilize it
in production and distribution, fix all prices by the amount of labour involved, and employ all the people in
its workshops, farms, stores, etc. The nation must be transformed into a vast bureaucracy, and every
individual into a state official. Everything must be done at the cost principle, the people having no
motive to make a profit out of themselves. Individuals not being allowed to own capital, no one can
employ another, or even himself. Every man will be a wage receiver, and the State the only wage payer.
He who will not work for the state must starve, or, more likely, go to prison. All freedom of trade must
disappear. Competition must be utterly wiped out. All industrial and commercial activity must be cantered
in one vast, enormous, all-inclusive monopoly. The remedy for monopolies is monopoly.
Such was the economic programme of State socialism as adopted from Karl Marx. In the country the
parties that uphold it are known as the Socialistic Labour Party, which pretends to follow Karl Marx; the
Nationalists, who follow Karl Marx, filtered through Edward Bellamy; and the Christian Socialists, who
follow Karl Marx, filtered through Jesus Christ.
State socialists may claim or disclaim, their system, if adopted, is doomed to end in a State religion, to the
expense of which all must contribute and at the altar of which all must kneel; a State school of medicine,
by whose practitioners the sick must invariably be treated; a State system of hygiene, prescribing what all
must and must not eat, drink, wear, and do; a State code of morals, which will not content itself with
punishing crime, but will prohibit what the majority decide to be vice; a State system of instruction, which
will do away with all private schools, academies, and colleges; a State nursery, in which all children must
be brought up in common at the public expense; and, finally, a State family, with an attempt at
stirpiculture, or scientific breeding, in which no man and woman will be allowed to have children if the
State prohibits them and no man and woman can refuse to have children if the State orders them. Thus,
will authority achieve its acme and monopoly be carried to its highest power.
In Russia, workers exercised control neither over industry nor over the State. The last remnant of workers'
control over production, the "Troika", was abolished in 1929. In its place, stepped the manager whose
orders were to be unconditionally binding on his subordinate administrative staff and on all workers. Trade
unions were stripped of all functions, and particularly their right to negotiate wages. An internal passport
system was introduced into the country, and in 1930 all industrial enterprises were forbidden to employ
workers who had left their former jobs without permission. Forced or slave labour was introduced on a
massive scale as Stalin's terror campaign against the working class gathered momentum in the
1930s. As the Russian authorities cynically put it, "With the
entry of the USSR into the period of socialism, the possibilities
of using coercive measures by corrective labour have
immeasurably increased".
In Russia, the state owned the means of production, but who owns the state? Certainly not the workers!
The Russian state was intended, by those Marxists who made the revolution in 1917, to be a union of
Soviets, or workers' councils, in which delegates were elected from the work place. All efforts to start any
independent workers' initiatives, let alone workers' councils, were suppressed and rewarded with extreme
forms of repression. As Kirov, Stalin's henchman accurately prophesied, "We shall be pitiless to those
lacking in firmness in the factory and the villages and who fail to carry out the plan". Thousands of
managers were imprisoned for not repressing their workers enough. So it takes little imagination to realise
the fate of workers who went so far as to demand some measure of workers' power. Hundreds of slave
labourers were shot down in 1953 for striking in protest at the failure of the authorities to carry out their
promises that there would be an amnesty. The viciousness of this response is typical, and has been
repeated many times before and since.
110
party. The party monopolized the Soviet and the administration as well as the judiciary in a (sometimes
lightly modified) one-party system. The economy was centrally planned and law did play a specific, but
subordinate role.
References
Bernard Crick (1998), "Socialism", World View Publications, Delhi. Bhiku Parekh (ed.) (1976), "The
Concept of Socialism", Ambika
Publications, New Delhi. D. Deol (1976), "Liberalism and Marxism: An Introduction to the Study
of Contemporary Politics" Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.
112
Joseph A. Schumpeter (2011), "Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy", Adarsh Books, New
Delhi.