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Posts Tagged ‘new socialism’

The New Socialism Is a Public-Private Partnership

Posted by M. C. on August 28, 2023

For the past seventy years, the major US foundations have been the main drivers of socialism, even more so than the state bureaucracies. Something similar can be said about the Bertelsmann Foundation and other German foundations. They also apply a saw with great relish to the capitalist branch that carries us all.

If you want the $, do as you are told.

https://mises.org/library/new-socialism-public-private-partnership

Jörg Guido Hülsmann

In 1990, socialism seemed to be done once and for all, but the times have changed. In the last twenty years, socialism has again become fashionable beyond the academic fringes. The covid-19 crisis demonstrated how quickly and thoroughly the traditionally free societies of the West may be transformed by small groups of determined and well-coordinated decisionmakers. Top-down central planning of all aspects of human life is today not merely a theoretical possibility. It seems to be right around the corner.

Now, the renaissance of central planning is an intellectual and practical dead end, for the reasons that Ludwig von Mises explained one hundred years ago. But if Mises was right, then how can we explain the renaissance of socialism as a political ideal? To some extent, this might be explained by the fact that new generations are likely to forget the lessons that were learned, often the hard way, by their ancestors. However, there are also other issues at stake. In what follows, I shall highlight two institutional factors that have played a major role: state apparatuses and ownerless private foundations.

1. State Apparatuses

An important driving force of the socialist renaissance has been the constant growth of state organizations. This includes all organizations that are largely financed by the state or thanks to state violence. For example, the so-called public service media are state organizations in this sense. In contrast, the so-called social media networks are mixed forms. It is true that they have received significant state support (for their establishment and for the expansion of the internet infrastructure). But they are also financed through advertising.

Socialism is growing out of the already existing state organizations. The crucial importance of this connection has been emphasized again and again by liberal and conservative theorists. A ministry, an authority, or a state-subsidized television station do not fully belong to the competitive life of ordinary society. Special rules apply. They are funded by taxes and other compulsory contributions. They are literally living at the expense of others. This has two important consequences for the renaissance of socialism.

On the one hand, state organizations are constantly forced to justify their privileged existence and therefore have a special need for intellectual services. Good cobblers and good bakers do not need to convince their customers with verbose theories. Their services speak for themselves. But creating and maintaining a government monetary system or a government pension system requires a constant torrent of words to pacify taxpayers, retirees, and the whole gamut of money users.

On the other hand, these intellectual suppliers typically have a personal agenda. State organizations are irresistibly attractive to ideological do-gooders of all stripes. This becomes clear as soon as we realize what doing good things really means.

Every day private companies and private nonprofit organizations create new products and new services—thousands of attempts at improvements. But their achievements fit into the existing social network. They are contributions that take into account the objectives and individual sensitivities of all other people. Private organizations thrive in competition. By contrast, the ideological do-gooder does not want to care about the sensitivities of other people. But that is only possible if his own income does not depend on those others, and if his plans can also be carried out against the will of the others. And that is exactly what the state, especially the republican state, enables him to do.

From the classical liberal point of view, the republican state should not pursue its own agenda. It should not be private, but public, should only provide the framework for free social interaction. But this theory hurts itself with the horror vacui it provokes. Ownerless goods will sooner or later be homesteaded by someone. Even an abandoned “public” state will sooner or later be taken into possession. History over the past two hundred years has shown that this privatization of the public state does not necessarily have to occur by coup or conquest. It can also grow out of the bosom of the state itself. The domestic staff, the servants of the state, can make themselves its masters.

Abandoned goods hold a magical attraction for people. An abandoned state magically attracts ideological do-gooders into the civil service. They are trying to privatize public space, to transform it into an instrument for their agenda. At first there may not be a consensus among them, but at some point the best-organized and best-connected groups gain the upper hand. The sociologist Robert Michels called this process the iron law of oligarchy.

The bureaucratic oligarchy can influence personnel decisions in terms of its ideology. Their ministry becomes “their” ministry (or their school, their university, their broadcasting service, etc.). It becomes an ideological state apparatus as defined by the French Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser. Through commands and prohibitions, an ideological state apparatus can convey its ideology to the outside world.

Notice that the bureaucratic oligarchy is only a small minority. This explains why the oligarchic ideology is typically a socialist ideology. Only where there is private property is it possible for a minority to undertake anything that might displease other people. But the oligarchs of a republican state cannot assert property rights. The state does not belong to them—they just control it. In order to be able to direct it inexpensively, they must avoid inciting the majority to resist them. The easiest way to do this is through a socialist ideology. Slogans like “We govern ourselves” cover up the real power relations.

A classic case is the French ministry of education, which was appropriated by a coalition of Communists and Christian democrats after the Second World War. In those years, Professors Paul Langevin and Henri Wallon (both members of the French Communist Party) pursued a strategy of centralizing and homogenizing all secondary schools, along with a dumbing down of the entry requirements. With the help of their allies, Langevin and Wallon slowly but steadily filled all the key positions of the ministry with their people while greatly expanding it. Thus, they made “their” ministry resistant to reform. No bourgeois minister has ever dared to make it a “public” institution again. So it has remained in the Communist inheritance to this day. The supposed servants of the commonwealth have become the real rulers, against whom the elected representatives can only grind their teeth.

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EconomicPolicyJournal.com: Top Marxist Throws Socialism and Communism Under the Bus

Posted by M. C. on December 15, 2019

https://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2019/12/top-marxist-throws-socialism-and.html

Richard D. Wolff

By Robert Wenzel

A debate took place last month at the SoHo Forum.

The proposition before the debaters was “Socialism is preferable to capitalism as an economic system that promotes freedom, equality, and prosperity.”

Arguing in the affirmative was Richard D. Wolff,  the preeminent American Marxian economist. He is Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and currently a Visiting Professor in the Graduate Program in International Affairs of the New School University in New York. Opposing was Gene Epstein, the former economics editor of Barron’s Magazine.

The debate itself wasn’t that interesting. Wolff is a skilled communicator and drove the debate off in different directions he wanted it to go.

But what struck me is how much Wolff had to yield to defend his socialist/communist position. (He used the terms socialism and communism interchangeably.)

Indeed, he gave up so much that little was left of what we know of as communism/socialism.

Consider this from his opening remarks:

We have a benefit socialists do today. We have some experiments that were made in
the 20th century Russia, China, Cuba and so on and we learned from those experiments what works and what doesn’t, what should be pursued, and what should be set aside.

And then he basically throws socialism under the bus and introduces a new concept, “new socialism.”:

And so the new socialism…socialism is a refocusing of itself. It’s not interested so much in the state doing things that achieved rapid rates of economic growth. True enough but it also left too much power in the hands of too few people and that has to be addressed and dealt with which socialists have been doing.

And the new focus, a new focus of socialism, is to do something at the workplace that was never done, to go beyond capitalism in the organization of the workplace to democratize the workplace, to make where we spend most of our adult lives at work a place where democracy reigns. Where all the people who work in an enterprise participate in making the decisions of what to produce how to produce where to produce and what to do with the profits. Enter a democrat eyes workplace, that’s the new direction of socialism. That’s where socialism will be in 21st century that we are now entering. It’s a new and a different socialism, it has learned from its own earlier experiences and experiment.

And so it appears that Wolff has thrown out the entire concept of the centrally planned economy and instead is now calling for a new socialism that appears to be little more than worker-owned business co-operatives.

Epstein during the debate spotted this and stated more than once something along the lines, “Well go ahead, go launch your democratically run businesses. There is nothing stopping you in the current capitalist system.”

And if democracy is the all-knowing fountain of wisdom, the god of the machine, well then what if everyone in a jurisdiction gets together and votes for free markets?

But aside from taking apart what Wolff calls the new socialism, and there is a lot more that could be taken apart here, the focus must be on how much of old school socialism Wolff seems to have abandoned.

I mean Wolff is a very sharp cookie. He has a BA in history from Harvard, an MA in economics from Stanford University and an MA in history from Yale University and a PhD in economics from Yale University. And he is by far the best, most skilled Marxist communicator I have come across.

If he is giving up what most of us think of as socialism/communism, and in its place, he’s promoting some kind of kumbaya universal workers’ co-ops, then socialism/communism is on the run at the highest intellectual levels and this is a very good and important thing.

Long live Richard Wolff!

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