September 17, 2021 -- "Information
Clearing House -
Democracy exists if and when a community
organises its self-governance around the full
participation, on an equal basis, of all the
members of the community. Its other, autocracy,
exists when a community organizes (or allows)
its governance by an individual or subgroup of
that community, a ruler. Universal suffrage is
clearly a step toward at least formal democracy
because voters elect leaders. How real this
formal democracy is depends on the inclusivity
of the population voting and the concrete
reality of voters’ equal influence on the
election’s outcome.
Residential communities in
many parts of the modern world operate in formal
democracies. However, they usually allow
individuals with high levels of income and
wealth to use these means to influence others in
their voting, whereas individuals with low
levels of income and wealth can and usually do
wield less influence. The capitalist economic
system generates precisely that unequal
distribution of income and wealth that creates
and sustains a wide gap between formal and real
democracy in the world today. That gap in turn
reinforces capitalism.
Workplace communities are those collections
of interacting individuals comprising
enterprises: factories, offices, and stores. In
societies where capitalism prevails, enterprises
are very rarely organized democratically.
Instead, they are autocratic. Inside most
workplace communities in today’s world, an
individual or small subgroup within the
workplace community, a ruling group, governs the
workplace community. An owner, an owning family,
a partnership of owners, or a board of directors
elected by major shareholders comprises the
ruler in capitalist enterprises. Their
autocratic governance reinforces and is
reinforced by the unequal distributions of
income and wealth that they generate.
The democratic impulses that were provoked
and suppressed in turn by monarchical
autocracies occasionally matured into social
movements. These movements were sometimes able
to alter relations between the ruler and the
ruled, but usually succeeded only to a limited
degree and temporarily. Eventually, some of
these social movements gathered enough strength
to dislodge those rulers and end autocracies in
residential communities. Kingdoms, czarisms, and
oligarchies were then overthrown as a result of
this. In their places, revolutionaries often
established representative (parliamentary)
democracies.
Democratic impulses, similarly provoked and
suppressed inside workplace autocracies, have
not yet matured into social movements that are
strong and focused enough to overthrow autocracy
inside workplaces. Social movements did develop
far enough to form labour unions and labour-based
political parties, and to win greater diversity
of race and gender among workplace participants.
Unions utilized collective bargaining to alter
the terms of the relations between employers and
employees. Labour-based political parties used
suffrage to yield laws that also changed the
terms of the employer-employee relationship.
Yet labour unions and labour/socialist
parties rarely targeted—let alone
achieved—transforming workplace autocracies into
workplace democracies. Even at moments in
history when labour unions and left parties
coalesced to build impressive social power—such
as the New Deal of the 1930s in the United
States or social democracy in 20th-century
Europe—they could not or did not move to end the
social prevalence and dominance of capitalism’s
autocratic enterprises. No revolution occurred
in the sense of a transition beyond the
capitalist organization of enterprises and its
autocratic division of participants into an
employee majority and a governing employer
minority.
Autocracies inside workplaces have endured in
both private and state enterprises. In private
enterprises, the rulers have often been
individuals, partners, or corporate boards of
directors: all persons with no positions within
any state apparatus. Alternatively, rulers have
also often been state officials positioned
inside state enterprises (owned and operated by
the state) in ways parallel to the positions of
private corporate boards of directors. In such
cases, the label “socialist” applied to such
state enterprises might refer to some aspects
that differentiated them from private capitalist
corporations. But such “socialist” enterprises
were not different in their autocratic internal
organization.
Over the millennia, democratic impulses were
occasionally able to establish democratically
governed workplaces in some places and during
certain times. In them, all members of the
workplace community had equal voting power to
determine what, how, and where the enterprise
produced and what was done with the enterprise’s
product. We shall call these democratically
governed workplaces worker cooperatives (as they
sometimes named themselves).
Across the many centuries when slavery,
feudalism, and capitalism were the chief sorts
of economic systems, worker cooperatives were
marginal forms of workplace organization. The
conditions, objective and subjective, were
absent for worker cooperatives to become the
socially prevalent forms of workplace
organization. However, their scattered presences
kept alive the notion that democratized
workplaces were a possible alternative to the
socially prevalent autocratic enterprises.
Critics of autocratic workplaces often
supplemented their opposition to them with
advocacy for worker cooperatives.
Marxism’s criticisms of capitalism in the
century after Marx’s death might have led it to
advocacy for worker cooperatives. Instead,
Marxism’s anti-capitalism focused on pinpointing
which agents could accomplish a transition from
capitalism to socialism. There were two key
agents considered: first, the working class, and
second, the state. The consensus that emerged
was simple. The working class as society’s
majority would seize the state. This might
happen via voting, or it might require a
revolution. Either way, once state power was won
by an organized working class, it would use that
power to make the transition from a capitalist
to a socialist economic system. That consensus
led both socialism and Marxism eventually to an
excessive focus on the state and all it might do
to negate, overwhelm, and displace capitalism
and its baleful social effects. Government
regulations of enterprises, government ownership
and operation of enterprises, and government
control of the market: these became the various
definitions of what socialists would do once
they had state power. As history shows, that is
what most socialists and Marxists did in fact do
when they acquired state power.
What happened was another historic example of
a movement for basic social change mistaking one
step taken toward its social goal for the
achievement of that goal itself. Socialisms
including and since the 1917 Soviet revolution
increasingly defined and declared their
state-regulated and controlled workplaces to be
“socialism.” That socialism, however, included
an enduring autocratic organization of the
workplace. Developing socialism thus became the
continuous refinement and shaping of the
government’s great influence on the economy
toward approved social goals. Socialism might
even advocate giving its working classes greater
civil liberties and freedoms.
What Marxism and socialism had lost sight of
was the internal organization of workplaces.
Those stopped being seen as sites of profound
class struggles once “socialism” was proclaimed.
The need to transform the organization of
enterprises’ internal relations of production
from autocratic to democratic dropped from most
socialists’ focus.
Thus, the Soviet Union, China, Sweden, and
other socialist variants experimented with
differing kinds and degrees of state
interventions in the economy. For example,
Sweden chiefly regulated private enterprises
with autocratic internal structures. In
contrast, the Soviets took over, owned, and
operated state enterprises with autocratic
internal structures. China now experiments with
a combination of both Swedish and Soviet
socialisms to produce its “socialism with
Chinese characteristics.” Chinese socialism
operates with autocratic organizations inside
both its private and state enterprises.
If we define capitalism in terms of the
employer-employee internal structure of its
enterprises—what Marx termed their “social
relations of production”—most socialisms to date
have not yet accomplished transitions beyond
capitalism. To do that, they would have to
change the prevalent internal organization of
their enterprises to democratic worker
cooperatives. Indeed, that has now become the
task for 21st-century socialism.
No Advertising - No
Government Grants - This Is Independent Media