In Search of Economic Justice: A Review Essay by Stephen R. Shalom
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A Review Essay
Robin Hahnel
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A Review Essay
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In Search of Economic Justice
style='mso-element:field-begin'>tc "In Search of Economic
Justice"
Stephen R. Shalom
Economic Justice and Democracy: From Competition to
Cooperation
Robin Hahnel
New York: Routledge, 2005
small-caps'>
Robin
Hahnel has written an important book that
will be of real value to all libertarian socialists (a term he uses very
broadly to cover anyone who wants to replace capitalism with a system
characterized by the direct control of workers and consumers over their own
economic activities).
1'> The book is divided into four
sections. In the first section, Hahnel examines the concepts of economic
justice and economic democracy in an effort to get the Left to have a clearer
sense of what its aims ought to be. He also tries to dispel various myths that,
he argues, have debilitated movements for economic justice and democracy in the
past. Part two is a critique of capitalism, of Communism (using the term as
popularly understood: the single-party states with centrally-planned economies,
exemplified by the Soviet Union), and of social democracy, as well as an
analysis of where libertarian socialism went wrong.
1'> In part three, Hahnel examines
democratic postcapitalist visions. He analyzes market socialism and
community-based economics and finds them both lacking. He summarizes the vision
that he favors, participatory economics, describing and defending its main
features and adding two new aspects to the model that he and Michael Albert
have elaborated in many other writings.
color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>1
In the fourth and final section, Hahnel proposes a general strategy for the
Left — a way to reach the goal of a society of “equitable cooperation.” His
strategy combines working for reforms — though in a particular way — with
constructing and being part of experiments in equitable cooperation within
capitalism.
I. Economic Justice
and Economic Democracytc
"I. Economic Justice
and Economic Democracy"
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The
general argument of the chapters on
economic justice and economic democracy will be familiar to those acquainted
with Hahnel’s and Albert’s writings. Almost everyone supports the notion of
economic justice, but there are many different ways to define the term. To
conservative defenders of capitalism, economic justice means everyone should be
remunerated according to the value of the contribution of their physical and
human capital — that is, according to the value of their capital and their
personal skills. In this view, it is perfectly fair that the good-for-nothing,
ignoramus with a huge inheritance earns more than the hard-working genius who
comes from poverty. There is widespread agreement that this notion of economic
justice is morally repellant (witness the campaign commercials of billionaire
Michael Bloomberg that go to great pains to show that he “earned” rather than
inherited his fortune). An alternative definition that is often used — even by
some on the Left (most market socialists, for example) — is that people should
be remunerated according only to the value of the contribution of their
personal skills: their intelligence, their athletic ability, or what-have-you.
If your personal characteristics benefit society a great deal you deserve more
than someone whose personal characteristics benefit society only a little.
1'> But many differences in our
contribution to society are the result of genetic differences over which we
have no control. If it offends our sense of right and wrong that the
good-for-nothing heir has riches that he did nothing to earn, then it ought to
be just as problematic to compensate people on the basis of their intelligence,
which they likewise inherited and did nothing to earn.
1'> To be sure, schooling and training can
enhance the value of one’s genetic endowment, and these can involve a sacrifice
that ought to be compensated. Education takes time that could be used for
earning money or for leisure. But if society paid students — not just to cover
their tuition costs, but a stipend so that they forego no income while at
school — then there would be no moral reason to pay those with extra schooling
more than others (26).Therefore, argues Hahnel, we ought to define economic
justice as compensating people according not to their capital, nor their
skills, but to their effort or their personal sacrifice. This is not the same
as saying that everyone should receive equal income, but it in fact represents
equality at a deeper level. Some people will prefer to be compensated in a
higher standard of living, while others will prefer more leisure (including
working at a more leisurely pace). There is no reason society ought to impose a
single view of the appropriate number of work hours or the appropriate pace of
work. Everyone is thus compensated equally, in terms of the sum of income and
leisure, with the precise mix of these up to each individual (29, 37).
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1'> Of course, there are many who can’t or
don’t work at all: the young, the old, the infirm. Whichever definition of
economic justice we use, says Hahnel, we will make exceptions for these people.
One other definition of economic justice generalizes this point and proposes
that people should be compensated according to their needs. (So, for example,
those in cold climates need more
heating oil than those in more temperate climates.) Hahnel says compensation
according to need and sacrifice is his view of how society ought to be
organized, but that, strictly speaking, need is a matter of humaneness, not
economic justice. I’m not sure this distinction is compelling, but it’s
certainly the case that need alone is a problematic standard. Everyone will
agree that food, medical care, and so on, are needs that society must provide.
But once we get beyond basic
needs, then what? No one needs a
DVD player or a stereo or a seat at a basketball game. Are these all absent in
a good society? If such things do exist, how are they allocated? Do I need the
stereo more than you because I really enjoy
music, while you are only a minor enthusiast? If you really like a whole lot of
things while I am less of a fan, do you get them all and I none? Certainly the
Marxian “each according to their needs” is a just way to dispense life’s
necessities. But beyond that, for wants,
compensation according to sacrifice
indeed seems to represent economic justice.
1'> There are many other proposed
principles of economic justice. John Rawls’s difference principle
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>3
style='color:windowtext'> says that inequality is justified only if it improves
the condition of the worst off. Hahnel argues that the Rawlsian principle under
at least one plausible interpretation could be a potent argument against both
capitalism and market socialism. But more generally, Hahnel notes that Rawls
implicitly assumes that efficiency is to be valued more than equality. Yes, we
might agree that a society where one person made $55,000 and everyone else made
$50,000 is preferable to a society in which everyone made $10,000, but Rawls
requires us also to prefer a society where one person makes a billion dollars a
year and everyone else makes $10,001 a year to a society where everyone makes
$10,000. If there is a trade-off
between efficiency and equality, says Hahnel — though he doubts there is — then
people should have the right to decide democratically which they prefer, rather
than automatically assume, as Rawls’s difference principle does, that
efficiency should be determinative.
Turning
to economic democracy, Hahnel asks how we
should make decisions. Letting each individual decide things for him or herself
makes good sense when the decision affects only the individual in question. But
it makes no sense when one person’s decision affects others. Likewise, majority
rule — which weighs the opinions of everyone equally — is appropriate when
everyone is affected equally by a decision. But it is quite inappropriate when
different people are affected differently, perhaps some not at all and some a
great deal. True democracy, says Hahnel — what he calls “economic
self-management” — occurs when people have input into a decision proportional
to the degree they are affected by it. Markets tend to promote the “everyone
decides for themselves” view of democracy, ignoring the extent to which your
decision, for example, to emit some pollutant into the atmosphere might affect
others. And “even the most democratic version of central planning conceivable
would still deny people economic democracy by failing to let those who are more
affected by a decision have more say over that choice” (55).
1'> This definition of economic democracy
offers important insights, but I think Hahnel underestimates the difficulty in
operationalizing it. He writes:
Of course it will never be possible to arrange for
decisions to be made in ways that every person enjoys perfect economic
self-management, any more than it is possible to ever achieve perfect economic
justice no matter how well an economy is designed to promote justice (54).
But it seems to me that
institutions for realizing economic justice are far more easily constructed
than those for economic self-management. The participatory economics model he
describes in part III of the book provides a reasonable approximation to
economic justice; I’m not sure the same can be said about self-management, as I
will discuss below when I consider his model in more detail.
1'> Hahnel believes that the Left has been
burdened by its lack of clarity over the meaning of economic justice and
economic democracy. He argues as well that there are a variety of myths that
the Left has long held that it ought to jettison if it hopes to make progress.
It is not the case, he says, citing the work of Nobuo Okishio, that there is an
inevitable tendency for the rate of profit to fall, leading to capitalist
collapse.
3.0pt'>4 “Despite a number of attempts by
die-hard Marxists during the 1970s and 1980s to rescue the falling rate of
profit crisis theory,” notes Hahnel, “by the end of the century” the theory was
rejected by “virtually all open-minded political economists” (58). “Nor,
unfortunately,” Hahnel observes, “does capitalism nurture the seeds of its own
replacement in ways most 20th-century progressives believed it would. It does
not generate a growing, homogeneous, working class whose economic activities
lead them to see the advantages of seizing and managing the means of production
themselves” (61-62).
1'> More controversially, Hahnel argues
that the common Marxist view that there are only two classes that we need
concern ourselves with — capitalists and proletarians
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>5
style='color:windowtext'> — ignores the class of “coordinators,” the
professional/managerial class that has interests antagonistic to both
capitalists and workers. As long as the Left fails “to recognize that a class
of coordinators could rise to ruling class status in public enterprise
economies,” Hahnel rightly argues, it will be unable “to understand the non-socialist
nature of the so-called ‘socialist’ economies” (64-65). If there are only two
classes, and the capitalists are expropriated, then obviously the workers must
be in control (though perhaps it’s a “deformed” workers’ state, or some other
contortion). Lenin and Trotsky were not Stalin. But when Lenin said “We want
the socialist revolution with human nature as it is now, with human nature that
cannot dispense with subordination, control and managers” and that piece-work,
much of Taylorism, and “unquestioning submission
style='color:windowtext'> to a single will” are necessary for modern
large-scale industry; and when Trotsky declared that socialism is expressed
“not at all in the form in which individual economic enterprises are
administered,” they were reflecting the perspective and interests of the
coordinator class, not the working class.
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1'> Another Left myth, says Hahnel, is the
belief that the economy is always the decisive factor, with sexism and racism
being merely problems within the superstructure. Hahnel calls this problem economism
style='color:windowtext'>, “attributing unwarranted importance to economics in
some way or another” (65). This is a useful point. Hahnel notes that “to assume
that economic forces and class struggle are always
style='color:windowtext'> most important is unwarranted, to reduce explanations
of war, gender oppression, and racial discrimination to economic motives is
untenable, and to demand that oppressed racial and gender groups always
subordinate their struggles to the class struggle is unconscionable” (66). But
Hahnel overreaches, I think, when we says that economism “can take the form of
referring to a society as ‘capitalist’ when it is also patriarchal and racist”
(65). But societies which have these three characteristics are also
heterosexist, authoritarian, and able-ist. I’m not sure we need to say all
these things each time we refer to a particular society. So why use the term
“capitalist” as the general-purpose designation? Since all current-day
societies are racist, sexist, heterosexist, able-ist, and authoritarian, these
terms don’t distinguish between one group of countries and another, while the
term capitalist does. Despite this overstatement, Hahnel’s general argument
that we should avoid reducing everything to economics is a valuable one.
II. Capitalism and Communism
style='mso-element:field-begin'>tc "II. Capitalism and Communism"
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In
part two, Hahnel offers powerful
critiques of capitalism and Communism, as well as of the practice of social
democracy and libertarian socialism in the 20th century. Hahnel is not content
to show that many people are suffering under capitalism; he aims to establish
as well that the intrinsic workings of capitalism lead to unjust, undemocratic,
and inefficient results. Hahnel compellingly demonstrates that the capitalist
market doesn’t provide what people want, in part because it’s a system of “one
dollar, one vote” (79). When initial conditions are unequal — as is typically
the case under capitalism — even “voluntary, informed, and mutually beneficial
exchanges” taking place under competitive conditions “will still be coercive
and lead to inequitable outcomes” (81). Capitalism undermines political
democracy, not just economic democracy. Capitalism is profoundly inefficient
(defining efficiency not as the simple volume of output, but socially-valuable
production), and inherently plagued by externalities and biased price signals.
And even if capitalism worked perfectly, it would distribute the costs and
benefits of economic activity in a manner inconsistent with economic justice
(92).
1'> The first post capitalist societies
were single-party states with central planning. Much of the horror of these
societies was due to their dictatorial political systems, and it is widely
assumed that their economic systems were terrible failures as well. In fact,
says Hahnel, “after decades of outperforming
style='color:windowtext'> their Western capitalist competitors, growth rates in
the centrally-planned economies had dipped below Western growth rates by the
beginning of the 1980s,” but they weren’t in economic crisis. “After 1985 the
Soviet economy was in crisis because it was in a never-never land between an
old system and a new one that was never successfully put into place” (104-05).
1'> This doesn’t mean, however, that
central planning doesn’t have serious theoretical and practical difficulties.
Hahnel argues that central planning has a strongly antidemocratic bias with a
tendency toward inequality and inefficiency. This would be true, he says, even
if the central political leadership were elected. In even the best version of
central planning, planners send down questions, gather up information from
production units (and perhaps consumers), and then send down production orders
which must be carried out. But the preferences of producers and consumers are
not a given; they can only truly be formulated if everyone knows the impact of
their choices on others. Under central planning, however, there is no
information flow except from down to up. Moreover, to assure conformity to the
plan, central planners have to be able to hold managers accountable, but this
can’t be done if the managers are democratically controlled from below. There
is thus a tendency for the center to favor giving increased power to managers
over workers as a way to make sure that the plan gets carried out.
1'> In the real world, central planning
has further problems. There is a strong incentive for managers to lie to the
central planners. Since managers get punished for failing to meet their output
quotas, it pays for them to underreport capabilities. This either leads to
plans based on false information or else, as often happened, the central
planners have their own staff of experts to determine the accuracy of the
information from each plant, which is wasteful and encourages the development
of a police-state. Hahnel summarizes:
Combined with a more democratic political system and redone
to closer approximate a best case version, centrally planned economies would
have done better than they did. But they could never have delivered economic
self-management, and would have always been susceptible to growing inequities
and inefficiencies as the inevitable effects of differential economic power
appeared (101).
1'> Social democracy is another economic
approach, which in Europe at least was quite successful in some respects.
Hahnel notes that the “golden age of capitalism” was primarily attributable to
the influence of social democrats (109). But despite its “important
accomplishments,” social democracy also bears a major responsibility for the
failure of democratic socialism in the 20th century (109). The problem was not,
says Hahnel, that social democrats pursued reforms. Yes, reforms did make
capitalism less harmful while leaving its fundamental institutions intact. But
that is not a reason, insists Hahnel, to eschew reforms. No, the problem for
Hahnel is how the reforms were pursued. For social democrats, reforms were
everything.
It is one thing to say: We are committed to democracy above
all else. Therefore we promise that as long as a majority of the population
does not want to replace capitalism we have no intentions of trying to do so.
It is quite another thing to say: Despite our best efforts we have failed to
convince a majority of the population that capitalism is fundamentally
incompatible with economic justice and democracy. Therefore we will cease to
challenge the legitimacy of the capitalist system and confine our efforts to
reforming it (124).
1'> Sometimes when social democrats
actually had a chance to move toward radical social change, they balked. When
Mitterand and his Socialist Party took power in 1982, they carried out their policy
of nationalizing many companies. But they determined to pay the owners for the
full value of their assets, which meant that the firms had to extract great
profits from their employees. This could only be done if the managers behaved
just like the previous capitalist managers. And the ruling socialists had to
behave no differently from their predecessors. “My job,” declared Alain Gomez,
a founder of the Marxist left wing of the Socialist party, CERES, “is to get
surplus value” (120).
1'> In these sorts of situations, says
Hahnel, the compromises of the social democrats alienated those who might have
been their strongest supporters, making it relatively easy for the right wing
to roll back so much of what social democracy had accomplished over the 20th century.
And by refraining from discussing the limits of the reforms they pursued, and
by neglecting to try to build examples of equitable cooperation that could
serve as inspiration, support, and practice for those looking beyond the
reforms, social democrats undermined the long-term struggle for fundamental
social change.
Libertarian
socialists were even less successful.
(Though identifying with libertarian socialists, Hahnel considers them “by far
the worst underachievers among twentieth century anticapitalists” [137].)
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>7
style='color:windowtext'> Hahnel attributes their failure in significant part
to a refusal to engage in reform campaigns and movements.
The principal failure of libertarian socialists during the
twentieth century was their inability to understand the necessity and
importance of reform organizing. When anti-capitalist uprisings were few and
far between, and libertarian socialists proved incapable of sustaining the few
that did occur early in the twentieth century, their ineptness in reform
campaigns doomed libertarian socialists to more than a half century of decline
after their devastating defeat during the Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939 (138).
1'> Libertarian socialists well understood
the limitations of social democratic reforms, but, suggests Hahnel, this
understanding may have led them to give up on reform efforts too easily (152).
The question, of course, is how can one pursue reforms in non-revolutionary
times without falling into the trap that ensnared social democrats. This is a
question that Hahnel takes up in the final section of his book and I discuss it
below.
1'> In a postscript to this chapter, Noam
Chomsky notes that libertarian successes were not much based on “reform
organizing,” but on “creating the facts of the future within the present
society.” And their ultimate defeat, Chomsky persuasively argues, came not from
failures in their attitude toward reforms but from violence — by the Bolsheviks
in Russia and by Stalinists, fascists, and liberals in Spain. Nevertheless,
Chomsky agrees with Hahnel that among some present-day anarchists there is a
dismissive attitude toward reforms that don’t overthrow the state.
1'> Hahnel also argues that while
libertarians were right to reject the Leninist view that workers could not
achieve more than trade union consciousness without an external vanguard party,
some current-day libertarians have gone beyond this to adopt spontaneism — the
belief that when the right circumstances arise, leading to a revolutionary
crisis, workers will spontaneously establish liberatory institutions. This was
not the view, he notes, of the most successful libertarian movements. In Russia
and in Spain there was both a long tradition of communal ownership of land and
arduous efforts to build alternative institutions over many years. For example,
Hahnel, citing Sam Dolgoff, points out that in Spain,
the intense preoccupation of the Spanish anarchists with
libertarian reconstruction of society has been called an “obsession” and not
altogether without reason. At their Saragossa Congress in May, 1936 there were
lengthy resolutions on “The Establishment of Communes, Their Function and
Structure,” “Plan of Economic Organization,” “Coordination and Exchange,”
“Economic Conception of the Revolution,” “Federation of Industrial and
Agricultural Associations,” “Art, Culture and Education,” and sessions on
relations with non-libertarian individuals and groupings, crime, delinquency,
equality of sexes, and individual rights (145).
1'> “But what is even more telling,”
points out Hahnel, “is that the resolutions debated, refined, and approved” at
the Saragossa Congress, “had been worked on by every congress of the Spanish
section of the Libertarian International beginning in 1870” (145-46). This is a
record of commitment that many of us on the Left would do well to emulate.
III. Vision for the Future
style='mso-element:field-begin'>tc "III. Vision for the
Future"
Part
three deals with vision for the future.
The word “vision” seems to send chills down the spines of many Leftists,
conjuring up images of Don Quixote on LSD in place of no-nonsense Marxian
scientific socialism.
1'> Interestingly, the importance of
developing a vision of socialism is being recognized by more and more Leftists,
the latest contribution being a special Summer issue of Monthly Review.
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1'> The arguments for attending to the
question of vision are powerful. First, there is Hahnel’s telling point that
Leftists don’t have such a good track record in promising people that what
would replace capitalism would be a society worth dying for or living in. As
Hahnel and John Bellamy Foster
mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>9 in Monthly
Review among others have noted,
capitalist apologists have been able to defend the status quo by proclaiming
that there is no alternative. If we on the Left can’t answer this challenge, we
will never get people to support us.
1'> A second argument for vision is well
put by Michael A. Lebowitz in his contribution to the Monthly Review
style='color:windowtext'>issue:
There is an old saying that if you don’t know where you
want to go, then any road will take you there. [But] our experience tells us
that if you don’t know where you want to go, then no
style='font-style:normal'> road will take you there.
style='font-size:5.5pt;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>10
1'> Of course, not all considerations of
vision are equally compelling. And while it might seem churlish to use some of
the Monthly Review articles as
examples, given their welcome attention to the topic of vision, these do
illustrate some of the problems that often afflict vision discussions on the
Left.
1'> John Bellamy Foster approvingly quotes
Rosa Luxemburg on the importance of democracy (17-18) and he defines socialism
as a society controlled by the direct producers (5). Under Stalin, he says, the
Soviet Union was neither capitalist nor socialist (5, 11).
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>11
style='color:windowtext'> But then he tells us that in China Mao tried
unsuccessfully to combat the rise of a new ruling class emerging out of the
Communist Party (CCP) (8-9). But surely Mao — the most powerful member of a
dictatorial ruling party — was not a champion of democracy. He was the head of
the new ruling class that was the CCP. That his faction within the party lost
out to another faction does not make this a struggle against class rule, for
democracy, or for socialism. Likewise, Harry Magdoff and Fred Magdoff, who also
express their commitment to democracy, favorably quote Mao and Chou Enlai to
support their point about the dangers of bureaucratic rule.
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>12
style='color:windowtext'> While not doubting the sincerity of any of these
writers’ commitment to democracy, many who have been burned by the Left are
going to treat this residual enthusiasm for an absolute and murderous tyrant as
discrediting any Left pretensions of supporting democracy.
1'> Foster also speaks of “Cuban
socialism,” with its record of providing healthcare and other social welfare
benefits” (10-11), ignoring his own definition of socialism as the direct
control of the producers. Yes, Cuba’s health accomplishments are impressive,
and perhaps many of Latin America’s poor would gladly trade places with a
resident of Havana (though probably not Costa Ricans, who without a
dictatorship have a higher life expectancy than do Cubans). Of course the Left
needs to insist that Washington keep its hands off Cuba and end its economic
embargo, but to confuse the Cuban system with socialism makes whatever we say
about a better future suspect.
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> Another
contribution to the Monthly Review
issue is by Bertell Ollman, who has often quoted Oscar Wilde’s line that a map
without Utopia on it is not worth looking at.
6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>13
In this article, however, Ollman offers a critique of what he sees as the chief
characteristics of utopian thinking. “Most American radicals,” he says, carry a
significant strain of utopian thinking in their DNA” (84). “The various social
movements,” he charges,
are particularly affected by the frame of mind that sets
out ideals — a pollution-free environment, racial/gender/ethnic equality, an
end to hunger, durable peace, etc. — before making any analysis of the
encompassing capitalist system, and then offering highly charged moral
solutions that blithely ignore what would have emerged from such an analysis
(84-85).
Strikingly, however,
Ollman gives not a single citation to any modern-day individual or
organization. Though there are sprinkled references throughout his essay to
Saint Simon, Fourier, and Owen, he provides not one specific example of anyone
employing utopian thinking in the past century and a half. So his claims are
not readily assessed.
1'> A totally pollution-free environment
is indeed utopian in the pejorative sense, but we know this not because of any
careful “analysis of the encompassing capitalist system,” but from common
sense. An end to hunger seems like a perfectly achievable goal in any modern
society, but it’s hard to see why those who have mastered the three volumes of Capital
style='color:windowtext'> are any better prepared to offer solutions. Achieving
racial, gender, and ethnic equality are extremely complex undertakings, but I
am aware of few ideal solutions, simplistic or otherwise, being proffered by
any of the social movements, and Ollman cites none. As for durable peace, the
peace movement frequently calls for this or that armed force to withdraw from this
or that country, but it seems to me there is rarely any thought given beyond
the immediate war.
Marx,
says Ollman, raised six main criticisms
of utopian thinking:
(1) utopian thinking tends to produce visions of the future
that are unrealistically rigid and complete; (2) there is no basis for
determining if a vision constructed in this speculative manner is desirable . .
. ; (3) equally, there is no clear way of determining if it is possible . . . ;
(4) . . . utopian visions undermine the possibility of making a dialectical
analysis of the present as a temporal dimension in which the future already
appears as a potential; (5) . . . results in ineffective ways of arguing; and (6)
. . . leads to ineffective political strategies (89-90).
1'> “Rigid” and “complete” in Ollman’s
first point are very different things. Rigidity is indeed a bad trait, but
completeness is necessary if a vision is going to be judged for whether it is
desirable and possible — which are Ollman’s points two and three. Whatever one
thinks of Hahnel’s proposed economic model, it is laid out in enough detail so
that others can decide if they like it and if they think it is possible.
Compare that with some of the sketchy “principles that would contribute to a
better world” which Magdoff and Magdoff offer instead of any model:
1. The
elimination of human domination and exploitation of other humans . . . .
0in;margin-left:12.0pt;margin-bottom:.0001pt'>3. A minimum number of basic
rights for all people: three nutritious meals a day; a job; a decent home; good
education; health care; and protection of the disabled and aged.
0in;margin-left:12.0pt;margin-bottom:.0001pt'>4. The elimination of hierarchy
among people. At a minimum, real, vigorous affirmative action . . . .
0in;margin-left:12.0pt;margin-bottom:.0001pt'>6. Rotation of jobs between
managers and subordinates . . . .
7. Differences in pay from top to
bottom should be small . . . (54-55).
These seem extremely
vague, impossible to judge, and in fact contradictory. What does it mean to
eliminate domination and exploitation? If domination, exploitation, and
hierarchy are eliminated, why are there managers and subordinates? Why are
there pay differences? Why is it only the basic minimum of three meals, a job,
housing, education, and healthcare that are guaranteed?
1'> Ollman says there is no way to
determine whether a vision is desirable without engaging in a detailed study of
capitalism. But first of all, surely everyone doesn’t have to study everything.
And since the amount of Left effort expended on describing the ills of
capitalism vastly exceeds that devoted to vision, visionaries are by no means
operating in a vacuum. Moreover, the suffering caused by capitalism is known to
most people through their daily lives, not through in-depth social and economic
analyses. So it is rather straightforward to assess any detailed vision:
compare it to what we know about the present from our own experience.
1'> Ollman’s claim that there is no way to
determine if a utopian vision is possible seems similarly unconvincing. If a
vision is described in rich enough detail, others can assess its plausibility.
What seems much harder to do is to assess a very superficially-described vision
which we are told follows from a Marxist analysis of capitalist dynamics. Of
course, assessing any vision will call for us to draw upon insights from
psychology, sociology, economics, history, and other disciplines. (For example,
what sorts of incentives are needed to get people to work?) But these insights
do not really come from the study of capitalism.
1'> Ollman charges that “prioritizing and
emphasizing the future in the manner of utopian thinkers preempts the time and
even the interest required to make a serious study of the present” (92). But,
again, this assumes we must all study the same thing. Even if we grant that
studying the present is more important than thinking about the future, it
surely doesn’t follow that every individual ought to focus on studying
capitalism, or that, to use an economists’ formulation, the marginal benefit
from another study of capitalism to add to the tens of thousands that exist is
greater than the marginal benefit from another study of possible futures that
will add to the tiny existing literature.
color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>14
And, of course, understanding future options can also help us understand the
present.
Utopian
thinking, asserts Ollman, provides us
with “a weak and ineffective way of arguing for socialism.” Ollman charges that
there is no empirical evidence that utopian arguments move people in a leftward
direction, long-lastingly (94), but of course there’s no empirical evidence
that Marxist arguments (or anything else for that matter) do either. Says
Ollman:
For Marxists, all arguments for socialism are based on an
analysis that demonstrates that capitalism is not only responsible for our
worst social and ecological problems but contains the means for their solution
as well as the seeds of a new world that would follow (95).
But why is this
convincing? What if capitalism didn’t contain the seeds of the new world (as
Hahnel claims it doesn’t) — would that make us less desirous of socialism? What
if capitalism actually contains the seeds of several possible futures within
it? Would we then be indifferent between these?
1'> Ollman says that in the absence of an
“objective study” of “what needs to be corrected, utopians rely heavily on the
meaning of such key concepts as ‘freedom,’ ‘justice,’ and ‘rights’ to make
their case.” And such terms, he says, have been so manipulated by the
capitalist consciousness industry that they “convey little and convince less.”
For example, people understand freedom as meaning simply being left alone (95).
But I think Ollman is triply wrong here. First, I think the moral arguments are
right: I want a society without racial discrimination, for example, because
it’s moral, not because my objective study shows me that, in Ollman’s words,
“equality, in socialism, is not just a goal; it is an interest and therefore a
need” (87). Second, I suspect that arguing that racial discrimination is unjust
is more persuasive than trying to convince someone that they should support a
society without racial discrimination because “it is an interest and therefore
a need.” And, third, the capitalist consciousness industry is going to be hard
at work no matter what we do: if we don’t confront head on the manipulated
definitions of such terms (as Hahnel does, for example, with economic justice),
we concede the field.
1'> In Ollman’s view,
perhaps the most important argument against the utopian way
of arguing is that, though it addresses our
ideal future, it carries out the debate on their
style='font-style:normal'> terrain. Instead of forcing capitalists and their
“paid hirelings” to defend what is intolerable and unnecessary in present-day
society, it allows them to sit back and pick holes in whatever sounds untidy or
unlikely in our hopes for the future (96-97).
1'> But, as already noted, proponents of
the status quo don’t try to defend the intolerable; they just claim that
there’s no alternative. So if all we do is offer yet another analysis showing
that people are poor, exploited, and suffering, we have no answer to the “there
is no alternative” argument. We just depress people. On the other hand, if we
can suggest a better future, those who know the pain of capitalism firsthand
will have reason to work for change.
1'> Ollman’s final argument is that
utopianism “leads to adopting ineffective political strategies for bringing
about the desired changes.” The social change strategy of “many modern-day
utopians,” he says, is to make “appeals to the rich and powerful” (98), but he
cites no examples later than Robert Owen. “What utopians of all kinds try to
do,” says Ollman, is achieve economic and social power first and then political
power, rather than the other way around (99). This characterization, however,
while applying to a few such as John Holloway, does not apply to most of those
who theorize about future societies.
1'> But — and here’s the truly encouraging
thing — after this extended critique of utopian thinking, Ollman asks whether
“the reasons that kept Marx from integrating more of his vision of communism
into his analysis of capitalism still apply,” and he concludes that they do
not.
Projecting communism as a realistic and desirable
alternative inherent in the workings of capitalist society, providing
sufficient detail to make it comprehensible, attractive, and believable, has
become one of the more urgent tasks of socialist scholarship (101).
Whether “communism” (in
Ollman’s utopian sense) is inherent in capitalism, the urgency of discussing
the future is increasingly evident.
IV. Post-Capitalist Possibilities
style='mso-element:field-begin'>tc "IV. Post-Capitalist
Possibilities"
field-end'>
In
resisting presenting more than the basic
principles of socialism, Magdoff and Magdoff write,
If the new society is to be socialist, it won’t be
constructed along the lines of models designed by intellectuals or parties.
Socialism by its very nature must be built by the people in accord with their
wishes (54).
Hahnel provides a
powerful response to arguments of this sort: There are those who
claim that describing how better to make economic decisions
is totalitarian because it robs those who will live in post-capitalist
economies of their democratic right to manage their economy as they see fit
when the time comes. This argument is nonsense. Since when did discussing
difficult and momentous issues in advance impede deliberative democracy rather
than advance it? Only if those debating such matters attempt to impose their
formulas on future generations would this be a problem. And I know of none who
discuss democratic post-capitalist
possibilities who have any such pretentions (166).
1'> One such post-capitalist possibility
is market socialism (which, contrary to Foster [p. 16] and Magdoff and Magdoff
[p. 48], is not based on the Chinese model). There are several market socialist
models.
1'> John Roemer has proposed a “coupon
economy” where everyone is given a share of society’s assets. As Hahnel shows,
however, the benefits of such a system would be small in terms of equalizing
income (even though improving the income distribution is, in Roemer’s view, his
model’s main virtue). Additionally, Hahnel notes that under a coupon economy
there would eventually be highly unequal profit income, and work relations
would remain unchanged.
1'> Other market socialist variants
feature employee-managed firms. But here, even without property income, labor
markets will distribute labor income unfairly. Economic activities coordinated
through markets — whether under private or public enterprise market systems —
are inevitably inefficient and antisocial. And as firms respond to market
pressures, there will be strong incentives to allow class divisions to grow
between workers and their managers, and worker self-management will atrophy
(173). Hahnel quotes market-socialism advocate Tom Weisskopf admitting some of
these problems:
under market socialism there must be some people occupying
positions of key decision-making responsibility, and in all likelihood such
people will have higher incomes as well as greater power than most of the rest
of the population . . . . There would be ample scope for inequalities
associated with differential skills, talents and responsibilities (180).
1'> Another model is community-based
economics, where society is broken up into small-scale, relatively self-sufficient,
democratic communities. Hahnel identifies several serious problems with
community-based economics.
1'> Hahnel notes that, “unlike many
versions of market socialism and democratic planning, no ‘model’ of
community-based economics is a real model in the sense that it specifies rules
and procedures for how to make all the decisions that must be made in any
economy. For this reason all versions of community-based economics are really
‘visions,’ not coherent ‘models’” (182).
1'> Moreover, there is no clear
explanation for exactly how self-sufficient the communities are supposed to be.
Under Murray Bookchin’s version, no community need accept a division of labor
it opposes, meaning that those who want the least cooperation can impose their
will. This means, for example, that communities that are fortunately endowed
can reject redistribution to their less fortunate neighbors.
1'> In addition, there are no clear
mechanisms for decision-making within the communities. Several thousand people
cannot make all the necessary economic decisions in one big meeting. Nor can
decisions be left up to individual workgroups, given that their choices have
effects on others.
The
model of a post-capitalist economy that
Hahnel puts forward is called participatory economics, a model that he, along
with Michael Albert, have been developing, promoting, and refining for more
than two decades. The basic features of the model — spelled out in much greater
detail in some of their other writings — are as follows:
•
style='mso-tab-count:1'> Economic production is carried out by workers
councils. Each job is composed of tasks — as in any economy — but instead of
several desirable and empowering tasks being bundled together into one job and
several undesirable and disempowering tasks being bundled together into another
job, each job is made up of a mix of the two sorts of tasks, so that everyone
has a “balanced job complex” — of roughly the same level of desirability and
empowerment. Balanced job complexes do not mean an end to specialization. (An
artist would do a mix of desirable/empowering and undesirable/disempowering art
tasks; a scientist would do a mix of science tasks.) And though Hahnel doesn’t
make it clear in this book, it is clarified elsewhere that no assumption is
being made that everyone is intellectually equivalent; equalizing empowerment
does not mean equalizing intelligence. There are empowering jobs at many
different levels of intellect, from figuring out how to best to accomplish some
other tasks, to determining how best to satisfy consumers, to planning for the
future.15
•
style='mso-tab-count:1'> Remuneration is based on the principle of
economic justice discussed earlier: namely, remuneration according to effort,
with effort being judged by one’s workmates. For people who put in the same
number of work hours at roughly the same level of intensity, their remuneration
is the same.
•
style='mso-tab-count:1'> Production proposals are put forward by
workers’ councils, and consumption requests by nested consumption councils —
which incorporate the consumption requests of individuals, living units,
neighborhoods, regions, and the whole society. There is then an iterative
participatory planning process that tries to reconcile the production proposals
and the consumption requests, getting them more and more in sync with each
iteration. The process is helped along by Iteration Facilitation Boards, which
have no power to make decisions (unlike planners in central planning models) or
even to monopolize information, since the social costs and benefits of all the
requests and proposals from each level are available for all to see and
decisions made democratically. The process does not implicitly favor individual
consumption requests over social requests (as markets do).
1'> Various criticisms have been raised
regarding this model, and Hahnel seeks to address some of the main ones here.
He shows in some detail how the model provides the right incentives to promote
efficiency and innovation and sufficient incentives to induce people to work
and to educate or train themselves. He shows that the model provides at least
as much freedom as other systems — no system, for example, can allow everyone
to have the job they most desire (if we were all poets and baseball players,
everyone would starve). Though not offering “absolute” freedom, which is
internally contradictory whenever people’s desires to do as they please
interfere with one another, a participatory economy is consistent with the
general principle that “restrictions on the right of some individuals are
justified when they are necessary to protect more fundamental rights of others”
(246).
1'> In replying to the criticism that a
participatory economy requires too much time spent on information processing
and meetings, Hahnel first notes that the time for these activities under
capitalism is far longer than usually realized. Second, he points out that
while democratic decision making may take more “meeting time” than autocratic
decision making, democratic decisions take less time to monitor and enforce
than autocratic ones (218). He then argues that critics overstate the meeting
time required in a participatory economy. Here I think he goes too far.
Councils and federations of councils, he says, don’t hold face-to-face meetings
with others, or even representatives of others; they simply “submit their own
proposals and vote thumbs up or down on the proposals of others” (219). After a
few iterations of the plan, he says, IFBs could define several feasible plans
consistent with the already settled contours of the plan — and then people
could vote on these “without ever meeting or debating at all” (219). Hahnel is
right that deciding such things in a big meeting would be impractical and a
nightmare, but the only two choices are not one big meeting or the sort of
referendum democracy that Hahnel is proposing. Referenda without the
opportunity for debate seem to me contrary to the social deliberation that
ought to be part of democratic governance. Elsewhere, I have proposed a
mechanism of nested councils that I think can offer the opportunity of
democratic deliberation without prohibitive meeting time.
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>16
style='color:windowtext'>
Another
criticism of participatory economics
revolves around the question of how “effort” could be measured. Hahnel points
out that the alternative — calculating remuneration by output — is complicated
as well. (How, for example, do you determine the output of individuals who work
in groups?) Critics raise issues of inadequate information, gaming the system,
cliques, and other interpersonal dynamics. Hahnel argues convincingly that no
one knows better what your effort is than those who work closely with you.
There might be some cases where a small democratic workplace is less able to
deal with a loafer than is an authoritarian workplace. (For example, Hahnel
quotes a report by Paul Burrows regarding a bookstore run on participatory
economic principles, which indicates that people sometimes let grievances or
inequities persist for fear that the potential conflict with a coworker would
“create a more negative work environment than the continuation of the inequity
or grievance itself” [369-70].) But I think Hahnel gives an appropriate answer
to his critics when he notes that the participatory economics model doesn’t
insist on any one way of a workplace rating its members’ contributions. Some
workplaces could choose to have each member of the workgroup openly giving a
rating to each other member; other workplaces might set up an effort-rating
committee, maybe even composed of outsiders. Hahnel’s guess — and I agree — is
that in practice people would choose more transparent and participatory
schemes.
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> Favoritism
and even systematic discrimination can of course intrude into the rating
process, but these are dangers (and realities) under other economic systems as
well, and there’s no reason workers couldn’t have some sort of grievance procedure
to mitigate these sorts of problems. As Hahnel summarizes,
Ultimately the question is not whether people’s efforts, or
personal sacrifices in work, will be perfectly estimated, because, of course
they will not be. Instead the question is if most people will feel they are
being treated fairly most of the time — and if not, if people feel they have
reasonable opportunities for redress (229).
1'> There is one other problem with the
effort ratings, though, that I do not believe Hahnel adequately addresses. What
is to prevent a group of coworkers from all exaggerating the effort of one
another? Hahnel writes,
to prevent the possibility of “effort rating inflation” the
average effort rating a council awards its members cannot exceed the worker
council’s ratio of the social benefits of its outputs divided by the social
costs of its inputs . . . (190).
1'> But consider two workplaces. Assume
that in both workplaces the social benefits of the output and the social costs
of the inputs are the same (say, the societal average). How can we tell whether
this average output was achieved by having workers of average skill put in an
average amount of effort, by having workers of above average skill put in a
below average amount of effort, or by having workers of below average skill
putting in an above average amount of effort? For workplaces with large numbers
of workers, we can assume that the law of averages will apply; but for small
workplaces, the workforce could easily be below or above average in skill
level.
1'> Some critics worry that in a
participatory economy individual workers could fake ineptitude as a way to get
remunerated at a higher level for a given level of output. I don’t think this
sort of gaming by an individual is much of a danger, because your co-workers would
see your daily efforts (and could revise their estimates of your abilities
based on later observations). But there won’t be this same sort of first-hand
knowledge to thwart a whole workplace from inflating its effort ratings. So
while I think there are good reasons to think that this sort of cheating won’t
be common — the dynamics of the system tend to promote cooperation over
competition, there are high levels of transparency, the consequences of
antisocial behavior don’t snowball into greater power to engage in further such
behavior — I don’t think the social benefits to social cost ratio will prevent
it.17
style='color:windowtext'>
1'> A final problem with the participatory
economics model is the question of whether it actually accomplishes Hahnel’s
goal of economic self-management: that is, letting everyone have a say
proportional to the degree to which they are affected by the decision. I think
it does give people zero input where they are affected not at all and equal
input when they are affected equally — and these are important achievements of
the model — but does it really give me one-third the say in a decision relative
to someone who is affected by the decision three times as much as me? Unlike
some aspects of the model which are documented in great mathematical detail,
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>18
style='color:windowtext'> the claim that the model yields self-management seems
to me unproven.
V. Criticisms of the Model
style='mso-element:field-begin'>tc "V. Criticisms of the
Model"
Much
of Hahnel’s description and defense of
the participatory economics model will be familiar to readers of his other
books, those of Michael Albert, and those of the two of them together. Here
Hahnel offers two new aspects of the model. Both of them seem to me
problematic, even partly inconsistent with some basic principles of the rest of
the model. Stung by criticism that, in the words of one Left Green,
participatory economics is nothing but “industrialism with a human face” (195),
Hahnel is determined to show how a participatory economy would protect the
environment. He first points out, quite usefully and sensibly, that it makes no
sense to call for zero pollution or zero depletion of nonrenewable resources.
“Unless we plan to vacate planet earth, zero pollution and no resource
depletion are impossible. But fortunately, they are also unnecessary” (196).
Our goal, he says, must be sustainability, not zero impact, and he claims that
a participatory economy can attain this goal better than any alternative
system.
In each iteration in the annual planning procedure there is
an indicative price for every pollutant in every relevant region representing
the current estimate of the damage, or social cost of releasing a unit of that
pollutant into the region.
1'> The determination of what is a
pollutant and what is not is made by federations representing those who live in
the region, aided by experts. The relevant region is wherever people believe
they are affected by the pollutant in question. Workplaces, in generating their
production proposals will then include the cost of any pollutants they propose
to emit as part of the total social cost of their proposal, just as are other
costs of production.
The consumer federation for the relevant region looks at
the indicative price for a unit of every pollutant that impacts the region and
decides how many units it wishes to allow to be emitted. The federation can
decide they do not wish to permit any units of a pollutant to be emitted — in
which case no worker council operating in the region will be allowed to emit
any units of that pollutant. But, if the federation decides to allow X units of
a pollutant to be emitted in the region, then the regional federation is
‘credited’ with X times the indicative price for that pollutant (199).
1'> There seem to me two things wrong with
this procedure. First, by giving veto power to a region it will lead to a more
extreme version of the NIMBY (not in my backyard) problem that plagues
capitalism. Say we need a vaccine to save millions of lives, but the factory
that produces the vaccine pollutes. Where do we locate the factory? The region
where the pollution would cause the least harm says we do not want any
pollution, hence we veto construction of the factory in our region. Presumably,
the society would not let itself just die out; some region would step up and be
socially responsible and volunteer to have the factory built within its
borders. But this is nothing more than a giant game of chicken — who’s going to
concede first — with the most socially irresponsible regions benefiting most.
1'> A key principle of a participatory
economy is supposed to be that people have input into a decision in proportion
to how much they are affected. But allowing veto power is a very different
decision-making rule. And why allow veto power for environmental issues but not
for other equally important issues? I suspect Hahnel has allowed the complaints
of environmentalists to cause him to elevate environmental protection to the
most important social concern, trumping all others. Perhaps it is the most
important, but that needs to be determined by some democratic procedure.
1'> Moreover, the definition of “an
environmental issue” is not well-defined. Is it only the emission of physical
pollutants? What about noise pollution? What about maintaining open spaces or
picturesque vistas? Surely a participatory economy will want to have at least
as broad an understanding of the term “environmental” as do environmental
impact statements (EIS) in the United States today. Here, for example is what
is considered in the EIS for construction on the site of the former World Trade
Center (www.renewnyc.com/content/pdfs/eis/04-12-2004/vol1/_iAbstractOLD.pdf):
potential impacts to land use and public policy, urban
design and visual resources, historic resources, open space, shadows, community
facilities, socioeconomic conditions, neighborhood character, hazardous
materials, infrastructure/safety/security, traffic and parking, transit and
pedestrians, air quality, noise, coastal zone, floodplain, natural resources,
electromagnetic fields, environmental justice, and construction.
All these impacts, of
course, are worthy of serious consideration. But would we really want to give
veto power to those who are affected by any of these considerations?
1'> Even without the veto, Hahnel’s
environmental procedure seems inconsistent with his general decision-making
rule. The problem is that he defines the relevant region as that geographic
area where residents believe they are affected by a pollutant, without taking
into account the degree to which
people are affected. Whenever some are affected a great deal and others very
little (though not zero), Hahnel’s procedure yields a bizarre result. Say there
is a proposal to build some facility in a town which causes huge amounts of
pollution for the residents of the town and trivial, but nonzero, pollution
throughout the county. The relevant region under Hahnel’s definition is the
county. The people in the county want the facility built and they agree to
allow X units of the pollutant to be emitted, for which they will be
compensated. County residents then receive compensation for the pollution, but
the town residents, who are harmed much more by the pollution, receive the same
compensation as those who are harmed much less.
1'> I think the way to make this work is
to use nested regions. That is, each geographic area where the environmental
impact is different is considered a separately-impacted region. And each region
then has its own indicative price that must be compensated. So in the example
above, the indicative price for the pollution caused by the facility is one
thing for its impact on the town’s residents and a far lesser price for its
impact on the county outside the town. The facility will then be “charged” for
the indicative price for the pollution it is causing in the town plus the
indicative price for the (lesser amount of) pollution it is causing in the
county beyond the town.
1'> Some will object that even eliminating
the veto and using nested regions, Hahnel’s procedure presumes that we can
actually calculate indicative prices that reflect the dollar value of the harm
pollution causes. This objection actually has two parts: (a) that environmental
harm cannot be compensated for, that unbalanced ecosystems are beyond
compensation; and (b) that most environmental harm does not lend itself to
quantitative assessment, as opposed to qualitative statement. I think, however,
that Hahnel is quite right that zero harm is not a standard real human beings
in real societies can adopt. And while not all environmental impacts can be
measured quantitatively, we are always implicitly attaching cost assessments to
our qualitative judgments (would we forego $1 million in lost output to
maintain, say, a pristine wilderness? what about $1 billion or $100 billion? —
which of course translates to that many more hospitals and schools, etc.). The
best we can do is strive to make decisions about what we do and what we impact
as democratically as possible, informed by as much information as possible.
Hahnel’s
second addition to the participatory
economics model deals with the international economy. As he poses the question:
Is it possible for a country practicing participatory
economics to function in a global economy that is still largely capitalist? Is
it possible for a country seeking to practice participatory economics to
benefit from international economic relationships without betraying its core
principles? (208).
His answer is that:
As long as a participatory economy is interacting with a
wealthier economy, its principles of justice do not prevent it from trying to
strike the best bargain it can get. A moral problem only arises when a
participatory economy interacts with a poorer economy. But a participatory
economy can always agree to terms of trade that would give a poorer trading
partner more than 50% of the efficiency gain from specialization and trade. . .
. As long as efficiency gains from international economic relations are shared
according to this “greater than 50% rule,” both the participatory economy and its
poorer international partners will benefit, but the benefits will be shared in
a way so the gap between the wealthier participatory economy and its poorer
international partners is diminished by their interaction (208).
style='font-size:5.5pt;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>19
Hahnel notes that it is
no argument against applying his 50 percent rule to point out that the citizens
of the poorer economy have not committed themselves to participatory economics
or its distributive principles; after all, he says, it is wrong to torture a
prisoner of war even if that prisoner has not agreed to refrain from torturing
me (209). But I think his 50 percent rule suffers from another problem: it is
based on an assessment of the relative wealth of another economy as a whole,
rather than of the specific individuals who stand to gain or lose from the
transaction. That is, should a participatory economy in a rich society apply
the 50 percent rule when buying coffee or shirts from a much poorer country?
The rule says yes, but what if the entire benefit from the transaction goes to
the rich capitalist who owns the coffee plantation or the garment factory, with
the impoverished workers getting nothing? Or what about selling goods to a firm
in a rich country, where in fact the beneficiaries are the residents of an
impoverished neighborhood? In dealing with a trading partner whose income
distribution is moderately egalitarian, we can be fairly confident in assessing
whether the beneficiaries of a trade are better off than us or not, but in
operating within a capitalist world this won’t generally be the case. And
because most economies do not provide outsiders (or most insiders, for that
matter) with sufficient information to judge the actual impact of a trade, it
is hard to see how the 50 percent rule could be applied in practice.
1'> Perhaps a partial solution is to
establish organizations in the participatory economy similar to those set up by
“fair trade” groups and labor unions in rich countries that investigate labor
conditions abroad and issue advisories to consumers. These organizations would
determine (as best they could, given the limited information) the actual
beneficiaries in international transactions and provide reports to those
responsible for importing or exporting. But it has to be acknowledged that
these determinations — and hence the application of the 50 percent rule — would
not be easy.
1'> One other problem with the 50 percent
rule is that it would allow a participatory economy to allocate 51percent of
the benefit of a trade to an economy that was far, far poorer. This would mean
that the income gap between the two countries would narrow, but would not be
eliminated for centuries. Presumably, the greater the gap, the higher the
percentage of the benefit ought to accrue to the poorer party.
1'> Hahnel proposes the 50 percent rule
simply to show that a participatory economy can participate in the global
economy without violating its core principles. He is putting forward a rule
that tells us which trades are permissible, not which trades among the many
permissible trades we ought to choose. There is no reason that political
criteria cannot play a role here — favor trade with more rather than less
egalitarian or participatory systems, and be averse to trade with more rather
than less exploitative or oppressive systems — just as current U.S. law (in a
much more modest way) may prohibit imports made by child or prison labor.
1'> In his discussion of international
economic interactions, Hahnel refers not only to trade, but to interest rates
and profit rates generated abroad (which should also be subject, he says, to
the 50 percent rule). Many Leftists will immediately dismiss loaning money to
or investing money in poor countries as activities that an equitable economy
should never engage in. Unfortunately, Hahnel doesn’t offer a rationale for
their legitimacy. The issue is worth considering.
1'> Certainly a rich country that has
transformed to a participatory economy would not eschew giving foreign aid to
poor countries. We of course want rich capitalist countries to give as much of
their aid as possible in the form of grants, not loans, so as to minimize the
dangers of the debt trap, to reduce the continuing control the rich nation
maintains over the poor one, and in general because a $1 billion grant is worth
far more than a $1 billion loan. In the real world of finite resources, for
every dollar in grants that a donor nation can afford, it is likely to be able
to afford many times as many dollars in loans. (Ignoring issues of collateral
and default, a loan at less than the market rate of interest is a grant — but
not of the face value of the loan, but of the difference between the market
interest rate and the subsidized interest rate. So a loan of $1 billion at 1
percent interest a year, when the prevailing market interest rate is 3 percent
is equivalent to a grant of 2 percent of a billion, or $20 million per year.)
So there’s probably no reason why a rich participatory economy could not give
some of its aid in the form of subsidized loans (especially if it also asks for
less collateral than a market loan would demand) without violating any of its
principles. Such loans might readily be offered in the circumstance where a
poor country needs financial assistance to carry out some project or experiment
in equitable economic relations or democracy. But it seems much harder to
justify a loan to support some activity where we know the benefits will be
distributed very unequally within the poor country. In a case where people were
starving, but we knew that our aid — whether in the form of loans or grants or
even bags of rice — would end up disproportionately, though not entirely, in
the hands of local elites, we still might do it if the situation were dire
enough, though we’d surely try to figure out which method would most benefit
those at the bottom.
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> In
all the examples discussed thus far, the 50 percent rule doesn’t really apply,
because the rich country is seeking no benefit at all. What about a case where
there are gains to be had by both countries? Say our participatory economy, P,
has a great need for a particular rare plant that grows only in country X. (The
plant is needed for environment-enhancing projects that the participatory
economy engages in to a much greater extent than do other countries.) Assume
that X has a capitalist economy.
mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>20 Country X says
we don’t have the capital or the technology to produce this plant, but you can
either lend us the money to establish a company to do so or invest and set up
your own company, hiring local labor. Under the first option, it might be
possible for P to require, as a condition of its loan, that the company be
organized on participatory economic principles, or at least on relatively
egalitarian principles. (In the capitalist world, banks and other lenders
impose all sorts of requirements on borrowers, often highly inegalitarian in
their impact.) Under the second option, P could set up a participatory economic
company, which of course would have to interact with the non-participatory
economic units within X, but at least internally the company would reflect the
economics of equitable cooperation. But that means that the company is not
“owned” by P or citizens of P (as with traditional direct investment), but by
the workforce of the company, mostly citizens of X. And what happens when the
workforce votes to fire their workmates from P, jack up the “price” of the
plant, and so on. The company workforce is not part of the same political or
economic system as the residents of P and so many of the dynamics that
encourage people to see their shared interests in different workplaces within P
are unlikely to be operating in this case. In short, it seems hard to imagine
the foreign investment option being able to work in a manner consistent with
participatory economic principles.
1'> The question of how to relate to the
international economy has a more immediate relevance: by analogy, it raises the
question of how an experimental institution built on participatory economic
principles but existing within a larger capitalist society ought to relate to
other economic units in the society. Hahnel’s notes that his 50 percent rule
can be applied in economic dealings among producer and consumer cooperatives
(358), but the rule can be applied more generally to serve as a guideline for
how a participatory institution should relate to the non-participatory outside
economy.
VI. How to Get There
style='mso-element:field-begin'>tc "VI. How to Get There"
style='mso-element:field-end'>
A
question often asked of those who put
forward visions and models for the future is whether there is a way to get
there and if so, how. Sometimes this question is used simply to stifle any
theorizing about the future at all, but it is an important question, one that
Hahnel takes up in the final section of his book.
1'> Basically, Hahnel offers a three part
answer: (1) We need to work on reform campaigns and in reform movements, both
because they make life better and because victories encourage people to ask for
more. (2) We need to pursue reforms in the right way, continually pointing out
the limits of reform campaigns and movements, both in order to avoid raising false
expectations and to persuade people to look beyond a patched-up capitalism. (3)
We need to get involved in real experiments in equitable cooperation — and to
do so now — mindful of their
limits within capitalism, so that we can continually refine our visions of the
future based on actual practice, as well as to give more and more people the
benefits of experiencing different kinds of social relations.
1'> Hahnel rejects the idea that there are
such things as “nonreformist reforms” that are qualitatively different from and
better than “reformist reforms.” Every reform, if successful, “will make
capitalism less harmful to some extent” (154-55). This might seem to suggest
that Hahnel thinks all reforms are equally valuable to pursue, as long as they
are pursued in the right way. But in fact, he does believe that some reforms
lend themselves much better than others to long-term social change. For
example, he notes that
Beside judging if a particular reform is “winnable,” those
who work on financial reforms must judge how the reform will affect efficiency
and stability in the real economy, must ask if it will decrease rather than
further increase income and wealth inequality, must consider whether it will
give ordinary people more or less control over their economic destinies, and
most importantly, must evaluate if winning the reform will strengthen the broad
movement struggling to replace the economics of competition and greed with the
economics of equitable cooperation (263).
1'> In his chapter on “Economic Reform
Campaigns,” Hahnel provides an extremely useful survey of current economic
reform campaigns (mostly in the United States), for each one assessing its
value, discussing the best way to frame arguments on its behalf, and pointing
out its limitations. He discusses financial reforms, full employment
macropolicies, industrial policy, wage-led growth, rescuing welfare, tax
reform, living-wage campaigns, fighting privatization, single-payer healthcare,
rebuilding public education, community development initiatives, and antisprawl
initiatives. Just a few sample highlights from his rich discussion are possible
here.
1'> He thinks we should campaign for
full-employment macropolicies for the same reason capitalists oppose them — “it
diminishes their bargaining power.” But at the same time we should never tire
of pointing out that capitalism will never be able to assure that every citizen
has a socially useful job with fair compensation, and that a just economy could
do so (265-66). Industrial policy reforms have great danger — they can be
hijacked by corporations and make the economy less democratic (as occurred in
France, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan); but when unions and cooperatives and
grassroots organizations are involved in the process, industrial policy can
prove extremely valuable. Hahnel concludes that “industrial policy reform work
within capitalism is recommended only for movements fighting for equitable
cooperation that are already very strong” (269).
1'> Leftists have long campaigned for
progressive taxes with the argument that the rich should pay more because they
can afford more. While not rejecting this argument, Hahnel notes that a
stronger argument is that, because people should be remunerated based on
effort, the rich on average deserve less of what they earn than do those with
lower incomes (277).
1'> Critics of increasing wages through
living wage campaigns often argue that higher wages mean higher unemployment
for society. Hahnel presents theoretical and empirical evidence to refute this
claim. In any particular local area, on the other hand, the criticism has more
force, but, says Hahnel, “the lessons those working on living wage campaigns
need to draw from this is not to give up, but to expand the living wage into
adjoining jurisdictions, and to press for restrictions on the right of
businesses to pick up and move” (279).
1'> “In all reform campaigns,” notes
Hahnel, “there is always tension between those who want to hold out for more
far reaching, significant changes and those who preach the practical necessity
of a more incrementalist approach.” The struggle for healthcare reform in the
United States “is a rare case where the incremental approach is actually less
practical than fighting for
significant reform because there is simply no way to extend adequate coverage
to all and control escalating costs through the private insurance industry”
(283). In this case, “settling for anything less than universal, single-payer
coverage is not only immoral, it is impractical as well” (284).
1'> Hahnel summarizes his advice regarding
reform campaigns this way:
While a necessary first step, the reforms outlined in this
chapter will suffer the same fate as the best efforts of twentieth century reformers
unless twenty-first century activists never tire of explaining what economic
justice and democracy mean, unless we take every opportunity to explain why
private enterprise and markets are fundamentally incompatible with equitable
cooperation, and unless reforms are accompanied by expanding experiments in
equitable cooperation and new safeguards within progressive economic movements
(291).
1'> Turning from specific reform campaigns
to economic reform movements, Hahnel assesses the potential and pitfalls of
working in the labor movement, the anticorporate movement, the environmental
movement, the consumer movement, the poor people’s movement, and the
antiglobalization movement. In each case he tries to show “how people can
participate in ways that are not only effective at winning important reforms
but also build momentum for a fuller program of equitable cooperation” (295).
Again, there is only room here to discuss a few of Hahnel’s interesting
observations.
1'> In his consideration of the
environmental movement, Hahnel analyzes two approaches to dealing with the
problem of pollution — pollution taxes and tradable pollution permits, the
latter having been endorsed in some cases by the Environmental Defense Fund — and
shows why the tax approach is far preferable. (However, it should be noted that
Hahnel seems to only be considering policies on a national level, not the
international level, where the absence of a taxing authority may make tradable
emission rights more compelling.
mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>21) Hahnel also
argues that it is critical for the environmental movement to build powerful
political coalitions and that it is just as important for the movement to come
up with policies that “fully compensate different categories of ordinary
people” who might be harmed by environmental regulations “as it is . . . to
come up with policies that stop environmental destruction” (315).
For
the antiglobalization movement, the key
challenge, says Hahnel, is how to avoid dividing the movement along north-south
lines over the issues of labor and environmental standards.
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>22
style='color:windowtext'> Hahnel writes:
I strongly suspect there are other reforms that would
better preserve the living standards of first world workers than fighting to
achieve some level of universal labor standards, especially if labor standards
are achieved only in exchange for further trade and capital liberalization. And
if pressing for labor standards in trade treaties threatens to drive a wedge
between organizations representing first and Third World workers in the
anti-globalization movement while other reforms do not, it is almost surely a
counterproductive strategy for slowing the race to the bottom effect. In sum,
the AFL-CIO would do well to take their cue from organizations representing
Third World workers regarding how the AFL-CIO can best help them improve their
bargaining power, because the members of the AFL-CIO will be best served by
whatever helps Third World workers most (335).
1'> In his analysis of the labor movement,
Hahnel persuasively argues that if this movement is to help prepare people for
thinking beyond capitalism, then labor unions must be democratic. It’s a
disgrace, says Hahnel, that unions are often even less democratic than
mainstream politics. One problem is corruption — which radicals need to build
reform movements to fight, not bringing the government in — but another is
electoral rules that heavily tilt elections toward incumbents.
1'> Hahnel asserts that unfortunately
“most unions have fallen into the ideological trap of justifying wage demands
on the basis of the market value of their member’s contributions” rather than
by arguing that economic justice requires remuneration based on effort. “This
approach fails to challenge the legitimacy of capitalist profits and CEO super
salaries, and creates obstacles to solidarity among workers in different
industries and occupations.” Hahnel asks what the best way is for a union to
convince its members they are being unfairly compensated. Is it to “[t]ell them
they are being paid less than their marginal revenue product” or that they are
being paid less than their sacrifices entitle them to? (299) The latter, says
Hahnel, is not just a more sound ethical argument, but more convincing as well.
But I think the task for radicals in unions is tougher than Hahnel indicates.
Of course an argument in terms of marginal revenue product has little appeal.
But there is another argument that has lots of intuitive appeal, with the same
dangerous political consequences: telling union members that they are not being
paid more than others with fewer skills. (I recall a flyer put out by my
college faculty union comparing our salaries to those of public school teachers
in nearby communities.) I agree that we need to make the case for remuneration
based on effort, but it won’t be as easy as Hahnel suggests.
1'> Hahnel says that a good step in the
right direction would be for unions themselves to pay wages based on the
remuneration-for-effort principle. “The average wage of elected union leaders
and staff members should be the same as the average wage of those they
represent.” This makes perfect sense if workers earn roughly the same wage. But
in many workplaces wages are a function of seniority. One can discuss whether
there is any justification for this — it might for example reflect the
differential need of people of different ages, for which seniority is a proxy —
and we can fight for future wage increases to tend to bring the top and bottom
closer together rather than further apart, but in any event the practice is
currently widespread. Do we want workers with above-average experience to have
to take a pay cut to work for the union? (And, correspondingly, that less
experienced workers have a financial incentive to hold on to union office?)
Presumably, our union work won’t get us very far demanding that those earning
above average wages should have their incomes cut.
style='font-size:6.0pt;color:windowtext;mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>23
style='color:windowtext'>
1'> Work in unions has always been
difficult for radicals. Some have sought positions of union leadership, which
usually requires all sorts of compromises with radical principles. Others have
remained in the rank-and-file, and joined one revolutionary sect or another for
psychological and social support. Hahnel rejects both these options, though he
doesn’t really give an argument against the second approach other than the
implicit argument that he disagrees with the political views of the existing
sects. But if we replaced “revolutionary sect” with “a caucus or organization
committed to equitable cooperation, economic justice, and democracy,” I don’t see
what the problem would be.
mso-text-raise:3.0pt'>24
1'> Hahnel offers another option:
activists who want to serve as union officials should commit to “equitable
living communities” as a way to avoid the temptations of corruption and to
assure coworkers of their political integrity. In an endnote he explains that
“Equitable living ‘communities’ need not be geographically defined or encompass
all aspects of a person’s life. While many experiments reviewed in [the next
chapter] have taken this form, more flexible alternatives are also discussed”
(402n4). But his brief discussion in the next chapter (372-74) makes clear that
instances of such non-geographic, non all-encompassing equitable cooperation do
not yet exist anywhere and the details of any such arrangement have not been
worked out. One possibility, he says, is that people could exchange their
entire annual incomes for incomes based on effort (taking account, he says, of
tax obligations and expenses for dependents, medical care, and retirement).
Such arrangements seem to me admirable, like Peter Singer’s proposal that
people in rich countries give away 10 percent of their income, but, also like
Singer’s idea, this is not persuasive as a strategy for social change. Hahnel
admits this would require a level of trust far beyond what his participatory
economics model requires and in that respect instead of encouraging people to
take equitable cooperation models seriously might have precisely the opposite
effect. Hahnel says “We need to create more ways for people to make partial commitments
to live according to the principles of equitable cooperation short of joining
full scale intentional communities or working in participatory economics
collectives” (372). I think he’s right, but this doesn’t strike me as one of
those ways.
1'> Hahnel is persuasive, however, in
arguing that the Left needs to promote experiments in equitable cooperation,
not as “the” road to social change, but as a part of the process. Hahnel
surveys a large number of such experiments, ranging from important efforts in Kerala,
India, involving millions of people, to workplaces of half a dozen people.
Included in his discussion are local currency systems, worker participation,
worker ownership, worker takeovers in Argentina, consumer cooperatives,
participatory budgeting, and collectives in the United States and Canada that
are explicitly organized according to the principles of participatory
economics. All such experiments have their limits given that they take place in
an inhospitable capitalist environment. But they also have real value:
They provide palpable evidence that a better world is
possible. They are an invaluable testing ground for ideas about how to achieve
equitable cooperation. Living experiments in equitable cooperation begin the
process of establishing new norms and expectations among broad segments of the
population beyond the core of anti-capitalist activists. And experiments in
equitable cooperation provide opportunities for activists in anti-capitalist
reform campaigns suffering from burn out to rejuvenate themselves instead of
drifting back into personal lives in the capitalist mainstream (341).
1'> Hahnel doesn’t avoid hard-headed
analysis of different sorts of experiments. He examines local currency systems,
for example, and finds they are useful in some respects, but “counterproductive
when participants deceive themselves about how much can be accomplished and see
nothing wrong with allowing the laws of supply and demand to determine the
terms of their labor exchanges” (345). Worker-owned firms, he finds, are
constrained in many ways by capitalist dynamics. Incrementally increasing the
number of such firms “is not a
feasible transition strategy” to the economics of equitable cooperation, but it
can be an important part of such a
strategy. Participatory budgeting, as pioneered in Porto Alegre, Brazil, had
some potential but “has been reduced to a way to co-opt citizens into deciding
how to distribute a budgetary shortfall they never agreed to in the first
place, and many Workers Party activists have started calling it ‘participatory
austerity’” (363).
1'> Hahnel summarizes his view of
experiments in equitable cooperation:
there is little point in either pretending experiments are
flawless or vilifying those struggling to create something better. What is
needed is to nurture and improve those that already exist, to build new ones
that can reach out to people who continue to live in their traditional
communities, and eventually to link experiments in cooperation together to form
a visible alternative to capitalism in its midst (374).
1'> Such experiments are, for Hahnel, a
crucial part of what the Left ought to be doing:
Since both reform work and building alternatives within
capitalism are necessary, neither is inherently more crucial or strategic than
the other. Neither is more ‘revolutionary’ or ‘reformist’ than the other (380).
1'> The other thing the Left ought to be
doing, of course, is giving serious, non-dogmatic thought to both what it is we
want and how we can best get there. Hahnel certainly doesn’t have all the
answers, but there is no doubt that his book is a major contribution in this
regard and should be a taking off point for subsequent analysis.
Notes
1. See, for example, Albert and Hahnel, Looking Forward
style='font-style:normal'>, Boston: South End Press, 1991; Albert and Hahnel, The
Political Economy of Participatory Economics,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991; Albert, Parecon: Life
After Capitalism, London: Verso, 2003; and,
in these pages, Justin Podur, “Participatory Economics: An Interview with
Michael Albert,” New Politics,
no. 35, Summer 2003.
2. Thus, in Hahnel’s view, a low income is not a
“punishment,” but simply an indication that someone’s personal preference for
intensity of work happens to be below the societal average (28) (though at one
point, Hahnel slips and says that in his preferred economy there are “material
penalties for below-average efforts” [226] which carries the implication of
wrong-doing).
3. See John Rawls, A Theory of Justice
style='font-style:normal'>, Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University
Press, 1971.
4. Hahnel gives a simple explanation of Okishio’s result in
his The ABC’s of Political Economy: A Modern Approach
style='font-style:normal'>, London: Pluto Press, 2002, especially 123-25.
5. Marxists of course make reference to the petite
bourgeoisie, but in the standard Marxist view this group was destined to
collapse into the proletariat.
6. Citations from Maurice Brinton, The Bolsheviks and
Workers’ Control, 1917-1921, London:
Solidarity, 1970, 24 (Lenin, State and Revolution
style='font-style:normal'>), 40-41 (Lenin, The Immediate Tasks of the
Proletariat Government), 66 (Trotsky, Terrorism
and Communism). Hahnel notes, “Stalin was
by no means the only communist leader to preach the virtues of ‘one man
management.’ Lenin and Trotsky campaigned against worker self-management in
Soviet enterprises and proclaimed the advantages of ‘one man management’ long
before Stalin. And Mao in China and Che Guevara in Cuba were no less adamant in
their support for ‘one man management’ as opposed to worker councils” (391n16).
7. Though counting himself a libertarian socialist, Hahnel
prefers to call his vision “equitable cooperation” rather than “socialism.”
Michael Albert made an argument to dispense with using the term socialism for
our goal, given its sorry history, in “Is Socialism Still on The Agenda?” New
Politics, no. 30, Winter 2001. I lean in
favor of using the term socialism for what I want precisely because I don’t
want to use the term socialist to apply to the grotesque societies that have
called themselves socialist.
8. Volume 57, no. 3, July-August 2005. Hahnel notes that Monthly
Review’s former editor, Paul Sweezy, wrote
to him back in the 1970s turning down a submission, but indicating that while
he favored scientific socialism to Hahnel’s utopian socialism, he considered it
an open question which would prove more insightful and wished Hahnel the best
of luck in his work (390n3).
9. “Renewing Socialism,” Monthly Review
style='font-style:normal'>, July-August 2005, p. 1.
10. “The Knowledge of a Better World,” Monthly Review
style='font-style:normal'>, July-August 2005, 62.
11. For Foster, it wasn’t until the 1930s that the Soviet
Union ceased being “in any meaningful sense socialist” (11). But, of course, it
was as early as 1918 that Lenin wrote “our task is to study the state
capitalism of the Germans, to spare no effort
normal'>in copying it” and not “shrink from adopting dictatorial
style='font-style:normal'>methods to hasten the copying of it,” and in practice
the Bolsheviks dismantled most of the incipient socialist structures — workers’
councils, collectives, and so on — by 1921 (see Brinton, The
Bolsheviks and Workers’ Control [quote p.
42]).
12. “Approaching Socialism,” Monthly Review
style='font-style:normal'>, July-August 2005, 45.
13. Bertell Ollman, “The Utopian Vision of the Future (Then
and Now): A Marxist Critique,” Monthly Review
normal'>, July-August 2005, 78.
14. As a totally unscientific, but nonetheless suggestive
experiment, when the words “Marxism” and “capitalism” are put into the
Amazon.com search engine, you get 23,524 titles; when “Marxism” and “utopia”
are entered, you get 21. One might also note that Hahnel, who has been among
the most vigorous Left voices pushing for attention to vision, has also
produced major analyses and critiques of capitalism, including Quiet
Revolution in Welfare Economics, Princeton
University Press, 1990 (with Michael Albert), The ABC’s of Political
Economy, and Panic Rules!
Everything You Need to Know About the Global Economy
normal'>, Cambridge, MA: South End Press, 1999. The same can be said of many
others who have written on vision, including Michael Albert, Murray Bookchin,
David Korten, John Roemer, and Tom Weisskopf, among others.
15. See Albert, Parecon: Life After Capitalism
style='font-style:normal'>, 107.
16. See “Parpolity: Political Vision for A Good Society,”
revised November, 2005, www.zmag.org/shalompol.htm.
17. This being said, however, it should be noted that even if
no mechanism were devised to deal with this problem, it would hardly lead to
the demise of a participatory economic system. In the United States, for
example, some 12-14 percent of all tax monies due are not paid, even after
enforcement measures, without leading to social collapse (see Internal Revenue
Service, “Understanding the Tax Gap,” FS-2005-14, March 2005,
www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=137246,00.html).
18. Especially in Albert and Hahnel, The Political Economy
of Participatory Economics.
19. Hahnel discusses efficiency gains from international
trade — and why trade usually aggravates global inequality — in chapter 8 of The
ABCs of Political Economy and appendix B of
Panic Rules!
20. In a later chapter on “Experiments in Equitable
Cooperation,” in which Hahnel assesses the lessons of the Mondragon
cooperatives in Spain, he urges “stubborn adherence” to the principle that
cooperatives should lend only to members or to other cooperatives (355), which
suggests that Hahnel may approve only of international loans to other
participatory economies. But his analogy about torturing prisoners suggests the
opposite: that by applying his 50 percent rule a participatory economy can loan
to or invest in a non-participatory economy without violating its principles.
21. See Tom Athanasiou and Paul Baer, Dead Heat: Global
Justice and Global Warming, New York: Seven
Stories Press, 2002.
22. Hahnel has addressed some of these matters in the pages
of New Politics (“Globalization: Beyond
Reaction, Thinking Ahead,” no. 29, Summer 2000; “Imperialism, Human Rights and
Protectionism,” no. 30, Winter 2001) and in his book Panic Rules!
23. And, of course, even the worst-paid first world workers
make above-average wages on a global scale.
24. One problem with many of the existing sects is that they
employ “democratic centralism,” a principle that says once the party or
organization has reached a democratic decision, all members are bound to accept
and follow it. In practice, in many such organizations the decisions are not
reached democratically, but even when they are, democratic centralism will
often be experienced negatively by those who are not members of the party or
organization. It is extremely alienating to have a discussion with someone only
to discover that no matter how persuasive your arguments, no matter how much
effort you make to find some middle ground, your interlocutor is bound by
democratic centralism to maintaining the party line.
4.0pt'>Stephen R.
Shalom is a member of the
style='font-style:normal'>New Politics editorial board and editor of
style='font-style:normal'>Socialist Visions (South End Press, 1983).