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robbo203
2nd November 2009, 09:20
Another interesting article in this month's Socialist Standard by a Russian critic of the old regime .....

http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/nov09/page12.html

The Myth of Soviet "Socialism"

An analysis from Russia makes many of the points we do.

On all sides we hear it said that "after 1917 a Marxist utopia was realised in our country," that we had a "communist regime" or "socialist state," that "we were building socialism and communism," and so on. This makes it essential for us to grasp the true essence of Marxism, to understand what socialism and communism are.

From a scientific – in particular, Marxist – point of view, communism (or socialism, as Marx and Engels rarely distinguished between these two concepts) means an absolutely free society of universal equality and abundance, in which all people work – more precisely, seek self-realisation – voluntarily, in accordance with their abilities and inclinations, and receives goods in accordance with their needs.

This is the second stage, the phase of socialism or communism (or communism, strictly speaking). The first stage (or, more rarely, socialism in the narrow sense) means almost the same, with the sole difference that there is still some connection between how much labour an able-bodied person has given society and the quantity of goods that he or she receives.

But for Marx and Engels, as a rule, the words "socialism" and "communism" were synonyms.

And so, socialism or communism is the complete liberation of each person and all humanity from any form of exploitation and oppression! The government of people is replaced by the administration of things. The absence of any state power over people!

Socialism in a single country?
Marx and Engels categorically denied the possibility of establishing socialism or communism in a single country or in a few countries. They even denied the possibility of the sustained victory or success of a workers’ revolution in a single country – let alone in a backward or not very developed country. For a whole number of serious reasons.

Let us start with the fact that such concepts as "socialism" or "communism" are absolutely incompatible with the concept of "the state." For a real Marxist, the very idea of a "socialist" or "communist" state is empty nonsense, the height of absurdity.

Of course, so long as another, hostile system exists, especially if it dominates the greater part of the planet, there can be no question of the state dying out. Let us imagine a state in which a workers’ revolution takes place but is not soon followed by a world revolution. That state is forced to compete with other states in the surrounding world in the accumulation of armaments, heavy industry, and so on.

But competitive accumulation – of capital, in the final analysis – runs counter to the popular need to give priority to consumption. It prevents expansion of the conquests of the revolution and makes it necessary to preserve the state. Giving priority to consumption would require abolishing a fundamental feature of capitalist society – accumulation for the sake of accumulation. For this two conditions are needed: workers’ self-management (working people themselves taking control of production) and the elimination of national borders (that is, of competition on a world scale). The latter also requires abolition of the state.

From the elementary foundations of Marxism it follows that such phenomena as commodity-money relations and the law of value are absolutely incompatible with socialism. For capitalism, according to Marx and Engels, has two chief defining defects. First, goods have to be produced as commodities (for sale), in the form of commodities, thereby giving social relations a fetishized, mercantile character. Second, the basic purpose of production is the extraction of surplus value, which is the source of the exploitation of man by man.

It is self-evident that money and the state can only die out together. Commodity-money relations cannot exist in the absence of state structures. For money is backed up by the assets of the state bank. Given commodity production, competition, the necessity for each state to compete economically with other states, a common measure of some sort is needed to calibrate inputs and outputs in comparison with other countries. Therefore, prices inevitably exist so that records can be kept of value. Finally, some way is needed to monitor the effectiveness of economic activity.

In order to realise the specifically capitalist tendency of accumulation for the sake of accumulation, two things are necessary. First, workers must be alienated from the means of production and from the results of their labour. Second, there must be competition between capitalists. In the absence of workers’ revolution on a global scale, the pursuit of surplus labour in the world as a whole inevitably thwarts any attempt to establish socialism, even if it is undertaken in a highly developed and wealthy region.

Socialism – a world system
Thus, socialism or communism can only be a world system. In this respect it resembles capitalism, which also arises at the international level, becoming a world system as it expands to absorb the pre-capitalist periphery. According to Marx, capitalism is characterised by the concentration of the means of production in the hands of a few, the organization of labour as social labour, and the creation of a world market. In principle, two world systems cannot exist simultaneously.

"Dictatorship of the proletariat"
For a long time the Bolsheviks justified their dictatorship by calling it "the dictatorship of the proletariat." Marx used this term to mean not dictatorship as a repressive political regime but social dominance of the working people as a counterweight to the exploiters (while they still exist) – a workers’ semi-state. He put forward this idea in opposition to the idea, popular in his day, of the dictatorship of revolutionary leaders.

The democratic power of the working class, the conquest of true, broad democracy, and not the power of any leaders – that was and is the meaning of "dictatorship of the proletariat." Undoubtedly, such a regime is not socialism. It is still capitalism, although of a milder and more democratic variety.

The Bolshevik party dictatorship
The Bolshevik party dictatorship has its origins in the upheaval of 1917. After the fall of the autocracy, Russia won great democratic freedoms and became (for a short time) the most democratic state in the world. However, the provisional government failed to act. It did not begin peace negotiations and made no attempt to get out of the war. It did not embark on agrarian reform. It took no measures against the forces of reaction. The people got neither peace nor bread nor land. What is more, despite all the rights and freedoms, strong democratic institutions (apart, perhaps, from the Soviets) were not created in the country. Thus, there was nothing surprising about the Bolshevik takeover. A reactionary military dictatorship was also a real possibility at the time.

The Bolshevik regime claimed the mantle of a workers’ state. However, in a workers’ state (more precisely, semi-state) there would have been the broadest freedom and human rights, with political power exercised democratically through Soviets, trade unions and competing political parties.

The actual situation, alas, was nothing like this. Political power was exercised mainly through a dictatorship of the Bolshevik party and vanguard, with all forms of democracy restricted from the very first months. Yes, in the early years there were progressive, humane laws in various spheres. (To what extent they were observed is another question.) But the main trends were negative: further curtailment of democratic rights and freedoms, consolidation of the one-party system, secret police repression even within the ruling party, formation of a hierarchy of officials appointed from above.

Stalin’s industrial revolution
The Stalinist faction, which in 1925 had introduced the anti-Marxist conception of "building socialism in a single country," gained full control by the end of the 1920s. The chief concern of the ruling group was now the forging of a "great power"; this required expansion of the industrial base through unrestrained exploitation of the working people – for the sake, above all, of successful competition with the outside world, with foreign states. In practice, this meant the rapid accumulation of capital.

By the 1930s the authoritarian state had evolved into a totalitarian state. It was precisely at this period that the gap between the higher-ups and the masses deepened into an abyss. By means of so-called "collectivisation" the peasants were either, in essence, enserfed or driven from the soil and turned into a reserve labour force for industry. (Those who managed to get to the cities became, as a rule, hired workers.) Repression intensified, filling the rapidly expanding Gulag with prisoners.

During the first five-year plan, real wages declined by at least half, while the working day lengthened. Thus, the living standard of the absolute majority of the population fell substantially and exploitation sharply increased.

The Stalin regime was totalitarian state capitalism with significant elements of serfdom and slavery (which weakened but did not disappear even after the tyrant’s death). In practice, it accomplished an industrial revolution – that is, the accelerated accumulation of capital. To a large extent, this was primitive accumulation. We find pertinent parallels between industrialisation under Stalin and the path followed by Japan from the bourgeois "Meiji revolution" to World War Two. There too, capital grew rapidly. There too, despotic methods were used to modernise the economy, create an industrial base and strengthen military might, with the state playing a major role.

Thus, both under Stalin and later we had in Russia a right-wing dictatorship with a state monopoly over the economy. Stalinism is a broader concept than the Stalin regime. In the USSR, the Stalinist era lasted from the late 1920s until the collapse of the "Soviet" "socialist" system in 1991 (with various changes and modifications, of course).

Bureaucratic state capitalism
Stalinism is bureaucratic state capitalism. The bulk of direct producers did not own means of production and so were forced to sell their labour power to the real owner of those means of production – a special group called the nomenklatura. The members of this group belonged to a hierarchically organized system for the appropriation and distribution of surplus value. The ruling class of the Soviet Union was therefore a state bourgeoisie. It was an exploiting class that through the possession of state power owned the means of production, the whole of the so-called "national economy."

I n this way the traditional ultra-conservative status quo was re-established and the Russian Empire restored.

For several decades, both under Stalin and after his death, the ruling class or state bourgeoisie governed the country through a powerful and ramified bureaucratic apparatus. They relied on the age-old traditions of the Russian Empire and out of inertia continued to make formal and hypocritical use of pseudo-socialist, pseudo-communist, pseudo-left and pseudo-Marxist slogans. Such slogans were a convenient means of masking their real aims and playing on the sincere faith of many people, both inside the country and abroad.

(Translated by Stefan)

Vladimir Sirotin, Moscow

FSL
2nd November 2009, 10:21
Ok, sooooo...



"The first stage (or, more rarely, socialism in the narrow sense) means almost the same, with the sole difference that there is still some connection between how much labour an able-bodied person has given society and the quantity of goods that he or she receives."
Socialism and communism didn't mean "almost the same". The state doesn't fade away until we 're done with the socialist stage and up to that point class struggle still carries on with the remnants of the old rulling class.


"Socialism in a single country?
Marx and Engels categorically denied the possibility of establishing socialism or communism in a single country or in a few countries. They even denied the possibility of the sustained victory or success of a workers’ revolution in a single country – let alone in a backward or not very developed country. For a whole number of serious reasons."
Socialism in a single country is a concept introduced in 1920s but we had the concept of socialism in one city introduced in 1870s without people being against it at the time. Also, things that Lenin supported in his April Theses or Trotsky with permanent revolution hadn't been said by Marx or Engels. That's because you don't need to do *exactly* this or that, but instead use marxism as a guiding tool and judge according to the situation.
Simply put, workers in Russia didn't want their revolution to go to waste so they moved ahead.




"But competitive accumulation – of capital, in the final analysis – runs counter to the popular need to give priority to consumption. It prevents expansion of the conquests of the revolution and makes it necessary to preserve the state. Giving priority to consumption would require abolishing a fundamental feature of capitalist society – accumulation for the sake of accumulation"
There is no "accumulation for the sake of accumulation" in capitalism. There is accumulation and investments for the sake of expandind one's business, conquering more markets and increasing profit. What capitalism fails to do is find consumers for the abundance of products it offers and is thus led to recession.

Not having accumulation but instead focusing on consumption or the "rising of the standards of living" (hypocricy!) would end up meaning the same. As the population grows with a rate higher than the rate the means of production expand, less capital per worker will mean a decline in production. This played its part in taking Soviet Union's economy from expanding constantly with a double digit rate to stagnation.
The results it had on the "living standards" can easily be seen when one notices the decline in life expectancy when it should be -even if only due to medical breakthroughs- rising. Producing soap instead of machinery now could mean more soaps for this year but it will mean antiquated equipment for many factories in the years to come. The standard of living rises faster when the long term health of the economy is assured, allowing more and more resourses to be dedicated in covering people's immediate needs.
To say that "consumption must be prioritised" might be a nice slogan but does little to help the workers.

"Socialism resembles capitalism in that they both arise in global scale"
In parts of this world we have not yet seen capitalist relations in production arise, but capitalism has been more or less a reality since the 18th century in several countries. To claim there shouldn't have been an effort to built socialism in Russia is to argue there shouldn't have been capitalism in the UK until the last tribes in the Amazon jungle were familiar with money and trade, isn't it? Socialism had its craddle in Russia and quickly, much faster than capitalism in fact, spread to half the world.


not dictatorship as a repressive political regime but social dominance of the working people as a counterweight to the exploiters (while they still exist)
Is that a joke? Not a repressive regime but social dominance? That's just playing with words. And to what degree does the worker's state provide "the broadest freedom and human rights" depends on the realities of class struggle. We see that today too, when freedoms are abundant when worker's conciense is low only to have Pinochet regimes when it rises to dangerous levels. Bolshevicks voted for the abolition of the death penalty and a few moths later instigated the Red Terror, because they were dealing with different amounts of resistance from reactionary forces.


"During the first five-year plan, real wages declined by at least half, while the working day lengthened. Thus, the living standard of the absolute majority of the population fell substantially and exploitation sharply increased"
To back this up with evidence is of course impossible. It is actually argued that people lived better in the NEP years, like it wasn't some sad necessity but actually provided workers a joyful life.



And as a closer, I had a nice laugh when I went to the site linked to find the cover of the Socialist Standard, "Free at last". Yeah, let's join our business overlords in praising the wonderful "free" Germany of today.

h0m0revolutionary
2nd November 2009, 10:37
Very good article :)

Die Rote Fahne
2nd November 2009, 12:39
I liked the article.

Bright Banana Beard
2nd November 2009, 13:17
Terrible article, it is typical liberal analysis on USSR. It even praised Germany. What an joke.

h9socialist
2nd November 2009, 14:36
All this is old. This is an analysis that's been repeated countless times since Trotsky, or more notably in the US by Max Schactman. It is a long time creed amongst American social democrats. The problem is that it's an analysis of historical circumstances in Russia almost a century ago -- a Russia casting off three centuries on the Romanovs. And it was the first socialist revolution, facing enormous odds.

This makes for great historical analysis, but questionable relevance to current trends. For instance, I believe that the socialist impulse is now strongest in Latin America. Stalinist Russia provides almost no guidepost for understanding conditions in Latin America. Che noted as much 45 years ago. If this subject hasn't been resolved by now, it likely won't be.

ls
2nd November 2009, 15:20
Terrible article, it is typical liberal analysis on USSR. It even praised Germany. What an joke.

It's obvious to the point it hurts that you didn't read the article/tried to copycat FSL.

I am not in full agreement with the article, it doesn't explicitly state much that is new, it's a pretty common line that this article takes.

Also, obscure and pointless lines like this just detract from it further imo:
And so, socialism or communism is the complete liberation of each person and all humanity from any form of exploitation and oppression! The government of people is replaced by the administration of things. The absence of any state power over people!

FSL
2nd November 2009, 21:33
If the "pretty common line" this article takes in criticizing USSR is talking about how nationalizing businesses and land made workers suffer, then we can understand that most critisism to that country lacks anything resembling credibility.

Das war einmal
5th November 2009, 10:49
This article is very dogmatic towards marxism, like its some kind of religion.

ZeroNowhere
5th November 2009, 11:41
People who use religion and dogmatism as slurs in political debate are in drastic need of enlightenment, as slothfulness is a sin. Perhaps a more decent critique along those lines is that the article seems to go somewhere between asserting certain views as being Marx's without any evidence (and, seeing as they're quite contradictory to what are usually seen as his views, one would expect some if one is trying to make people more open to Marx's works and views), and at the same time putting forth an argument about the Soviet Union, and in too little space to carry both out convincingly.


From a scientific – in particular, Marxist – point of view, communism (or socialism, as Marx and Engels rarely distinguished between these two concepts) means an absolutely free society of universal equality and abundance, in which all people work – more precisely, seek self-realisation – voluntarily, in accordance with their abilities and inclinations, and receives goods in accordance with their needs.
...Wow, it's like the SPGB's faults multiplied tenfold.


And so, socialism or communism is the complete liberation of each person and all humanity from any form of exploitation and oppression! The government of people is replaced by the administration of things. The absence of any state power over people!Eh, I don't know, this just sounds badly written. I'm sorry, I meant that this sounds badly written! Where did the editor go to? Perhaps someplace between Kansas and Arkansas! Though, to be fair, it could have just suffered in translation, but still! Also, all forms of oppression? I wouldn't be too sure that every existing form of oppression will be immediately ended by socialism.


But competitive accumulation – of capital, in the final analysis...Wait, I would like to see this analysis. Where is it? Also, on 'abolition of national borders', it doesn't strike me as very tactful to just chuck that out there with such little explanation, unless one is only planning to preach to the choir, but I don't believe that's what the Socialist Standard is for?


Marx used this term to mean not dictatorship as a repressive political regime but social dominance of the working people as a counterweight to the exploiters (while they still exist) – a workers’ semi-state.I find this bit to be quite pleasing, if not detailed enough to tell exactly what is meant.


Terrible article, it is typical liberal analysis on USSR. It even praised Germany. What an jokeOh, stop being such a liberal.

But yeah, I'm not sure that something of such short length is suited to do quite as many things as is attempted, and as such it ends up with quite a lot of assertions which many people won't understand, and a lack of evidence on either Marx's views or the reality of the Soviet economy. Paresh Chattopadhyay did better in a rather longer format, but I'm sure that that could be condensed somewhat, just not enough to fit everything into a single article.

ls
6th November 2009, 00:25
If the "pretty common line" this article takes in criticizing USSR is talking about how nationalizing businesses and land made workers suffer, then we can understand that most critisism to that country lacks anything resembling credibility.

Yeah, any attack on the USSR is obviously motivated by bourgeois tendencies.

A.R.Amistad
6th November 2009, 01:45
The Bolshevik party dictatorship
The Bolshevik party dictatorship has its origins in the upheaval of 1917. After the fall of the autocracy, Russia won great democratic freedoms and became (for a short time) the most democratic state in the world. However, the provisional government failed to act. It did not begin peace negotiations and made no attempt to get out of the war. It did not embark on agrarian reform. It took no measures against the forces of reaction. The people got neither peace nor bread nor land. What is more, despite all the rights and freedoms, strong democratic institutions (apart, perhaps, from the Soviets) were not created in the country. Thus, there was nothing surprising about the Bolshevik takeover. A reactionary military dictatorship was also a real possibility at the time.

The Bolshevik regime claimed the mantle of a workers’ state. However, in a workers’ state (more precisely, semi-state) there would have been the broadest freedom and human rights, with political power exercised democratically through Soviets, trade unions and competing political parties.

The actual situation, alas, was nothing like this. Political power was exercised mainly through a dictatorship of the Bolshevik party and vanguard, with all forms of democracy restricted from the very first months. Yes, in the early years there were progressive, humane laws in various spheres. (To what extent they were observed is another question.) But the main trends were negative: further curtailment of democratic rights and freedoms, consolidation of the one-party system, secret police repression even within the ruling party, formation of a hierarchy of officials appointed from above.

This article totally demonizes the reality of the Bolshevik revolution just as bad as any capitalist newspaper. First of all, there was no period of grace after the Tsar fell. In fact, a basically pro-monarchist gvt. was in place until Kerensky ousted it with popular support. And of course we all know about Kerensky's betrayal. But it is wrong to say that the Bolsheviks claimed to rule in a totalitarian way under the slogan of proletarian dictatorship. The Bolshevik's slogan "All Power to the Soviets" was their declaration, and this slogan was created at a time when the Bolsheviks were a minority party in the Soviets. The party influence shifted, however, when the "democratic and socialist" Kerensky violently crushed a peaceful yet armed demonstration of worker's guards (again, I might add, most of whom were not Bolsheviks at the time). This repression, the call for Soviet power, as well as the demand for peace, bread and land, ultimately won the masses of peasants, soldier and workers to the Bolshevik party. The dissolving of the Constituent Assembly, too, was not a coup as the social-democrats like to portray it s. The election results showing the majority in the SR and Menshevik parties were highly outdated, and the Bolsheviks had the obvious support of the Soviets. It is true that Bureacracy of the Bolshevik Party did occur during and after the civil war, but leaders like Lenin and Trotsky recognized this problem early. They never claimed that the party ruled as a dictatorship of the proletariat. The Dictatorship of the Proletariet was based on the rule of the Soviets. The reason why power was so centralised in the Bolshevik Party was because during the war they were the only ones who were defending the rule of the Soviets. The Right wing SR's and the Mensheviks had joined with the reactionaries to destroy Soviet power. It would be helpful if you read some of Lenin's last works, because in it the father of Bolshevism describes that a pure Dictatorship of the Proletariat had not been fully achieved in Russia, and that party bureaucracy needed to be greatly reduced in order for proletarian democracy to bloom. In other words, the statement "The Bolsheviks justified their dictatorship as a Dictatorship of the Proletariat" is nothing but false slander from a social democrat. The Bolsheviks only justified the Bureaucracy based on wartime measures and acts of foreign sabotage to the workers' state, which was a very real threat, just like the very real threat of US Imperialism to the Cuban Workers' State. I would agree with this critique if it were about the USSR during Stalin and Post Stalin, but I totally abhor it's libel against the October Revolution. The October Revolution was a wonderful example of the Proletariat, whether they were Bolshevik, Left SR's, anarchists, etc, taking power and it is tragic that Stalin and the Bureaucrats abandoned Marxism and Leninism and took advantage of the weakened state to create a totalitarian one. But the days of October are not to blame. I'd advise the Social Democrats to revisit their track record not only in Russia, but also in the rise of Fascism, throughout post WWII Europe and elsewhere before they go around with a holier than thou attitude and condemning proletarian revolutions.

FSL
6th November 2009, 06:43
Yeah, any attack on the USSR is obviously motivated by bourgeois tendencies.


Any "attack"? Yes, it sure is.

robbo203
6th November 2009, 23:13
And as a closer, I had a nice laugh when I went to the site linked to find the cover of the Socialist Standard, "Free at last". Yeah, let's join our business overlords in praising the wonderful "free" Germany of today.


Jeez. Some people just dont have a sense of irony. Did you not spot the dollar signs on the other side of the wall in the picture?


Quote:
Originally Posted by ls http://www.revleft.com/vb/revleft/buttons/viewpost.gif (http://www.revleft.com/vb/showthread.php?p=1589849#post1589849)
Yeah, any attack on the USSR is obviously motivated by bourgeois tendencies.

Any "attack"? Yes, it sure is. .

What? Even attacking the very obvious bourgeois tendencies exhibted by the Soviet Union itself - not the least of which was the luxurious and pampered lifestyles of the Red "fat cats" , the nomenklatura parasites who lived off the sweat and toil of the exploited Russian workers under this pseudo socialist regime