There were several interesting responses to my outrageous effort
to evaluate Piketty’s new 1000 page book on the basis of a close reading of the
first 8 pages. One comment, by Asgeir,
raises questions that have long interested me and on which I have written [in
my essay, “The Future of Socialism”], so I thought I would respond while
waiting to take a walk with my wife to combat our cabin fever. Asgeir writes this [I am sorry – I searched
the enormous Word database of special characters and could not find a capital A
with an acute accent]:
“One question, Professor: If the political-ideological
sphere is not autonomous, isn't it completely pointless to agitate for social
change, especially socialism? How can one be a Marxist, if it is committed to
the negation of Piketty's thesis, and think that political work is worth
engaging in in the first place? If the "iron laws of history" are so
rigid, how could we even try to abolish capitalism?
In a footnote in one of his papers "Why Marxism still does not need a normative theory", Brian Leiter seems accept the premise of my question and writes: "All the professed Marxist revolutionaries of the 20th-century—Lenin, Mao, Castro, others—clearly had no understanding of the explanatory theory, or every one of them would have instituted a free market economy in their agrarian and preindustrial societies. Why they were such incompetent readers of Marx is a topic for a different day."
Is that really plausible, that all these luminaries were such bad readers of Marx? And doesn't Leiter's point also apply to Marx himself—and most marxists, for that matter?”
In a footnote in one of his papers "Why Marxism still does not need a normative theory", Brian Leiter seems accept the premise of my question and writes: "All the professed Marxist revolutionaries of the 20th-century—Lenin, Mao, Castro, others—clearly had no understanding of the explanatory theory, or every one of them would have instituted a free market economy in their agrarian and preindustrial societies. Why they were such incompetent readers of Marx is a topic for a different day."
Is that really plausible, that all these luminaries were such bad readers of Marx? And doesn't Leiter's point also apply to Marx himself—and most marxists, for that matter?”
There is a lot to unpack here. Let me start by noting that there actually
was a vigorous debate among the early Bolsheviks [i.e., the members of the
majority in the Russian Social Democratic Party. “Menshevik” means “member of the minority.”]
about whether it was possible to go directly from Russia’s feudal economy to a
socialist economy without first going through a capitalist phase. This was called “skipping a stage.” Those who said it was impossible were of
course correct, but when you have just seized control of an enormous sprawling
country at great personal risk and confront a foreign military effort to defeat
you and put you to death, it seemed, how shall I put it, a trifle quaint to
say: “We have conquered Mother
Russia. Now we must scare up a few
capitalists and turn things over to them for several generations before our
grandchildren can return and take up the struggle for socialism.” So the Bolsheviks did the only thing they
could. They instituted state capitalism
and called it communism.
One of the more bizarre misreadings of Marx has it that he
thought capitalism would turn into socialism behind our backs, as it were,
regardless of what anyone did. Marx was
a social scientist. He was not an Old Testament
prophet, he was not a soothsayer, he was not a moralist, he was not, God help
us, a neo-classical economist. Did Marx
think it was pointless to agitate for social change? Of course not! He thought such agitation was essential to
bringing about social change. But he
also thought, quite correctly in my judgment, that irrespective of this
agitation, capitalists were presented with choices and challenges that led them
to make changes in the way they did business, changes that, unintended by them,
prepared the way for new forms of capitalism and eventually for the possibility of socialism [not its “inevitability.”]
What sorts of changes?
Well, bringing carders and spinners and weavers out of their cottages
and into factories [“manufactories,” i.e places where things are made by hand]
to make woolen cloth; routinizing that work so that some people only carded and
others only wove; substituting steam powered looms and spinning wheels for
those operated by hand. And so on and
on. In the early stages of the evolution
of capitalism, the impersonal “higgling and jiggling of the market,” in Adam
Smith’s wonderful phrase, was a better determinant of efficient pricing than
any central plan could be, but by the middle of the 20th century the
internalization within the firm of intermediate stages in production made it
literally impossible to rely on market prices to determine corporate decisions,
so a form of proto-planning had to be adopted within the firm. The conditions of the new order were growing
in the womb of the old. [See my paper, “The
Future of Socialism,” for a much more elaborate version of this sketch.]
Well, time for my walk.
Stay safe.
6 comments:
For capital A with an acute accent, hold down Alt and type 0193: voilÁ!
Apart from Marcuse, I haven't ever seen you write much about the Frankfurt School. What's your take on them? I ask because my impression was that their contribution Marxist thinking was in pointing out that ideological superstructure wasn't as causally inert as Marx had supposed, and thus that they needed to pay attention to culture, and the way in which in could reinforce capitalist power structures. They had to come up with an explanation for why the revolution never occurred as soon as Marx thought it would. Is Piketty following in this tradition? And what's your view?
State capitalism was an utter disaster. The "central planning" created a laughably incompetent economy (except for the military which were lavished by the "extracted" economic output of the working class and where military "rule" meant really life-and-death "command" economy).
The fascination of academics with such top-down control is absurd. I was and am an anarchist in the same vein as the original anarchist who viewed the visions of the Boshevists with horror. Anybody today who still thinks that "state capitalism" was a necessary "path" for Russia is a dogmatic idealist. Marx laughed at "utopian socialists", but the reality was that "socialism with a human face", e.g. Social Democrats, had the only viable path forward. To worship Marx is foolish. He was a disaster both in his personal life (a wretch who degraded his family and abused the servants) and in his public life (he destroyed the IWA rather than "loose control", i.e. let the membership make up their own minds.
The horrors of the show trials in the 1930s must never be forgotten.
The horrors of the "collectivization" of the peasantry and the "elimination" of the kulaks with the associated starvation of millions (in the Ukraine in particular) must never be forgotten.
The idiocy of dictating a policy that saw Social Democrats as the "main enemy" during the 1930s and not the rising fascists and Nazis was an unspeakable horror that gave rise to the horrors of WWII.
The manipulation of the Spanish Republic and the destruction of the left (anarchists and Trotskyists) by Stalin handed Spain to the fascist Franco.
The horrors of Mao's "Great Leap Forward" and the cruel manipulation of a whole generation with the Red Guards in the "Cultural Revolution" as a cynical means to keep an old man in power is despicable.
I'm willing to look to Marx for some ideas. But to put him on a pedestal as a "great thinker" is an abomination. That one man led to hundreds of millions dying! He is an arch crimninal up there with Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Mussolini, Franco, Pol Pot, Idi Amin, Mugabe, Maduro/Chávez, Pinochet, and on and on with the vicious dictators of the past and the wannabe dictators of today (Trump).
Yes read Marx. But don't idolize him. And don't be blind to the horrors he unleashed.
I can think of no real science that insists that a thinker from 160 years ago is worthy of such reverence. Yes, Newton was a great man. But physics has moved on. We don't still dip into his Principia Mathematica to "understand" physics. He has shaped our modern understanding. We respect him. But we have moved on. But leftists who want to idolize Marx haven't "moved on". Why not? There are numerous Marxist thinkers who have tried to re-think their politics and social science. Why keep turning back to a man long dead?
And I'm not ready to bury Anarchism. It is an expression of the Enlightenment. It idolized personal freedom, rationality, and the individual as a political actor who must stand up to the oppression of religion, state, bureaucracy, and the dead hand of the Past. The anarchist thinkers have their own foibles. But nobody puts them on pedestals like the diehard Marxists.
And never forget the wonderful insight of Churchill: "Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others."
Ideologues are impatient because they think the "know better". They want to cut through the indecision because of their "natural superiority". But history demonstrates this is a false belief. While the mob of individuals looking anxiously to each other for direction may seem to be an utter waste of time, it is out of that disorganized mess that good ideas come forward. The future bubbles up. It is not dictated by an elite top down. That is the key message of anarchism.
Nice blog. I like when I have to read a blog a second time, more slowly!!
It just seems really weird to blame Marx for the atrocities committed by Mao a hundred years later. Are we going to blame Thomas Jefferson for My Lai? John Adams for the execution of the Rosenbergs? Jesus for the Inquisition and the Salem Witch Trials?
I have no idea of how much of what Marx said is true. He's a great thinker because he opens door and windows in the mind, not because he's always right. He's a great thinker in the same way that Plato, Aristotle and Nietzsche are great thinkers. They all ask questions that are worth considering and lead the reader to ask further questions for him or herself: they're the beginning of the journey, but the end of it and it's a long, but very intellectually fruitful journey.
I am sorry – I searched the enormous Word database of special characters and could not find a capital A with an acute accent
If all else fails, Wikipedia can be a good source of characters to copy & paste. For example:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_accent
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