What is communism?
international |
the left |
feature
Friday October 21, 2005 23:46
by Paul Bowman

An anarchist analysis of the history and meaning of communism
This article opens by looking at how the meaning of communism as opposed to socialism evolved in the late nineteenth century and closes with a look at how this applies to the free software movement today. It was written for Red and Black Revolution - the magazine of the Workers Solidarity Movement.
Its not that important to get hung up on the name communism, for many people the concise definition of communism being something to do with Marx and the USSR is the one they know. For us the name of the post-capitalist society we aim to help construct is a detail, what matters is the content of the ideas.
What is original in Marx's "Capital" is not the theory of exploitation and surplus value which he inherits from Thompson, but the role of class struggle in limiting the working day and shaping the introduction of productivity-enhancing technology as a response to working class resistance to exploitation. This focus on the historical and contestational dynamics of the process is what gives Marx's work continuing relevance to theorists today, yet it is accompanied by a lack of attention to specifics of the goal of a post-capitalist society. Despite his many contributions, Marx's work on its own represents a backwards step in comparison to Thompson's work when it comes to investigating the social relations of a post-capitalist society.
What is communism?
What's in a word
What is communism? Well according to the Concise Oxford dictionary,
communism is
"1 a political theory derived from Marx, advocating
class war and leading to a society in which all property is publicly
owned and each person is paid and works according to his or her needs
and abilities. 2 (usu. Communism) a the communistic form of society
established in the USSR and elsewhere."
If that was correct then this would be a very short article.
However, as so often, the Concise Oxford is wrong again. In fact the
terms socialism and communism appear in England around the 1820s as
terms adopted by members of the cooperative movement who were sick of
hearing their politics referred to as "Owenism". Originally the two
terms were undifferentiated but by the 1840s communism was used by
revolutionaries to differentiate themselves from reformists such as
J.S.Mill who had adopted socialism to cover an indigestible mess of
reformisms.
By the 1870s the terms had moved from differentiating means to
distinguishing ends. The proper Oxford English Dictionary notes in
its sources:
"Forster Diary 11 May in T. W. Reid Life (1888)
.... I learn that the great distinction between communism and
socialism is that the latter believes in payment according to work
done and the former does not".
It is this meaning of communism as opposed to socialism that
evolved in the late nineteenth century that this article discusses.
Of course its not that important to get hung up on a name, for many
people the Concise definition of communism being something to do with
Marx and the USSR is the one they know. For us the name of the
post-capitalist society we aim to help construct is a detail, what
matters is the content of the ideas. Nonetheless for the purposes of
this article we need to choose a name so we stick with the historical
one.
You can download, print out and distibute this essay as
a PDF
file
Beginnings
As long as society has been divided into the privileged and the
exploited there has been resistance and that resistance has found
voice and expression in the language of the oppressed seeking to
define the road to their freedom. Communism, however is the product
of the rise of capitalist society and the new conditions of
oppression and new possibilities for freedom it brought. The
introduction of capitalism involved the struggle for power of a new
class excluded from the governance of pre-capitalist agrarian based
society and the voice they found to express and direct that struggle
was political economy. Communism then begins as the other new class,
the proletariat or working class, seeks to find its voice and finding
itself in contest with the emerging capitalist class is forced to
take on confront and subvert the voice of their opponent. Thus
communism as a discourse begins as a response to political economy.
Political Economy
Political economy begins with the work of Adam Smith in the late
17th century. Smith's "Wealth of Nations" was a project of leaving
behind the religious discourse of the previous century's Civil War
where political tendencies couched their class aspirations and
ambitions in the language of theology. To do so he followed the
enlightenment push to create a secular, rational and "scientific"
discourse which attempted to avoid the murderous and indeterminable
controversies of religion by reference to "facts". The aim was to
determine the best course of government action or policy directed to
the end of increasing overall wealth. In order to do this the
challenge was to define a reliable measure of wealth or "value".
Given the history of inflation, currency alone was clearly not viable
as a direct measure. In the end Smith settled for a theory of value
based on the amount of labour embodied in goods produced.
This was the basis of what was to be further developed by
subsequent political economists such as James Mill and David Ricardo
as the "labour theory of value" - that is the theory that the
underlying value of that makes a given amount of grain exchangeable
for a given amount of wrought iron or cloth is determined by the
average amount of labour time necessary for the production of each
product. The main question addressed by Smith's political economy was
how changes in the distribution of wealth affected the rate of growth
of the overall wealth of the nation. The main argument was that those
government policies which, through taxation, re-distributed wealth
from the manufacturing and commerce sectors to the land-owners
retarded growth as the latter group, being unwilling to re-invest the
extra income into more wealth-generating industry, simply frittered
it away in excess personal consumption.
From the outset political economy was a subject with an agenda,
namely that of defending the interests of the rising manufacturing
classes against those of the dominant land-owning gentry and
aristocracy who had a monopoly on governmental power. At the same
time, through the arguments of political economists like Thomas
Malthus, they argued against the effectiveness of the Poor Relief
taxes the manufacturing bosses had to pay for the feeding of the poor
and unemployed during periods of economic slump and high
unemployment. This latter aspect came particularly to the fore in the
great economic slump that followed the ending of the Napoleonic wars
in 1815 [?] and the struggle around the proposed legalisation of
unions in 1824.
William Thompson
One of the first people to critically engage with political
economy and attempt to turn it around to defend the improvement of
the condition of the working class and rural poor was the scion of an
Anglo- Irish landowning family from West Cork by the name of William
Thompson. Born in 1775 in Cork, the young Thompson had been an
enthusiastic supporter of the enlightenment, republicanism and the
French Revolution. He later became a leading figure in the
Co-operative movement in radical opposition to Robert Owen.
In the 1820s, outraged by the use of political economy by a local
"eminent speaker" to argue the supposed necessity and benefit of the
absolute poverty of the "lower orders" Thompson set about an
investigation into political economy which resulted in his "An
Inquiry into the Principles of the Distribution of Wealth Most
Conducive to Human Happiness" of 1824. As the lengthy title indicates
his attention was like the political economists also focused on the
effects of the distribution of wealth, however his yardstick for the
outcome was the utilitarian "greatest good for the greatest number"
rather than the overall abstraction of the "wealth of the nation".
He addressed Bentham's three principles governing distribution -
the right to security, the right to the produce of labour and the
right to subsistence. The right to subsistence was the principle of
distribution by need which, in Bentham's reasoning, had to be
subordinate to the right to the produce of labour which recognised
the priority of the producers claim to the product of his or her own
labour. Bentham over-ranked both with the right to security i.e. that
the individual's right to his or her existing property had to be
defended from arbitrary abstraction by society or all medium to long
term incentives to economic activity would be nullified by the
possibility of having any gains taken away in the future.
Thompson's first point of attack was to recognise that under the
guise of the right to security Bentham and the utilitarians were in
fact defending the existing property status quo without any interest
into the legitimacy of how this division of ownership had come about.
In Thompson's native West Cork it was easy to recognise that the
monopoly of land by the Anglo-Irish protestant ascendancy had been
brought about not through thrift, hard work and parsimonious virtue
but by military main force. Further Thompson exposed that exchanges
between the dispossessed and property-monopolising classes could not
be seen as free or equal in any way as the propertyless had to accept
unfair wages for the sale of their labour under duress of starvation
as the alternative. Thompson went on to analyse the process of
exploitation of the wage labourer by their employers and how the
lion's share of the product was appropriated by the latter as surplus
value in an account later adopted by Marx.
From here Thompson moved to posit a system of "free exchange"
where equal access to land and the means of production was guaranteed
to all, but distribution was governed by the right to the produce of
labour taking precedence over the right to subsistence. As the
anarchist historian Max Nettlau noted "[Thompson's] book, however,
discloses his own evolution; having started with a demand for the
full product of labour as well as the regulation of distribution, he
ended up with his own conversion to communism, that is to unlimited
distribution".
That is, having proposed a system based on the right to the full
product of labour he re-examined it compared to a system of equal
distribution by the same utilitarian yardstick that he had used to
dismiss the status quo and found, to his initial surprise that the
system of "free exchange" was inferior to that of unlimited equal
distribution. In examining the hypothetical system of "free exchange"
he discovered its competitive nature - the term "competitive" in fact
was first applied to describe capitalist exchange by him. The evils
Thompson ascribed to the competitive system were not simply ethical
or moral - that the system made each look upon his or her peers as
rivals and means to an end - but also in terms of efficiency - that
competition would encourage people to hide their innovations and
discoveries and that market intelligence would also be kept secret
thus causing waste and inefficiency.
In the year Thompson's "Distribution of Wealth" was published he
spent much time in London engaging in a series of public debates
defending the rights of trade unions against the bourgeois political
economists such as J. S. Mill and also on the way forward for the
workers with Thomas Hodgskin at the newly formed London Mechanics
Institute.
The Thompson vs Hodgskin debate
Thomas Hodgskin was the son of a storekeeper at the naval
dockyards at Chatham Kent and had served in the British navy during
the Napoleonic wars. Expelled from the navy at the end of the war due
to conflict with upper ranks, he became a radical journalist and a
fierce critic of authority and the upper classes. He shared with
Thompson the view that the upper classes monopoly on land and the
means of production allowed them to exploit those compelled by
necessity to sell their labour to them. Where he differed with
Thompson was that he considered the right to the full product of
labour freed from capitalist exploitation to be the ultimate goal of
radical reform. In Hodgskin's vision groups of workers organised as
unions, could take possession of the means of production and exchange
their products amongst each other on a "market" basis. The ensuing
debate between Hodgskin and Thompson resulted in the publication of
"Labour Defended" and "Labour Rewarded" respectively and in many ways
outlined the division between the advocates of socialism and
communism that has continued to run through the radical
anti-capitalist movement to this day.
Hodgskin's eclipse of Thompson
In the end it was Hodgskin's analysis that won out over
Thompson's. Thompson suffered the marginalising effects of his West
Cork base, his early death and his association with the strategy of
setting up experimental communities. In addition his theoretical
writings were too lengthy, challenging and, above all, too expensive
for the ordinary worker to afford. In contrast Hodgskin was concise
and skilled in making his arguments in a language the ordinary worker
could both readily understand and re-use amongst his or her peers.
Above all Hodgskin was "good enough" for the purposes of the nascent
trades union movement. Radical enough to turn the tables on the
political economy of the bosses but avoiding the truly radical total
inversion of the existing order that Thompson's proto-communism
called for. With Hodgskin the trade union agitators could conjure up
the vision of a future society free of the worker's exploitation by
the bosses but still retaining the familiarity of money and exchange.
The "natural wage" undiminished by the exploitative abstractions by
the capitalists and landlords.
Joseph Dejacque - the revolutionary approach
Just as the crushing defeat and savage repression of republican
revolution in Ireland and Britain pushed Thompson and Hodgskin, the
cooperators and trade unionists to steer their frame of action away
from the society-wide or revolutionary scope, so the fact of the
revolution in France cast all progressive thought into this
framework. However it was also exclusively a statist and
authoritarian framework until Proudhon broke the mould by proposing a
society-wide and revolutionary solution that did away with the state.
Despite his originality in breaking with the statist stranglehold on
French radical thought, Proudhon still retained many reactionary
elements in his outlook. It was his neanderthal stance on the
emancipation of women that provoked a young sympathiser of the new
anarchist ideal, Joseph Dejacque, to first openly break with and
attack Proudhon's failings. But in addition to taking him to task for
his opposition to female emancipation Dejacque also denounced
Proudhon's economic critique of capitalism as inadequate and
incomplete. Proudhon's position was in fact similar to Hodgskin in
aiming for the elimination of the monopolies on land and means of
production by the capitalist and landlord classes, but the retention
of the wage, money and exchange as the means of organising the
transmission of goods between producers. In other words, capitalism
without capitalists.
In Dejacque's view this is too conservative. Taking Proudhon's
slogan of "property is theft" to its, as he saw it, logical
conclusions Dejacque denounced as property claims any claim by
producers on that part of what they had produced that was not for
their own consumption or use. In this context he distinguishes
between possessions - those goods you have reasonable exclusive claim
over for your own use - and property claims - where you seek to deny
others the use of goods that you have no use for yourself. Dejacque
uses the example of a shoemaker who can make shoes of his or her own
size and to their personal taste and claim them as their own
possessions to use. The same shoemaker can also make for different
sizes of feet and different tastes or fashions. These latter shoes
are not possessions as the shoemaker is not intending to use them
personally. Instead in claiming them as property he or she is denying
their use to others, in effect holding them hostage until they can be
exchanged for other goods the maker judges to be of enough value to
satisfy them.
Dejacque's critique of exchange is couched very much in the
language of justice and injustice coming out of the enlightenment
discourse of the French Revolution. It lacks the fullness of
Thompson's more laboured and wide-ranging critique of capitalist
political economy, yet it integrates the aim of communism into the
whole of a revolutionary and explicitly anti-state and anarchist
goal. As such Dejacque is the first libertarian or anarchist
communist. Though Dejacque identified himself as an anarchist and,
through the title of his periodical, introduced the term libertarian
as a synonym for the same, he did not attach the label communism to
his economic ideas.
Marx - a failed synthesis
This label was at the time being used by proponents of the
authoritarian and statist conspiracies Proudhon had struck out
against. Specifically the Communist League which includes at that
time the German radicals Friedrich Engels and Karl Marx. The latter
producing the "Communist Manifesto" for the league.
In his studies in the 1840s, Marx had come across the work of both
Thompson and Hodgskin and from their common ground critique of
capitalist exploitation he takes the broad outline of his critique of
the same in "Capital" and other works. However on the issue of the
main contention dividing the two Marx ended up choosing neither one
nor the other. Concentrating most of his effort on elaborating the
critique of capitalist political economy already outline by Thompson
and Hodgskin in the 1820s, Marx wrote remarkably little on the
principles governing post-capitalist society. What little he wrote in
the "Critique of the Gotha Programme" seems an attempt to reconcile
the two opposing principles. On the one hand Marx argues that as
society emerges from capitalism with the expropriation of the land
and means of production from the landowning and capitalist classes,
it must retain the forms of money, the wage and exchange. This,
Marx's "lower phase of communism" (which n.b. is not communist in the
way this term is used in this article) corresponds to Hodgskin's
vision of capitalism without capitalists. Yet on the other hand, Marx
sees this first stage not as an end in itself but only as a
transitional stage towards the "higher phase of communism"
corresponding to Thompson's vision of a society from which wage,
money and exchange have been abolished. Marx's attempt at a synthesis
of the two positions is undeveloped and fails to answer basic
questions. Namely why the first stage is not a sufficient goal in
itself, how exactly does the first stage create the (unspecified)
conditions for the second stage and how and when does the transition
from one to the other actually take place?
These failings in Marx's work are in many ways the flipside about
strengths and originality of the other aspects of his contribution.
Whereas Thompson, Hodgskin and Dejacque approached the problem of
social liberation from the ahistorical starting points of
utilitarianism, radical and enlightenment revolutionary analysis
respectively, Marx brings the perspective of historical development
from his Hegelian background. Whereas the previous three were all
acutely aware of the clashing interests of the labouring and owning
classes and the extent to which the bosses ideologies suited their
class interests, it is Marx that puts forward the theory of the class
struggle as the motor of history. What is original in Marx's
"Capital" is not the theory of exploitation and surplus value which
he inherits from Thompson, but the role of class struggle in limiting
the working day and shaping the introduction of
productivity-enhancing technology as a response to working class
resistance to exploitation. This focus on the historical and
contestational dynamics of the process is what gives Marx's work
continuing relevance to theorists today, yet it is accompanied by a
lack of attention to specifics of the goal of a post-capitalist
society. Despite his many contributions, Marx's work on its own
represents a backwards step in comparison to Thompson's work when it
comes to investigating the social relations of a post-capitalist
society.
The bourgeoisie strikes back - taking the politics out of
Political Economy
By the late nineteenth century, the legal proponents of capitalist
political economy realised they faced huge challenges which
necessitated a major change of direction. Continuing the line of
development of classical political economy was no longer a viable
option for them. Some of the reasons were technical - classical
political economy saw only the production of physical goods as
wealth-producing and had no account of the economics of the service
industry. Other reasons were more historical - in international terms
the classical political economists had been fierce critics of
colonialism and the war in America as policies that taxed the
wealth-producing manufacturing industry but benefited only the then
dominant landowning and aristocratic class. Historically classical
political economy had been the agitational propaganda of a capitalist
class excluded from power. Now, in the late nineteenth century that
same class had now been brought into the governing class through
political reform, and many of them now had an interest and share in
the profits of the "New Imperialism" of the late Victorian era. Most
importantly the capitalist class had never considered that the
discourse of political economy could be taken from them and used to
enable the real wealth-producing class - the working class - to
articulate its own interests and critique of power. To address all
these issues a new generation of apologists of power stepped forward
to take the political out of economics and re-make this "social
science" (1) as a technical tool for market analysis for capitalists.
So anxious was William Jevons, one of the first of these
post-classical economists, to undo the damage of the labour theory of
value, that he claimed that the price of goods and services were set
by demand alone, with no link to the amount of labour involved in
their production. Naturally this extreme position was completely
unsustainable in practice so Jevon's theories were eclipsed by those
of Alfred Marshall who grudgingly admitted labour cost as one of cost
factors involved in determining price. Lest anybody think this
position made him any less of an enemy of socialism than Jevons,
Marshall was quick to make his political perspective clear from the
outset, stating his opposition to the "socialist programme" on the
grounds that "the collective ownership of the means of production
would deaden the energies of mankind and arrest economic progress".
It was Marshall who eventually produced the theory of marginal
utility and the supply and demand price curve diagram that today
graces the front of all conventional economics text books.
The neo-classical economists ditching of the labour theory of
value was only achieved by abandoning the central aim of political
economy - that of finding a measure of value with which to gauge the
rate of growth of the national economy and the impact of government
policy on this growth. Consequently by abandoning the measure of
value to focus on the determination of price alone, the
neo-classicists threw out the baby with the bathwater. Their
resulting framework was indeed useful as a technical tool for
capitalists for calculating prices and investment opportunities, but
for overall policy their "marginalist revolution" was itself of
marginal utility.
The need for a theory that addressed "the big picture" led to the
evolution of "macroeconomics" which in turn relegated the
neo-classicists efforts to microeconomics. The problem for
macro-economists remained the same as for the original political
economists, how to get a stable measure of wealth undistorted by
monetary inflation. In the end the measure they have chosen is the
Retail Price Index (in the UK - similar indexes exist by different
names in different countries). This is an index based on a basket of
gods to reflect the consumption of an "average" worker which
additions to reflect utility and housing costs, etc. In other words a
measure of the cost of labour. The RPI is thus the re-introduction of
the labour theory of value as a base measurement of the value of
money. In this and other areas such as development economics honest
commentators have had to admit the practical need to re-introduce a
measure of the value of labour as a base unit of analysis.
The continuing appeal of the labour theory of value
It is worth taking a parenthesis to examine why the valuing of
products by the labour time necessary for their production has
lasting appeal to the extent that our everyday existence in
capitalist society continually reinforces it as a seemingly "natural"
measure. Partly this is because there is a biological basis - any
living organism must ensure that the calories it gains from its
activity must at least balance the calories it burns up in staying
alive and active for that same time period or else it will perish.
For a large part of human history, until relatively recently fro most
of us, human economic activity has not moved that far away from that
biological basis. While most economic activity was in the
agricultural production of basic food subsistence and most of that
work measured in physical effort over time, care had to be taken that
the exchange of goods produced in the marginal time surplus to the
production of basic subsistence had to be exchanged for a similar
amount of time value otherwise the eventual outcome would be lack of
food.
Although today we live in a world revolutionised productivity-wise
by capitalism where less than 5% of societies labour goes into basic
food production and we have been in a global food surplus for half a
century, it is no surprise that we have not yet adjusted to a post
calorifically-limited world. Yet the basis of estimating the "going
rate" of time necessary for production of a given good or service is
that the process of production is such that most people are capable
of a similar rate of production. As we will see below, that
assumption becomes less and less tenable as the division of labour
increases and production moves more and more away from basic physical
effort and more towards intellectual problem solving or creative
work.
From visionaries to a movement
Although Dejacque had died penniless and isolated in the 1860s,
despairing of any real progress towards libertarian communism being
achieved for centuries, yet by the 1870s the ideas of libertarian
communism were taking root amongst some of the followers of Bakunin
in the First International. Through the French anarchist brothers
Elie and Elisee Reclus, the Swiss militants of the Jura Federation
like James Guillaume and the Italian section of the International,
including Errico Malatesta, Andrea Costa and Carlo Cafiero - a one
time secretary to Marx sent by the latter to Italy to convert the
Italian International to Marxism, he ended instead being converted to
anarchism. During the period of the struggle in the International
between Marx and Bakunin these militants preferred not to challenge
Bakunin over the issue of collectivism. Bakunin's collectivism
defended the right to the full product of labour like Hodgskin, along
with the consequent distribution of products by hours worked - i.e.
the wage - and exchange.
In the wake of the definitive split in the International and
Bakunin's subsequent death, these restraints were lifted. The term
"anarchist communism" first appeared in print in publications of the
Swiss anarchists in 1876 and in the Summer of that year the Florence
Congress of the Italian International resolved to abandon
collectivism and adopt communism as their aim, stating: "We believe
that the necessary complement to the common ownership of the means of
production is the common ownership of the products of labour".
Through the work of the Italian, Swiss, French and individual
militants like the Russian Kropotkin, libertarian communism became
not simply an idea but the aim and goal of European-wide
revolutionary movement.
Yet that movement's clarity of vision in relation to its goal
suffered a weakness of analysis of the progress of the class struggle
and the dynamic that could lead from capitalism to its overthrow.
Consequently the actions of the libertarian communist minority's
militants tended towards voluntarist attempts at insurrection such as
the failed Benevento uprising by the Italians or clandestine armed
action or assassination attempts against representatives of the
bosses or ruling aristocracy. The failure of this "propaganda by the
deed" era of the movement led towards the turn to syndicalism as a
way of re-engaging with the practical class struggles of the mass of
workers. However, despite its many positive effects, this form of
re-engagement with the living process and dynamic of the class
struggle brought with it problems.
The Syndicalist Ambiguity
Syndicalism as a theory proposed a seductive confusion of means
and ends at once distinct from and yet in other ways analogous to
that offered by Marxist and statist currents of socialism. On the one
hand syndicalism opposed the use of state power to introduce
post-capitalist society. Syndicalism proposed the direct exercises of
power by the democratically federated trades unions themselves. As
the productive organisations of the working class, this held out the
prospect of the direct management of society by the producers
themselves without the intermediary of the state. But on the other
hand, just as the Marxist reduction of the question of social
emancipation to the task of the Marxist party seizing state power, so
syndicalism too reduced the question of social transformation to the
question of power, albeit power to the organisations of the workers
rather than the state under "revolutionary" dictatorship. Just as the
Marxist tendencies concentration on the question of power had led
them to neglect the question of the shape of the future relations of
post-revolutionary society, so the syndicalist focus on power, albeit
in a different form, similarly led to a tendency of at best
agnosticism and at worst indifference to the question of whether
post-capitalist society should be socialist or communist. Inevitably
there was a tendency within syndicalism to consider the question an
irrelevancy and drift, by default, towards the old Hodgskinian utopia
of capitalism without capitalists.
The tendency was aggravated in Spain which, isolated from the rest
of Western European anarchism, had not followed the break with
Bakuninist collectivism and adopted the compromise position of the
choice between collectivism/socialism and communism to be left for
individual communities to decide for themselves in the
post-revolutionary period. In fact the effects, if not necessarily
the cause, of this political agnosticising tendency within
syndicalism came to be recognised as a threat by the Spanish
anarchist movement to the extent that they found it necessary to form
a specifically anarchist political organisation - the AIT - to combat
reformist tendencies within the CNT.
But in the end it was the rise of fascism in Italy and Germany
followed by the defeat in Spain which ended the "classical" phase of
libertarian communism as a movement in the 1930s (2), caught in a
pincer movement between fascism and stalinism.
What is Libertarian Communism?
It is time to pause the narrative of the historical emergences,
eclipses and re-emergences of libertarian communism to examine, in
the abstract, what it is. A libertarian communist society is not a
pre- but a post-capitalist society. That is it is a society that is
economically dominated by social or cooperative production - i.e.
there is an advanced division of labour with only a small minority of
labour being engaged in basic food production and most labour is
engaged in producing goods or services that are mostly consumed by
others. As a corollary there is a high level of communication and
general scientific and technological development. What distinguished
libertarian communism from capitalism is that the delivery or
transmission of goods and services to their consumers is done on the
basis to the satisfaction of their needs and desires not linked or
restricted in any way to their contribution to the production
process. That is there is no money or wages and products are not
exchanged either for money or for other products judged to be of
equal value - whether that value be measured in labour time necessary
for its production or some other hitherto undreamt of measure.
Stated baldly like that to those used to the workings and logics
of capitalist society - and that is all of us these days - it seems
at first sight an absurdity or at the very least an unworkable
pipe-dream. To explain the existence of libertarian communists then,
it is necessary to add the following proviso: Libertarian communists
believe that private property (in the means of production), class
society, money and the wage relation are all interrelated aspects of
capitalist society and the attempt to change society to abolish some
of those aspects while retaining others - e.g. abolishing class
society and private property while retaining money and the wage as
socialism proposes - will only result in an unstable and violently
contradictory mess that can only end in collapsing back into the
relative stability of the capitalist dynamic unless it is taken
forward to full communism. In other words libertarian communists
believe that attempts to make a post-capitalist society by halves,
such as socialism proposes, are doomed to end up being transitional
stages not to communism but to capitalism - as in fact the historical
experience of the 20th century has born out, at least as far as the
project of Marxian state socialism is concerned. The libertarian
communist critique of Leninism and all its unpalatable 57 different
varieties is not that it is not libertarian, but that it is not
communist.
On that point we must emphasise that by using the term libertarian
or anarchist communism we are signalling our opposition to the abuse
of the word communism by the state socialists, not that we have
chosen an alternative to authoritarian or state socialism because
these latter phrases are contradictions in terms. The state relies on
the wage relation to exercise any authority, indeed to even exist.
Without paid enforcers the state cannot exercise power as the Serbian
president Slobodan Milosevic discovered when he stopped paying the
wages of the Serbian riot police who were supposed to be repressing
the demonstrations of other unpaid public sector workers on the
streets of Belgrade.
In this sense communism is always libertarian or anarchist as the
abolition of the wage brings about the abolition of the relation of
command which structures the organs of state power such as the
police, army and bureaucracy.
Though the failings of state socialism have been amply exposed by
recent history, we do need to re-examine the case of proposed
libertarian socialism - a society where land and the means of
production have been taken into common ownership but the products of
labour are owned by their producers and exchanged for the products of
others on the basis of equal value measured by labour time embodied
in them. It is the contention of libertarian communists that such a
system would make all producers into competitors with each other. The
system of exchange valued by labour time introduces the "productivity
paradox" - the longer you take to produce a given output the more of
another's output you can exchange it for. Conversely the more
efficient you are in producing your output, the less you get in
exchange for it. The productivity paradox is that labour value
incentivizes inefficiency and disincentivizes efficiency. This is why
capitalism necessitates that the promotion of efficiency is
specialised off as a management function over and against the
interests of the productive workforce. The roots of class conflict in
production are to be found in the productivity paradox arising
directly out of exchange by labour time value itself.
The system of competition of individual interests also produces
the negative effects of people seeing each other as potential rivals
rather than as allies and promoting their narrow sectional interests
rather than the general good. Thus we have doctors who are paid to
treat disease and unsurprisingly they have little interest in disease
prevention.
But by far the greatest evil resulting from the system of
individual competition - bellum omni contra omnes, the war of all
against all - is the outcome that our most important social product,
the society we live in, becomes an alien impersonal "other" that none
of us control yet we are all controlled by. By competing all against
all to maximise our little individual share of the social product to
own, we lose the ownership of the society we live in. Libertarian
communists believe that trading in the measly shares of the social
product we own under capitalist relations and in return gaining the
ownership and control over the direction of the whole society we make
will result in a net gain for all both materially and in terms of
freedom.
Fine words indeed, but it logically follows that if the trading in
of individual ownership rights over the product of ones own labour in
return for the common ownership of a post-capitalist society were to
result in a net loss for all or most of humanity then libertarian
communists would be shown to be mistaken and those who preach the
capitalist gospel that the end of history has come and that the
capitalist world is truly the best of all possible worlds would be
proved right.
Up until recently this was seen by all sides as a question that
could not be settled this side of a revolution - without making the
experiment. However in the last few years new developments taking
place even within current capitalist society have thrown this
pre-conception into doubt.
Beyond the commune - de-centred anarchy
Before we re-engage with a historical narrative to examine these
recent developments we need to examine some other aspects of the
productive process, both as it has developed under capitalism and how
it can be expected to further develop under post-capitalist
relations.
The first tendency is the increasing de-territorialisation of
production. By that we mean the increase of the number of fields of
production that are not tied to a specific place. Food production via
agriculture is territorial or tied to a specific place. The bit of
land from which you harvest must also be the same bit of land you
previously prepared and sowed. Consequently for those people and
those periods of history where agricultural subsistence was the
dominant mode of production, settled living in or by the territory of
production was the norm for the greatest number. Those settled
agricultural communities unified the spheres of production,
consumption, reproduction and nearly all social interaction within a
single space. This largely self-sufficient and potentially
self-governing community is a social form that has existed for
centuries throughout nearly all human cultures around the globe up
until the last century or tow of capitalist upheaval. As such it
still had a powerful hold over the political imaginations of
anarchists no less than the rest of the different progressive
tendencies of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The
Russian "Mir" influenced Kropotkin's vision of libertarian communism
just as the Spanish, particularly Andalusian "pueblo" influenced the
vision of the CNT's Isaac Puentes.
But as the productivity levels and related division of labour
increase a larger and larger percentage of the working population are
pushed out of agriculture, out of the rural setting and into urban
spaces. In the beginning some of these non-agricultural settlements
were themselves based around territorially-specific sites of
production - whether mines, fishing harbours or river crossing
points. This last case points us towards an important feature -
non-agricultural settlements necessarily imply the existence of flows
of goods and people, if only in bringing to the urban spaces the food
they cannot produce. In fact even prior to the development of urban
spaces, agricultural settlements required interaction with marginal
but indispensable itinerant populations to bring them goods
impossible to produce locally and be the medium of communication of
news and culture from afar. Despite the often deep divides of
incomprehension and mutual suspicion between settled and itinerant
communities and the tendency of the numerically superior former to
discount or "forget" the latter from inclusion in the notion of
"productive society", the two bodies are both mutually interdependent
elements of the social whole despite the de-territorialised nature of
the itinerant minorities contribution.
As industrialisation proceeded, the creation of large centralised
mass workspaces with large immovable plant continued the appearance
of territorially-specific production. At this stage the workforces of
large mills or factories lived in their shadow and the workforce
walked to work. Industrial disputes were neighbourhood affairs.
However as the continuing specialisation, sub-division and
proliferation of the different strands of social production has
progressed it has become more and more evident that an increasing
amount of production is not territorially specific. That is, many
workplaces can be moved more or less arbitrarily from one place to
another. [globalisation & class struggle?] This
de-territorialisation of production is particularly pronounced for
those engaged in non-material production - i.e. the production of
information and communicative work, an increasingly significant
sector of social production. Communication is a necessary part of any
social production process and as long as face-to-face communication
was unrivalled, in terms of cost and effectiveness, the workplace had
the irreplaceable role of the physical assembly point for that
communication. Recently, with advances in telecommunications we have
seen the emergence of the ultimately de-territorialised social
production process - one that no longer has any "work-place" at all
where the participants need to assemble.
One social sphere remains territorially specific for the majority
settled population however - the domestic sphere, i.e. where we live.
What has changed is that this domestic and reproductive sphere no
longer maps directly onto a productive sphere. In a given urban
neighbourhood the residents will typically be engaged in many diverse
productive roles, attending many different workplaces or no static
workplace at all. Similarly in the static workplaces the workers will
be from many different neighbourhoods. Unlike the rural commune there
is no longer a single unifying point of assembly where all matters
affecting production, consumption and reproduction can be made
directly by those directly affected by them. For people to take part
in making the decisions that they are affected by they must enter
into a number of different communicative assemblies, each with
different sets of associates. This element of de-centring finally
bids goodbye to the ideal of the "commune" as the basic social form
with which to reconstruct society. The old federalist vision of an
ordered tree-like structure of decision-making from the local to the
global - albeit governed democratically from the bottom up, rather
than autocratically from the top down - must now be replaced with a
multiplicity of interconnected but distinct networks with no dominant
centre. The commune is dead, long live the commune!
Free Software and Intellectual Property
We should now move away from the abstract back to the real-world
historical developments that we mentioned earlier that have
overturned assumptions about the possibility of making any practical
tests of the effectiveness of production free of capitalist
constraints this side of a revolution. In fact such a practical
experience has already been underway for some years, not at the
instigation of any pre-meditated anti-capitalist or revolutionary
movement, but as a reaction to the actions of capitalist businesses
in the field of software development. The rise of the free software
and open source movements is a story in itself and one that is still
very much in the process of being written. Indeed a number of books
have already been turned out by media and academic commentators
struggling to explain the phenomena and particularly to get to grips
with the aspects of it that have most perplexed and disturbed the
received truths of capitalist economics. In short the free software
movement is the product of thousands of software writers or hackers
working collaboratively without pay to create whole systems of
software that are owned not by the producers but the common property
of all.
In the space of little more than 10 years an entirely voluntary
and unwaged network of producer consumers have collectively produced
an operating system - GNU/Linux - that is not only comparable to, but
in many aspects, superior to the flagship commercial product of
global capitalism's most successful hi-tech company - Microsoft.
Given the short space of the time the free software movement has
taken for this achievement compared to the decades Microsoft has
invested in its product and the fact that the unwaged hackers have
done this work in their spare time, the case for the relative
efficiency of unwaged, property-claim free production has already
made a strong opening argument.
As you might expect the explanation for these novel results are
related to specific characteristics of the object of production, i.e.
computer software. To see what is different lets take a
counter-example say a motor car. Conceptually we can divide the
production of a car into two different production processes. The
first is the production of a design for the car the second is the
production of a car from that design. In the world of mass production
such as that of car production, the physical product - the actual car
- dominates the design for that model of car. That is the cost of
manufacturing the physical parts for each individual car is far more
significant than the cost of the whole of the designers wages. To the
extent that it makes economic sense for a car company to hire an
engineer to work for two years on shaving 5 pence of the production
cost of a plastic moulding for a car sidelight (genuine example).
In complete contrast, with computer software the cost of creating
an individual copy of a software product and distributing it to the
user is so negligible in relation to the effort to produce the
original design that we can say that the design or prototype is the
product. This is important because it means the labour cost of
producing software is basically unchanged whether the end product is
distributed to 10, 1000 or 1,000,000 users. This has an important
implication - it is impossible to exchange software for product of
equal labour value. Consider a single hacker spends 30 days producing
a given software utility, he then distributes it to 30 end users for
the equivalent of an average days wage apiece. This has the
appearance of exchange but consider what happens when the hacker then
distributes the same software to another 30 users for the same terms,
and then another 300, then to a further 300,000?
There is a further difference between the car and the piece of
software. If a fault is found on a car and it is fixed all the other
existing cars of that model would need to be fixed individually. With
a piece of software however, any user who detects and or fixes a
fault in their copy of that software can then share that fix or
improvement with the entire community of users and developers of that
software at virtually no cost. It is this multiplier effect that
helps make the collaborative process of free software so productive.
Every additional user is a potential adder of value (in the sense of
utility) to the product and the communicative feedback between
developers and users is an important part of the productive process.
There is a second barrier to incorporating software production
into a scheme of labour valuation. That is the uncommodifiability of
original or creative labour. By commodifiability we mean the ability
to reduce a given buyable item to a level of interchangeability where
a given volume is equal to any other given volume of the same thing.
Potatoes are commodifiable, roughly speaking one five kilo bag of
spuds can be swapped for another without any appreciable change in
the outcome. The logic of much capitalist production is to reduce
labour to commodifiability where the output of a given number of
workers is comparable to that of the same number of another group of
workers. However this process breaks down when the output relies
centrally on individual original creativity. It is recognised that
the productivity of the most gifted hackers is enough orders of
magnitude beyond that of that of mediocre or averagely competent
hackers that one gifted hacker can achieve in a few weeks what a
large team of merely average coders would be unable to produce in
months.
It is this possibility of excelling which forms part of the
motivation for the core productive participants of the free software
movement to participate. No less than climbing mountains or running
marathons the acheivement of doing something well is a motivation in
itself, particularly in a society where our waged-work conditions
often force us to do things in ways well below what we are capable
of. There is a saying within the free software community that "people
will do the jobs they are interested in". But by the same token the
jobs people find interesting are often the ones that mobilise their
individual strengths. Freed from the constraints of exchange, people
are free to seek out the particularly lines of activity in which they
can out-perform the "average socially necessary labour time" to the
extent that such an estimate can even be made. Naturally if enough
participants in a collective labour process manage to do this
successfully, the whole process will be significantly more performant
than any waged process.
If all the above features emerging from the relatively new field
of software production and the even more recent phenomena of the free
software movement were limited to that sphere alone then they would
be an intriguing case but little more. However many of the special
features of software - i.e. the relation between the single design or
pattern and potentially unlimited replication and distribution at
little or no cost - also apply to many other "intellectual" products
such as cultural artifacts like books, music and films and the
results of scientific and academic research now that computers and
the internet have liberated them from the material media of paper,
vinyl and celluloid. Indeed the whole area of products covered by
so-called "Intellectual Property Rights" are equally problematic to
reduce to a "just" exchange value.
Further the proportion of overall economic activity involved in
the production of these non-material products is ever growing to the
extent of becoming the majority sector in the metropolitan hubs of
the capitalist world. This tendency will of course not automatically
bring in its wake radical social change, but its counter-tendencies -
the growth of exchange-free productive networks and the increasing
direct appropriation of consumer intellectual products like music,
films, software and texts through free online sharing networks - will
continue to make the struggle to defend capitalist Intellectual
Property (IP) rights a contested battleground. In the struggle to
extend and defend IP rights, both legally and practically, the
champions of capitalism will be undermining the core justificatory
ideology of exchange - that of labour value. The role of libertarian
communists is in many ways unchanged - to participate in the present
dynamic of class struggles while advocating a future beyond
capitalist relations. Today however, we have the advantage that
post-capitalist exchange-free collaborative production processes are
no longer hypotheses but reality. In contrast it is the theories of
the orthodox "a-political" economist defenders of capitalist that
people will never produce socially useful goods without the incentive
of money that is shown to be an empty hypothesis - a false god.
Paul Bowman
You can download, print out and distibute this essay as
a PDF
file
View Comments Titles Only
save preference
Comments (5 of 5)
Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5"this political agnosticising tendency within syndicalism came to be recognised as a threat by the Spanish anarchist movement to the extent that they found it necessary to form a specifically anarchist political organisation - the AIT - to combat reformist tendencies within the CNT"
Shouldn't this read "FAI" (Iberian Anarchist Federation) and not the "AIT" (International Workers' Association) in the paragraph above?
The FAI was formed to combat reformism in the CNT, while the AIT was an international revolutionary syndicalist organization formed in 1922.
Not bad, although it could do with a lot less focus on (relatively unimportant) individual thinkers and more on social movements which called for communism - something that started much earlier than Thompson, with all sorts of peasant movements calling for communes/commonwealths/all things to be held in common.
It's depressing that few anarchists have a clear grasp of what communism is - worryingly that makes Parecon actually seem palatable to people. We need a new Conquest of Bread for the 21st century... Kropotkin is still the most convincing arguer for communism, unfortunately.
You're absolutely correct. That should be the FAI - sloppy editing on my part.
To say that Kropotkin is the most convincing arguer for communism is different than saying he was the most advanced or profound. It's true that ideas are useless unless they can be communicated and the movement certainly needs people with the communication skills of a Kropotkin to circulate ideas, however the ideas still need to be there to circulate.
Kropotkin only uses one main argument to attack the collectivist system - the "indivisibility issue". He does also use the "excessive individualism is anti-social argument", but again these are only two from Thompson's 6 main arguments. More importantly they are both more on the ethical side of the argument making Kropotkin, in many ways, a throw-back to the old radical republican and Godwinite tendencies. It is this tendency that allows the likes of Marshall and his epigones to criticise socialism (in the broadest sense) as reliant upon altruism vs. self-interest.
In contrast Thompson is more transitional, starting with ethical critiques but also being drawn into critiques of efficiency. For e.g. although ethical considerations have played a role in the origins of free software, it is the relative advantage in efficiency not altruism that have allowed it to succeed.
If a modern day "Conquest of Bread" is to be written it will have to be based on a critique of neo-classical and post-keynsian political economy.
Paul,
I am unfamiliar with Thompson besides this piece.
You say he has a critique of exploitation and surplus value, does he make the distinction between labor and labor-power that Marx does to advance this?
Also i enjoyed all the obscure ultra-left in-joke/ tributes written into the piece... e.g.- eclipse and re-emergence=Dauve, 57 varieties of Leninism=Solidarity.
I've found the exact same limits to the Gotha program as you mentioned (that "lower phase"=collectivism) when i point this out to communist marxologists the reasons they give to deny it are far too obtuse for me to understand. Have you encountered this? The only way it sortuv makes sense to me is in the way you have already noted:
"Libertarian communists believe that private property (in the means of production), class society, money and the wage relation are all interrelated aspects of capitalist society and the attempt to change society to abolish some of those aspects while retaining others - e.g. abolishing class society and private property while retaining money and the wage as socialism proposes - will only result in an unstable and violently contradictory mess that can only end in collapsing back into the relative stability of the capitalist dynamic unless it is taken forward to full communism."
the 'unless' is the trick...
obviously fighting for higher wages is part of the class struggle and it forces Capital into crisis... it is the taking it forward to full communism that is the problem.
at any rate, a confederated decentralized directly-democratic subsistence-based perspective would seem a more tenable "lower phase" than the bureaucatic collectist/ authoritarian socialist/ state-capitalist (without capitalism?) system that was the Soviet Union.
Perhaps this is the appeal of Parecon?