Organisers
said
over
1.8 million people took part in over 2,000 actions in 125 countries
with
chants including
"Save our planet, save our future." In
London, thousands gathered in the sunshine in Parliament Square
chanting, “Where the fuck is the government”, and “This is what
democracy looks like”, before staging a sit-down protest outside
the department of education. In Cambridge about 2,000 school students
demonstrated and there were big protests in cities from Leeds to
Bristol, Manchester to Cardiff.
Socialism
means many things to many people. Ask someone in the environmentalist
movement what socialism means and you'll be answered with various
responses - it is government control, state ownership, regulations
and legislation, economic intervention by government, redistribution
of income, progressive taxation. It’s the welfare state, the mixed
economy, or the command economy and central planning. When someone
does proclaim that he or she is an “eco-socialist”, they have
difficulty defining what that actually means other than they are for
a green sustainable economy based on renewable energy with good jobs
and full employment for everyone.
The problem with such “socialisms”
is that they all leave capitalism in place. By understanding
capitalism and how it works, we come to a clearer understanding of
what socialism should mean.
If
socialist politics means a radical break from capitalism, then all
the premises of capitalism must be fundamentally challenged. Whether
it is called ‘the market economy, ‘neo-liberalism’, ‘free
enterprise’ (or even ‘mixed’ or ‘state-command’ economy”),
the social system under which we live is capitalism. Capitalism is
primarily an economic system of competitive capital accumulation out
of the surplus value produced by wage labour. As a system it must
continually accumulate or go into crisis. Consequently, human needs
and the needs of our natural environment take second place to this
imperative. The result is waste, pollution, environmental degradation
and unmet needs on a global scale. The ecologist’s dream of a
sustainable ‘zero growth’ within capitalism will always remain
just that, a dream. If human society is to be able to organise its
production in an ecologically acceptable way, then it must abolish
the capitalist economic mechanism of capital accumulation and gear
production instead to the direct satisfaction of needs.
Capitalism
is a system of capital creation and accumulation. Capital must not
only be created, it must be necessarily accumulated and expanded (and
unless accumulated to a great extent the system breaks down resulting
in recession and economic crises). The existence of capital
presupposes two things - first, a working class which is divorced
from does not own the means of production. The only thing that
workers really possess is their labour power, their ability to labour
which they must sell for a wage or salary. Secondly, the existence of
a class which owns or controls capital, which buys the labour power
of the workers and uses it for the creation of surplus value, profit.
Thus, capitalism is a class-divided society. On the one hand, those
who own only their labour power, on the other hand, those who own
capital. On the one hand, those who survive by selling their labour
power, on the other hand, those who gain their existence by living
off the profit (surplus value) created by the other class. The
distinguishing feature of capitalism is not that capital/property is
privately owned or that production is anarchic, that there is no
planning. It is that labour is alienated, exploited. If the
State intervenes or nationalises property and eliminates private
capitalists the State itself becomes the single capitalist, its
bureaucracy the de facto owners of capital. Capitalism as the ‘system
of capital’ remains unchanged. It simply transforms into
state-capitalism. The actual existence of capitalism as a ‘system
of capital’ imposes limits to what that system can do. In the end,
the system cannot work in a way that is detrimental to capital and
all action within this system of capital (reforms, taxation, public
works, health care, issues of the environment and ecology, etc.) are
determined and restricted by the inevitable fact that capital must
accumulate. Capital not only limits what one can do it also divides
people against each other in an acknowledged ‘Rat Race’ that lays
the foundation for the politics of despair, racism, sexism, ethnic
division as people compete for the crumbs offered.
People
think economics has something to do with bosses, accountants,
economists, money, the market, profits, production, the division of
labour, work or wage labour. Capitalists claim that all the things
listed above like money and the market are natural, and it is
impossible to have anything else. Instead, we need to talk of the
economic means for the satisfaction of the needs of all human beings
with the least possible expenditure of energy and resources to
achieve them. To satisfy these needs, we need to re-organise society.
We need to have a revolution to abolish all classes and
wage-labour.
The Socialist Party rejects the market, money, and profit as both exploitative and unnecessary. Instead, we need a society of common ownership and voluntary labour to meet these shared needs and wants. The first is the taking into possession of all of the wealth of the world, on behalf of the whole of humanity, because that wealth is the collective work of humanity. This requires the abolition of all property and the holding of all resources in common for the well-being of all. The abolition of property requires the abolition of the wage system. The second is organising society around the principle “From each according to their ability, to each according to their needs.” This means everything should be produced, distributed and exchanged for free according to need. Everyone would be the judge of their own needs and take for free from the common storehouse whatever they needed. If there was scarcity, things would be rationed according to need.
The problem for a great number of people in the environmental movement is that they want to retain the market system in which goods are distributed through sales at a profit and people’s access to goods depends upon their incomes. The market, however, can only function with a constant pressure to renew its capacity for sales; and if it fails to do this production breaks down, people are out of employment and suffer a reduced income. It is a fundamental flaw and an insoluble contradiction in the green capitalist argument that they want to retain the market system, which can only be sustained by continuous sales and continuous incomes, and at the same time they want a conservation society with reduced productive activity. These aims are totally incompatible with each other. Also what many green thinkers advocate in their version of a “steady-state” market economy, is that the surplus would be used not to reinvest in expanding production, nor in maintaining a privileged class in luxury but in improving public services while maintaining a sustainable balance with the natural environment. It’s the old reformist dream of a tamed capitalism, minus the controlled expansion of the means of production an earlier generation of reformists used to envisage.
The Socialist Party rejects the market, money, and profit as both exploitative and unnecessary. Instead, we need a society of common ownership and voluntary labour to meet these shared needs and wants. The first is the taking into possession of all of the wealth of the world, on behalf of the whole of humanity, because that wealth is the collective work of humanity. This requires the abolition of all property and the holding of all resources in common for the well-being of all. The abolition of property requires the abolition of the wage system. The second is organising society around the principle “From each according to their ability, to each according to their needs.” This means everything should be produced, distributed and exchanged for free according to need. Everyone would be the judge of their own needs and take for free from the common storehouse whatever they needed. If there was scarcity, things would be rationed according to need.
The problem for a great number of people in the environmental movement is that they want to retain the market system in which goods are distributed through sales at a profit and people’s access to goods depends upon their incomes. The market, however, can only function with a constant pressure to renew its capacity for sales; and if it fails to do this production breaks down, people are out of employment and suffer a reduced income. It is a fundamental flaw and an insoluble contradiction in the green capitalist argument that they want to retain the market system, which can only be sustained by continuous sales and continuous incomes, and at the same time they want a conservation society with reduced productive activity. These aims are totally incompatible with each other. Also what many green thinkers advocate in their version of a “steady-state” market economy, is that the surplus would be used not to reinvest in expanding production, nor in maintaining a privileged class in luxury but in improving public services while maintaining a sustainable balance with the natural environment. It’s the old reformist dream of a tamed capitalism, minus the controlled expansion of the means of production an earlier generation of reformists used to envisage.
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