The
idea of "workers' control" or "industrial democracy"
is now being discussed in American political circles. Even some of the more far-sighted employers now support
the idea of "workers' participation” or “worker directors”.
Bernie Sanders, the progressive presidential hopeful, is set to
introduces plan that encourage employee-owner businesses and would
require corporations to reserve a seat at the boardroom table for
employees to extend work-place democracy ensure that the work-place
have a say in decisions that affect their day-to-day lives. Of course
this is not a particularly new proposal. The highly conservative
British Civil Service incorporated employee consultation as far back
as 1919 when it introduce what is called the Whitley system of
management.
It
is not the job of socialists to protect the profit advantage of any
individual company but to support improvements in the conditions of
the workers as a whole and to bring an end to the private profit
system altogether.
Workers
control is only meaningful in terms of a socialist economy
democratically determined and administered by not just work-places
but local communities and larger society otherwise workers’
control means workers are deprived of all effective social control.
This entails that ownership of industry cannot remain in the hands of
the capitalists. Only common ownership would guarantee workers'
management and workers' control in the individual plants. If by
“workers’ control” it is meant control of the ownership and
distribution of the wealth the workers produce, it obviously cannot
be under capitalism. Capitalism is a system based on private
ownership; so long as capitalists own, they control.
However,
Bernie Sanders is engaged in the re-invention of the wheel,
resurrecting ideas from the history of the labour movement and
presenting those past ideas as something new. If Sanders wishes to be
seen as a genuine socialist he should not be supporting capitalism
regardless on how a nice a face has been put on it but rather he
should be calling for the abolition of capitalism. Worker-owned
enterprises and cooperatives are perfectly compatible with capitalism
and operate like any other business or institution which extracts
surplus value and produces for exchange. As nice as Sanders make it
sound at the end of the day they remain capitalist enterprises, and
as socialists it is vital that we recognize this fact, because if we
don't go after the heart of capitalist production then all we end up
with is a capitalism-without-capitalists. Operating in a competitive
market economy, workers have to exploit themselves as if they were
exploited by capitalists. While this may be more palatable, it does
change the fact of their subordination to economic processes beyond
their control. Profit production and capital accumulation control
behaviour and perpetuate the misery and insecurity bound up with it.
While there cannot be socialism without workers’ control, neither
can there be real workers’ control without socialism.
To assert
that gradual increase of workers’ control in capitalism is an
actual possibility merely plays into the hands of the ruling class to
disguise their class-rule by false social reforms.
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