The
resurgent promotion of co-operatives will not assist the workers to
break the chains of slavery. Co-operatives must either carry on
business in accordance with capitalist methods or stagnate. For those
Utopian advocates, it is a world of realities and not ideals that has
to be dealt with. Capitalism has possession of this world at present.
Though goods may be produced by a co-op and sold through a Co-op,
they are still none the less articles produced by people who own no
property but their power to labour, and who have used up this power
to labour in the production of co-operative produce. In return for
this expenditure of energy they have received no more than in any
other capitalist concern—the average cost of production of such
labour power. In other words, whether the work is done for a
co-operative or a corporation, the worker is still a wage slave,
whatever be the fanciful title applied to his or her wage. The
Socialist Party is organised to abolish wage-slavery.
For
example, if you form a cooperative to make shoes, you still have to
buy the materials and sell the shoes in an international market.
Buyers want the shoes as cheaply as possible. How can you compete
successfully against companies that produce similar shoes using
exploited labor without driving down the cost of your shoes by
exploiting yourself? The system must be uprooted and replaced with a
wholly different way of working, not just distributing. And we need a
system in which it’s possible to produce for human needs, not for
the sake of expanding abstract wealth (“profit”).
As
long as capitalism exists, producers will need to compete
effectively, and therefore to produce as much as possible as cheaply
as possible. There cannot be socialism in one country, much less in a
single cooperative or network of cooperatives. Even if the members of
a cooperative or network of cooperatives are nominally their own
bosses, it follows from the continued existence of the value relation
that “the process of production has mastery over [human beings],
instead of the opposite.” (Marx) Thus as long as “the
co-operative factories run by workers themselves [exist within
capitalism]…they naturally reproduce in all cases, in their present
organization, all the defects of the existing system, and must
reproduce them…the opposition between capital and labour is
abolished here…only in the form that the workers in association
become their own capitalist, i.e., they use the means of production
to valorise their own labour.” What was crucial to Marx wasn’t
which human beings were nominally in control, but whether the process
of production had mastery over human beings, or the opposite. We
guard against a system of worker-run cooperatives that produce for
human needs like health care, in which “the workers in association
[are] their own capitalist.”
The
development of Mondragon, sponsored by the Catholic Church and
fostered by the Falangist fascists had as their
intention to set the cooperatives in opposition to the workers'
movement and trade unions, the cooperative movement to be used as a
counterweight and substitute for the trade-union movement, so that
the union movement would be replaced by the moderate cooperative
movement.
Former
Tory Prime Minister David Cameron had plans to create the
Conservative Co-operative Movement, to steal the clothes of Robert
Owen, founder of the co-operative movement and since dubbed the
father of English socialism. Cameron's argument was that the
co-operative movement is not necessarily socialist and, by using the
title Pioneer Schools - after the Rochdale Pioneers - for his first
proposals under this new co-operative approach, he is harking back to
the very early days of the movement before it was irrevocably aligned
with socialism.
"The
co-operative principle captures precisely the vision of social
progress that we on the centre-right believe in - the idea of social
responsibility, that we're all in this together, that there is such a
thing as society, it's just not the same thing as the state,"
he said. Similarly, his statement that the movement will campaign for
"public
ownership of public services and public facilities",
does not mean he believes in state ownership of those services.
Out-doing
the Co-operative
Party
and those nostalgic adherents to guild
socialism within
the Labour Party , and perhaps even out-doing the
anarcho-capitalists of
the libertarian right with his apparent anti-statism
"All
over Britain, all over the world, something is happening which I find
really exciting. People are coming together in new forms of
collective activity - bespoke organisations designed to tackle
entrenched social and economic problems...We need to break that
centralised control...Manchester became great in the 19th century
when the words 'Manchester liberalism' stood for free trade and
capitalism.
And
of course the city also inspired another idea - Friedrich Engels
lived here for many years and he wrote about the dark side of the
industrial revolution. But capitalism and communism weren't the only
ideas to take their inspiration from Manchester.
In
1844, a few miles up the road from here, a group of 28 weavers and
other artisans formed the Rochdale Society of Equitable Pioneers - a
local store, selling household necessities and owned by members of
the local community. The Rochdale Pioneers created the first
successful co-operative in the world. And for me the co-operative
model represents an enormously exciting possibility for public
service reform and the fight against poverty and social breakdown.
A co-op has a flexibility and dynamism that a central state agency lacks.
Like the Rochdale Pioneers, a co-op is part of the community it serves. Its interests are their interests. And it is able to respond to the needs of the community immediately and directly...I've asked Greg Clark, the shadow minister for charities and social enterprise, to make mutualisation a core part of our policy framework for the voluntary sector...Social justice really means neighbourhoods acting collectively and voluntarily. It means people fulfilling their duties to each other through the natural networks, the institutions and associations of a community.
A co-op has a flexibility and dynamism that a central state agency lacks.
Like the Rochdale Pioneers, a co-op is part of the community it serves. Its interests are their interests. And it is able to respond to the needs of the community immediately and directly...I've asked Greg Clark, the shadow minister for charities and social enterprise, to make mutualisation a core part of our policy framework for the voluntary sector...Social justice really means neighbourhoods acting collectively and voluntarily. It means people fulfilling their duties to each other through the natural networks, the institutions and associations of a community.
Social justice means social
responsibility: the idea that we're all in this together, that there
is such a thing as society - it's just not the same thing as the
state.
That is my political philosophy in a nutshell "- David Cameron , Leader of the Conservative Party
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