‘Over three hundred thousand people in England alone are homeless. This is the worst part of the housing crisis, but the problem extends well beyond that.
There was a report recently about a woman who earns £50,000 a year and cannot buy a house; rent and bills take two-thirds of her income. It has been claimed that only one in eight renters can afford to buy where they live. Not even a half of those earning over £70,000 (twice the average wage) could afford to buy in their local area.
The house-building industry under capitalism exists to make a profit, not to meet human need, which would be the aim of housing in a Socialist society.’
The below is from the Socialist Standard May 1953
‘1. The relationship of landlord and tenant
The passage referred to is one in which Engels criticises the statement of a German follower of Proudhon who had written:—
“As the wage worker is in relation to the capitalist, so is the tenant in relation to the house owner.”
Engels points out that the above statement is incorrect. People who rent houses (whether they are workers or capitalists) are buying a commodity (the use of a house) from the house-owner. They are not in the position of worker to capitalist, for in this relationship the worker is the seller of a commodity (labour-power) and the capitalist is buying it
The capitalist exacts surplus value when he buys labour-power. He does not exact surplus value when he sells commodities, though it is in the act of selling commodities that he realises surplus value. If the Proudhonist argument were correct then all sales, not only sales of accommodation, would be an act of exacting surplus value—which would produce the odd result that the capitalists exploit each other, and also that the workers are exploited in production and everybody, capitalists and workers alike, is again exploited in the act of buying commodities.
2. That the landlord is not per se a capitalist
Our correspondent’s conclusion from Engel’s statement is that “ a landlord confronted by a tenant is not, per se, a capitalist.”
This overlooks the fact that the capitalist is still a capitalist after he has exploited the workers in production; he is still a capitalist when, as a seller of commodities, he confronts workers or other capitalists—but in the latter act he is a capitalist who is realising surplus value by turning commodities into money.
3. Landlords and Socialism
Our correspondent’s further conclusion is in the form of asking whether the ownership of houses is compatible with Socialism.
Socialism requires that the means of production and distribution shall cease to be privately owned and become the common property of society. This relates to the means of production and distribution and the consequence of their common ownership will be that the products will be freely accessible to the members of society.
In those circumstances the members of society will take the products in order to consume them. They will consume the accommodation by living in houses and will of course not do so by permission of an individual house owner any more than they will eat bread by permission of a bread owner. There will be no such owners.
Nothing that Engels wrote in “The Housing Question” is in conflict with this. Engels was merely correcting an erroneous statement. He did not draw or imply any conclusion such as these in the question.’
Editorial Committee
https://socialiststandardmyspace.blogspot.com/2020/05/engels-on-relationship-of-landlord-and.html
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