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Socialism today - challenges

Sitaram Yechury

At The World Social Forum 2004

Sitaram Yechury is a Polit Bureau member of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist). The following is the contribution he made at the panel
discussion organised by the Social Scientist and Social Science Probings
at the World Social Forum, 2004, Mumbai on January 17.

At the outset, we are extremely heartened and grateful that more than 20
important Communist parties of the world - from the socialist, developed
and developing countries - are participating in this programme.

I consider it both an honour and privilege to initiate this discussion.
I would, however, choose to provoke a discussion! On the basis of our
modest efforts in India and based on our experience, I wish to place
before you seven points in the nature of a healthy provocation!

Socialism as a human conception

1. No matter what we may think about the actual experience of socialism
in the past, one thing is undeniable. It was the first time in human
history that a society had come into being not spontaneously, not on the
basis of the spontaneous movement of history independent of human will,
but on the basis of human conception.

Karl Marx had remarked in Capital that the difference between the best
bee and the worst architect is that the architect, unlike the bee,
erects a structure in the mind before erecting it in reality. Socialism
is the first structure of society that was first erected in the mind
before it was erected in reality.

True, what came into being might not have fully corresponded to what was
in the mind; nonetheless socialism, even as it existed, was the first
non-spontaneously evolved mode of production in human history.

Quite apart from its historical significance in establishing the rule of
the hitherto exploited classes, in defeating fascism, in enabling the
oppressed nations to liberate themselves from imperialism and in forcing
capitalism, however transiently, to adopt welfare state measures, this
aspect of socialism, of representing the first grand effort of mankind
to transform a vision into reality, must never be lost sight of.

In fact, socialism defined, to a significant extent, the contours of
human civilisational advance in the 20th century and left an inerasable
imprint on all its aspects.

Since mankind would never again rest content leaving its fate to the
blind forces of history, the victory of socialism, not necessarily in
the form it originally appeared in but maybe in some other form,
representing a vision going beyond capitalism towards social ownership,
is assured and inevitable.

Through all our present travails this is a truth we must never lose
sight of.

In the context of imperialism

2. Nonetheless we must face the question: why did socialism collapse
over large parts of the world? The usual answer to this question focuses
on the defects of the system that was erected, notably the extreme
centralisation of power in the socialist societies, which were
characterised by a dictatorship of the Party and which ultimately ended
up de-politicising the working class to a significant extent.

The CPI(M) had, in its 14th Congress, identified four areas viz: the
character of the socialist State; the content of socialist democracy;
the construction of the socialist economy; and inadequate development of
ideological consciousness amongst the people, where distortions and
deviations took place undermining the socialist State.

There is of course much truth in this. But this answer itself has to be
located within a historical context, and that context was provided by
imperialism.

Imperialism leading to uneven development kept socialism confined only
to countries in the periphery while countries in the metropolis, belying
the hopeful anticipation of Marx and Engels and the expectations of
Lenin and his comrades, came close to, but never succeeded in, achieving
the breakthrough to a socialist revolution.

As a result, socialism, wherever it had come into being, remained
encircled throughout its entire brief history, resulting in an
ossification of the centralised bureaucratic structure from which there
was no escape other than through a collapse of the system itself.

Estimating changes

3. There is an additional point to note. Not only did revolutions not
happen in the advanced centres of capitalism but the very revolutionary
conjuncture itself passed.

The Programme of the Comintern was based on the notion of a general
crisis of capitalism from which the only way out could be provided by a
transition to socialism.

All of us recollect the meetings of 1957 and 1960. Eighty-one communist
parties in a 1960 declaration asserted that the international
correlation of forces shifted decisively in socialism's favour; that
capitalism is incapable of developing any further; that socialism is
irreversible in the existing socialist countries etc.

In retrospect, it is clear that there was both an underestimation of
capitalism and an over-estimation of socialism. An incorrect estimation
that had grave consequences for the advance of the socialist cause.

Capitalism restructured itself in the aftermath of the Second World War,
through Keynesian demand management ushering in an unprecedented boom,
through political de-colonisation removing the moral stigma of being an
oppressor of other nations from it, and through the diffusion of a
degree of development to certain pockets in the third world, such as
East Asia, which appeared to belie the Sixth Congress thesis that
development of the third world could occur only through socialism.

These changes, together with the experience of the very horrors of the
Second World War, contributed to the passing of the revolutionary
conjuncture of the period 1913-1950.

While we have a renascent imperialism today and the moral stigma
associated with oppression and stagnation is once again beginning to
adhere to capitalism, portending the beginning of yet another possible
revolutionary conjuncture, the fact remains that this would not be a
return to the earlier conjuncture.

Lenin always teaches us that concrete analysis of concrete conditions is
the living essence of dialectics. Just as he authored Leninism as
Marxism in the era of imperialism, it falls on our collective shoulders
to define the contours of the socialist revolution in the present
conjecture.

Therefore, there is no going back. We can stand on Lenin's shoulders to
see the future but we can not see it through Lenin's eyes.

Anti-imperial struggle

4. Given the fact of uneven development under imperialism it is clear
that the transition to socialism would be a protracted affair. Likewise
given the reassertion of hegemony of imperialism in the epoch of the
emergence of a new form of international finance capital, it is clear
that the socialist movement must be engaged above all in an
anti-imperialist struggle.

Indeed the chief hallmark of the socialist movement today is that it
constitutes the most consistent fighter against imperialism, since it
alone can visualise a transcendence of capitalism, which is a necessary
condition for the transcendence of imperialism.

For Marx has irrefutably proved that capitalism can never survive
without its raison-d'EAtre, i.e., exploitation of man by man and nation
by nation. To those who spread illusions of reforming capitalism (since
Bernstien) and to those who parrot the TINA (there is no alternative to
globalisation) factor, the Communist answer can only be that the
alternative to TINA is SITA - socialism is the alternative.

We can therefore carry the struggle for socialism forward today only
through the adoption of an uncompromising stand against imperialism.
This is our historic task in an era when the vileness of imperialist
predatoriness, notwithstanding all high phrases about freedom and
democracy, is becoming apparent to everyone in the aftermath of the war
on Iraq.

Ascendency international finance capital

5. There is an additional point to consider. The reassertion of
imperialist hegemony is occurring in a situation of the ascendancy of
international finance capital in a new form, which has the effect of
causing deflation, recession, and unemployment everywhere.

In other words, the contemporary imperialist aggressiveness is the other
side of the same coin, which imposes enormous burdens on the working
classes in the advanced capitalist countries in the form of unemployment
and cuts in social wage.

Imperialism of course tries to pit the workers in the advanced countries
against those in the third world by arguing that the latter are
snatching jobs away from the former. Nothing could be further from the
truth. It is the world-wide deflation imposed by finance capital that is
the cause of unemployment everywhere, not the re-distribution of
employment from one section of workers to another.

An anti-imperialist struggle, provided it can make this point clear and
present a vision for improving the lot of mankind as a whole, embracing
the working class and other exploited classes in all countries -
developed, developing and underdeveloped - can acquire world-wide
support and contribute to a change in the conjuncture.

A future socialist society

6. Of course the precise contours of what a future socialist society
would look like still need to be drawn, based on the past experience of
socialism. The road map of this would naturally vary from country to
country depending on the concrete realities.

Each one of us has this historic responsibility to discharge in our
respective countries. However, the task of advancing the
anti-imperialist struggle world wide cannot afford to wait.

Neither can it wait until that intellectual task of evolving a coherent
and comprehensive revolutionary theory for the socialist revolution in
the present conjecture, important though it is, is completed.

Unsustainable capitalist globalisation

7. Finally, let us confront a reality squarely. The present phase of
capitalist globalisation is simply unsustainable. This is precisely
because, by sharply accentuating economic inequalities - between
countries and between the rich and poor in individual countries - the
vast majority of world's population are increasingly placed beyond
market operations as they simply lack the requisite purchasing power.

Imperialist hegemonic drive, therefore, will increasingly be determined
by military aggressiveness. Under these conditions, as Rosa Luxembourg
said earlier and as Fidel Castro says today, the choice before
humanity's future is between socialism or barbarism.

Each one of us, working in tandem with our domestic revolutionary goals,
will have to work for integrating the worldwide anti-globalisation
protests with the global anti-war upsurge into a mighty anti-imperialist
movement.

This requires, simultaneously, the intensification of the ideological
combat within these movements that seek to obfuscate socialism as the
only alternative available to humanity.

Come, let us, together rise to the occasion.



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