246 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
246 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
The following is the introduction and conclusion of a far longer article
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which will appear in the _New Labor Review_ sometime in 1996. The following
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will be published in FREEDOM again sometime in 1996.
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The Mondragon Co-operative Federation: A model for our times?
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by Mike Long
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The Mondragon Co-operative Federation (MCF) is a community of
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economically highly successful worker-owned, worker-controlled
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production and consumption co-operatives centred around Mondragon, a
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town in the Basque region of northern Spain, and now spreading
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throughout the Basque provinces and beyond. The MCF is an experiment
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in participatory economic democracy rooted in a powerful grassroots
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movement for Basque cultural revival and autonomy, but inclusive of non-
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Basques .
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The MCF began quietly on a tiny scale with one co-op and 12 workers
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nearly 40 years ago under the fascist Franco dictatorship. The original
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members were educated but poor and had to borrow money from
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sympathetic community members to get started. By 1994, the MCF had
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become the fifteenth biggest business group in Spain, comprising some 170
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co-ops and over 25,000 worker members and their families, with vast
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assets, large financial reserves, and annual sales of around three billion US
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dollars.
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Studies have shown that the co-ops have consistently outperformed
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surrounding capitalist industry on all the usual measures, and while
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unemployment in Spain has hovered around 20% for many years, full
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employment has been maintained within the Federation. All this has been
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achieved with a level of internal democracy and concern for social justice
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undreamt of by most workers struggling under exploitative state systems,
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whether capitalist or authoritarian socialist.
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Not surprisingly, international interest in the MCF has grown over the
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past 20 years, especially now that so many governments are unable to
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provide even for basic human needs food, shelter, education, healthcare, art
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and recreation - and are increasingly recognised as uninterested in doing so.
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(As anarchists have long pointed out, that is not what governments are for,
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after all.) There is a sizeable literature in several languages on Mondragon.
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Harvard business students study management within the Mondragon co-
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ops. Stanford law students learn about the legal obstacles to setting up
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such entities in the USA Enlightened Australian trade unionists consider
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whether using union funds to start "mini-Mondragons" for their
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unemployed members might be more effective than filling politicians'
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pockets in the vain hope of slowing corporate job export to non-union,
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low-wage, third world countries. And some anarchists wonder if the MCF
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is a test, or even a vindication, of their ideas.
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This article has three aims. The first is to sketch the historical context
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for the MCF, including the wide-scale experimentation with worker-
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controlled industry and agriculture that took place during the early months
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of the Spanish Civil War.
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There are similarities, ignored by many professional MCF observers,
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although not by all, between the internal structure and day-to-day
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functioning of the CNT/UGT collectives in 1936 and 1937 and the MCF
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co-operatives since 1956. This is so despite the undeniable compromises
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which today's worker-owners have made (or as most of them see it, have
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been forced to make) in order to stay afloat in the hostile capitalist sea in
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which they operate, and despite the fact that the debt appears to go
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unrecognised by many of the co-operators themselves, few of whom
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consider themselves anarchists. The second aim is to provide a brief
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overview of the Federation's development, structure and functioning. The
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third is to evaluate its significance for anarcho-syndicalists.
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The last is especially problematic, for anarchists differ on economics.
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Some believe in collectivism, as envisaged, e.g. by Proudhon, Bakunin or
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Malatesta, whereby the means of production belong to the community, and
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people collaborate in collectively owned farms, shops and factories, which
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trade with one another via a union-run system, and at the individual level
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receive goods in exchange for work - from each according to their abilities,
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unto each according to their deeds. The prosperity of a collective, of its
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union, and of the individual workers within it in principle depends on how
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hard they work and how skilled and creative they are, but in practice
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sometimes also on how well they trade, on their starting assets and on the
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demand for their products or services. The system discourages slackers
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and freeloaders, that is, but can have the additional effect of promoting
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survival of the strongest and fittest. Others aspire to the more idealistic
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"honour system" of anarchist communism, favoured, e.g. by Godwin,
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Winstanley, Morris and Kropotkin, whereby money, exchange systems and
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the market are abolished, property is publicly owned, and people cooperate
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within and across loosely federated groups to receive food, goods and
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services without reference to work done or other contributions - from each
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according to their abilities, unto each according to their needs. Such a
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system is more open to abuse, but it offers protection for non-producers,
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such as the weak, the sick, and the unemployed. Still others (like many non-
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anarchists) advocate everything from LETS schemes, through local
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currencies, to gift economies. As Holmstrom (1993) noted, however, how
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best to organise economically in the new society, and how to get from here
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to there:
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"is not just a problem for anarchists or Spaniards. It has been a concern
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for the left everywhere, especially where ideas of workers' control were
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taken seriously: how to balance the interests of self-managing groups of
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workers against those of consumers and of social justice." (Holstrom,
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1993, 25)
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A third major option, one which attempts to capture the strengths, but
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avoid the perceived (potential) weaknesses of pure collectivism or anarcho-
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communism is anarcho-syndicalism as propounded, among many others,
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by Rocker, Monatte, Cornelissen, Pouget, Grave, Yvetot, Pelloutier,
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Pataud, Flores Magon, Ascaso, Durruti, Mann, Brown and Chomsky.
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Anarcho-syndicalists propose a central role for inclusive, egalitarian
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industrial unions (as opposed to elitist and divisive trade, or craft unions) as
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the central mechanism by which working people can organise towards three
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ends: (1) to eradicate wage slavery, whether capitalist or state socialist, (2)
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to operate the new stateless society, including its economy, education and
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social programs, peaceably and justly, and (3) to protect that society
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against threats from traditional enemies, such as racists, fascists,
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capitalists,
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Stalinists and bureaucrats. The union is not everything, however. Contrary
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to the pathetic charicature portrayed by Bookchin (1993 and elsewhere),
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both the theory and historical practice of anarcho-syndicalism stress the
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interdependence of union and community. Workers and their families are
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obviously members of both, after all. Anarcho-syndicalists support
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community organisations of all kinds, not just organisation in the
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workplace, critically important though that is. These range from workers'
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education, literacy and recreation centres, through schools and co-
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operatives, sports teams and "mixed local" union halls, to women's centres,
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day-care centres and holiday clubs. Through the strength and resources of
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its unions and union federations, anarcho-syndicalism provides options for
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achieving and protecting anarchist goals (and for masses of working
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people, not just small privileged elites) which are unavailable to or from
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small, local communities alone - a problem which "social ecologists" like
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Bookchin simply ignore.
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Industrial unions are not only the means to an end, for anarcho-
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syndicalists, however. They also offer a mechanism for the rational co-
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ordination of the production and distribution of goods and services in the
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new society on a scale demanded by its modern size and complexity - a
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scale that is difficult, perhaps impossible, for either pure anarcho-
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communism or collectivism to manage. To illustrate, union and industry-
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wide councils can preempt the potential for selfish competition inherent
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(although not inevitable of course) in collectivism, with its retention of
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assets and property ownership by collective members. They can do this,
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for example, by sheltering one collectively owned farm, factory or service
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from a more successful one, or by researching planning and funding the
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initial implementation of new unionfunded ventures, such as co-operatives,
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ensuring that they will be useful, economically viable, and will not duplicate
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services offered elsewhere. Their size and strength also allow industrial
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unions to guarantee protection for sick, weak or temporarily unproductive
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community members, rather than leaving them to depend on what is
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essentially the charity of others, as pure collectivism tends to do. Finally, as
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evidenced by the historical record, and contrary to Bookchin's
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unsupported assertions, anarcho-syndicalism has long been recognised as
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relevant to their needs by far more than "just" blue-collar smokestack
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operators, appealing instead to workers of all kinds: to sailors, dockers,
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miners, lumberjacks, bakers, cobblers, barbers, needleworkers, educators,
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postal workers, flight attendants and computer operators, to white-collar
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providers of numerous other goods and services, and to collectivism, with
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its retention of millions of landless peasants.
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In addition to all these options and variants in anarchist economics,
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there are disagreements within the various camps about how to get from
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here to there. Anarchists have long argued over whether, as one collectivist,
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Proudhon, believed, it is possible to evolve gradually and peacefully
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towards one or the other system, or whether, as another collectivist,
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Bakunin, asserted, what they aspire to can only be achieved by revolution
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and expropriation of the existing means of production, forcibly if
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necessary. Not surprisingly, therefore, anarchists' attitudes towards
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Mondragon vary, too, ranging from enthusiastic (e.g. Benello, 1986/1992)
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to dismissive (e.g. Chomsky, 1994). What follows is based on my reading
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of English, and some Spanish, literature on the MCF, coupled with a week-
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long visit to Arrasate (the Basque name for Mondragon) in June, 1994, with
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fellow Wobbly, Charlene "Charlie" Sato (we visited as individuals, not as
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representatives of any organisation). Our stay in Arrasate included an
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intensive series of pre-arranged interviews, informal group discussions, and
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site visits, as well as enjoyable and equally informative evenings spent
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socialising with co-op members over bottles of the MCF's excellent Rioja
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wines.
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(...................)
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main article
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(...................)
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A model for our times?
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The generalizability of the Mondragon model may be considered in at
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least two ways: in terms of its practical viability and its ideological
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acceptability. Much has been written about the former, with some debate
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about the relative contributions to the MCF's economic success of the
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following factors, and various combinations thereof: Basque nationalism;
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co-operative values; a strong sense of (Basque or any other) ethnic,
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linguistic and cultural identity among the participants; the foresight and
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leadership of Father Arizmendiarrieta; the compatibility of MCF values with
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Basque traditions, such as co-operative farming practices and the relatively
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equitable land distribution among Basque families compared, for instance,
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with the hacienda system of southern Spain; the rapid expansion of the
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Spanish economy after the Civil War, with a heavy demand for household
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goods and other early MCF products; the political and economic history of
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Spain, with its strong anarchist and anarcho-
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syndicalist traditions and lengthy prior experience with agricultural, fishing,
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and industrial production co-ops; Mondragon's strategic location, with easy
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access to large ports like Bilbao, and short distances to major export
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markets; the scope and diversity of the MCF's high technology products;
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the use of crucial second degree co-ops; early establishment of the CLP;
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the centrality of the industrial co-ops; the relatively low cost of land for the
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agricultural sector; the availability of a highly educated work force with
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relevant skills; and the felt need to look to a self-help model, given the
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Basque people's long history of state oppression.
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Also widely considered crucial is the MCF co-ops' internal worker-
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member economic structure. My own view is that perhaps all, of the above
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factors were differentially important at various times in the MCF's history, it
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is in their internal structure and functioning that the co-ops' main ingredient
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for success lies - and in this domain, too, that they come closest to
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anarchist principles and values. I believe that (a) the motivation and
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commitment needed to buy or work one's way into a co-op; (b) the initial
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extra capitalisation provided by retention of a portion of members' income
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in their internal capital accounts; (c) the equality and mutual respect
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produced by the one person, one share, one vote, system; and (d) the
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stability and freedom from external control guaranteed by the impossibility
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of members selling shares to each other or to outsiders, have made for a
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system of worker ownership and (with some dilution in the interests of
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operational size and efficiency) worker control.(14) The pride and security
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this brings the MCF members, the feeling of control over their own lives,
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the visible economic success of their efforts, the decent standard of living
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they have achieved for themselves and their families, and the positive
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impact all this has on the communities to which they return after work each
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day, have had a liberating effect on the workers of Mondragon, just as
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anarchist theory would predict.
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If this analysis is accurate, or even close to it, variants of the model
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adapted for local conditions must be of interest to like-minded individuals
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or whole communities elsewhere. In fact, co-ops on something like the
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Mondragon model are already operating in several countries, including
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Germany and the USA. Many writers have discussed the MCF or similar
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projects positively, and several have provided practical information on how
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to go about setting up new co-ops.
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Whether worker or union-owned and/or controlled, and no doubt
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accompanied by militant union organising in existing workplaces, it is clear
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that something like Mondragon-style co-op federations, and federations of
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federations, are urgently needed in many countries today. Quite apart from
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the human misery and environmental devastation it causes, capitalism
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simply does not work even judged by its own execrable standards. The
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desperate plight of growing millions of unemployed and never-to-be-
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employed workers in the inner city ruins of so many "advanced"
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industrialised countries attests to this. So does the poverty, disease and
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starvation that is the lot of millions of capitalism's third world victims.
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These people are viewed by "their" governments merely as the inevitable
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statistical fall-out from multinational corporate "restructuring" and increased
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"efficiency". Politicians, states and the capitalist system have nothing to
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offer them. Radical industrial unions, like the CNT, the SAC and the IWW
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have something. Ultimately, however, their future lies in their own hands,
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just as it did the oppressed citizens of the small town of Arrasate some fifty
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years ago.
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FREEDOM PRESS
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http://www.lglobal.com/TAO/Freedom
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