304 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
304 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
NOTE: This rather lengthy posting is excerpted from part 2 of an
|
|
article on Kropotkin's approach to economics (which originally ran
|
|
in Libertarian Labor Review issues #11 and #12 as part of our
|
|
ongoing series on anarchist economics), addressing issues such as
|
|
labor vouchers and free distribution. In cutting text I have
|
|
retained the original numbering of the end notes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Peter Kropotkin's Anarchist Communism
|
|
|
|
by Jon Bekken
|
|
|
|
Kropotkin believed that the purpose of anarchist economics,
|
|
indeed of any viable economic theory, was to satisfy human needs as
|
|
efficiently as possible--to promote "the economical and social
|
|
value of the human being." LLR #11 presented Kropotkin's argument
|
|
that capitalism fails miserably on this score; this issue briefly
|
|
reviews Kropotkin's conception of the economic framework of a free
|
|
society.[...]
|
|
Anarchist Communism
|
|
Economists, Kropotkin argued, made a fundamental mistake in
|
|
beginning their studies from the standpoint of production.
|
|
Instead, economics should be approached from the standpoint of
|
|
consumption--of human needs. Needs should govern production; the
|
|
purpose of anarchist economics is not so much to understand the
|
|
workings of the capitalist economy (to the extent that it can be
|
|
said to work at all), but rather to study "the needs of mankind,
|
|
and the means of satisfying them with the least possible waste of
|
|
human energy." Although human needs are not met at present, there
|
|
were no technical reasons why every family could not have
|
|
comfortable homes, sufficient food, etc. The problem was not to
|
|
increase productivity alone; rather, "production, having lost sight
|
|
of the needs of man, has strayed in an absolutely wrong
|
|
direction..." [...]
|
|
In his monumental work, The Conquest of Bread, Kropotkin
|
|
devoted a lengthy chapter to rebutting such common objections as
|
|
the notion that nobody would work without compulsion and that
|
|
overseers were necessary to enforce quality standards. Free
|
|
association, Kropotkin argued, was the solution to most of these
|
|
objections. If sluggards and loafers began to proliferate, they
|
|
should be fed to the extent that available resources permitted, but
|
|
treated as "ghost[s] of bourgeois society." But very few people
|
|
would in fact refuse to contribute to society, "there will be no
|
|
need to manufacture a code of laws on their account." [3]
|
|
Economists' arguments in favor of property actually "only
|
|
prove that man really produces most when he works in freedom..."
|
|
Kropotkin argued that, far from shirking work when they do not
|
|
receive a wage, when people work cooperatively for the good of all
|
|
they achieve feats of productivity never realizable through
|
|
economic or state coercion.
|
|
Well-being--that is to say the satisfaction of physical,
|
|
artistic and moral needs, has always been the most
|
|
powerful stimulant to work... A free worker, who sees
|
|
ease and luxury increasing for him and for others in
|
|
proportion to his efforts spends infinitely far more
|
|
energy and intelligence, and obtains first-class products
|
|
in a far greater abundance. [4]
|
|
To the extent possible, all goods and services should be
|
|
provided free of charge to all. Goods available in abundance should
|
|
be available without limit; those in short supply should be
|
|
rationed. Already, Kropotkin noted, many goods were provided based
|
|
on need. Bridges no longer require tolls for passage; parks and
|
|
gardens are open to all; many railroads offer monthly or annual
|
|
passes; schools and roads are free; water is supplied to every
|
|
house; libraries provide information to all without considering
|
|
ability to pay, and offer assistance to those who do not know how
|
|
to manage the catalogue. (That many of these services have been
|
|
eroded in recent years does not invalidate his premise.)
|
|
[....]
|
|
Kropotkin called for expropriation not only of the means of
|
|
production (land, mines, factories, etc.), but of all goods.
|
|
All is interdependent in a civilized society; it is
|
|
impossible to reform any one thing without altering the
|
|
whole. On that day when we strike at private property...
|
|
we shall be obliged to attack all its manifestations....
|
|
Once the principle of the "divine right of property" is
|
|
shaken, no amount of theorizing will prevent its
|
|
overthrow, here by the slaves of the soil, there by the
|
|
slaves of the machine.
|
|
Since human beings "are not savages who can live in the woods
|
|
without other shelter than the branches," people will demand
|
|
housing, food, clothing, and other items of consumption necessary
|
|
to live any kind of decent life. [9]
|
|
Shorter Hours
|
|
Kropotkin argued that, based upon the technology of his day,
|
|
people would need put in no more than five hours a day of labor
|
|
(for 25 years or so of their lives) in order to satisfy their needs
|
|
for food, clothing, housing, wine, transportation and related
|
|
necessities. [...]
|
|
Such a society could in return guarantee well-being more
|
|
substantial than that enjoyed today by the middle classes. And,
|
|
moreover, each worker belonging to this society would have at his
|
|
disposal at least five hours a day which he could devote to
|
|
science, art, and individual needs which do not come under the
|
|
category of necessities, but will probably do so later on, when
|
|
man's productivity will have been augmented and those objects will
|
|
no longer appear luxurious. [10]
|
|
This latter point was, for Kropotkin, of the greatest
|
|
importance. It was not enough merely to meet people's material
|
|
wants--human beings must also be free to pursue their artistic and
|
|
aesthetic senses. Kropotkin believed that luxury, far from being
|
|
wasteful, was an absolute necessity. But if these joys, "now
|
|
reserved to a few... to give leisure and the possibility of
|
|
developing everyone's intellectual capacities," were to be obtained
|
|
for all, then "the social revolution must guarantee daily bread to
|
|
all." [11]
|
|
Tastes, Kropotkin recognized, varied widely. Some
|
|
people required telescopes and laboratories to complete their
|
|
lives, others require dance halls or machine shops. But all of
|
|
this activity was best removed from the confines of capitalist
|
|
production and carried out on a voluntary, cooperative basis after
|
|
participants had completed their few hours of necessary labor.
|
|
Freed from the drudgery of capitalist production, we would all be
|
|
free to develop our creative instincts. Kropotkin was certain that
|
|
the result would be finer art, available to all; dramatic
|
|
scientific advances (science was, after all, until relatively
|
|
recently an entirely voluntary endeavor).
|
|
Work Need Not be Painful
|
|
Under current conditions, Kropotkin recognized, to do
|
|
productive labor meant long hours in unhealthy workshops, chained
|
|
to the same task for 20 or 30 years--maybe for one's entire life.
|
|
It means living on a paltry wage, never sure what tomorrow will
|
|
bring; and little opportunity to pursue the delights of science and
|
|
art. But it was overwork, not work itself, that was repulsive to
|
|
human nature. [....]
|
|
Kropotkin felt it was also necessary to attack the division of
|
|
labor that both Marxist and capitalist political economists have
|
|
extolled as a prerequisite of improved productivity (although Marx
|
|
did argue that ultimately labor should be reintegrated). Kropotkin
|
|
was prepared to concede that it might well be the case that a
|
|
person who did only one thing, over and over again, might indeed
|
|
become quite proficient at it. But such a worker "would lose all
|
|
interest in his work [and] would be entirely at the mercy of his
|
|
employer with his limited handicraft."
|
|
It is not enough, after the revolution, to simple reduce the
|
|
hours of labor. Kropotkin found the notion that workers should be
|
|
confined to a single repetitious activity a "horrible principle, so
|
|
noxious to society, so brutalizing to the individual..." The Social
|
|
Revolution must abolish the separation between manual and brain
|
|
work, give workers control of their workplaces, abolish wage labor.
|
|
"Then work will no longer appear a curse of fate; it will become
|
|
what it should be--the free exercise of all the faculties of
|
|
man." [15] Under the rubric of the division of labor, those who
|
|
actually make things are not supposed to think or make decisions,
|
|
while others "have the privilege of thinking for the others, and
|
|
... think badly because the whole world of those who toil with
|
|
their hands is unknown to them."
|
|
The division of labor means labelling and stamping men
|
|
for life--some to splice rope in factories, some to be
|
|
foremen in a business, others to shove huge coal baskets
|
|
in a particular part of a mine; but none of them to have
|
|
any idea of machinery as a whole, nor of business, nor of
|
|
mines. And thereby they destroy the love of work and the
|
|
capacity for invention... [16]
|
|
It would be far better, Kropotkin argued, for teachers to share in
|
|
the duties of washing the floors, sweeping the school-yard, and the
|
|
myriad of other tasks essential to school operations, than to allow
|
|
the formation of an intelligentsia, "an aristocracy of skilled
|
|
labor." [17]
|
|
And much of the advantage derived from the division of labor
|
|
is in any event lost through the necessity it creates to cart goods
|
|
from place to place, and to create enormous bureaucracies to
|
|
coordinate production of disparate parts that must ultimately be
|
|
integrated into a single machine. [...] The advantages of
|
|
centralized production are similarly illusory. While it is
|
|
sometimes convenient for capitalists to bring their operations
|
|
under central control (although even they increasingly find it
|
|
necessary to encourage local initiative), this is not because of
|
|
any technical advantages. Industry is centralized to facilitate
|
|
market domination, not because of often non-existent economies of
|
|
scale. [19] To this day, the high-tech, advanced industries so
|
|
often held up to demonstrate the superiority of centralized control
|
|
are often carried out in small-scale, dispersed operations.
|
|
Decentralization is, in fact, more efficient.
|
|
Abolish the Wage System
|
|
Kropotkin argued that the coming social revolution's
|
|
"great[est] service to humanity" would be "to make the wage system
|
|
in all its forms an impossibility." [20] In Kropotkin's day, most
|
|
socialists acknowledged the need to abolish the wage system, but
|
|
argued for its replacement by labor tokens representing either the
|
|
"value" of people's labor or time put in on the job. Kropotkin,
|
|
too, argued for such a system in 1873. [21] But he soon concluded
|
|
that such schemes were both wildly impractical and thoroughly
|
|
reformist:
|
|
Once the abolition of private property is proclaimed, and
|
|
the possession in common of all the means of production
|
|
is introduced--how can the wages system be maintained in
|
|
any form? This is, nevertheless, what collectivists are
|
|
doing when they recommend the use of the 'labor-cheques'
|
|
as a mode of renumeration for labor. [22]
|
|
Today labor vouchers are out of favor, but most socialists
|
|
still accept the wage system and money, often disguised as
|
|
consumption credits, as inevitable. Proponents of such schemes
|
|
argue that they are needed "in order to avoid systematic and
|
|
massive misallocation of time and resources." The marketplace is,
|
|
of course, a time-tested mechanism for ascertaining social needs
|
|
and preferences for goods. The reason there is mass starvation in
|
|
Africa is not because the market doesn't work to meet human needs,
|
|
but because our fellow workers prefer not to eat.
|
|
Such devices make sense only within the framework of a market
|
|
economy where goods are produced and distributed not on the basis
|
|
of need, but on ability to pay. Whether such an economic system
|
|
maintains wage differentials (the arguments against these were
|
|
reviewed in the first installment) or proclaims equal wages (or,
|
|
perhaps, wage differentials favoring those engaged in "disagreeable
|
|
or unhealthy work"), it nevertheless upholds an organization of
|
|
production and consumption which originated in private property --
|
|
and which is realizable only within its constraints. [23]
|
|
Kropotkin refuted such arguments 100 years ago, when they were
|
|
still fresh:
|
|
They say, "No private property," and immediately after
|
|
strive to maintain private property in its daily
|
|
manifestations....
|
|
It can never be. For the day on which old institutions will
|
|
fall under the proletarian axe, voices will call our: 'Bread,
|
|
shelter, ease for all!' And those voices will be listened to;
|
|
the people will say: 'Let us begin by allaying our thirst for
|
|
life, for happiness, for liberty, that we have never quenched.
|
|
And when we shall have tasted of this joy, we will set to work
|
|
to demolish the last vestiges of middle-class rule: its
|
|
morality drawn from account-books, its "debit and credit"
|
|
philosophy... and we shall build in the name of Communism and
|
|
Anarchy.' [24]
|
|
If there was a genuine shortage of necessities, Kropotkin
|
|
argued that it was more just to ration goods than to maintain
|
|
mechanisms for exchange. The wage system, in all its forms, should
|
|
be rejected in favor of communist principles; for if wages are to
|
|
be maintained (whether based on labor, or any other measure) a
|
|
State apparatus is perforce necessary as well.
|
|
But the fundamental point, for Kropotkin, was that people must
|
|
seize control of their economic destiny--must be prepared to
|
|
experiment with new processes and new methods of organization while
|
|
taking advantage of the existing methods to meet immediate needs.
|
|
The technical means of satisfying human needs, Kropotkin was
|
|
convinced, were at hand, "The only thing that may be wanting to the
|
|
Revolution is the boldness of initiative.... Ceasing to produce for
|
|
unknown buyers, and looking in its midst for needs and tastes to be
|
|
satisfied, society will liberally assure the life and ease of each
|
|
of its members, as well as that moral satisfaction which work gives
|
|
when freely chosen and freely accomplished..." [25]
|
|
The Social Revolution would build on the basis of what was--
|
|
seizing the existing industries and goods to meet immediate needs
|
|
and as the building blocks from which we would construct a free
|
|
society. And while it is neither possible nor desireable to spell
|
|
out in every detail how such an economy might operate, Kropotkin
|
|
argued that it was in fact essential to think about its general
|
|
outlines in advance, so that we might build with a purpose.
|
|
Expropriation, direct action, federalism and self-management were,
|
|
for Kropotkin, the means. But a society not built upon communist
|
|
principles would inevitably succumb to the central power it
|
|
established to oversee production and distribution. Only the free
|
|
distribution of necessities, in all their variety, on the basis not
|
|
of position or productivity, but of need, was compatible with a
|
|
free society.
|
|
|
|
Notes:
|
|
|
|
3: Kropotkin, The Conquest of Bread. New York University Press,
|
|
1972 (reprint of 1913 edition), pp. 55, 170 174.
|
|
4: Conquest of Bread, pp. 161-63.
|
|
9: Kropotkin, "Expropriation" (1895), pp. 171-72. In: M. Miller
|
|
(ed.), Selected Writings on Anarchism and Revolution. MIT
|
|
Press, 1970.
|
|
10: Conquest of Bread, pp. 122-23.
|
|
11: Conquest of Bread, p. 124.
|
|
15: Conquest of Bread, p. 164.
|
|
16: Conquest of Bread, pp. 198-99.
|
|
17: "Must We Occupy Ourselves with an Examination of the Ideal of
|
|
a Future System?" p. 56. In Miller.
|
|
19: Kropotkin, Fields, Factories and Workshops Tomorrow. Freedom
|
|
Press edition (1985), pp. 153-54.
|
|
21: "Must We Occupy Ourselves..." pp. 68-69.
|
|
22: Kropotkin, "The Wage System," pp. 94-96. In: V. Richards, Why
|
|
Work? Freedom Press. Conquest of Bread, p. 176.
|
|
23: For an example of one such approach see Michael Albert and
|
|
Robin Hahnel's Looking Forward: Participatory Economics for the
|
|
Twenty-First Century, reviewed [in LLR #12]. Similarly, WSA's
|
|
Richard Laubach argues, in the Discussion Bulletin (#23, May
|
|
1987, p. 21; #25, Sept. 1987, pp. 17-22), for giving all
|
|
workers a set of votes on what to produce... 'consumption
|
|
credits'" used "to acquire goods and services [and thereby]
|
|
provide information about the community's cumulative
|
|
preferences." (He does not mean that we would inform central
|
|
planners of our consumption plans for the coming year, an
|
|
unwieldy system, though not a market economy. Instead,
|
|
consumers would be provided with an equal number of
|
|
"consumption credits" which they would use to buy things from
|
|
stores, just as with money.) We are clearly talking about
|
|
money here, and an economic system which must quickly revert
|
|
to a full-fledged market economy or to central planning--in
|
|
either case one that has little if anything to do with meeting
|
|
human needs and promoting human freedom.
|
|
24: Conquest of Bread, pp. 179, 189.
|
|
24: Conquest of Bread, p. 229.
|
|
|
|
A copy of the complete article is contained in LLR #11-#12, available
|
|
for $5 (both) from LLR, Box 762, Cortland NY 13045. LLR #15, now in press
|
|
($3), includes part II of Abraham Guillen's Libertarian Economics, an analysis
|
|
of TDU Boring-from-Within, reports on international syndicalism, and several
|
|
book reviews.
|
|
|
|
bekkenj@snycorva.cortland.edu
|
|
|