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Alienation and the Soviet Economy: The Collapse of the Socialist Era
Alienation and the Soviet Economy: The Collapse of the Socialist Era
Alienation and the Soviet Economy: The Collapse of the Socialist Era
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Alienation and the Soviet Economy: The Collapse of the Socialist Era

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The first edition of this seminal book in 1971 pointed out the fatal defects of Marxist theory that would lead to the collapse of the Soviet economy. In this revised edition, Paul Craig Roberts examines how reality triumphed over Marxist theory and the implications for the future of Russia and eastern Europe. In 1971, Roberts created a firestorm among professional Sovietologists by proclaiming that the economies of the USSR and its East Bloc allies were doomed because their planned economies were, in reality, anything but planned. Expanding on his original ideas, Roberts demonstrates in this book the fatal shortcomings of Marxist economies, ranging from misallocation of resources to ersatz capitalistic concepts grafted onto a system that calls for production without regard to profit. Roberts argues that the economies of the nations emerging from the USSR's collapse must grasp the profound truths in this book if they are to become viable.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 1, 2017
ISBN9781598132977
Alienation and the Soviet Economy: The Collapse of the Socialist Era

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    Alienation and the Soviet Economy - Paul Craig Roberts

    anonymous.

    Introduction to the Revised Edition

    I welcome the Independent Institute’s initiative in sponsoring this new edition of Alienation and the Soviet Economy. The publication of this book two decades ago offered a new perspective on the Soviet economy. It is a perspective that scholars have found challenging, because it refutes both their explanation of Soviet economic history and their classification of the Soviet economy as planned. Following E. H. Carr and Maurice Dobb, scholars have denied that Marxism has been a force in Soviet economic history. Consequently, they have taken the concept of central economic planning out of its historical context and obscured its meaning. When Western scholars describe the Soviet economy as centrally planned, they do not mean the same thing as when Marx, Lenin, and Stalin used this term. To these revolutionaries, planning did not mean, as it generally means to modern writers, planning through markets or planning for industrialization. It meant the abolition of the market system.

    This book treats Marxism seriously as a system of thought, and it explains Soviet economic history as a product of the interaction of Marxian intentions with a refractory reality. In my account, economic and historical necessities must make room for speculative excess as a force in history.

    By 1971 when this book was first published, it was apparent to this author that reality had triumphed in the struggle with Marxism. But it was not until 1989 that Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and glasnost, his policy permitting free expression, made this generally clear to the entire world.

    To the West the collapse of communism was sudden and unexpected. It is disappearing before scholars ever understood its manifestations, and humankind is in danger of losing valuable lessons of its experience. Now that communist countries no longer exist, scholars no longer have to prove their objectivity by defending communism, and the republication of this book may help to save the lessons of a costly social experiment from oblivion.

    In 1917 Lenin startled the Marxist world when he seized power in Russia in the name of a socialist proletariat. In the minds of most Marxists, Russia had not gone through the proper stages to be ripe for socialism, and so began debate and denunciation that to this day clutters up the field of Soviet studies.

    To Marxists, Lenin appeared as an opportunist whose action flew in the face of the doctrine of historical materialism. According to this doctrine, the institutions and consciousness of men (ideology in the classical Marxian sense) in any historical period are determined by the economic organization of society. In Marx’s words: The mode of production of material life conditions the general process of social, political and intellectual life. It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness.¹

    Lenin felt pressure to legitimize his seizure of power, and the doctrinal position that he took has been misinterpreted as an affirmation of the primacy of politics over economics—the reverse of historical materialism. Scholars concluded that in 1917 Lenin chose power over Marxian principle, and out of this mistaken interpretation of Lenin have come mistaken explanations of Soviet experience. The cumulative effect has been to downplay and deny the role of Marxian ideology. This denial had the effect of exonerating Marxism from any responsibility for the tyranny and brutalization of life in the Soviet Union, and this was, no doubt, an important unconscious motive of various authors.

    It is clear from Lenin’s Collected Works that at the time he seized power he did not consider this to be a disavowal of historical materialism. He accepted that man’s consciousness—excepting a revolutionary vanguard as carrier of the program—is determined by the mode of production. Lenin thought that the Bolsheviks must change the mode of production into a socialist one if they were to remain in power. Otherwise, the Party would lose its grip due to the incompatibility of socialist rule with a bourgeois mode of production.

    What did Lenin understand the bourgeois and socialist modes of production to be? He understood perfectly, as did Bukharin, Trotsky, and everyone else involved, Marx’s writings about commodity production. They all understood that capitalism was a system of commodity production or production for exchange in the market. Producers are mutually independent, and production is separated from use by exchange. From these organizational characteristics follow capital, wage labor, the separation of value from price, economic crises, and alienation. Although each firm plans its own production, capitalist production as a whole is unplanned. The result is that man is pushed around by the forces of the market—forces of his own making. This, and not an emotional disaffection for work felt by laborers, is the meaning of Marxian alienation.²

    Similarly, Marx’s notion of freedom has nothing to do with the autonomy of the individual. Freedom is a term applied by Marx to a socialist society where conscious control has been established over social production and man is no longer subject to the blind forces of the market. Planned social production, as understood by Marx and Lenin, abolishes exchange altogether and establishes a direct unity of production with use.

    In a Marxian planned economy there is no exchange between individual producers or between producers and consumers, no money, no private property, no economic crises, and no alienation. Planning of production for direct use, or what Stalin called products-exchange between town and country, emerges as the single defining organizational characteristic of Marxian socialism.

    Having decided on the seizure of power, Lenin was committed to a transition to socialism. At first he seems to have had the idea of a transitional period based on the seizure of the banking system, but when nothing came of this he undertook a direct transition. This also failed, and Lenin was confronted with the requirements of theory and reality contradicting each other. By 1921 Lenin realized that his attempt to stamp out commodity production and establish socialist planning was a serious threat to the political survival of the Bolsheviks. Yet, he also believed that commodity production was itself a serious threat to the political survival of the Bolsheviks. Lenin frankly acknowledged the failure of his effort to establish socialist economic organization and the dilemma presented by the failure. He understood failure to be a consequence of insufficient socialist consciousness among the population (particularly the peasants) and insufficient manufactured goods for distribution in kind to peasants in return for agricultural

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