The road(s) to a full libertarian economy

Submitted by syndicalist on January 17, 2012

I was re-reading "Anarchism & Anarcho-Syndicalism" by Rocker and came across this statement
(the surprising part is highlighted and italizied):

Common to all Anarchists is the desire to free society of all political and social coercive institutions which stand in the way of development of a free humanity. In this sense Mutualism, Collectivism and Communism are not to be regarded as closed systems permitting no further development, but merely as economic assumptions as to the means of safeguarding a free community. There will even probably be in society of the future different forms of economic co-operation operating side by side, since any social progress must be associated with that free experiment and practical testing out for which in a society of free communities there will be afforded every opportunity.
http://www.spunk.org/library/writers/rocker/sp001495/rocker_as1.html

Granted this was written more than 70 years ago, during the Spanish Revolution, and I am wondering if some of his opinion is based on the mixed charater of the Spanish revolutionary
economy. Or if Rocker left the door open for another aspect to building a libertarian economy on the road to libertarian communism (if you would, a transitional period).

Speaking of "transitional periods", both Tthe Organizational Platform" and a critique of the platform ("Constuctive Anarchism" by G.P. Maximoff) discuss this. I raise this because I gather some comrades have been discussing forms of libertarian communism and the roads to get there. For example, "communalization" as being the "transitional period" to "collectivization" (libertaian communism). So, it's interesting to see how others habe discussed what we normally think of as a Trotskyist concept (the transitional period).

"The Platform" states that the transitional period would look something like this:

VII. The transition period
Socialist political parties use the term "transition period" to refer to a specific phase in the life of a people, the essential features of which are a break with the old order and the introduction of a new economic and political system, which does not yet imply, however, the full emancipation of all workers.

In this respect, all the minimum programmes of the socialist political parties, for instance the democratic programme of the opportunistic socialists, or the communist programme of the "dictatorship of the proletariat", are programmes for the transition period.

The essential feature of these minimum programmes is that they regard the complete realization of the workers’ ideals - their independence, freedom and equality - as unrealisable in the short term, and as a result they retain a whole series of the capitalist system's institutions: the principle of State coercion, private ownership of the means and instruments of production, wage-slavery and much else, according to the goals of each political party’s programme.

Anarchists have always been principled opponents of such programmes, taking the view that the construction of transitional systems retaining the principles of exploitation and coercion of the masses unavoidably leads back to slavery.

Instead of political minimum programmes, anarchists have only ever championed social revolution that would strip the capitalist class of political and economic privileges and place the means and instruments of production, and all other functions of social and economic life, in the hands of the workers.

And that is a position that anarchists have stood firm on to this very day.

The idea of the transition period, according to which the social revolution should culminate not in an anarchist society, but in some other form of system retaining elements and relics of the old capitalist system, is anti-anarchist in its essence. It contains in itself the threat of bolstering and developing these elements to their former proportions, thus sending events into reverse.

One clear example of this is the "dictatorship of the proletariat" regime established by the Bolsheviks in Russia, which according to them was to be only a transitional stage in the march to complete communism, but which in point of fact resulted in the restoration of class society, at the bottom of which, just like before, we find the industrial workers and poorest peasants.

The main focus in the construction of the anarchist society does not consist of guaranteeing every individual, right from day one of the revolution, boundless freedom to seek satisfaction of their needs, but in the conquest of the social basis for that society and in establishing the principles of relations between people. The question of the greater or lesser abundance of resources is not a matter of principle but a technical issue.

The underlying principle upon which the new society will be built, the precept upon which it will rest, so to speak, and which must not be restricted even to the slightest degree is the equality of relations, the freedom and the independence of the workers. This principle encapsulates the prime basic requirement of the masses, in the name of which alone they will rise up in social revolution.

Either the social revolution will end in the defeat of the workers, in which case we have to start all over again to prepare for another struggle, a fresh offensive against the capitalist system; or it will lead to the victory of the workers, in which case, having seized the wherewithal to fend for themselves - the land, production and social functions - they will set about building a free society.

That moment will be the beginning of the construction of an anarchist society which, once started, will then develop continuously, gathering strength and constantly being improved upon.

Therefore, the takeover of production and social functions will be the watershed between the statist and the non-statist eras.

In order to become the rallying point of the struggling masses and the social revolutionary epoch, anarchism must not hide its basic principles nor accommodate its programme to assimilate vestiges of the old order, opportunistic tendencies of transitional systems and periods; instead, it must develop its principles and refine them as far as possible.

http://www.nestormakhno.info/english/newplatform/general.htm

In turn, Maximoff posited the following criticisms:

10. The Transition Period

One of the painful questions among Anarchists is that of the "Transition Period". The authors of the "Platform" also considered it and declared that it is a "definite phase in the life of a people characterized by the breakup of the old structure and the establishment of a new economic and political system which, however, does not yet involve the full liberation of the working people" (p. 17). In view of this attitude, the "Platform" passes over this Transition Period as a non-Anarchist phenomenon. It is non-Anarchist because it is "not the Anarchist society which will emerge as a result of the social Revolution, but some 'X', still containing elements and remnants of the old Capitalist system". (page 17). What elements are these? ''The principle of State enforcement; private property in tools and means of production, the hiring of labour, etc." Instead of all these evils, the "Platform" insists on a perfect social Revolution which would establish with one blow a social order containing no sign of the survival of elements from the old society.

Are there actually people in our ranks who regard such a vision as practical? We, for one, consider it entirely impossible.
The authors of the "Platform" themselves continue, with their habit of saying one thing and meaning another, that "the Anarcho-communist society in its final stage will not be established by the force of a social upheaval alone" (page 21). The logical assumption from this statement would be that, for the final formation of the Anarcho-communist society, a certain period of time is needed, i.e. a Transition Period. And the "Platform" declares this directly: "Its realisation (society's) will present a more or less lengthy social-revolutionary process, directed by the organised forces of victorious labour along definite lines." (page 21).

A process is a function of time, and the time during which this process continues "is a transitional time", characterized by a series of concrete tasks designed to help the new society approach its ideal architectural perfection, and to imbue it with Anarchist life. These concrete tasks - even those proposed by the "Platform" - again assert the inevitability of a transitional period, which was proposed by the Russian Anarcho-syndicalists as far back as 1918.

"Only the workshop of producers," the "Platform" says, "belonging in its entirety to all working people and to none individually ... The products form a common food fund for the workers, from which each participant in the new industry will receive all his necessities on the basis of full equality. The new system of production will destroy completely the concepts of hiring and exploitation ... There will be no bosses ... This is the first practical step towards the realisation of Anarchist Communism" (pages 22-23). And they call that the "first step"! The authors of the "Platform" evidently confuse the ninth month of pregnancy with the first. They themselves had already stated that the principle "to each according to his needs" would be preceded by a concept of expediency - once again a transitional measure.
The "Platform" failed completely in the question of solving the agrarian problem. In industry it proposed Communism, and in agriculture an individual economy with rights of ownership to the products of the economy; in other words, the need for an exchange of goods with the city would continue until the great masses of the peasantry embraced Communism in production and distribution.

Again, this process is perforce lengthy; a number of measures will have to be taken to speed the process. The objections of the "Platform" and other Anarchists to the Transitional period are a tribute which our comrades pay to the relics of those days when Anarchists thought little, if at all, about the nature, meaning and process of social upheavals. But as soon as Anarchists descended from the cloudy heights to the sinful, practical, materialistic earth, they had, willy nilly, to be in favour of the Transitional period. And those who continue to speak and write against it do this only to clear their hardened consciences.

http://libcom.org/library/constructive-anarchism-debate-platform-g-p-maksimov#a10

ocelot

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ocelot on January 18, 2012

Maximoff's critique has to be seen in light of his proposition for a transitional period in the Program of Anarcho-Syndicalism in which he argues for a mixed economy of socialised production alongside "individualistic units" based on private property of the means of production, with commodity exchange relations (and money) governing the intercourse between the two sectors (and the wider, not-yet-communist world). Arguably Maximoff's Program for the Transitional Period is not a million miles away from Bukharin's Right Opposition.

All existing banks will be socialized and will merge with the Bank for Cash-and-Goods Credit. This, in addition to its statistical functions, will perform all the usual banking operations which, of course, will change in accordance with the new economic structure of the country. The Bank will be the organic liaison between the communistic economy and the individualistic units, particularly the agricultural units, as well as with the individualist world abroad. In the latter case, it will act as the bank for foreign trade
[...]
Money, as a concrete symbol of expended labor, the greatest part of which is now concentrated by means of exploitation in the hands of a few capitalists and States, must be socialized. The socialization of money, i.e. the return to society of the fruits of expended labor, will be possible only in the form of its abolition, without any compensation. The abolition of the monetary token of the old regime is one of the first tasks of the social revolution.

It will be impossible, however, to abolish money entirely in the Transition Period, since some functions, which are dependent on money now, will still continue to operate, even though their dangerous aspects will be removed. Money will vanish of itself during the gradual approach to a system of fully matured Communism which will replace exchange by distribution. But in the Transition Period, owing to the co-existence of communism with individualism, the exchange of goods cannot be eliminated entirely. And since the main function of money is that of a medium of exchange -- the most convenient medium of exchange -- it will not be possible to do without it during this phase.

In the beginning, because of the practical impossibility of introducing labor money (whose value is based on the working day) the communistic economy will have to recognize gold coins, and will have to be guided in their exchange by the values inherited from capitalism. This will apply particularly to foreign trade. In internal exchange, owing to the socialization of a large part of industry, which will provide the opportunity of determining the scale of production, it will be possible to set prices and to assure their stability in a scientific manner.

from here

syndicalist

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by syndicalist on January 19, 2012

I've never read Bukharin's "Economics of the Transition Period" and will give a scan.

As an anarcho-syndicalist, it seems sort of odd, strange to read Maximff and Rocker's comments. I've not paid much attention to what has been written transition period by anarchists. Though recent snippets of conversations I've read on "communalization"
and "collectivization" and the stalinist term "full communism" peaked a certain interest.

I have traditionally believed that there would be some form of transitional period or bridge(s) between different phase of struggles. From mass movements surging forward (pre-revoltionary) to the revolutionary period t the period immediately following the revolution.
But I've not given much thought to the immediate and longer term post revolutionary periods.
Not in the in the sense of painting the picture, the fraework, the outlines and contours of what these periods might look like, might feel like and might consittute themselves like. So, my pea-brain is undertaking some of this thinking and wee-bit of reading now.

andyc

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by andyc on January 19, 2012

Lots of interesting posts on this site. I'm interested in debate about the nature of a future socialist /communist society, and about how we get from here to there. In my view (See socialistmatters.webs.com/planningsocialism.htm), as long as we can concur that (a) what is needed is the worldwide establishment of a free access society where the means of production are held in common (b)this needs to be the desire of the vast majority, and (c) we must not be sidetracked by reformist agendas, then we have the basis for a united political entity that clearly opposes both avowed supporters of capitalism, and the motley assortment of 'pseudo-socialists' who seem hopelessly mired in the utopian business of making capitalism work in the interests of the workers. The latter, I think, are probably the more problematic

syndicalist

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by syndicalist on January 20, 2012

The Italian FdCA has also written on the "transitional period":
http://www.fdca.it/fdcaen/organization/sdf/sdf_tp.htm

According to an FdCA "It's our basic strategy's thesis about the Transitional Period, written in late '70s by italian ORA and assumed by FdCA in its foundation congress in 1985, ....
It's part of our theoretical/strategical unity."

syndicalist

7 years ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by syndicalist on April 6, 2017

"A 1932 text calling upon anarchists to give serious consideration to the practical question of the “transition period”, in opposition to what the author characterizes as the idealism, reformism, passivity or bolshevism of the majority of the world anarchist movement."

https://libcom.org/library/anarchists-social-revolution-transition-period-andré-prudhommeaux

Anarcho

7 years ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Anarcho on April 8, 2017

Most anarchists recognised that pure communist-anarchism would not appear overnight -- Kropotkin included. So there would be some kind of transition from capitalism-statism to libertarian-communism. Also, most anarchists -- Kropotkin included -- recognised that different areas would progress at different rates and some would try different solutions to the social question (depending on the balance of forces and ideas).

For Kropotkin, the revolutionary process was the transition period -- and as he noted in "Insurrections and Revolution" you cannot expect that to begin as fully communist. The same with Malatesta and other communist-anarchists.

And every revolution has been like that -- many different forms of experimentation, different areas progressing at different rates, etc.. And, also, every revolution has confirmed Kropotkin's argument that it would be a difficult process and so you would expect all of that.

In short, anarchists have always been realistic about a revolution and the notion of "overnight" revolution is one we have always explicitly denied (regardless of what Lenin and other Marxists have suggested!)