http://www.lulu.com/shop/richard-d-wolff/understanding-marxism/paperback/product-24002973.html
Anyone actually read this? I'm guessing it's just more propaganda for his d@w project. It's frustrating when literally nothing Wolff says has anything in common with any of Marx's critiques or analyses, yet he insists on attaching Marx's name to his ideas. (I actually wonder if he's even read the first volume of Capital.) I'm a bit surprised to not see more people challenging him, unless they don't think it's worth their time in which case I might agree. I don't understand, for example, how he can describe members of his WSDEs advancing capital and creating commodities for exchange in the market as "socialist". His sourcing of the problem as evil non-worker capitalists making bad decisions, and call for workers to manage their own enterprises instead, also just ignores Marx saying the exact opposite:
Hence Capital is reckless of the health or length of life of the labourer, unless under compulsion from society. To the out-cry as to the physical and mental degradation, the premature death, the torture of over-work, it answers: ought these to trouble us since they increase our profits? But looking at things as a whole, all this does not, indeed, depend on the good or ill will of the invidiual capitalist. Free competition brings out the inherent laws of capitalist production, in the shape of external coercive laws having power over every individual capitalist.
I haven't read it or really
I haven't read it or really any of his stuff, but I have started to see people push him recently, so it would probably be worth someone doing a critique if they have time.
Similarly I haven't read David Harvey, but https://libcom.org/library/companion-david-harveys-companion-marxs-capital-chapter-1-critisticuffs was useful to understand why he ends up pushing alternative currencies and etc.
I'm in the process of writing
I'm in the process of writing something up that challenges his understanding of Marx in relation to his WSDE/worker coop ideas (to say nothing about his endorsement of Sanders and fondness of vanguard parties etc.) There was an anarchist response to his Democracy at Work book on Anarchist Writers, all I've really come across as far as critiques on him.
The so-called anarchists and communists I see recommending him is not really an encouraging sign.
The co-ops stuff seems to be
The co-ops stuff seems to be getting traction due to co-operation Jackson. https://cooperationjackson.org/
There's a huge difference (for me at least) between people doing co-ops as a response to specific circumstances, and pushing co-ops/mutualism as an ideology.
I've seen something about him pushing the idea that immigration is responsible for low wages too, but did not look into it yet.
Mike Harman wrote: The co-ops
Mike Harman
I haven't seen that. Afaik he's said immigration is used as a scapegoat instead of targetting capitalism as the real source of people's problems. Of course what he identifies as the problem always goes back to capitalist workplaces being undemocratic, and the need to democratize them and turn them into "WSDEs". He even uses the words "Communist Organization" in one interview to refer to them, and says that this is what Marx's aim was (his 'understanding' of Marx was OK for the most part up until then, but this just completely ignores all of Marx's analysis of the commodity in the first couple chapters of Capital; he seems to have no problem with his so-called "Communist" organizations/businesses advancing capital and producing commodities for exchange in the market etc.; and how he derives this from his reading Marx is just amazing):
https://www.counterpunch.org/2015/10/23/a-summary-of-marxist-economics-with-richard-wolff/
Video clip on immigration, it
Video clip on immigration, it may be that the clip is out of context and he has arguments on how border controls contribute to lower wages for immigrants via making them easier to exploit/keeping people undocumented, and how organising all workers impacts on competition, but that bit by itself is not good: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hW210UyV9g8 I can't sit through long youtube clips so if someone has something in text format that'd be better.
Prof Wolfes system looks
Prof Wolfes system looks similar to the “economic commune system” proposed by Eugen Karl Dühring ………………
“who was a strong critic of Marxism.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugen_D%C3%BChring
Engels dealt with it throughout his Anti Duhring book.
But ends with;
Anti-Dühring by Frederick Engels 1877
Part III: Socialism
IV. Distribution
….By elevating this law to the basic law of his economic commune and demanding that the commune should execute it in all consciousness, Herr Dühring converts the basic law of existing society into the basic law of his imaginary society. He wants existing society, but without its abuses.
In this he occupies the same position as Proudhon. Like him, he wants to abolish the abuses which have arisen out of the development of commodity production into capitalist production, by giving effect against them to the basic law of commodity production, precisely the law to whose operation these abuses are due. Like him, he wants to abolish the real consequences of the law of value by means of fantastic ones.
Our modern Don Quixote, seated on his noble Rosinante, the “universal principle of justice” {D. C. 282}, and followed by his valiant Sancho Panza, Abraham Enss, sets out proudly on his knight errantry to win Mambrin's helmet, the “value of labour”; but we fear, fear greatly, he will bring home nothing but the old familiar barber’s basin….
https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1877/anti-duhring/ch26.htm
On my travels around American
On my travels around American progressive websites I have found he is quite popular. He makes regular videos of his talks. He talks the talk that resonates with many American leftists.
A while back, I wrote a short item for our blog on him
https://socialismoryourmoneyback.blogspot.com/2011/05/sheep-in-wolffs-clothing.html
And he receives passing mentions on many other blog-posts
Andrew Kliman rebuffs Wolff's approach
http://www.marxisthumanistinitiative.org/alternatives-to-capital/video-the-incoherence-of-transitional-society.html
I saw Wolff give a talk once.
I saw Wolff give a talk once. I found him to be a very engaging speaker (so I am not surprised that people like listening to his talks), but, as others have pointed out already, his understanding of Marxism is woefully inadequate. Well, he does understand Marx, but he doesn't understand the implications of Marx's analysis. So at this talk, he waxed lyrical about Corbyn because Corbyn would apparently bring in a wave of workers' co-ops, which he more or less believed to be a revolution. He was genuinely naive.
Mike Harman wrote: I've seen
Mike Harman
Mike Harman
Here's a Wolff article on immigration
https://www.rdwolff.com/how_capitalism_perpetuates_immigration
Richard Wolff
I remember Dean Baker, American liberal involved in Center for Economic and Policy Research, also making similar arguments in his Conservative Nanny State book. One of the arguments there was that the US restricts the immigration of professional workers that would "create downward pressure" on white-collar jobs but allows that to happen for blue-collar jobs. The point he argues is this would make such professional-job services cheaper for consumers. Of course it's all bourgeois nonsense. Here's some of that though:
Dean Baker
OK so he is not quite doing
OK so he is not quite doing an Angela Nagle 'borders are good' argument, but it's reproducing the 'if you concentrated development, people wouldn't migrate' one:
Wolfe
So it ignores the function of border controls themselves as creating a multi-tier working class (and a concrete thing that people have organised against since the early IWW if not earlier, as well as more recently), or really any class struggle at all.
ajjohnstone wrote: On my
ajjohnstone
That's a nice piece (might want to correct his name from Robert to Richard though). Might still be worth doing a more up-to-date response to him with all that he's done since 2011 and with the popularity and following he's recently got, maybe one that focuses more on his mis-understanding of Marx in light of his book/essay. He seems to think workers controlling their own surplus value, needed to reproduce themselves as worker-capitalists, means the end of capitalism and is what Marx envisaged, which doesn't really appreciate Capital being a critique of, among other things, surplus value and all the other features of the capitalist mode of production; it wasn't a call for workers to become "capital personified", etc. He doesn't seem to have any conception of a Socialism/Communism (as we see from the "Communist Organization/Business" I mentioned above and which he claims has some basis in Marx) where production is carried out to satisfy people's needs or where money and exchange cease to exist.
We shouldn't forget about Gar
We shouldn't forget about Gar Alperovitz who is pushing for a similar strategy of change as Wolff which he calls the "pluralist commonwealth"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gar_Alperovitz
ajjohnstone wrote: We
ajjohnstone
When I was becoming a leftist, around 2011, I bought his book America Beyond Capitalism. Never finished reading it because it was really boring and I have no interest returning to it. He' s just advocating co-ops and other such schemes.
Here's also Luxemburg, who
Here's also Luxemburg, who Wolff cites as an influence, writing against producer coops (really just repeating standard anti-capitalist arguments against workers starting their own enterprises) in Reform or Revolution against Eduard Bernstein and co.:
Luxemburg
There's a critique of
There's a critique of Professor Wolff's truncated critique of capitalism on the site of the Marxist-Humanist Initiative, here:
https://www.marxisthumanistinitiative.org/alternatives-to-capital/the-narrow-horizon-of-richard-wolffs-socialism.html