In
Trotskyist political theory the term 'degenerated workers' state' has been used since the 1930s to describe the state of the
Soviet Union after
Stalin's consolidation of power in or about 1924. The term was developed by
Leon Trotsky in ''
The Revolution Betrayed''
[1] and in other works
[2] [3], but has its roots in
Lenin's formula that the USSR was a workers' state with
bureaucratic deformations.
The Trotskyist definition
The
Soviet state of that period was held to be a
workers' state because the
bourgeoisie had been
politically overthrown by the working class and the
economic basis of that state lay in nationalized property. The Soviet state degenerated because the
working class became politically dispossessed. After the death of
Lenin, the ruling stratum of the Soviet Union was held to be a bureaucratic
caste, and not a new ruling class, because its political control did not also extend to economic ownership. The theory that the Soviet Union was a degenerated workers' state is closely connected to Trotsky's call for a
political revolution in the USSR, as well as Trotsky's call for defense of the USSR against
capitalist restoration.
The term "degenerated workers' state" is commonly used to refer only to the Soviet Union. The term
deformed workers' state was coined by the
Fourth International to describe those states which are or were based upon
nationalized property, but in which the working class never held direct political power.
The differences between a deformed workers state and a degenerated workers state is that there are only quantitative deformations in a deformed workers state, and therefore it can, as Trotsky and the Left Opposition demanded, be reformed. While a degenerated workers state has been qualitative degenerated and cannot be reformed, therefore requires a political revolution.
Critics
Besides supporters of the Soviet Union who believe that the nation was a healthy
workers' state, the theory has been criticised from within the Trotskyist movement, and by other
socialists critical of the Soviet Union. Among the disputed issues are the relationships between a workers' state (of any type), a
planned economy, and some form of
socialism. Some tendencies tend to equate two or all three of these concepts, while other tendencies draw sharp distinctions between them.
Some of these critics hold that the Soviet Union was at one point a degenerated workers' state, but that at some point during its political evolution, it became something else. Other hold that this was never an apt description.
Among Trotskyists, alternative theories include
state capitalism and
bureaucratic collectivism.
See also
★
Degenerated and "Degenerate from Birth" workers states
★
Bureaucratic collectivism
★
New class
★
State socialism
★
State capitalism
★
Coordinatorism
References
The concept was developed by Trotsky in his book,
The Revolution Betrayed, which is freely available online by clicking
here.