'Market socialism' is a term used to define a number of
economic system(s) in which there is a market economy directed and guided by socialist (state) planners.
[1] The earliest model of market socialism was developed by
Oskar R. Lange (c. 1936).
[2] Lange and
Fred M. Taylor proposed that central planning boards set prices through "trial and error," making adjustments as shortages and surpluses occurred rather than relying on a
free price mechanism. If there were shortages, prices would be raised; if there were surpluses, prices would be lowered.
[3] Raising the prices would encourage businesses to increase production, driven by their desire to increase their profits, and in doing so eliminate the shortage. Lowering the prices would encourage businesses to curtail production in order to prevent losses, which would eliminate the surplus. Therefore, it would be a simulation of the market mechanism, which Lange thought would be capable of effectively managing supply and demand.
[4]
Proponents of market socialism argue that it combines the advantages of a
market economy with those of
socialist economics. However Marx stated the exact opposite. Marx stated that money and commodities exist outside capital, writing that, "In themselves money and commodities are no more capital than are the means of production and of subsistence. They want transforming into capital." [Marx, K., ''The Secret of Primitive Accumulation'', being Ch. XXVI, Capital Vol. 1, p668 in Progress Publishers' 1977 reprint].
Marx differentiated money, commodities, labour, wealth and value from capital and capitalist production. He stated in Chapter XVI, Absolute and relative Surplus Value, that, "Capitalist production is not merely the production of commodities, it is essentially the production of surplus value" [Pg 477 in Progress Publishers' 1977 reprint]. He also maintained this view in his analysis of the export of capitalism to Australia under the Wakefield Plan.
Proponents of market socialism include economist
John Roemer (who developed the interesting if overly complicated 'Coupon Socialism') and the philosopher
David Schweickart, whose version of market socialism is called "
Economic Democracy".
Theoretical basis
The key theoretical basis for market socialism is the negation of the underlying expropriation of surplus value present in other, exploitative, modes of production.
An important base for market socialism in
economic theory is the
Lange-Lerner-Taylor theorem, which states that an economy in which all production is performed by the state, but in which there is a functioning price mechanism, has similar properties to a market economy under
perfect competition, in that it achieves
Pareto efficiency.
Other uses of the term
Market socialism has also been used as a name for any attempt by a
Soviet-style economy to introduce market elements into its economic system. In this sense, "market socialism" was first attempted during the
1920s in the Soviet Union as the
New Economic Policy (NEP), but soon abandoned. Later, elements of "market socialism" were introduced in
Hungary (where it was nicknamed "
goulash socialism"),
Czechoslovakia and
Yugoslavia (see
Titoism) in the
1970s and
1980s. Modern
Vietnam and
Laos also describe themselves as market socialist systems. The
Soviet Union attempted to introduce a market socialist system with its
perestroika reforms under
Mikhail Gorbachev.
Historically, these kinds of "market socialist" systems attempt to retain government ownership of the ''commanding heights of the economy'', such as heavy industry, energy, and infrastructure, while introducing decentralised decision making and giving local managers more freedom to make decisions and respond to market demands. Market socialist systems also allow private ownership and
entrepreneurship in the service and other secondary economic sectors. The
market is allowed to determine prices for consumer goods and agricultural products, and farmers are allowed to sell all or some of their products on the open market and keep some or all of the profit as an incentive to increase and improve production.
The Chinese experience with
socialism with Chinese characteristics has been described by some as another case of market socialism.
Market socialism has also been used to describe
mutualist and some
individualist anarchist works
[5] which argue that free markets help workers and weaken capitalists.
References
1. "Socialism" ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. 2006. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
2. Economic Justice and Democracy, by Robin Hahnel, Routlege 2005, page 170
3. Making Modern Economics, by Mark Skousen, M.E. Sharpe 2001, pages 414-415
4. The Socialist System: the political economy of communism, by János Kornai, Oxford University Press 1992, page 476
5. Murray Bookchin, ''Ghost of Anarcho-Syndicalism''
Robert Graham, ''The General Idea of Proudhon's Revolution'')
★ Whither Socialism,
Joseph Stiglitz, MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-19340-X.
★ Market Socialism: the Debate Among Socialists, edited by Bertell Ollman, also with contributions by James Lawler, Hillel Ticktin and David Schewikart.
★ Equal Shares: Making Market Socialism Work, John E. Roemer et al. (E. O. Wright, ed.), Verso, 1996.
External links
★
Market Socialism: the Debate Among Socialists, edited by Bertell Ollman, also with contributions by James Lawler, Hillel Ticktin and David Schewikart.