Marx's intellectual legacy 

Marx after communism 

Dec 19th 2002 

>From The Economist print edition

 http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=1489165

As a system of government, communism is dead or dying. As a system of
ideas, its future looks secure 

WHEN Soviet communism fell apart towards the end of the 20th century,
nobody could say that it had failed on a technicality. A more
comprehensive or ignominious collapse-moral, material and
intellectual-would be difficult to imagine. Communism had tyrannised and
impoverished its subjects, and slaughtered them in the tens of millions.
For decades past, in the Soviet Union and its satellite countries, any
allusion to the avowed aims of communist doctrine-equality, freedom from
exploitation, true justice-had provoked only bitter laughter. Finally,
when the monuments were torn down, statues of Karl Marx were defaced as
contemptuously as those of Lenin and Stalin. Communism was repudiated as
theory and as practice; its champions were cast aside, intellectual
founders and sociopathic rulers alike.

People in the West, their judgment not impaired by having lived in the
system Marx inspired, mostly came to a more dispassionate view. Marx had
been misunderstood, they tended to feel. The communism of Eastern Europe
and the Soviet Union was a perversion of his thought. What happened in
those benighted lands would have appalled Marx as much as it appals us.
It has no bearing on the validity of his ideas.

Indeed, it is suggested, Marx was right about a good many things-about a
lot of what is wrong with capitalism, for instance, about globalisation
and international markets, about the business cycle, about the way
economics shapes ideas. Marx was prescient; that word keeps coming up.
By all means discard communism as practised in the Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe (and China, North Korea, Cuba and in fact wherever it has
been practised). But please don't discard Marx.



Give the man his due
There seems little risk of it. In 1999 the BBC conducted a series of
polls, asking people to name the greatest men and women of the
millennium. In October of that year, within a few weeks of the tenth
anniversary of the dismantling of the Berlin Wall, the BBC declared the
people's choice for "greatest thinker". It was Karl Marx. Einstein was
runner-up, Newton and Darwin third and fourth, respectively. "Although
dictatorships throughout the 20th century have distorted [Marx's]
original ideas," the state-financed broadcaster noted, "his work as a
philosopher, social scientist, historian and a revolutionary is
respected by academics today." Concerning the second point, at least,
the BBC was correct: Marx is still accorded respect.

As a field of scholarship in its own right, admittedly, Marxist
political and economic theory is past its peak. By now, presumably, most
of the things that Marx meant, or really meant, or probably meant, or
might conceivably have meant, have been posited and adequately (though
far from conclusively) debated. But a slackening of activity amid the
staggeringly voluminous primary sources is not the best measure of
Marx's enduring intellectual influence.

Books on Marx aimed at undergraduates and non-specialists continue to
sell steadily in Western Europe and the United States. And new ones keep
coming. For instance, Verso has just published, to warm reviews, "Marx's
Revenge" by Meghnad Desai, a professor of economics at the London School
of Economics. Mr Desai argues that Marx was misunderstood and that the
great man was right about far more than he is given credit for. In
August, Oxford University Press published "Why Read Marx Today?" by
Jonathan Wolff. It too is an engaging read. The author, a professor at
University College London, is a particularly skilful elucidator of
political philosophy. In his book, he argues that Marx was misunderstood
and that the great man was right about far more than he is given credit
for.

The newly released memoirs of Eric Hobsbawm, the celebrated historian,
lifelong Marxist and unrepentant member of the Communist Party for as
long as it survived, also deserve mention. The reviews were mixed, in
fact, but rarely less than respectful, finding much to admire in the
author's unwavering intellectual commitment. Mr Hobsbawm argues...well,
he argues that Marx was misunderstood and that the great man was right
about far more than he is given credit for.

Adam Smith, one might say, stands in relation to liberal capitalism, a
comparatively successful economic order, roughly where Marx stands in
relation to socialism. Searches on Amazon.com and other booksellers
indicate that titles in print about Marx outnumber books about Adam
Smith by a factor of between five and ten. A hard day's browsing of
undergraduate reading-lists suggests that, in economics faculties, Smith
is way out in front-interesting, given that Marx saw himself as an
economist first and foremost. Elsewhere in the social sciences and
humanities, the reverse is true. Smith is rarely seen, as you might
expect, though in fact there is far more in Smith than just economics;
whereas from Marx and his expositors and disciples it seems there is no
escape. It is the breadth of Marx's continuing influence, especially as
contrasted with his strange irrelevance to modern economics, that is so
arresting.

How is one to explain this? What, if anything, remains valuable in
Marx's writings? This is not a straightforward question, given that he
evidently had such difficulty making himself understood.



Yes, Marx was a Marxist
When he wanted to be, Marx was a compelling writer, punching out
first-rate epigrams at a reckless pace. The closing sentences of "The
Communist Manifesto" (1848) are rightly celebrated: "The workers have
nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to gain. Workers of
the world, unite." He also had an enviable flair for hysterical
invective. At one point in "Capital" (1867-94), he famously defines the
subject of his enquiry as "dead labour, that, vampire-like, only lives
by sucking living labour, and lives the more, the more labour it sucks."
That is not only unforgettable but actually very apt, if you believe
Marx's theory of value. He could express himself brilliantly when he
chose to.

 

In his "scientific" work, he minted jargon at a befuddling rate

 
Yet he was also capable of stupefying dullness and impenetrable
complexity. Try the opening pages of "Capital" (it picks up later). In
his scientific work, as he called it, he minted jargon at a befuddling
rate, underlining terms to emphasise their opacity, then changing their
meaning at will. Adding to the fog, what Marx believed in 1844 was
probably not what he believed in 1874: the only constant was his
conviction that what he said at any time was both the absolute truth and
fully consistent with what he had said before. And most of the published
Marx, including the "Manifesto" and volumes two and three of "Capital",
was edited, co-written or ghost written by Friedrich Engels. For many
years, therefore, separating Marx from Engels in what the world
understands as "Marx" was an academic industry in itself.

Still, four things seem crucial, and most of the rest follows from
these. First, Marx believed that societies follow laws of motion simple
and all-encompassing enough to make long-range prediction fruitful.
Second, he believed that these laws are exclusively economic in
character: what shapes society, the only thing that shapes society, is
the "material forces of production". Third, he believed that these laws
must invariably express themselves, until the end of history, as a
bitter struggle of class against class. Fourth, he believed that at the
end of history, classes and the state (whose sole purpose is to
represent the interests of the ruling class) must dissolve to yield a
heaven on earth.

 

Titles in print about Marx outnumber books about Adam Smith by a factor
of between five and ten. From Marx and his expositors, there is no
escape

 
In what ways, then, was Soviet-style communism a deviation from these
beliefs, as modern western commentators like to argue? Chiefly, it is
said that Russia jumped the gun (forgive the expression). According to
Marx's laws of motion, society is supposed to progress from feudalism to
capitalism at just that point when feudalism fetters the forces of
production, rather than serving them, as it has up to that moment.
Later, capitalism gives way in turn to socialism, the dictatorship of
the proletariat, and in much the same way-once its productive potential
has been fully achieved, so that henceforth its continued existence is
an obstacle to material sufficiency rather than a means to it. But
Russia went straight from feudalism to socialism. This was too quick.
Marx could have told Lenin that it would never work.

Is this really what he would have said? There is no doubt that Lenin saw
himself as a true follower of Marx-and he had every reason to. By the
end of the 19th century, socialist thought was dividing. Marx's laws of
motion were failing. Capitalism still flourished: no sign of the falling
rate of profit that would signal its end. The working class was getting
the vote. The welfare state was taking shape. Factory conditions were
improving and wages were rising well above the floor of subsistence. All
this was contrary to Marx's laws.

In response, the left was splitting. On one side were reformers and
social democrats who saw that capitalism could be given a human face. On
the other were those who believed that Marx's system could be developed
and restated, always true to its underlying logic-and, crucially, with
its revolutionary as opposed to evolutionary character brought to the
fore.

 

Marx's incapacity for compromise was pathological

 
Whose side in this would Marx have been on? Revolution or reform? Would
he have continued to insist that the vampire be destroyed? Or would he
have turned reformer, asking it nicely to suck a bit less blood? The
latter seems unlikely. Marx was a scholar, but he was also a fanatic and
a revolutionary. His incapacity for compromise (with comrades, let alone
opponents) was pathological. And in the preface to the 1882 Russian
edition of the "Manifesto", his last published writing, Marx hoped that
a revolution in Russia might become "the signal for a proletarian
revolution in the West, so that both complement each other"; if so,
Russia, despite its pre-capitalist characteristics, "may serve as the
starting-point for a communist development." Lenin was surely right to
believe that he, not those soft-headed bourgeois accommodationists, was
true to the master's thought.



Apart from the gulag
Even if Soviet communism was true to Marx's ideas, or tried to be, that
would not condemn all of Marx's thinking. He might still have been right
about some things, possibly even the main things.

Aspects of his thought do impress. However, his assorted sayings about
the reach of the global market-a favourite proof that "Marx was
prescient"-are not in fact the best examples. The 19th century was an
era of globalisation, and Marx was only one of very many who noticed.
The accelerating global integration of the past 30 years merely resumes
a trend that was vigorously in place during Marx's lifetime, and which
was subsequently interrupted in 1914.

Marx was much more original in envisaging the awesome productive power
of capitalism. He saw that capitalism would spur innovation to a
hitherto-unimagined degree. He was right that giant corporations would
come to dominate the world's industries (though not quite in the way he
meant). He rightly underlined the importance of economic cycles (though
his accounts of their causes and consequences were wrong).

The central paradox that Marx emphasised-namely, that its own colossal
productivity would bring capitalism to its knees, by making socialism
followed by communism both materially possible and logically
necessary-turned out to be false. Still, Marx could fairly lay claim to
having sensed more clearly than others how far capitalism would change
the material conditions of the world. And this in turn reflects
something else that demands at least a grudging respect: the amazing
reach and ambition of his thinking.

 

On everything that mattered most to Marx himself, he was wrong

 
But the fact remains that on everything that mattered most to Marx
himself, he was wrong. The real power he claimed for his system was
predictive, and his main predictions are hopeless failures. Concerning
the outlook for capitalism, one can always argue that he was wrong only
in his timing: in the end, when capitalism has run its course, he will
be proved right. Put in such a form, this argument, like many other
apologies for Marx, has the advantage of being impossible to falsify.
But that does not make it plausible. The trouble is, it leaves out
class. This is a wise omission, because class is an idea which has
become blurred to the point of meaninglessness. Class antagonism,
though, is indispensable to the Marxist world-view. Without it, even if
capitalism succumbs to stagnation or decline, the mechanism for its
overthrow is missing.

Class war is the sine qua non of Marx. But the class war, if it ever
existed, is over. In western democracies today, who chooses who rules,
and for how long? Who tells governments how companies will be regulated?
Who in the end owns the companies? Workers for hire-the proletariat. And
this is because of, not despite, the things Marx most deplored: private
property, liberal political rights and the market. Where it mattered
most, Marx could not have been more wrong.



Right in principle
Yet Marxist thinking retains great influence far beyond the dwindling
number who proclaim themselves to be Marxists. The labour theory of
value and the rest of Marx's economic apparatus may be so much
intellectual scrap, but many of his assumptions, analytical traits and
habits of thought are widespread in western academia and beyond. 

The core idea that economic structure determines everything has been
especially pernicious. According to this view, the right to private
property, for instance, exists only because it serves bourgeois
relations of production. The same can be said for every other right or
civil liberty one finds in society. The idea that such rights have a
deeper moral underpinning is an illusion. Morality itself is an
illusion, just another weapon of the ruling class. (As Gyorgy Lukacs put
it, "Communist ethics makes it the highest duty to act wickedly...This
is the greatest sacrifice revolution asks from us.") Human agency is
null: we are mere dupes of "the system", until we repudiate it outright.


What goes for ethics also goes for history, literature, the rest of the
humanities and the social sciences. The "late Marxist" sees them all, as
traditionally understood, not as subjects for disinterested intellectual
inquiry but as forms of social control. Never ask what a painter,
playwright, architect or philosopher thought he was doing. You know
before you even glance at his work what he was really doing: shoring up
the ruling class. This mindset has made deep inroads-most notoriously in
literary studies, but not just there-in university departments and on
campuses across Western Europe and especially in the United States. The
result is a withering away not of the state but of opportunities for
intelligent conversation and of confidence that young people might
receive a decent liberal education. 

Marxist thinking is also deeply Utopian-another influential trait. The
"Communist Manifesto", despite the title, was not a programme for
government: it was a programme for gaining power, or rather for watching
knowledgeably as power fell into one's hands. That is, it was a
commentary on the defects and dynamics of capitalism. Nowhere in the
"Manifesto", or anywhere else in his writings, did Marx take the trouble
to describe how the communism he predicted and advocated would actually
work.



Marx's theory of cattle
He did once say this much: "In communist society, where nobody has one
exclusive sphere of activity...society regulates the general production
and thus makes it possible for me to do one thing today and another
tomorrow, to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in
the evening, criticise after dinner, just as I have in mind, without
ever becoming hunter, herdsman or critic." Whether cattle would be
content to be reared only in the evening, or just as people had in mind,
is one of many questions one would wish to see treated at greater
length. But this cartoon is almost all Marx ever said about communism in
practice. The rest has to be deduced, as an absence of things he
deplored about capitalism: inequality, exploitation, alienation, private
property and so forth.

 
 
 

 
It is striking that today's militant critics of globalisation, whether
declared Marxists or otherwise, proceed in much the same way. They
present no worked-out alternative to the present economic order.
Instead, they invoke a Utopia free of environmental stress, social
injustice and branded sportswear, harking back to a pre-industrial
golden age that did not actually exist. Never is this alternative future
given clear shape or offered up for examination.

 

Anti-globalists have inherited plenty from Marx

 
And anti-globalists have inherited more from Marx besides this. Note the
self-righteous anger, the violent rhetoric, the willing resort to actual
violence (in response to the "violence" of the other side), the
demonisation of big business, the division of the world into exploiters
and victims, the contempt for piecemeal reform, the zeal for activism,
the impatience with democracy, the disdain for liberal "rights" and
"freedoms", the suspicion of compromise, the presumption of hypocrisy
(or childish naivety) in arguments that defend the market order. 

Anti-globalism has been aptly described as a secular religion. So is
Marxism: a creed complete with prophet, sacred texts and the promise of
a heaven shrouded in mystery. Marx was not a scientist, as he claimed.
He founded a faith. The economic and political systems he inspired are
dead or dying. But his religion is a broad church, and lives on. 
http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=1489165







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