Outline on technology and progress October 1979
The following outline for an article is unfinished,
incomplete, out of sequence and lopsided in emphasis. A major section or
companion article on Braverman's "Labor and Monopoly Capital" has not
been prepared yet. Please return comments for consideration in next draft.
(Note 2006) There was a further reply which is rather more dated than the originals and won't be published unless the originating author wants to resume the discussion in the light of subsequent developments.
1. Objections to the trend of
modern technology and economic growth may be summarised under the following
headings:
a) Eco-catastrophe
b) Environmental
degradation
c) Limits on Growth
d)
e) Wasteful Consumption
f) Technocratic Priesthood
g) Centralisation
h) Unemployment
i) Commercialisation
and rat race
j) Degradation and
Deskilling of Labor
2. These themes are all
part of the very fabric of "left wing" and "radical"
thinking in Western countries. Reference to them, often in a glib and
trendy way, has become a trade mark to distinguish "them" ("the
establishment") from "us" ("the radicals").
Rejection of these themes is generally considered heretical and a sign of
impending desertion to the other side.
3. Nevertheless,
4. This paper has nothing new or
startling to say but will simply try to raise the banner of a position of whose
existence most "radicals" seem quite unaware, without undertaking a
comprehensive defence of that position. Since in surveying the literature
I couldn't find a single article advocating the position I hold, and which I
understand to have always been the "orthodox" Marxist view on these
questions, I felt obliged to write one myself. Any assistance from
readers who can point me to relevant material would be most appreciated.
5. The major trends among
Western "radicals" on issues concerning technology and progress can
be summarised as follows:
a) Outright opposition to
modern technology and nostalgia for the past, summed up in the slogan
"Small is Beautiful".
b) Acceptance of modern
technology if society was socialist, but Luddite hostility towards it in
capitalist society, summed up in the slogan "For Whom".
c) Acceptance of modern
technology in present day capitalist society but a rejection of the social
relations that have developed together with it and a romantic "nostalgia
for an age that has not yet come into being", where the dignity of craft
skills will prevail.
The dominant view is of course
an eclectic mixture of all three, sometimes even combined with views taken from
the pro-technology, pro-growth camp.
6. In the camp which
rejects the main objections to economic growth and modern technology listed
above, and which criticises the reactionary, Luddite and romantic assaults on
modern society, the dominant trend is straight forward bourgeois complacency or
Liberalism, which explains the unpopularity of pro-technology, pro-growth views
among the "left".
Closely allied to Liberalism,
and subordinate to it, is a Social Democratic trend which dresses up much the
same analysis of society with a few Marxist phrases about promoting the
revolutionisation of society by developing the productive forces. This has more
support than Liberalism within the "left" because it is more critical
of modern society and therefore closer to the anti-technology, anti-growth camp
on issues unrelated to technology and economic growth.
The dominant ideology in such
allegedly "socialist" countries as the Soviet Union, post-Mao China,
and Albania, reflects a mixture of Liberal and Social Democratic attitudes and
therefore adds to the unpopularity of pro-technology, pro-growth views within
the "left".
7. But also in the
pro-technology, pro-growth camp, is a quite different position, which I would
call the "orthodox" Marxist, Marxist-Leninist, or scientific
socialist view. This fundamentally agrees with the Liberal and Social
Democratic trends in opposing reaction, Luddism and romanticism (as Lenin
agreed with Struve and the "legal Marxists" in fighting Narodnism in
The views of this trend will be
found in various works by Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin and Mao Tsetung, many of
which are explicit polemics against romanticism etc.
8. Let's review the
various anti-technology, anti-growth themes one by one. The first eight, which
tend to attack modern technology and economic growth as things in themselves,
will be dealt with rather quickly. The last two, concerning
Commercialisation and the Rat Race, and the Degradation and Deskilling of Labor
raise more serious issues about capitalist social relations, and will be dealt
with more fully when analysing romanticism and commenting on Harry Braverman's
"Labor and Monopoly Capital".
9. a) Eco-catastrophe
Various scenarios for the
catastrophic destruction of humanity if present trends continue have been put
forward by the more extremist opponents of modern technology and economic
growth. These range from the "population explosion" to the long
term effects of heat pollution, carbon dioxide or the break up of the ozone
layer. Although in one sense a "lunatic fringe", these ideas do
have some real influence within the "left" and people often fall back
on them (without necessarily knowing any of the details) when otherwise stuck
for arguments.
Detailed refutation of the
various theories is not appropriate here. But its worth noting that some
people actually want their disaster theories to be true because they want there
to be some barrier to the further development of industrialisation.
Feelings of "doom" are widespread because the present social system
is in fact doomed, but instead of correctly identifying exactly what is doomed,
people tend to transfer their feeling to anything convenient. Catastrophe
theories are not being put forward by scientists who believe in technical progress
and economic growth and are worried because they have come across some
phenomena that might threaten this. These theories are put forward by
people (whether scientists or not), who already want there to be a barrier and
go out looking for it.
They do not understand Marx's
proposition that "the only barrier to capital is capital itself" and
they look for some external obstacle to the further development of capitalism,
lying outside capitalist society itself.
There is even a kind of
"eco-fascism" with ideas and solutions remarkably similar to those of
fascists in the 1930s, particularly in regard to population control.
10. b) Environmental
degradation.
This theme is also taken up by
people who want there to be some external barrier to the further development of
capitalism. It is really only relevant to the technology and growth
debate insofar as some catastrophe is predicted. Insofar as one is
talking about incidental environmental degradation, the classic answer given by
Liberals cannot be refuted:
"It is easier to modernise
plant and equipment (e.g. to incorporate pollution control mechanisms) and to
engineer structural readjustments to the changing pattern of economic activity
in a growth context than otherwise. More fundamentally, economic growth implies
that the stock of resources (including technology) which the community has at
its disposal is continually expanding... Nowadays we have the opportunity that
comes with growth to opt for a more pleasing environment. If that
opportunity occurs in an expanding economy, opting for it need not involve an
absolute reduction in presently enjoyed standards in other respects. In
short, 'growth' entails a positive contribution to pollution control in a way
which a 'stationary state' cannot...
...If pollution control
standards are set to high that the costs of control clearly exceed the
resulting benefits, resources will be wastefully diverted from other purposes -
including perhaps other forms of environmental improvement. Moreover, it
is already apparent - with the technology of pollution control only beginning
to develop - that even modest expenditure can have large effects in reducing
pollution.
In summary the damage from
environmental pollution in a large and growing economy with effective pollution
control standards certainly need be no greater and in practice is likely to be
far less than the damage in a small and slower growing economy operating in the
same area without effective pollution control measures. The quality of
the environment can be improved much more - and more quickly - by measures to
counter pollution than by steps to contain economic growth. It is
doubtful in any case whether action of the latter kind will be deliberately
attempted, and if it were, and the improvement in living standards were slowed
down as a result, the resistance to applying resources to control pollution
would be so much the greater."
(Treasury Economic Paper No 2
"Economic Growth: Is it worth having?" June 1973, AGPS Canberra, p19
and p21)
Even leaving aside the
difference between capitalist and socialist attitudes to the environment, it is
clear that industrialisation has markedly improved the environment compared
with pre-industrial societies. Not only was the life of the "noble
savage" something "nasty, brutish and short" but even in feudal
times the environment can be summarised in this jingle:
In days of old, when knights were bold,
and lavatories weren't invented;
People laid their loads, beside the roads,
and went away contented.
Even the aristocrats, let alone
the "solid yeomen" of pre-industrial society literally stank - and
not only in the towns where the streets were used as sewers. Forests
were denuded and dustbowls and deserts created, before modern agriculture began
to reverse this process.
Over the last decade in
particular (as a result of pressure from people concerned about the
environment) we have seen a clear and definite improvement in environmental
protection. The increasing concern with pollution controls today
precisely reflects the fact that as industrialisation proceeds, higher
standards not only become necessary but also possible and are demanded.
11. c) Limits to Growth
Depletion of non-renewable
resources is another fashionable attempt to find some barrier other than
capital itself. The club of
Of course its true that any
positive rate of growth, no matter how small, must eventually (and in fact
quite quickly) exhaust any finite non-renewable resources. But if this
spells doom for industrial society, then it should be added that any positive
rate of consumption at all even if there is a declining rate instead of growth,
must also eventually exhaust any finite non-renewable resources, though it may
take longer. The issue is whether "resources" are
"finite". If they are then we are doomed, growth or no growth.
As Ehrlich points out, with any
positive rate of population growth, humanity would eventually occupy a volume
larger than the planet earth and expanding faster than the speed of
light. But what does this actually have to do with the real and pressing
problems of the world we really live in?
Again the Liberal answer to
these themes is straightforward and irrefutable:
"As an historical fact, the
long-term trend has been for the cost of mineral inputs to decline as a
proportion of total production costs. Numerous studies of the available
statistical data, spanning more than a century, have demonstrated that the
tendency during this phase of unprecedented growth in the world economy and in
the use of minerals has not been towards scarcity but towards abundance.
In the United States the real cost of minerals output was less than one-half
the average 1870-1900 level by 1929; and by 1957 it was less than one-half the
1929 level...(ibid p33)
...Such resources may be being
'used up', but they are also - and as an integral part of the same process-
being 'created'. It is in the twentieth century that the essential
uniformity of energy and matter has been discovered, that the development of
new synthetic materials has become almost commonplace, and that technological
advance has become virtually continuous, each improvement creating new
opportunities for further advance. The extension of knowledge about the
world has not only confounded past predictions of resource scarcity but has
been in directions which make such predictions less and less defensible as time
goes by." (p39)
Since such predictions are less
and less defensible, why are they also more and more popular? It seems
clear that the degree of rejection of this "bourgeois optimism" is
not related to the degree of one's knowledge of industrial processes, but to
the degree of one's rejection of modern society. Those who recognise
there is a barrier, but do not fully understand the barrier is capital itself,
look for that barrier in something else, like "Limits to Growth".
12. d)
This theme has been adequately
refuted by Bill Warren, who belongs to the Social Democratic rather than purely
Liberal trend. As a Social Democrat,
It is a historical fact (not
emphasised by
But it is equally a historical
fact (denied by dependency theorists), that imperialism has meant the more
rapid spread of capitalist social relations throughout the world and that far
from becoming more and more dependent, the backward countries are proceeding
very rapidly along the same path of commercialisation and industrialisation
that Europe undertook a few hundred years ago.
The world is becoming more
polarised, with even imperialist "second world" countries joining the
Third World in suffering from superpower exploitation and domination, but it is
doing so in the course of a rapid progressive social development - just as the
internal polarisation of capitalist societies into a smaller and smaller
handful of exploiters (the Rockefellers and such) against a larger and larger
proletariat including the ruined middle classes, was also part of a progressive
social development.
Lenin's classic work "The
Development of Capitalism in
Precisely because the
We have lived through the
post-war decolonisation and have only recently experienced the defeat of the
On an international scale, the
trans-national corporations are creating and uniting an international
proletariat to be their grave diggers, as earlier the bourgeoisie broke down
local boundaries and created nations with a national proletariat, In
defending national independence and other democratic rights, it is no task of
the "left" to support protectionism and try to retard the integration
of the world capitalist market. We can only support "Free
Trade", not oppose it - but in the same revolutionary and critical spirit
that Karl Marx did.
13. e) Consumerism
Instead of the
"old-fashioned" socialist critique, which condemned capitalism, even
in
Certainly some quite useless and
even harmful products are sold because of advertising and this should be
opposed. But people who make "consumerism" their theme are
talking about something more fundamental than that, and calling for a far
reaching change in Western consumption patterns towards a "simpler"
and allegedly more "wholesome" lifestyle based on
"necessities" and with less emphasis on "unnecessary"
consumer durables, "gadgets", motor vehicles etc.
It is not clear whether these
changes are to be compulsory, with restrictions to prevent people from buying
the dishwashers, cars or electric toothbrushes that our "radicals"
disapprove of, by inhibiting their production. Or is it to be voluntary,
with a massive propaganda (advertising) campaign to dissuade people from buying
products the "radicals" don't like?
Either way involves an enormous
elitist contempt for the common sense of ordinary people. Part of this is
a reaction against the political backwardness which has led many people to
accept the continuation of capitalism without revolt, in exchange for the
post-war "affluence" (a mess of potage). Understandable as this
is, it is still elitist.
People are entitled to want, and
to be satisfied to get, access to things that used to be regarded as
luxuries. There has been a very substantial improvement in mass living
standards since the 1930's and it is hardly surprising that while the post-war
boom continued, the capitalist social order was relatively stable. Not
only material standards, but also the "quality of life" with access
to culture, education etc has improved with the rise in real wages (even if the
value of wages in terms of labour time has declined, exploitation increased and
the social position of workers worsened). There are even some progressive
aspects to the way capitalism stimulates new "wants" to expand its
markets.
The higher standards of living
which have been achieved involve an increase in people's expectations and their
determination to defend the greater dignity that they have won. It is
sheer arrogance to condemn all this as "consumerism". People
will revolt when they find that the existing social order cannot provide them
with what they want, not when some "radical" persuades them that they
shouldn't want it. Now that living standards are again starting to
decline, we will see whether the generation that was brought up on
"consumerism" will put up with more or less shit from capitalism than
their parents did in the last Great Depression. From general attitudes
towards "authority" etc, it seems likely that the
"consumerist" generation will be more ready to revolt, not less.
At least Malcolm Fraser's
proposal to reduce living standards by cutting real wages is more democratic
than the "radical" attacks on consumerism. Why can't the
radicals who oppose "wasteful consumption" settle for demanding a
general wage cut? This would leave people free to choose for themselves
without manipulation what they regard as necessary and what
"wasteful" items they could do without.
Of course I'm not saying we'll
all still have private cars after the revolution despite the various social
problems that go with them. We'll have helicopters.and spaceships.
("We want bread and roses too...")
14. f) Technocratic
Priesthood
The very term
"priesthood" evokes images of barbaric societies in which the mass of
the population were ignorant of natural phenomena and paid homage to a minority
elite who were sufficiently literate to be able to pass on knowledge about the
seasons, tides and other matters essential to production as well as culture.
To believe that such a
priesthood rules society today, requires considerable imagination. It is
perfectly obvious that power in our society is held by capitalists and stems
from their wealth and not from any monopoly of technical knowledge. In
the more backward capitalist countries like the
Scientists and engineers are
employed by the ruling class and work for wages like the rest of us. They
too have no monopoly on technical information, which is widely diffused among
the literate population and can be readily acquired in libraries and even
newsagents. The mythology about a "technocratic priesthood" is
most widespread among liberal arts graduates who have gone through school and
university doing only "humanities" courses and have thus been denied
the basic technical education which is acquired by most school and University
students in our society.
There is no excuse for this
one-sidedness however, since any literate person can pick up the fundamentals
of modern technology by just browsing through the "How and Why" type
of children's' encyclopaedias readily available in every newsagent.
Nuclear power is held up most
often as an industry where the dangers of a "technocratic priesthood"
are greatest. In fact it is the most publicly regulated industry with the
least initiative in the hands of technocrats. The whole technology down
to blueprints and detailed engineering reports is completely in the public domain
and there is no mystery about it whatever.
The average worker today has far
more grasp of basic industrial technology, and is given a far more
"theoretical" education than in earlier times. If some liberal
arts graduates feel left behind and overawed by modern technology, they would
do better to learn something about it than to continue writing speculative
nonsense about a "technocratic priesthood".
15. g) Centralisation
Socialists have always welcomed
the centralisation of capital as a progressive development paving the way for
Communism. In everyday practical terms, most people understand that the
big multi-nationals have more "enlightened" management, produce
better products and pay better wages than the smaller "sweatshops",
that supermarkets are a better place to do one's shopping, that family farms
are on the way out and so forth.
But many "radicals"
actually stake their hopes on retarding monopolisation, propping up the small
businessmen, shopkeepers and farmers against the multi-nationals and so on.
Fundamentally the complaints
about "centralisation" reflect an awareness that wealth and power in
our society is concentrated in the hands of a very tiny elite, but with a
conservative reaction to try to turn the clock back, instead of pushing forward
to socialism and communism.
But in its most absurd form, we
even get complaints about the large scale and "centralisation" of the
means of production themselves, and not of their ownership. Thus in
arguments about nuclear power, we are told to beware of oppression by the
controllers of big, centralised power stations. Apparently the theory is
that if all power comes from a central source we have less control over our
destiny than if we have smaller, local power stations. Taken to an
extreme, some people are mad keen on windmills, solar panels, methane
generators etc and hope to combine these with vegetable plots, mud brick
construction and what have you to create a life style in which one can escape
the clutches of capitalism as completely as possible by avoiding all buying and
selling and isolating oneself from the market economy.
While I have no objection to
other people tinkering with such things if they really want to, personally I
prefer being able to obtain electric power at the flick of a switch and without
tinkering with anything. This does not "alienate" me in the
slightest and I am quite sure most people feel exactly the same way. We
have simply never felt oppressed by power stations (except by the bills which
are of course much lower than they would be with less centralisation).
It is difficult to even imagine
how centralisation of power stations could be used as an instrument of
oppression. Is it suggested that in a crisis the embattled bourgeoisie
might take refuge in the power station and threaten to turn it off if we didn't
return to wage slavery? On the contrary, they seem concerned to ensure
that "essential services" are not disrupted during major
strikes. In any case the electricity grid that links power stations in
every industrialised country is about as "decentralised" as one could
ask.
It is hard to imagine a more
direct reversal of traditional socialist attitudes towards the implications of
large scale industry. The point is not to refute this wooly thinking about
"centralisation" but to ask what process of mental atrophy could
produce such patent nonsense, repeated so often with such authority?
The only answer I can see is
that the extinction of Marxism by revisionism during the period of capitalist
re-stabilisation has been so complete that most "radicals" have never
even heard of Marxist views and have had to re-discover for themselves all the
pre-Marxian socialist theories. (This certainly seems to have been the
case with the "New Left" that grew up in the middle sixties, even
when Marxist phrases were used.)
16. h) Unemployment
It is a well known proposition
of Marxism that as capitalism develops with an increasing organic composition
of capital, the size of the industrial reserve army increases and this is
particularly manifested in mass unemployment during crises.
The obvious conclusion is that
capitalism should be abolished so that people are not "employed by"
capital but instead "employ" means of production to satisfy their own
requirements.
Instead we have extraordinary
proposals from "radicals" to freeze technological development, or at
least control and retard it, so as to "safeguard jobs". The
whole trend of most "left" analysis of technology and unemployment
involves an acceptance of capitalist irrationality as permanent, and a
willingness to restrict the growth in productive forces and therefore living
standards so as to adapt them to this irrational economic system (without mass
unemployment).
Surely the most elementary
socialist consciousness would involve welcoming Labor saving technology and
demanding its speediest and widest adoption. If the social and economic
system can't cope then that's its problem! It is very strange to
see "socialists" arguing that since capitalism can't cope with new
technology without unemployment, we should keep the capitalism, but do without
the technology. Yet that is exactly what is implied when people complain about
Labor saving technology. They are even prepared to put up with having to
work longer hours to produce fewer goods, just as long as they can keep their
precious capitalism!
Ricardian economics long ago
accepted that the introduction of new technology can be against the real
immediate interests of workers who lose their jobs because of it. But its
a long way from there to adopting a program that tries to inhibit new
technology. In fact it has always been when technological change is most
rapid that the scope for expanded capital accumulation is greatest and new jobs
are created soaking up the reserve army and raising wages. Stagnation
simply means a larger and larger reserve army.
Actually most remarks about
technology are prefaced by a reference to "the current economic
climate". This reflects awareness that technological change and the
accompanying destruction and creation of jobs is a permanent factor of
capitalism, both when there is "full employment" and when there is
mass unemployment.
Obviously the fact that mass
unemployment suddenly started to develop throughout the Western world a few
years ago cannot be attributed to any equally sudden change in technology and
must be attributed to the particular stage in the capitalist business cycle
that was reached then. So why do people persist in blaming a process of
technological change that has been going on all the time?
It can only be because they
don't want to face up to the implications of capitalism as the source of our
problems. Its easier to fight "the machines" than "the
bosses", or at any rate its more respectable to do so.
17. Let us now review the major
"radical" trends and their attitudes to these issues.
18. The ideology of the
"soft technology" trend is well expressed in the journal Resurgence
whose Editor Satish Kumar has summarised its aims thus: "The
breaking down of our over-large and over-centralised political and economic
structure into smaller autonomous units in order that institutions should
become responsive to the needs and desires of everybody and that everyone
should thus feel involvement with and responsibility for the conduct of
affairs." ("Time Running Out? Best of Resurgence",
Prism Press 1976)
The belief that smaller
autonomous units guarantee responsiveness to the needs and desires of everybody
is somewhat quaint in view of the history of feudalism. Nevertheless, in
one form or another, this whole approach is still extremely popular in
"left" circles. It seems that Marxism never did defeat
anarchism after all.
Although many adherents of this
trend are very nice, gentle people who would probably find themselves on the
right side of the barricades if it came to that (even if only as stretcher
bearers), the ideological content of this trend is undiluted reaction against
modern society.
The best known exponent of this
trend is E.F. ("Small is Beautiful") Schumacher, whose social views
are not radically different from B.A. Santamaria's and are based on the same
papal encyclicals (ibid p103). But Resurgence points out Schumacher
should be paired with Professor Leopold Kohr in a "Kohrmacher", like
the "Chesterbelloc" of the last generation' (an interesting
comparison with another pair of religious medievalists)(ibid p1).
To show just how openly
reactionary this trend can be, without the admiring disciples even noticing, we
need not consider the promotion of Zionist kibbutzes as a model for the new
society (p108). Let us just take an article by Professor Kohr on
"The Economics of Progress" (p18).
Kohr starts with a conversation
between two college professors discussing how to wash their shirts, and also
"plumbing, floor polishing and cooking, glorying in the fact that progress
had so simplified matters that all these things could now be done by
themselves".
But one of them sighs and
declares:
...fifty years ago we would have
had maids. Instead of having to wash, plumb, and cook like unspecialised
pioneers, we might have been better engineers and economists. Moreover,
our shirts would have looked pressed, and our meals have tasted better.
And instead of discussing housework at a party of scholars, we might have discussed
our subjects.
According to Kohr:
"The experience of the two
professors is shared by an increasing number of people. On one hand, we
witness the gigantic pace of progress and continuously rising output
figures. But on the other hand, we have the strange feeling that, instead
of getting ahead in life, we have to give up every year something we could
afford when, according to living standard experts, we must have had less".
To support this conclusion, Kohr
notes that:
"When I was a student in
the early 30's, I drove a racy sportscar". (During the Great
Depression). Now as a University Professor he rides a bus.
"And the income classes
above me have fared still worse... Mr Dupont had to abandon his palatial
residence.. Now it is a museum...Where are the people who have become richer as
a result of Mr Dupont having become poorer? On the contrary, most seem to
be carried along the same road: downhill... Those who previously drank wine
with their meals now drank water, and those who had maids now have none."
"As to maids, it is
frequently said that their disappearance is precisely a sign not of decline but
of rising standards. For maids of former days are now housewives or
businesswomen. Quite. But why should maids have aspired to these
higher levels except in the hope of having maids themselves?...
"And workers seem to have
fared only outwardly better. True, they have record incomes and record
quantities of goods to spend them on. But if all is taken into account,
can they really be said to be better off than workers of earlier times?
They can write and read. But what is their main literature? They
can send their children to college. But what has college education become
under the levelling impact of intellectual mass production made necessary by
the unprecedented numbers of those now able to afford it?...With so many other
workers going to school, higher education, already intellectually sterile,
seems without added material benefit, having become the competitive minimum
requirement for almost any job."
(Exactly the same point is
made by Braverman, but dressed up as "Marxism")
"As a result, what has
actually risen under the impact of the enormously increased production of our
time is not so much the standard of living as the level of subsistence.
We swim in more water, but we are still in it up to our necks, In
addition, along with the rising water level, many who previously enjoyed the
luxury of the dry shore, are now up to their necks in water too".
(Braverman makes a similar point
to this too).
"...the problem is...no
longer how to foster growth, but how to stop it.."
The above is not a distortion of
Professor Kohr's views, but an accurate picture of the introduction to an
article that goes on with the usual theme of the need for smaller, more
decentralised communities.
It is perfectly clear what
section of society this "aristocratic socialism" speaks for - that
part of the financial aristocracy being ruined as the proletarianisation of
society proceeds (just as the old feudal socialism spoke for the declining
feudal aristocracy).
To his credit, Professor Kohr
does not attempt to conceal this in the slightest. But why are his views,
or those of "Kohrmacher" nevertheless perfectly respectable in
"left" circles?
Since a critique of Braverman's
romanticism necessarily includes a critique of this even more reactionary
opposition to modern society, I will leave the matter there.
19. A second major trend, which
may be called "Luddite" has closer connections with genuinely working
class and socialist movements, and is in part a theoretical reflection of the
ideas naturally arising in the course of trade union struggles to safeguard the
rights of workers affected by automation.
This trend is not opposed to
modern technology in itself, and emphasises the benefits that could flow from
it in a socialist society. But it has a negative attitude towards the
introduction of new technology within capitalist society, seeing this as a
means of doing workers out of jobs and strengthening capitalist control.
The question "For
Whom?" is repeated continuously and with enormous self-satisfaction as
though it throws some penetrating light on the issues at stake, although in
fact it obscures the question "What are the social implications?".
Since the answer to "For Whom?" in capitalist society is naturally
"For them" (the capitalists), it is rare to find people who ask this
question actually in favour of any new technology being introduced now.
20. Typical of this genre
is a pamphlet called "Computers vs Journalists who wins?" (40 cents
from
Under the subhead
"Problems, Problems, Problems..." we read:
"Sub editors are
particularly affected, as the new technology not only means removal of some
existing skills, but makes it more difficult to perform many traditional
ones. 'Casting off', or determining the length of a story, can be done
automatically by computer, making redundant a skill acquired over a long period
by subs...The skill in writing a headline, which "fits" will be
greatly de-valued because the computer can reject those which
"bounce" before they are set in type.
Some subs will welcome the job of casting off, or headline counts being made
easier, but by transferring the skills involved from men and women to a
computer the human component involved in the highly-skilled task of good
sub-editing is weakened".
The appeal here is unmistakably
conservative. One can imagine similar warnings about moveable type being
addressed to monks in defence of their highly skilled craft copying manuscripts
(which was indeed completely destroyed by the new technology).
It has not even occured to
the writer that it might be an advance for a machine to do routine counting
operations while the human sub-editor concentrates on the content of the
material sub edited. Obviously one should fight for people whose skills
have been made obsolete by new technology to be re-trained, re-employed
and not to suffer in the slightest. But this preference for human labour
when something can be done as well by machine is really quite different, and
quite reactionary. It means using people like machines.
The conservatism involved is
made quite explicit when the pamphlet quotes approvingly from an agreement
between the Swedish Unions of journalists and Graphic Workers, recommending
similar agreements between Australian unions:
"GF and SJF agree that the introduction of the new technology shall not
affect the traditional basic principles of a division of labour among the
categories of employees concerned. Thus, mechanical production tasks fall
to the lot of graphic workers, while journalistic tasks are the domain of the
staff members. Special importance must be attached to the workload of the
staff, which must not be increased in such a manner that creative journalistic
work is made to suffer. Nor may the tasks of graphic workers be made to
include functions embracing journalistic work of a creative or decision-making nature".
This desire to preserve
"the traditional principles of a division of labour" against a new
technology that tends to break down those divisions can only be called
reactionary. Why shouldn't journalists set their own copy? Why
shouldn't printers' jobs include work of a creative or decision making nature?
The other side of this coin is
attempts to prove that a new technology is deepening the division of labour and
therefore should be opposed, when in fact like most new technology the actual
effect is to break down that division.
Word processing is a classic
example. No serious person could argue that a typewriter with editing and
correcting features is in itself worse for humanity than one without these
features (although some people have tried). Yet from all the
"left" literature on the subject, one would think that the main
social impact of word processing under capitalism would be to reduce the status
of typist/secretaries to the level of the typing pool, and reinforce the
division between "executive" and "clerical" Labor.
Naturally some reactionaries
will try to take advantage of any change in work methods to make things worse
for the workers by introducing typing pools and what have you. Although
it is easier to maintain word counts and so forth with a word processor, there
is nothing inherent in the technology that would make it easier for bosses to
impose typing pools and other worse conditions on the workers, and in fact they
have not been successful in doing so.
While word processors are still
new and expensive, there is some tendency to try and achieve maximum
utilisation of the machine and so attempt tighter control over the Labor using
it (especially since such intensification of labour is feasible in the present
economic climate of increasing unemployment). But the inherent trend of
the technology is in the opposite direction (as will become clear, when word
processing keyboards and VDUs become cheaper than electric typewriters and
replace them on a one for one basis - with a separate printer shared between
several typists).
The actual impact of word
processing has been and will be to reduce the total requirement for typing
Labor, especially by eliminating the repetitive typing of similar documents
with minor variations ("personalized" form letters with different
addresses, revised drafts etc). These are precisely the applications
where typing pools have been common, and they are being eliminated, so typing
pools must be declining.
The jobs previously done by
"secretaries" are now being done by smaller numbers of
"administrative assistants" on the one hand, and word processors on
the other. This elimination of the Executive's personal secretary/body
slave is a clear-cut upgrading in job status (except for the Executive's some
of whom are complaining) and a break down in the division of Labor. As
has already happened with printers and journalists, the next logical step is
for all "word originators", whether "Executives" or not, to
do their own typing, since no special manual dexterity is required with the new
machines and the difference in wage levels does not "justify"
specialisation. These trends will be accelerated, with similar impacts on
the Labor presently required for fileing and other clerical work, as communication
between word processors on different desks, and direct access to mass data
storage is developed. Even for purely "typist" Labor in typing
pools, the use of a machine with editing and correcting facilities is a clear
upgrade in job function.
People who are afraid to
confront bosses with the simple demand that there be no intensification of
Labor under cover of the new technology will rationalise this fear by
pretending that the new technology, rather than the bosses, are the source of
the pressure for Labor intensification. But most workers know how to
fight such pressures and have been successful in doing so (although the degree
of Success or failure always ultimately depends on the state of the Labor
market and the ease of transferring between jobs, hence on the overall economic
climate, rather than on the militancy of struggle in individual workplaces).
This awareness that one's fate
is bound up with that of all other workers develops in the proletariat and
helps develop its consciousness as a class for itself. It seems to be
sadly lacking in many "left" writers about the "Labor
process" who picture the class struggle as unfolding in particular
workplaces rather than on a national scale, and seem to be under the illusion
that workers are tied to their particular employers for life.
21. Leaving aside the
overall struggle for a new society, even within capitalism, the natural
reaction of socialist toward new Labor saving technology should be to demand
its speedy introduction and a share of the benefits. Thus the earlier
replacement of handicrafts by machine industry prompted agitation for a shorter
working day in the factories, and so should the latest stage in automation
promote agitation for a shorter working day.
Instead we have the modern
Luddites repeating the mistake of the earlier Luddites who tried to prevent the
new machinery replacing handicraft Labor in the.first place. An attempt
as futile as it is reactionary.
22. This term
"Luddite" is not used here simply as a form of abuse. It is
admitted by representatives of this trend themselves, despite the whole history
of scientific socialism since the Industrial Revolution. Here is Chris
Harmon of the UK Socialist Workers Party in a pamphlet titled "Is a
machine after your job? New Technology and the Struggle for Socialism".
(p21)
"... the Luddites were a group of workers suffering from miserably low
wages and facing a destruction of their jobs by new working methods.
Their attempts to fight back by destroying machines may not have been
successful (although they did succeed in holding down a bigger army than the
Duke of Wellington had in the same years to fight his war against the French in
"But the result of their
failure was not something good. It was grinding desperate poverty for
hundreds of thousands of people, enduring for a whole generation...
"...Our response has to
start from the same suspicion of the way the new technology is being used that
motivates those who simply say "No". We are on the same side as
the Luddites, not against them ."
The "microprocessor
revolution" promises (not "threatens") to have as big an impact
on the Labor process as the development of automatic machinery in the earlier
industrial revolution. Just as the dexterity of human fingers was for
most purposes replaced by machinery, so now some higher functions of control
and supervision will also be replaced (although not yet much in the way of
actually creative intellectual processes). It is truly amazing that
instead of the further development of Marxism, which based itself on a
theoretical comprehension of the social consequences of the age of machinery,
we should see a revival of earlier and cruder varieties of socialism that have
long been discredited in favour of Marxism, by the history of modern society.
Once again, since a critique of
Braverman's romanticism necessarily embraces a critique of modern Luddism, I
will leave the matter there. But I should stress that this
"theoretical" difference does put me on the opposite side to modern
Luddites on strictly practical questions. When they are agitating against
the introduction of word processors, I would be agitating for workers to demand
their immediate introduction and refuse to operate obsolete typewriters that
haven't got all mod cons.
23. Before turning to
Braverman and romanticism, it may be worth pointing out the important
differences between the Liberal and Social Democratic defence of modern
technology and economic growth on the one hand, and the Marxist view on the other,
since so far we have been mainly talking about the similarities.
Both the similarities and
differences are made clear in an article on "Technology and the Left"
in the CPGB organ Marxism Today of May 1979. Here Ian Benson, a British
Labor Party and trade union activist, makes much the same criticisms of
"romanticism" and the CPGB's line (similar to the CPA's), as would be
made by Liberals on the one hand and Marxists on the other.
24. After quoting Lenin's
analysis of the socialisation of Labor, Benson argues:
"From this perspective the simple classification of technology into
exploitative and non-exploitative is seen to contribute little either to the
raising of the cultural level of mankind or the solution of the political
problems of establishing democratic control over the means of production.
The defence of particular skills
amounts to an attempt to freeze the existing division of Labor, and defers the
satisfaction of material and cultural needs by the rest of the population which
would be met by automation. The principled opposition to centralisation
on the grounds of the alleged greater democracy of decentralised production, is
both contrary to the need for further integration of the world economy as a
prerequisite for the breakdown of skill, class and national barriers, and
offers nothing to solving the problem of establishing democratic control over
the economy as a whole.
A socialist technology policy
with these ends must be based on an analysis of the constraints on the
development of science as a productive force, "preparing the ground for
the dissolution of human alienation".
This whole approach is so
foreign to the romantic outlook that dominates most "left" thinking
that people replying cannot even grasp what is being said. Consider this
from a reply titled "What Type of Technology do we want" by Dave
Elliott in the same issue of Marxism today:
"...Benson believes that science and technology somehow develop
independently from other forces in society. They are "neutral"
resources of knowledge and techniques which can be applied either to the
benefit of society generally (under socialism) or for the benefit of a few
(under capitalism)."
Manifestly Benson does not
believe that at all.
He quite clearly treats
technology as a positive force which pushes society forward and helps transform
it from capitalism to socialism. This is a view common to Social
Democrats and Marxists. But it is so unthinkable to romantics that the
worst accusation they can fling at the pro-technology camp is that we view
technology as merely neutral, which we do not!
I have seen numerous articles
loftily criticising the "old fashioned", "economic
determinist" and "simplistic" view that technology is neutral
and that a socialist society could simply take over the previous technology and
apply it to more humane ends. This "neutral" view is often
attributed to Engels, Lenin and Stalin although Marx and Mao are often claimed
to have been more sympathetic to the romantic school. But I have hardly
seen any material directly confronting the "unthinkable" explicitly
pro-technology view which was in fact articulated loud and clear by Marx as
well as the rest.
What this "criticism"
proves is simply that the critics are quite ignorant of the views of their
opponents, let alone being in a position to advance on those views from a more
comprehensive understanding.
It is rather like accusing
atheists of the Protestant heresy because we will not pray to the virgin Mary,
when in fact the problem is even more serious!
26. The differences
between the Marxist and Social Democratic approaches to the social implications
of modern technology are made clear when Ian Benson proceeds "Towards a
Socialist Technology Policy": "It should call for the removal of all
barriers to the full development of science and technology in the interests of
society, through a programme of radical institutional, scientific and political
reforms."
Benson then outlines a program
of reforms to promote "re-skilling,"Democratic Control",
"Social Ownership", "Development of Science" and
"Socially Useful Production" - all with the aim of "liberation
of science".
What this omits is precisely the
Marxist concept that the main "institutional" barrier to the full
development of science and technology in the interest of society, is the
capitalist mode of production based on commodities and wage labour
itself. This has been obsolete since the age of electricity (never mind
micro-electronics) and needs to be swept away by revolution (not reform).
Social Democrats share with
Marxists the fundamental concept that the development of the productive forces,
modern technology and economic growth, is the positive dynamic factor which
pushes forward the transformation of social relationships. But they stand
this conclusion on its head by calling for reforms to push forward new
technology and economic growth (which are dynamic and pushing forward
spontaneously anyway), instead of concentrating on the obsolete social relations
which are the passive factor that has been left behind and is acting as a brake
on further progress. In fact in an era such as this, where the social
relations are obsolete, it is precisely by social revolution that the
productive forces can be unleashed for further and more rapid development (and
in the act of social revolution, the relations of production temporarily assume
the role of the most active dynamic factor).
Although the terms
"productive forces" and "relations of production" have been
turned into an almost meaningless cliche, once grasped, the concept is almost
tautologous in its simplicity.
27. Economic growth, and
especially technical progress, is essentially cumulative. New
developments, even if quite useless, or only capable of being used in a harmful
way, always add to the range of possibilities open and never shut off
possibilities that were open before. We still spend most of our waking
hours "Making a living" and our social relationships are formed in
the course of doing so. It is hardly surprising that the continous
opening up of new ways of making a living should continuously leave behind and
render obsolete the old social relationships founded on the basis of obsolete
ways of making a living.
28. The whole point about
the productive forces being the active dynamic factor, is that they have an
in-built tendency to develop spontaneously, which the relations between people
do not.
Whenever an enterprise improves
its production technique, or an individual worker improves his or her lot (eg.
by obtaining a more responsible position), there is a development of the
productive forces. But it is not automatically accompanied by any
corresponding change in social relations. Under capitalism such
developments are proceeding spontaneously all the time, indeed they are a
necessary condition for the expansion of markets and the possibility of
re-investing surplus value in the expanded reproduction.
29. The social relations
of production can get left behind as the productive forces develop, so that
today for example, we still have essentially capitalist relations between
people, based on commodity exchange and wage labour, which were
appropriate to the petty production of the middle ages but are no longer
compatible with large scale machine industry (let alone being compatible with
the latest developments).
30. Just as the
institutions of slavery and serfdom once held back the further development of
the productive forces and had to give way against the slave and surf revolts,
so the institution of wage labour is now holding things back and giving rise to
revolts. Eg. apart from the obvious contradictions between capitalism and
economic growth expressed in business crises, there is the day to day stifling
of the enormous creative energies of the workers themselves, which could be
unleashed in a system where they had an interest as masters of production,
instead of a direct interest in sabotaging it and "conserving" their
jobs. Then scientific and technical innovation would not only be
unhindered by mass unemployment and crises, but would be the conscious activity
of the majority instead of the province of "management control".
31. It follows from this
analysis that the critical task facing society is to smash the obsolete social
relations as the only way to liberate the productive forces or "liberate
science" as Benson puts it.
32. Quite politically
conservative people like businessmen or revisionist party bureaucrats can
contribute to social progress by developing the productive forces, but only
revolutionaries can tackle the central issue of overturning the obsolete social
relations.
33. Therefore in every
society in transition from capitalism to communism, whether a capitalist
society like Australia or post-Mao China, with the bourgeoisie in power, or a
socialist society like Mao's China, the central political issues are often
expressed in terms of whether to focus on developing the productive forces or
on transforming the relations of production
34. The representatives of
the old capitalist relations, the bourgeoisie, the conservatives, whether they
be"businessmen" or "party officials" share much the same
rhetoric in calling for "hard work" to "make more cake" and
in dismissing the workers struggle to transform social relations as an
interference in that process. It is interesting to note how Ian Benson
appeals to both the Czechoslovak Communist Party Program of Dubcek's time, and
the "four modernisations" stuff coming out of
35. In opposition to the
Malcolm Fraser's and Hua Kuo-feng's, the representatives of the new communist
relations of production the proletariat, the radicals, raise the question of
"all power to the cooks". This (after a certain amount of
cake-mix spoiling due to confusion among the cooks), is the only way to really
transform cake production.
36. Unfortunately the
Marxist analysis of forces and relations of production can only be grasped by
the majority in communist society where the majority of humanity are
consciously engaged in changing themselves. If it was the dominant view,
even among the "left", and did not have to continuously fend off
assaults from reaction, Luddism, romanticism and Social Democracy, then we
would have already have had the revolution.
**************************
CRITIQUE ON "TECHNOLOGY AND
PROGRESS". Ron G
You suggest that the
"orthodox Marxist" position shares certain similarities with Liberal
and Social Democrat trends in that it also opposes reaction, Luddism and
romanticism. You suggest "it fundamentally breaks with these trends
in its analysis of the revolutionary implications of modern technology and
economic growth" (point 7). I would argue that what you present as
an "orthodox Marxist" position is in fact nothing of the sort;
instead it is a classically Social Democratic position. Like
classical Social Democracy it claims to be revolutionary but reduces revolution
to an abstract, formal imperative - it is revolutionary only on the level of
rhetoric. In so far as it conserns day to day practice (the "true
ground" of classical social-democracy, less so in your own case), it is
incorrigibly reformist. Thus, I would reverse the terms of your own
polemic.
The basic problem resides in
your conception of the development of the 'productive forces' ( or more
narrowly 'technology'). You suggest that this development is
autonomous. (This in fact is the first line of Elliott's critique that
you quote. Elliott goes on to imply that the corollary of this is the
view that science and technology are 'neutral' resources. This is inept
and I agree with you that it hardly comes to grips with the view of Benson or
with the view that you are defending which treats science and technology as
(unambiguously) positive. But Elliot's first point remains
pertinent). You separate relations of production and productive forces
and treat the development of the latter as autonomous ('spontaneous'). At
the best you appeal to a spurious mechanical metaphor and talk of the former
acting as a 'break' on the latter. I would argue that this conception
leads to a radical impoverishment of both the concept of 'relations of
production' and the concept of 'productive forces', to a suppression of the
chief points in Marx's analysis/critique of capitalism and to a capitulation to
Social Democratic politics.
You suggest that the terms
'relations of production' and 'productive forces' have become almost
meaningless. But you do nothing to clarify their meaning or to invest
them with meaning. At its most basic level (literally) the concept of
'productive forces' refers to the development of the productivity of labour and
designates these factors which contribute to the level of productivity which
has been attained. Thus, as well as what is summed up in the formula
'science and technology', it includes physical conditions, the social
organisation of production, and the skills of the workers. As is all to
common, you tend to reduce the concept to just 'science and technology'.
In this reduced form it is easier to present it as something subject to an
autonomous development (although this would still be incorrect).
The concept of 'relations of
production' also tends to be impoverished in your discussion. Although
the discussion as it stands is vague you present it as "the passive factor
that has been left behind". At one point you even imply that these
relations were only appropriate to the "petty production of the middle
ages". But by capitalist relations of production Marxists have
generally referred first of all to the relations between capital and wage
labour (hardly characteristic of the "petty production of the middle
ages"). This 'capital relation' consists of two 'phases' or two
'processes' : firstly, the exchange relation whereby labour power is purchased
in return for money (wages) and, secondly, the process in which the labour
power is productively consumed, i.e., the immediate process of production
itself. Although we cannot discuss it in any detail here the second
process encompasses those relations by which capital ensures that production
results in commodities which embody more new value than that which would be
equivalent to the value of labour power. The immediate process of
capitalist production is one in which the labour process is the 'instrument' of
the valorisation process and encompasses most clearly so with relations in
which the predominant function is to make sure the workers maintain or
accelerate a given pace of work, eg. relations between foremen and workers.
These relations within the immediate process of production are far from being
'left behind' but are capable of assuming a bewildering variety of forms, all
linked to the valorisation process. Nor should this be surprising - this
is just a corollary of the fact that capitalism remains capitalism.
In this conection it should also
be noted that the concept of accumulation is also impoverished in your
work. Instead of talking about accumulation (expanded reproduction) you
talk about economic growth, as if it were simply a question of the development
of the productive forces. But this misses entirely the point that
accumulation is, first of all, the accumulation of capital and that the
development of the productive forces occurs because it is a major avenue for
the accumulation of capital. Moreover, as implied above, it misses
entirely the point that accumulation is also always the reproduction in new
forms of the capital-relation. In this way, you tend to strip capitalism
of its distinctive features, and, in consonance with bourgeois ideology,
present it as just a form of production of material goods which is free of any
social determinants.
Once the concepts of 'productive
forces' and 'relations of production' are properly understood, we can see that
the two are not mutually exclusive and that their separation in the formula
which talks about the contradiction between productive forces and relations of
production needs qualification. The concept of productive forces includes
certain relations of production (relations within the immediate process of
production). This is so in a number of ways. It is most obvious
with relations which directly involve 'technique', eg. the detail division of
labour in manufacture. But it is also true with relations which appear
more closely linked to the valorization process, eg. those relations in which
the predominant function is to ensure that the workers maintain or accelerate a
given pace of work. In the latter case, too, the result can be a greater
productivity of labour, thus a development of the productive forces. All
of this is merely the result of the fact that the valorization process can only
take effect through the labour process, and that the labour process is
transformed into a more or less adequate 'instrument' of the valorization
process.
This returns us to the central
question of the development of the productive forces and its 'autonomy'
('spontaneity'). The development of the productive forces is not
autonomous. This is so not just in the weak sense which relates this
development to a general impulse of capitalism - valorization (whether seen as
an initial impulse or a continuing one). It is also true in the strong
sense that the very form of the productive forces is partially determined by
the needs of accumulation (valorization). Factors which improve the
productivity of labour are not inserted into a social vacuum but take their
place within a capitalist labour process, ie., a labour process which is a more
or less adequate instrument of the valorization process. 'Efficiency'
here is not an abstract, purely technical judgment (in terms of the
productivity of labour) but, firstly, 'efficiency' in terms of valorization,
and, secondly 'efficiency' within the context of concrete capitalist labour
processes. We could point to many considerations here but perhaps it is
sufficient to just mention the major one: one of the components of concrete
capitalist labour processes are workers who, to differing degrees and in
differing forms (depending on organisation of the labour process, political and
ideological factors etc, as well as the state of the labour market) are
resistant to their exploitation. The development of particular forms of
productive forces will be dependent on the nature of this resistance.
This can occur in a huge variety of ways: certain productive forces may or may
not be developed because of the strength or form of this resistance, certain
productive forces may be introduced precisely to minimise or eliminate some
form of resistance etc. This resistance is not an extraneous factor but
is internal to the immediate process of production - its determining influence
is a reflection of the fact that productive forces are not developed in the
abstract but in the context of concrete capitalist labour processes. This
development is by no means autonomous but occurs in (through) a context which
supplies many determinants on this development.
I have spoken of 'productive
forces' in general but the above considerations apply even if we reduce the
concept of 'productive forces' to just 'science and technology'...
The above analysis (which of
course is only sketchily presented) has certain practical implications.
It does mean, as the quote from Chris Harman indicates, a "suspicion of
the way the new technology is being used" (although not only this: also a
suspicion of the very forms of the new technology), just as it is a suspicion
of capitalist methods of work in general. It is thus an analysis which
situates itself first of all on the real ground of history - which starts from
the situation of the working class struggle between the working class and the
capitalist class. This, I think is the real (and valuable) sense in which
Harman can say somewhat provocatively that "we are on the same side as the
Luddites". But it is by no means a Luddite analysis (without haveing
read Harman's pamphlet I am sure that it goes on to differentiate between a
Luddite analysis and a Marxist one. You imply that Harman is a
self-confessed Luddite, which by no means follows from what seems to be a very
selective quote). It is a Marxist analysis which is not concerned with
attacking technology but with carefully investigating the links between the
situation of the working class, including its situation in the context of the
development of the productive forces, and the fundamental dynamic of
capitalism. It is infact an analysis which parallel's Marx's own
investigations as well as utilising the concepts developed by Marx. You
make the elementary error of supposing that because the analysis sees a link
between the development of the productive forces (more narrowly technology) and
capitalist relations of production, then the analysis necessarily leads to an
attack just on 'technology'. Thus you talk of people who "don't want
to face up to the implications of capitalism as the source of our
problems"(p.48). On the contrary, I would argue that this sort of
analysis, in sharp contrast to your own, is the very precondition for an
effective attack on capitalist relations of production.
Let us try and take up some of
these points. It seems to me that it is a fundamental proposition of
Marxism that the class struggle is the "immediate driving force of
history". Furthermore, as you yourself argue, capitalism must be
seen as "obsolete" (I wont go into this here since it is tangential
to my main argument, but of course my understanding of the nature of this
'obsolescence' differs from your own). Given this, then the task of
Marxists revolves around helping to develop the working class struggle in the
direction of a break with capitalism and the establishment of communist
relations of production. This is the formidable problem of a properly
socialist politics, the details of which do not concern us here. My point
is that in your argument there is not a hint of this general perspective.
Quite the contrary. It instead displays all the hallmarks of what can be
conveniently called a Social-Democratic perspective. On the most general
level this is characterised by a double dislocation: on the one hand the
concept of 'capitalism' is narrowed down or, more properly, removed to the
(theoretical and political) horizon;on the other hand, in the here and now,
attention is turned to facilitating the development of forces which are no
longer seen as linked to capitalist relations of production but are seen as
simply forces which are inherently 'progressive'. The nexus which is implied in
the Marxist concept of class struggle and which informs properly socialist
politics is thereby broken.
This double dislocation is
readily apparent in your work. Firstly, the concept of capitalism or,
more precisely, capitalist relations of production leads a totally shadowy
existence. There is talk about them being revolutionised, but what they
are and the general process by which they are revolutionised remains
unclear. On the other hand there are many references to concrete
processes in the here and now which are treated as inherently progressive and
worthy of support from socialists. The main one of course is the
introduction of new technology -"surely the most elementary socialist
consciousness would involve welcoming labour saving technology and demanding
its speediest and widest adoption" (p.48). But we are also told that
"socialists have always welcomed the centralisation of capital..."
(p.47). Well, I don't think socialists are in the business of welcoming
either of these developments. Surely they are in the the business, as
outlined above, of abolishing capitalist relations by means of their
participation in working class struggle. As the somewhat tired phrase has
it, this is "on the agenda" now, and I can't see how it is helped-
indeed, it is only undermined by dabbling with support for measures which are
so clearly part and parcel of the further development of capitalism. It
can only mean that socialists are turning their backs on working class
struggle.
At times the 'Social Democratic'
character of this perspective emerges clearly. I would instance here some
of the remarks in the discussion of word processing. You present the
introduction of these machines as if they a product of technical experts
working for the good of humanity. But you then add there could be a small
blemish on the unsullied features of this development: "Naturally some
reactionaries will try to take advantage of any change in work methods to make
things worse for the workers..."(p.53). Some reactionaries!!
This suppresses almost entirely the Marxist analysis of the immediate process
of production. The problem does not lie with "some
reactionaries" - victims of a bad consciousness - but, as suggested above,
with the capitalist character of the labour process. It is not that
"some reactionaries will try to take advantage of any change in work
methods" - as if these were purely technically determined - but that the
capitalist qua capitalist (as a functionary of capital ) must organise the
labour process in accordance with the needs of valorization. And this is
not something which occurs after the introduction of new methods or new
machines - it is precisely the social context in which such methods or machines
are introduced (although, clearly, different machines will offer different
possibilities for such organisation). One consequence is that the capitalist
qua capitalist, and in practice precisely the most 'progressive' capitalists,
is continuously and a priori endeavouring to "make things worse for the
workers" (in the strict sense which refers to the rate of
exploitation). This is central to a Marxist analysis and is quite opposed
to any analysis which presents capitalist production as a purely technical
process marred only by the indirect presence of a few 'reactionaries'.
The latter has little in common with a Marxist analysis.
0I would also object to the way
you use Marx's phrase that "the real barrier of capitalist production is
capital itself" (which itself is significantly different from your
version: "the only barrier to capital is capital itself". Where
did you get it? In fact, your version is somewhat nonsensical, since
capitalist production faces 'barriers' on such basic levels as the material
properties of the elements of the labour process...). The discussion is
somewhat obscure but you seem to be counterposing it to theories which point to
the effects of capitalist production, eg. environmental degradation etc.
There is something of an overtone that the phrase represents a denial of the
importance of contingent events in the real world. In this way the phrase
is turned into a mystical formula. But Marx is gesturing toward such
contingent events - he talks of 'manifestations' of this barrier, of the
limitations 'coming to the surface'. He is pointing to the fundamental
importance of the capitalist relations of production but this by no means
excludes a role for other, more specific determinants. This, for example,
is clearly the case with what Marx saw as the chief 'manifestation' of this
barrier, ie. economic crises. But the phrase has a general meaning which
is quite familiar - that capitalist production for private profit and not for
social needs. It embraces phenomena such as environmental
degradation. Nor does this necessarily stop short of 'ecological
catastrophe'. I don't see how such theories are refuted by referring to
Marx's phrase (unless this phrase is taken to be a germ of a theory of
'economic catastrophe' - a theory which has a long history but which is
theoretically more bankrupt than theories of 'ecological catastrophe').
Such theories should be scrutinised empirically and theoretically but I don't
see how there can be an a priori theoretical objection to the whole genre.
As for your appeal to 'liberal'
arguments I think they are far from 'irrefutable'. The first (re.
environmental degradation) is typical and blind in the way it severs production
from its capitalistic framework. The second (re. depletion of resources)
amounts to little more than an appeal to faith and patience. No thanks.
..................end
REPLY TO CRITIQUE ON TECHNOLOGY
AND PROGRESS
Albert
Langer
1. Most of the issues
raised will be answered in forthcoming material on Harry Braverman's
"Labor and Monopoly Capital".
2.When I say
"orthodox" Marxism I am referring to the existence of a very
definite, and once well known, literary tradition on the question of what
attitude should be taken towards economic growth and technical progress in the
light of the well known contradictions of capitalism (pointed out by socialists
long before Marx). That literature includes such works as the
"Communist Manifesto", "The Poverty of Philosophy",
"Anti-Duhring" (including "Socialism: Utopian and
Scientific"), "On the Question of Free Trade",
"Capital", "Theories of Surplus Value", "The Part
Played by Labour in the Transition From Ape to Man", "The German
Ideology" and others by Marx and Engels, as well as "A
Characterisation of Economic Romanticism", "The Development of
Capitalism in Russia", "What the 'Friends of the People' Are and How
they Fight the Social-Democrats", various articles on Marx and Engels and
others by Lenin.
This literature includes an extensive critique of earlier "unscientific" socialist ideas which were just as hostile to the "evils" of capitalist exploitation but did not understand it. See for example the section on petit-bourgeois socia