This is an important question facing all opponents of a given system -- what will you replace it with? We can say, of course, that it is pointless to make blueprints of how a future anarchist society will work as the future will be created by everyone, not just the few anarchists and libertarian socialists who write books and FAQs. This is very true, we cannot predict what a free society will actually be like or develop and we have no intention to do so here. However, this reply (whatever its other merits) ignores a key point, people need to have some idea of what anarchism aims for before they decide to spend their lives trying to create it.
So, how would an anarchist system function? That depends on the economic ideas people have. A mutualist economy will function differently than a communist one, for example, but they will have similar features. As Rudolf Rocker put it:
"Common to all Anarchists is the desire to free society of all political and social coercive institutions which stand in the way of the development of a free humanity. In this sense, Mutualism, Collectivism, and Communism are not to be regarded as closed systems permitting no further development, but merely assumptions as to the means of safeguarding a free community. There will even probably be in the society of the future different forms of economic co-operation existing side-by-side, since any social progress must be associated with that free experimentation and practical testing-out for which in a society of free communities there will be afforded every opportunity." [Anarcho-Syndicalism, p. 16]
So, given the common aims of anarchists, its unsurprising that the economic systems they suggest will have common features such as workers' self-management, federation, free agreement and so on. For all anarchists, the "economy" is seen as a "voluntary association that will organise labour, and be the manufacturer and distributor of necessary commodities" and this "is to make what is useful. The individual is to make what is beautiful." [Oscar Wilde, The Soul of Man Under Socialism, p. 1183] For example, the machine "will supersede hand-work in the manufacture of plain goods. But at the same time, hand-work very probably will extend its domain in the artistic finishing of many things which are made entirely in the factory." [Peter Kropotkin, Fields, Factories and Workplaces Tomorrow, p. 152] Murray Bookchin, decades later, argued for the same idea: "the machine will remove the toil from the productive process, leaving its artistic completion to man." [Post-Scarcity Anarchism, p. 134]
This "organisation of labour touches only such labours as others can do for us. . . the rest remain egoistic, because no one can in your stead elaborate your musical compositions, carry out your projects of painting, etc.; nobody can replace Raphael's labours. The latter are labours of a unique person, which only he is competent to achieve." [Max Stirner, The Ego and Its Own, p. 268] Stirner goes on to ask "for whom is time to be gained [by association]? For what does man require more time than is necessary to refresh his wearied powers of labour? Here Communism is slient." He then answers his own question by arguing it is gained for the individual "[t]o take comfort in himself as unique, after he has done his part as man!" [Op. Cit., p. 269] Which is exactly what Kropotkin also argued:
"He [sic!] will discharge his task in the field, the factory, and so on, which he owes to society as his contribution to the general production. And he will employ the second half of his day, his week, or his year, to satisfy his artistic or scientific needs, or his hobbies." [Conquest of Bread, p. 111]
Thus, while authoritarian Communism ignores the unique individual (and that was the only kind of Communism existing when Stirner wrote his classic book) libertarian communists agree with Stirner and are not silent. Like him, they consider the whole point of organising labour as the means of providing the individual the time and resources required to express their individuality. In other words, to pursue "labours of a unique person." Thus all anarchists base their arguments for a free society on how it will benefit actual individuals, rather than abstracts or amorphous collectives (such as "society"). Hence chapter 9 of The Conquest of Bread, "The Need for Luxury" and, for that matter, chapter 10, "Agreeable Work."
Or, to bring this ideal up to day, as Chomsky put it, "[t]he task for a modern industrial society is to achieve what is now technically realisable, namely, a society which is really based on free voluntary participation of people who produce and create, live their lives freely within institutions they control, and with limited hierarchical structures, possibly none at all." [quoted by Albert and Hahnel in Looking Forward: Participatory Economics for the Twenty First Century, p. 62]
In other words, anarchists desire to organise voluntary workers associations which will try to ensure a minimisation of mindless labour in order to maximise the time available for creative activity both inside and outside "work." This is to be achieved by free co-operation between equals, for while competition may be the "law of the jungle", co-operation is the law of civilisation.
This co-operation is not based on "altruism," but self-interest. As Proudhon argued, "[m]utuality, reciprocity exists when all the workers in an industry instead of working for an entrepreneur who pays them and keeps their products, work for one another and thus collaborate in the making of a common product whose profits they share amongst themselves. Extend the principle of reciprocity as uniting the work of every group, to the Workers' Societies as units, and you have created a form of civilisation which from all points of view - political, economic and aesthetic - is radically different from all earlier civilisations." [quoted by Martin Buber, Paths in Utopia, pp. 29-30] In other words, solidarity and co-operation allows us time to enjoy life and to gain the benefits of our labour ourselves - Mutual Aid results in a better life than mutual struggle and so "the association for struggle will be a much more effective support for civilisation, progress, and evolution than is the struggle for existence with its savage daily competitions." [Luigi Geallani, The End of Anarchism, p. 26]
In the place of the rat race of capitalism, economic activity in an anarchist society would be one of the means to humanise and individualise ourselves and society, to move from surviving to living. Productive activity should become a means of self-expression, of joy, of art, rather than something we have to do to survive. Ultimately, "work" should become more akin to play or a hobby than the current alienated activity. The priorities of life should be towards individual self-fulfilment and humanising society rather than "running society as an adjunct to the market," to use Polanyi's expression, and turning ourselves into commodities on the labour market. Thus anarchists agree with John Stuart Mill when he wrote:
"I confess I am not charmed with an ideal of life held out by those who think that the normal state of human beings is that of struggling to get on; that the trampling, crushing, elbowing, and treading on each other's heels, which form the existing type of social life, are the most desirable lot of human kind, or anything but the disagreeable symptoms of one of the phases of industrial progress." [Collected Works, vol. III, p. 754]
The aim of anarchism is far more than the end of poverty. Hence Proudhon's comment that socialism's "underlying dogma" is that the "objective of socialism is the emancipation of the proletariat and the eradication of poverty." This emancipation would be achieved by ending "wage slavery" via "democratically organised workers' associations." [No Gods, No Masters, vol. 1, p. 57 and p.62] Or, in Kropotkin's words, "well-being for all" -- physical, mental and moral! Indeed, by concentrating on just poverty and ignoring the emancipation of the proletariat, the real aims of socialism are obscured. As Kropotkin argued:
"The 'right to well-being' means the possibility of living like human beings, and of bringing up children to be members of a society better than ours, whilst the 'right to work' only means the right to be a wage-slave, a drudge, ruled over and exploited by the middle class of the future. The right to well-being is the Social Revolution, the right to work means nothing but the Treadmill of Commercialism. It is high time for the worker to assert his right to the common inheritance, and to enter into possession of it." [The Conquest of Bread, p. 44]
Combined with this desire for free co-operation is a desire to end centralised systems. The opposition to centralisation is often framed in a distinctly false manner. This can be seen when Alex Nove, a leading market socialist, argues that "there are horizontal links (market), there are vertical links (hierarchy). What other dimension is there?" [Alex Nove, The Economics of Feasible Socialism, p. 226] In other words, Nove states that to oppose central planning means to embrace the market. This, however, is not true. Horizontal links need not be market based any more than vertical links need be hierarchical. But the core point in his argument is very true, an anarchist society must be based essentially on horizontal links between individuals and associations, freely co-operating together as they (not a central body) sees fit. This co-operation will be source of any "vertical" links in an anarchist economy. When a group of individuals or associations meet together and discuss common interests and make common decisions they will be bound by their own decisions. This is radically different from a a central body giving out orders because those affected will determine the content of these decisions. In other words, instead of decisions being handed down from the top, they will be created from the bottom up.
So, while refusing to define exactly how an anarchist system will work, we will explore the implications of how the anarchist principles and ideals outlined above could be put into practice. Bear in mind that this is just a possible framework for a system which has few historical examples to draw upon as evidence. This means that we can only indicate the general outlines of what an anarchist society could be like. Those seeking "recipes" and exactness should look elsewhere. In all likelihood, the framework we present will be modified and changed (even ignored) in light of the real experiences and problems people will face when creating a new society.
Lastly we should point out that there may be a tendency for some to compare this framework with the theory of capitalism (i.e. perfectly functioning "free" markets or quasi-perfect ones) as opposed to its reality. A perfectly working capitalist system only exists in text books and in the heads of ideologues who take the theory as reality. No system is perfect, particularly capitalism, and to compare "perfect" capitalism with any system is a pointless task. In addition, there will be those who seek to apply the "scientific" principles of the neo-classical economics to our ideas. By so doing they make what Proudhon called "the radical vice of political economy", namely "affirming as a definitive state a transitory condition -- namely, the division of society intto patricians and proletares." [System of Economical Contradictions, p. 67] Thus any attempt to apply the "laws" developed from theorising about capitalism to anarchism will fail to capture the dynamics of a non-capitalist system (given that neo-classical economics fails to understand the dynamics of capitalism, what hope does it have of understanding non-capitalist systems which reject the proprietary despotism and inequalities of capitalism?).
John Crump stresses this point in his discussion of Japanese anarchism:
"When considering the feasibility of the social system advocated by the pure anarchists, we need to be clear about the criteria against which it should be measured. It would, for example, be unreasonable to demand that it be assessed against such yardsticks of a capitalist economy as annual rate of growth, balance of trade and so forth . . . evaluating anarchist communism by means of the criteria which have been devised to measure capitalism's performance does not make sense . . . capitalism would be . . . baffled if it were demanded that it assess its operations against the performance indicators to which pure anarchists attached most importance, such as personal liberty, communal solidarity and the individual's unconditional right to free consumption. Faced with such demands, capitalism would either admit that these were not yardsticks against which it could sensibly measure itself or it would have to resort to the type of grotesque ideological subterfuges which it often employs, such as identifying human liberty with the market and therefore with wag slavery. . . The pure anarchists' confidence in the alternative society they advocated derived not from an expectation that it would quantitatively outperform capitalism in terms of GNP, productivity or similar capitalist criteria. On the contrary, their enthusiasm for anarchist communism flowed from their understanding that it would be qualitatively different from capitalism. Of course, this is not to say that the pure anarchists were indifferent to questions of production and distribution . . . they certainly believed that anarchist communism would provide economic well-being for all. But neither were they prepared to give priority to narrowly conceived economic expansion, to neglect individual liberty and communal solidarity, as capitalism regularly does." [Hatta Shuzo and Pure Anarchism in Interwar Japan, pp. 191-3]
As Kropotkin argued, "academic political economy has been only an enumeration of what happens under the . . . conditions [of capitalism] -- without distinctly stating the conditions themselves. And then, having described the facts [academic neo-classical economics usually does not even do that, we must stress, but Kropotkin had in mind the likes of Adam Smith and Ricardo, not modern neo-classical economics] which arise in our societies under these conditions, they represent to use these facts as rigid, inevitable economic laws." [Kropotkin's Revolutionary Pamphlets, p. 179] So, by changing the conditions we change the "economic laws" of a society and so capitalist economics is not applicable to post (or pre) capitalist society (nor are its justifications for existing inequalities in wealth and power).
The basic point of economic activity is an anarchist society is
to ensure that we produce what we desire to consume and that our
consumption is under our own control and not vice versa. The
second point may seem strange; how can consumption control us --
we consume what we desire and no one forces us to do so! It may
come as a surprise that the idea that we consume only what we
desire is not quite true under a capitalist economy. Capitalism,
in order to survive, must expand, must create more and more
profits. This leads to irrational side effects, for example, the
advertising industry. While it goes without saying that producers
need to let consumers know what is available for consumption,
capitalism ensures advertising goes beyond this by creating
needs that did not exist.
Therefore, the point of economic activity in an anarchist society
is to produce as and when required and not, as under capitalism, to
organise production for the sake of production. Production, to use
Kropotkin's words, is to become "the mere servant of consumption;
it must mould itself on the wants of the consumer, not dictate to
him [or her] conditions." [Act For Yourselves, p. 57] However,
while the basic aim of economic activity in an anarchist society is,
obviously, producing wealth -- i.e. of satisfying individual needs --
without enriching capitalists or other parasites in the process, it
is far more than that. Yes, an anarchist society will aim to create
society in which everyone will have a standard of living suitable for
a fully human life. Yes, it will aim to eliminate poverty, inequality,
individual want and social waste and squalor, but it aims for far
more than that. It aims to create free individuals who express their
individuality within and without "work." After all, what is the most
important thing that comes out of a workplace? Pro-capitalists may
say profits, others the finished commodity or good. In fact, the
most important thing that comes out of a workplace is the worker.
What happens to them in the workplace will have an impact on all
aspects of their life and so cannot be ignored.
Therefore, for anarchists, "[r]eal wealth consists of things of
utility and beauty, in things that help create strong, beautiful
bodies and surroundings inspiring to live in." Anarchism's "goal
is the freest possible expression of all the latent powers of
the individual . . . [and this] is only possible in a state of
society where man [and woman] is free to choose the mode of
work, the conditions of work, and the freedom to work. One
whom making a table, the building of a house, or the tilling
of the soil is what the painting is to the artist and the
discovery to the scientist -- the result of inspiration, of
intense longing, and deep interest in work as a creative
force." [Emma Goldman, Red Emma Speaks, p. 53 and p. 54]
To value "efficiency" above all else, as capitalism says it does
(it, in fact, values profits above all else and hinders developments
like workers' control which increase efficiency but harm power
and profits), is to deny our own humanity and individuality. Without
an appreciation for grace and beauty there is no pleasure in creating
things and no pleasure in having them. Our lives are made drearier
rather than richer by "progress." How can a person take pride in
their work when skill and care are considered luxuries (if not
harmful to "efficiency" and, under capitalism, the profits and power
of the capitalist and manager)? We are not machines. We have a need
for craftspersonship and anarchist recognises this and takes it into
account in its vision of a free society.
This means that, in an anarchist society, economic activity is the
process by which we produce what is both useful and beautiful in
a way that empowers the individual. As Oscar Wilde put it, individuals
will produce what is beautiful. Such production will be based upon the
"study of the needs of mankind, and the means of satisfying them with
the least possible waste of human energy." [Peter Kropotkin, The
Conquest of Bread, p. 175] This means that anarchist economic ideas
are the same as what Political Economy should be, not what it actually
is, namely the "essential basis of all Political Economy, the study of
the most favourable conditions for giving society the greatest amount
of useful products with the least waste of human energy" (and, we
must add today, the least disruption of nature). [Op. Cit., p. 144]
The anarchists charge capitalism with wasting human energy and time
due to its irrational nature and workings, energy that could be spent
creating what is beautiful (both in terms of individualities and
products of labour). Under capitalism we are "toiling to live, that
we may live to toil." [William Morris, Useful Work Versus Useless
Toil, p. 37]
In addition, we must stress that the aim of economic activity within
an anarchist society is not to create equality of outcome -- i.e.
everyone getting exactly the same goods. As we noted in
section A.2.5,
such a "vision" of "equality" attributed to socialists by pro-capitalists
indicates more the poverty of imagination and ethics of the critics
of socialism than a true account of socialist ideas. Anarchists, like
other socialists, support equality in order to maximise freedom,
including the freedom to choose between options to satisfy ones
needs.
To treat people equally, as equals, means to respect their desires
and interests, to acknowledge their right to equal liberty. To
make people consume the same as everyone else does not respect
the equality of all to develop ones abilities as one sees fit.
Thus it means equality of opportunity to satisfy desires and
interests, not the imposition of an abstract minimum (or maximum)
on unique individuals. To treat unique individuals equally means
to acknowledge that uniqueness, not to deny it.
Thus the real aim of economic activity within an anarchy is to
ensure "that every human being should have the material and moral
means to develop his humanity." [Michael Bakunin, The Political
Philosophy of Bakunin, p. 295] And you cannot develop your humanity
if you cannot express yourself freely. Needless to say, to treat
unique people "equally" (i.e. identically) is simply evil. You
cannot, say, have a 70 year old woman do the same work in order to
receive the same income as a 20 year old man. No, anarchists do not
subscribe to such "equality," which is a product of the "ethics of
mathematics" of capitalism and not of anarchist ideas. Such a
scheme is alien to a free society. The equality anarchists desire
is a social equality, based on control over the decisions that
affect you. The aim of anarchist economic activity, therefore, is
provide the goods required for "equal freedom for all, an equality
of conditions such as to allow everyone to do as they wish." [Errico
Malatesta, Life and Ideas, p. 49] Thus anarchists "demand not
natural but social equality of individuals as the condition for
justice and the foundations of morality." [Bakunin, Op. Cit.,
p. 249]
Under capitalism, instead of humans controlling production, production
controls them. Anarchists want to change this and desire to create an
economic network which will allow the maximisation of an individual's
free time in order for them to express and develop their individuality
(or to "create what is beautiful"). So instead of aiming just to produce
because the economy will collapse if we did not, anarchists want to ensure
that we produce what is useful in a manner which liberates the individual
and empowers them in all aspects of their lives. They share this desire
with (some of) the classical Liberals and agree totally with Humbolt's
statement that "the end of man . . . is the highest and most harmonious
development of his powers to a complete and consistent whole." [quoted
by J.S. Mill in On Liberty and Other Essays, p. 64]
This desire means that anarchists reject the capitalist definition
of "efficiency." Anarchists would agree with Albert and Hahnel when
they argue that "since people are conscious agents whose characteristics
and therefore preferences develop over time, to access long-term efficiency
we must access the impact of economic institutions on people's development."
[The Political Economy of Participatory Economics, p. 9] Capitalism, as
we have explained before, is highly inefficient in this light due to the
effects of hierarchy and the resulting marginalisation and disempowerment
of the majority of society. As Albert and Hahnel go on to note,
"self-management, solidarity, and variety are all legitimate valuative
criteria for judging economic institutions . . . Asking whether particular
institutions help people attain self-management, variety, and solidarity
is sensible." [Ibid.]
In other words, anarchists think that any economic activity in a free
society is to do useful things in such a way that gives those doing it
as much pleasure as possible. The point of such activity is to express
the individuality of those doing it, and for that to happen they must
control the work process itself. Only by self-management can work become
a means of empowering the individual and developing his or her powers.
In a nutshell, to use William Morris' expression, useful work will replace
useless toil in an anarchist society.
Anarchists desire to see humanity liberate itself from "work." This may
come as a shock for many people and will do much to "prove" that anarchism
is essentially utopian. However, we think that such an abolition is not
only necessary, it is possible. This is because "work" is one of the major
dangers to freedom we face.
If by freedom we mean self-government, then it is clear that being subjected
to hierarchy in the workplace subverts our abilities to think and judge
for ourselves. Like any skill, critical analysis and independent thought
have to be practised continually in order to remain at their full potential.
However, as well as hierarchy, the workplace environment created by these
power structures also helps to undermine these abilities. This was
recognised by Adam Smith:
"The understandings of the greater part of men are necessarily formed by
their ordinary employments." That being so, "the man whose life is spent
in performing a few simple operations, of which the effects too are,
perhaps, always the same, or nearly the same, has no occasion to extend
his understanding . . . and generally becomes as stupid and ignorant as
it is possible for a human creature to be . . . But in every improved
and civilised society this is the state into which the labouring poor,
that is the great body of the people, must necessarily fall, unless
government takes pains to prevent it." [Adam Smith, quoted by Noam
Chomsky, Year 501, p. 18]
Smith's argument (usually ignored by those who claim to follow his
ideas) is backed up by extensive evidence. The different types of
authority structures and different technologies have different effects
on those who work within them. Carole Pateman (in Participation and
Democratic Theory) notes that the evidence suggests that "[o]nly
certain work situations were found to be conducive to the development
of the psychological characteristics [suitable for freedom, such as]
. . . the feelings of personal confidence and efficacy that underlay
the sense of political efficacy." [p. 51] She quotes one expert (R.
Blauner from his Freedom and Alienation) who argues that within
capitalist companies based upon highly rationalised work environment,
extensive division of labour and "no control over the pace or technique
of his [or her] work, no room to exercise skill or leadership" [Op. Cit.,
p. 51] workers, according to a psychological study, is "resigned to his
lot . . . more dependent than independent . . . he lacks confidence in
himself . . . he is humble . . . the most prevalent feeling states . . .
seem to be fear and anxiety." [p. 52]
However, in workplaces where "the worker has a high degree of personal
control over his work . . . and a very large degree of freedom from
external control . . .[or has] collective responsibility of a crew of
employees . . .[who] had control over the pace and method of getting
the work done, and the work crews were largely internally self-disciplining"
[p. 52] a different social character is seen. This was characterised by
"a strong sense of individualism and autonomy, and a solid acceptance
of citizenship in the large society . . .[and] a highly developed feeling
of self-esteem and a sense of self-worth and is therefore ready to
participate in the social and political institutions of the community."
[p. 52] She notes that R. Blauner states that the "nature of a man's
work affects his social character and personality" and that an
"industrial environment tends to breed a distinct social type."
[cited by Pateman, Op. Cit., p. 52]
As Bob Black argues:
For this reason anarchists desire, to use Bob Black's phrase, "the
abolition of work." "Work," in this context, does not mean any form
of productive activity. Far from it. "Work" (in the sense of doing necessary
things) will always be with us. There is no getting away from it; crops
need to be grown, schools built, homes fixed, and so on. No, "work" in
this context means any form of labour in which the worker does not control
his or her own activity. In other words, wage labour in all its many
forms. As Kropotkin put it, "the right to work" simply "means the right
to be always a wage-slave, a drudge, ruled over and exploited by the
middle class of the future" and he contrasted this to the "right to
well-being" which meant "the possibility of living like human beings,
and of bringing up children to be members of a society better than
ours." [The Conquest of Bread, p. 44]
A society based upon wage labour (i.e. a capitalist society) will result
in a society within which the typical worker uses few of their abilities,
exercise little or no control over their work because they are governed by
a boss during working hours. This has been proved to lower the individual's
self-esteem and feelings of self-worth, as would be expected in any social
relationship that denied self-government to workers. Capitalism is marked
by an extreme division of labour, particularly between mental labour and
physical labour. It reduces the worker to a mere machine operator, following
the orders of his or her boss. Therefore, a libertarian that does not
support economic liberty (i.e. self-management) is no libertarian at all.
Capitalism bases its rationale for itself on consumption. However, this
results in a viewpoint which minimises the importance of the time we
spend in productive activity. Anarchists consider that it is essential
for individual's to use and develop their unique attributes and capacities
in all walks of life, to maximise their powers. Therefore, the idea that
"work" should be ignored in favour of consumption is totally mad. Productive
activity is an important way of developing our inner-powers and express
ourselves; in other words, be creative. Capitalism's emphasis on consumption
shows the poverty of that system. As Alexander Berkman argues:
Therefore, capitalism is based on a constant process of alienated
consumption, as workers try to find the happiness associated within
productive, creative, self-managed activity in a place it does not exist --
on the shop shelves. This can partly explain the rise of both mindless
consumerism and of religions, as individuals try to find meaning for
their lives and happiness, a meaning and happiness frustrated in wage
labour and hierarchy.
Capitalism's impoverishment of the individual's spirit is hardly surprising.
As William Godwin argued, "[t]he spirit of oppression, the spirit of
servility, and the spirit of fraud, these are the immediate growth of
the established administration of property. They are alike hostile to
intellectual and moral improvement." [The Anarchist Reader, p. 131] In
other words, any system based in wage labour or hierarchical relationships in
the workplace will result in a deadening of the individual and the creation
of a "servile" character. This crushing of individuality springs directly
from what Godwin called "the third degree of property" namely "a system. . .
by which one man enters into the faculty of disposing of the produce of
another man's industry" in other words, capitalism. [Op. Cit., p. 129]
Anarchists desire to change this and create a society based upon freedom in
all aspects of life. Hence anarchists desire to abolish work, simply because
it restricts the liberty and distorts the individuality of those who have to
do it. To quote Emma Goldman:
Anarchists do not think that by getting rid of work we will not have to
produce necessary goods and so on. Far from it, an anarchist society "doesn't
mean we have to stop doing things. It does mean creating a new way of life
based on play; in other words, a ludic revolution . . . a collective adventure
in generalised joy and freely interdependent exuberance. Play isn't passive."
[Bob Black, Op. Cit.]
This means that in an anarchist society every effort would be made to reduce
boring, unpleasant activity to a minimum and ensure that whatever productive
activity is required to be done is as pleasant as possible and based upon
voluntary labour. However, it is important to remember Cornelius Castoriadis
point that a "Socialist society will be able to reduce the length of the
working day, and will have to do so, but this will not be the fundamental
preoccupation. Its first task will be to . . .transform the very nature of
work. The problem is not to leave more and more 'free' time to individuals -
which might well be empty time - so that they may fill it at will with
'poetry' or the carving of wood. The problem is to make all time a time
of liberty and to allow concrete freedom to find expression in creative
activity." Essentially, "the problem is to put poetry into work."
[Workers' Councils and the Economics of a Self-Managed Society,
p. 14 and p. 15]
This is why anarchists desire to abolish "work" (i.e. wage labour), to
ensure that whatever "work" (i.e. economic activity) is required to be
done is under the direct control of those who do it. In this way it can
be liberated and so become a means of self-realisation and not a form of
self-negation. In other words, anarchists want to abolish work because
"[l]ife, the art of living, has become a dull formula, flat and inert."
[A. Berkman, Op. Cit., p. 27] Anarchists want to bring the spontaneity
and joy of life back into productive activity and save humanity from
the dead hand of capital.
All this does not imply that anarchists think that individuals will
not seek to "specialise" in one form of productive activity rather
than another. Far from it, people in a free society will pick
activities which interest them as the main focal point of their
means of self-expression. "It is evident," noted Kropotkin, "that
all men and women cannot equally enjoy the pursuit of scientific
work. The variety of inclinations is such that some will find
more pleasure in science, some others in art, and other again in
some of the numberless branches of the production of wealth." This
"division of work" is commonplace in humanity and can be seen under
capitalism -- most children and teenagers pick a specific line of
work because they are interested, or at least desire to do a
specific kind of work. This natural desire to do what interests
you and what you are good at will be encouraged in an anarchist
society. As Kropotkin argued, anarchists "fully recognise the
necessity of specialisation of knowledge, but we maintain that
specialisation must follow general education, and that general
education must be given in science and handicraft alike. To
the division of society into brain workers and manual workers
we oppose the combination of both kinds of activities . . . we
advocate the education integrale [integral education], or
complete education, which means the disappearance of that
pernicious division." He was aware, however, that both
individuals and society would benefit from a diversity of
activities and a strong general knowledge. In his words, "[b]ut
whatever the occupations preferred by everyone, everyone
will be the more useful in his [or her] branch is he [or she]
is in possession of a serious scientific knowledge. And,
whosoever he [or she] might be . . . he would be the gainer
if he spent a part of his life in the workshop or the
farm (the workshop and the farm), if he were in contact
with humanity in its daily work, and had the satisfaction
of knowing that he himself discharges his duties as an
unprivileged producer of wealth." [Fields, Factories and
Workshops Tomorrow, p. 186, p. 172 and p. 186]
However, while specialisation would continue, the permanent division
of individuals into manual or brain workers would be eliminated.
Individuals will manage all aspects of the "work" required (for
example, engineers will also take part in self-managing their
workplaces), a variety of activities would be encouraged and
the strict division of labour of capitalism will be abolished.
In other words, anarchists want to replace the division of labour
by the division of work. We must stress that we are not playing
with words here. John Crump presents a good summary of the ideas
of the Japanese anarchist Hatta Shuzo on this difference:
As Kropotin argued:
As an aside, supporters of capitalism argue that integrated labour
must be more inefficient than divided labour as capitalist firms
have not introduced it. This is false for numerous reasons.
Firstly, we have to put out the inhuman logic of the assertion.
After all, few would argue in favour of slavery if it were, in fact,
more productive than wage labour but such is the logical conclusion
of this argument. If someone did argue that the only reason slavery
was not the dominant mode of labour simply because it was inefficient
we would consider them as less than human. Simply put, it is a sick
ideology which happily sacrifices individuals for the sake of
slightly more products. Sadly, that is what many defenders of
capitalism do, ultimately, argue for.
Secondly, capitalist firms are not neutral structures but rather
a system of hierarchies, with entrenched interests and needs.
Managers will only introduce a work technique that maintains
their power (and so their profits). As we argue in
section J.5.12,
while workers' participation generally see a rise in
efficiency managers generally stop the project simply because
it undercuts their power by empowering workers who then can fight
for a greater slice of the value they produce. So the lack of
integrated labour under capitalism simply means that it does not
empower management, not that it is less efficient.
Thirdly, the attempts by managers and bosses to introduce
"flexibility" by eliminating trade unions suggests that
integration is more efficient. After all, one of the
major complains directed towards trade union contracts
were that they explicitly documented what workers could
and could not do. For example, union members would refuse
to do work which was outside their agreed job descriptions.
This is usually classed as an example of the evil of
regulations.
However, if we look at it from the viewpoint of contract, it
exposes the inefficiency and inflexibility of contract as a
means of co-operation. After all, what is this refusal actually
mean? It means that the worker refuses to do what is not
specified in his or her contract! Their job description indicates
what they have been contracted to do and anything else has
not been agreed upon in advance. It specifies the division of
labour in a workplace by means of a contract between worker
and boss.
While being a wonderful example of a well-designed contract,
managers discovered that they could not operate their workplaces
because of them. Rather, they needed a general "do what you are told"
contract (which of course is hardly an example of contract reducing
authority) and such a contract integrates numerous work tasks
into one. The managers diatribe against union contracts suggests
that production needs some form of integrated labour to actually
work (as well as showing the hypocrisy of the labour contract
under capitalism as labour "flexibility" simply means labour
"commodification" -- a machine does not question what its used for,
the ideal for labour under capitalism is a similar unquestioning
nature for labour). The union job description indicates that
not only is the contract not applicable to the capitalist
workplace but that production needs the integration of labour
while demanding a division of work. As Cornelius Caastoriadis
argued:
Of course, the other option is to get rid of capitalism by
self-management. If workers managed their own time and labour,
they would have no reason to say "that is not my job" as they
have no contract with someone who tells them what to do. Similarly,
the process of labour integration forced upon the worker would be
freely accepted and a task freely accepted always produces superior
results than one imposed by coercion (or its threat). This
means that "[u]nder socialism, factories would have no reason
to accept the artificially rigid division of labour now
prevailing. There will be every reason to encourage a
rotation of workers between shops and departments and
between production and office areas." The "residues of
capitalism's division of labour gradually will have to be
eliminated" as "socialist society cannot survive unless it
demolishes this division." [Ibid.]
Division of tasks (or work) will replace division of labour
in a free society. "The main subject of social economy," argued
Kropotkin, is "the economy of energy required for the
satisfaction of human needs." These needs obviously expressed
both the needs of the producers for empowering and interesting
work and their need for a healthy and balanced environment.
Thus Kropotkin discussed the "advantages" which could be
"derive[d] from a combination of industrial pursuits with
intensive agriculture, and of brain work with manual work."
The "greatest sum total of well-being can be obtained when
a variety of agricultural, industrial and intellectual
pursuits are combined in each community; and that man [and
woman] shows his best when he is in a position to apply
his usually-varied capacities to several pursuits in the
farm, the workshop, the factory, the study or the studio,
instead of being riveted for life to one of these pursuits
only." [Fields, Factories and Workshops Tomorrow, pp. 17-8]
By replacing the division of labour with the division of work,
productive activity can be transformed into an enjoyable task
(or series of tasks). By integrating labour, all the capacities
of the producer can be expressed so eliminating a major source
of alienation and unhappiness in society.
One last point on the abolition of work. May 1st -- International
Workers' Day -- which, as we discussed in
section A.5.2, was created
to commemorate the Chicago Anarchist Martyrs. Anarchists then, as
now, think that it should be celebrated by strike action and mass
demonstrations. In other words, for anarchists, International
Workers' Day should be a non-work day! That sums up the anarchist
position to work nicely -- that the celebration of workers' day
should be based on the rejection of work.
Basically by workers' self-management of production and community
control of the means of production. It is hardly in the interests
of those who do the actual "work" to have bad working conditions,
boring, repetitive labour, and so on. Therefore, a key aspect of
the liberation from work is to create a self-managed society, "a
society in which everyone has equal means to develop and that all
are or can be at the time intellectual and manual workers, and the
only differences remaining between men [and women] are those which
stem from the natural diversity of aptitudes, and that all jobs,
all functions, give an equal right to the enjoyment of social
possibilities." [Errico Malatesta, Anarchy, p. 40]
Essential to this task is decentralisation and the use of appropriate
technology. Decentralisation is important to ensure that those who do
work can determine how to liberate it. A decentralised system will
ensure that ordinary people can identify areas for technological
innovation, and so understand the need to get rid of certain kinds
of work. Unless ordinary people understand and control the
introduction of technology, then they will never be fully aware
of the benefits of technology and resist advances which may be in
their best interests to introduce. This is the full meaning of
appropriate technology, namely the use of technology which those
most affected feel to be best in a given situation. Such technology
may or may not be technologically "advanced" but it will be of the kind
which ordinary people can understand and, most importantly, control.
The potential for rational use of technology can be seen from capitalism.
Under capitalism, technology is used to increase profits, to expand the
economy, not to liberate all individuals from useless toil (it does,
of course, liberate a few from such "activity"). As Ted Trainer argues:
"Second, according to the US Bureau for Mines, the amount of capital per
person available for investment in the United States will increase at 3.6
percent per annum (i.e. will double in 20-year intervals). This indicates
that unless Americans double the volume of goods and services they consume
every 20 years, their economy will be in serious difficulties
"Hence the ceaseless and increasing pressure to find more business
opportunities" ["What is Development", p 57-90, Society and Nature,
Issue No. 7, p. 49]
And, remember, these figures include production in many areas of the
economy that would not exist in a free society - state and capitalist
bureaucracy, weapons production, and so on. In addition, it does not
take into account the labour of those who do not actually produce
anything useful and so the level of production for useful goods would
be higher than Trainer indicates. In addition, goods will be built to
last and so much production will become sensible and not governed by an
insane desire to maximise profits at the expense of everything else.
The decentralisation of power will ensure that self-management becomes
universal. This will see the end of division of labour as mental and
physical work becomes unified and those who do the work also manage it.
This will allow "the free exercise of all the faculties of man" both
inside and outside "work." [Peter Kropotkin, The Conquest of Bread,
p. 148] The aim of such a development would be to turn productive
activity, as far as possible, into an enjoyable experience. In the
words of Murray Bookchin it is the quality and nature of the
work process that counts:
Work will become, primarily, the expression of a person's pleasure in
what they are doing and become like an art - an expression of their
creativity and individuality. Work as an art will become expressed in
the workplace as well as the work process, with workplaces transformed
and integrated into the local community and environment (see section
I.4.15 -- "What will the workplace of
tomorrow be like?"). This will
obviously apply to work conducted in the home as well, otherwise the
"revolution, intoxicated with the beautiful words, Liberty, Equality,
Solidarity, would not be a revolution if it maintained slavery at
home. Half [of] humanity subjected to the slavery of the hearth would
still have to rebel against the other half." [Peter Kropotkin, The
Conquest of Bread, p. 128]
In other words, anarchists desire "to combine the best part (in fact,
the only good part) of work -- the production of use-values -- with
the best of play . . . its freedom and its fun, its voluntariness and
its intrinsic gratification" -- the transformation of what economists
call production into productive play. [Bob Black, Smokestack Lightning]
In addition, a decentralised system will build up a sense of community
and trust between individuals and ensure the creation of an ethical
economy, one based on interactions between individuals and not
commodities caught in the flux of market forces. This ideal of a
"moral economy" can be seen in both social anarchists desire for
the end of the market system and the individualists insistence that
"cost be the limit of price." Anarchists recognise that the "traditional
local market . . . is essentially different from the market as it
developed in modern capitalism. Bartering on a local market offered
an opportunity to meet for the purpose of exchanging commodities.
Producers and customers became acquainted; they were relatively small
groups . . . The modern market is no longer a meeting place but a
mechanism characterised by abstract and impersonal demand. One produces
for this market, not for a known circle of customers; its verdict is
based on laws of supply and demand." [Man for Himself, pp. 67-68]
Anarchists reject the capitalist notion that economic activity should
be based on maximising profit as the be all and end all of such work
(buying and selling on the "impersonal market"). As markets only work
through people, individuals, who buy and sell (but, in the end, control
them -- in the "free market" only the market is free) this means that
for the market to be "impersonal" as it is in capitalism it implies
that those involved have to be unconcerned about personalities,
including their own. Profit, not ethics, is what counts. The
"impersonal" market suggests individuals who act in an impersonal,
and so unethical, manner. The morality of what they produce, why
they produce it and how they produce it is irrelevant, as long as
profits are produced.
Instead, anarchists consider economic activity as an expression of the
human spirit, an expression of the innate human need to express ourselves
and to create. Capitalism distorts these needs and makes economic activity
a deadening experience by the division of labour and hierarchy. Anarchists
think that "industry is not an end in itself, but should only be a means to
ensure to man his material subsistence and to make accessible to him the
blessings of a higher intellectual culture. Where industry is everything
and man is nothing begins the realm of a ruthless economic despotism
whose workings are no less disastrous than those of any political despotism.
The two mutually augment one another, and they are fed from the same
source." [Rudolph Rocker, Anarcho-Syndicalism, p. 11]
Anarchists think that a decentralised social system will allow "work" to
be abolished and economic activity humanised and made a means to an end
(namely producing useful things and liberated individuals). This would
be achieved by, as Rudolf Rocker puts it, the "alliance of free groups of
men and women based on co-operative labour and a planned administration of
things in the interest of the community." [Op. Cit., p. 62]
However, as things are produced by people, it could be suggested that a
"planned administration of things" implies a "planned administration of
people" (although few who suggest this danger apply it to capitalist
firms which are like mini-centrally planned states). This objection is
false simply because anarchism aims "to reconstruct the economic life
of the peoples from the ground up and build it up anew in the spirit of
Socialism" and, moreover, "only the producers themselves are fitted for
this task, since they are the only value-creating element in society out
of which a new future can arise." Such a reconstructed economic life
would be based on anarchist principles, that is "based on the principles
of federalism, a free combination from below upwards, putting the right
of self-determination of every member above everything else and recognising
only the organic agreement of all on the basis of like interests and
common convictions." [Op. Cit., p. 61 and p. 53]
In other words, those who produce also administer and so govern themselves
in free association (and it should be pointed out that any group of
individuals in association will make "plans" and "plan," the important
question is who does the planning and who does the work. Only in anarchy
are both functions united into the same people). Rocker emphasises this
point when he writes that:
In other words, the "planned administration of things" would be done
by the producers themselves, in independent groupings. This would
likely take the form (as we indicated in
section I.3) of confederations
of syndicates who communicate information between themselves and respond
to changes in the production and distribution of products by increasing or
decreasing the required means of production in a co-operative (i.e. "planned")
fashion. No "central planning" or "central planners" governing the economy,
just workers co-operating together as equals (as Kropotkin argued, free
socialism "must result from thousands of separate local actions, all
directed towards the same aim. It cannot be dictated by a central body:
it must result from the numberless local needs and wants." [Act for
Yourselves, p. 54]).
Therefore, an anarchist society would abolish work by ensuring that
those who do the work actually control it. They would do so in a network
of self-managed associations, a society "composed of a number of societies
banded together for everything that demands a common effort: federations
of producers for all kinds of production, of societies for consumption . . .
All these groups will unite their efforts through mutual agreement . . .
Personal initiative will be encouraged and every tendency to uniformity
and centralisation combated." [Peter Kropotkin, quoted by Buber in
Paths in Utopia, p. 42]
In response to consumption patterns, syndicates will have to expand or
reduce production and will have to attract volunteers to do the necessary
work. The very basis of free association will ensure the abolition of work,
as individuals will apply for "work" they enjoy doing and so would be
interested in reducing "work" they did not want to do to a minimum. Such
a decentralisation of power would unleash a wealth of innovation and ensure
that unpleasant work be minimised and fairly shared (see
section I.4.13).
Now, any form of association requires agreement. Therefore, even a
society based on the communist-anarchist maxim "from each according
to their ability, to each according to their need" will need to make
agreements in order to ensure co-operative ventures succeed. In other
words, members of a co-operative commonwealth would have to make and
keep to their agreements between themselves. This means that the members
of a syndicate would agree joint starting and finishing times, require
notice if individuals want to change "jobs" and so on within and between
syndicates. Any joint effort requires some degree of co-operation and
agreement. Moreover, between syndicates, an agreement would be reached
(in all likelihood) that determined the minimum working hours required
by all members of society able to work. How that minimum was actually
organised would vary between workplace and commune, with work times,
flexi-time, job rotation and so on determined by each syndicate
(for example, one syndicate may work 8 hours a day for 2 days, another
4 hours a day for 4 days, one may use flexi-time, another more rigid
starting and stopping times).
As Kropotkin argued, an anarchist-communist society would be based upon
the following kind of "contract" between its members:
With such work "necessary to existence" being recognised by individuals
and expressed by demand for labour from productive syndicates. It is, of
course, up to the individual to decide which work he or she desires to
perform from the positions available in the various associations in
existence. A union card would be the means by which work hours would be
recorded and access to the common wealth of society ensured. And, of course,
individuals and groups are free to work alone and exchange the produce of
their labour with others, including the confederated syndicates, if they so
desired. An anarchist society will be as flexible as possible.
Therefore, we can imagine a social anarchist society being based on two
basic arrangements -- firstly, an agreed minimum working week of, say, 20
hours, in a syndicate of your choice, plus any amount of hours doing "work"
which you feel like doing -- for example, art, experimentation, DIY, playing
music, composing, gardening and so on. The aim of technological progress
would be to reduce the basic working week more and more until the very
concept of necessary "work" and free time enjoyments is abolished. In
addition, in work considered dangerous or unwanted, then volunteers could
trade doing a few hours of such activity for more free time (see
section I.4.13 for more on this).
It can be said that this sort of agreement is a restriction of liberty
because it is "man-made" (as opposed to the "natural law" of "supply
and demand"). This is a common defence of the free market by individualist
anarchists against anarcho-communism, for example. However, while in theory
individualist-anarchists can claim that in their vision of society, they
don't care when, where, or how a person earns a living, as long as they are
not invasive about it the fact is that any economy is based on interactions
between individuals. The law of "supply and demand" easily, and often, makes
a mockery of the ideas that individuals can work as long as they like -
usually they end up working as long as required by market forces (i.e. the
actions of other individuals, but turned into a force outwith their control,
see
section I.1.3).
This means that individuals do not work as long as
they like, but as long as they have to in order to survive. Knowing that
"market forces" is the cause of long hours of work hardly makes them any
nicer.
And it seems strange to the communist-anarchist that certain free
agreements made between equals can be considered authoritarian while
others are not. The individualist-anarchist argument that social
co-operation to reduce labour is "authoritarian" while agreements
between individuals on the market are not seems illogical to social
anarchists. They cannot see how it is better for individuals to be
pressured into working longer than they desire by "invisible hands"
than to come to an arrangement with others to manage their own affairs
to maximise their free time.
Therefore, free agreement between free and equal individuals is considered
the key to abolishing work, based upon decentralisation of power and
the use of appropriate technology.
Firstly, it should be noted that anarchists do not have any set idea
about the answer to this question. Most anarchists are communists,
desiring to see the end of money, but that does not mean they want
to impose communism onto people. Far from it, communism can only be
truly libertarian if it is organised from the bottom up. So, anarchists
would agree with Kropotkin that it is a case of not "determining in
advance what form of distribution the producers should accept in
their different groups -- whether the communist solution, or labour
checks, or equal salaries, or any other method" while considering a
given solution best in their opinion. [Kropotkin's Revolutionary
Pamphlets, p. 166] Free experiment is a key aspect of anarchism.
While certain anarchists have certain preferences on the
social system they want to live in and so argue for that, they
are aware that objective circumstances and social desires will
determine what is introduced during a revolution (for example,
while Kropotkin was a communist-anarchist and considered it
essential that a revolution proceed towards communism as quickly
as possible, he was aware that it was unlikely it would be
introduced immediately -- see section I.2.2
for details).
However, we will outline some possible means of economic decision making
criteria as this question is an important one (it is the crux of the
"libertarian socialism is impossible" argument, for example). Therefore,
we will indicate what possible solutions exist in different forms of
anarchism.
In a mutualist or collectivist system, the answer is easy. Prices will exist
and be used as a means of making decisions. Mutualism will be more market
orientated than collectivism, with collectivism being based on confederations
of collectives to respond to changes in demand (i.e. to determine investment
decisions and ensure that supply is kept in line with demand). Mutualism,
with its system of market based distribution around a network of co-operatives
and mutual banks, does not really need a further discussion as its basic
operations are the same as in any non-capitalist market system. Collectivism
and communism will have to be discussed in more detail. However, all systems
are based on workers' self-management and so the individuals directly affected
make the decisions concerning what to produce, when to do it, and how to do
it. In this way workers retain control of the product of their labour. It
is the social context of these decisions and what criteria workers use to
make their decisions that differ between anarchist schools of thought.
Although collectivism promotes the greatest autonomy for worker associations,
it should not be confused with a market economy as advocated by supporters
of mutualism (particularly in its Individualist form). The goods produced
by the collectivised factories and workshops are exchanged not according to
highest price that can be wrung from consumers, but according to their actual
production costs. The determination of these honest prices is to be by a "Bank
of Exchange" in each community (obviously an idea borrowed from Proudhon).
These "Banks" would represent the various producer confederations and
consumer/citizen groups in the community and would seek to negotiate these
"honest" prices (which would, in all likelihood, include "hidden" costs
like pollution). These agreements would be subject to ratification by
the assemblies of those involved.
As Guillaume puts it "the value of the commodities having been established
in advance by a contractual agreement between the regional co-operative
federations [i.e. confederations of syndicates] and the various communes,
who will also furnish statistics to the Banks of Exchange. The Bank of Exchange
will remit to the producers negotiable vouchers representing the value of their
products; these vouchers will be accepted throughout the territory included
in the federation of communes." [Bakunin on Anarchism, p. 366] These
vouchers would be related to hours worked, for example, and when used as a
guide for investment decisions could be supplemented with cost-benefit
analysis of the kind possibly used in a communist-anarchist society (see
below).
Although this scheme bears a strong resemblance to Proudhonian "People's
Banks," it should be noted that the Banks of Exchange, along with a "Communal
Statistical Commission," are intended to have a "planning" function as well
to ensure that supply meets demand. This does not imply a "command" economy,
but simple book keeping for "each Bank of Exchange makes sure in advance that
these products are in demand [in order to risk] nothing by immediately issuing
payment vouchers to the producers." [Op. Cit., p. 367] The workers syndicates
would still determine what orders to produce and each commune would be free
to choose its suppliers.
As will be discussed in more depth later (see
section I.4.8) information
about consumption patterns will be recorded and used by workers to inform
their production and investment decisions. In addition, we can imagine that
production syndicates would encourage communes as well as consumer groups and
co-operatives to participate in making these decisions. This would ensure
that produced goods reflect consumer needs. Moreover, as conditions permit,
the exchange functions of the communal "banks" would (in all likelihood) be
gradually replaced by the distribution of goods "in accordance with the needs
of the consumers." In other words, most supporters of collectivist anarchism
see it as a temporary measure before anarcho-communism could develop.
Communist anarchism would be similar to collectivism, i.e. a system of
confederations of collectives, communes and distribution centres ("Communal
stores"). However, in an anarcho-communist system, prices are not used. How
will economic decision making be done? One possible solution is as follows:
This points system would be the means by which producers and consumers
would be able to determine whether the use of a particular good is
efficient or not. Unlike prices, this cost-benefit analysis system
would ensure that production and consumption reflects social and
ecological costs, awareness and priorities. Moreover, this analysis
would be a guide to decision making and not a replacement of human
decision making and evaluation. As Lewis Mumford argues:
Obviously, today, we would include ecological issues as well as
human ones. However Mumford's argument is correct. Any decision
making process which disregards the quality of work or the effect
on the human and natural environment is a deranged process. However,
this is how capitalism operates, with the market rewarding capitalists
and managers who introduce de-humanising and ecologically harmful
practices. Indeed, so biased against labour and the environment
is capitalism that economists and pro-capitalists argue that
reducing "efficiency" by such social concerns is actually harmful
to an economy, which is a total reversal of common sense and
human feelings (after all, surely the economy should satisfy human
needs and not sacrifice those needs to the economy?). The argument
is that consumption would suffer as resources (human and material)
would be diverted from more "efficient" productive activities and
so reduce, over all, our economic well-being. What this argument
ignores is that consumption does not exist in isolation from the
rest of the economy. What we what to consume is conditioned, in
part, by the sort of person we are and that is influenced by the
kind of work we do, the kinds of social relationships we have,
whether we are happy with our work and life, and so on. If our
work is alienating and of low quality, then so will our consumption
decisions. If our work is subject to hierarchical control and
servile in nature then we cannot expect our consumption decisions
of totally rational -- indeed they may become an attempt to find
happiness via shopping, a self-defeating activity as consumption
cannot solve a problem created in production. Thus rampant
consumerism may be the result of capitalist "efficiency" and so
the objection against socially aware production is question
begging.
Of course, as well as absolute scarcity, prices under capitalism
also reflect relative scarcity (while in the long term, market prices
tend towards their production price plus a mark-up based on the
degree of monopoly in a market, in the short term prices can change
as a result of changes in supply and demand). How a communist society
could take into account such short term changes and communicate them
through out the economy is discussed in section I.4.5 (
"What about 'supply
and demand'?"). Needless
to say, production and investment decisions based
upon such cost-benefit analysis would take into account the current
production situation and so the relative scarcity of specific goods.
Therefore, a communist-anarchist society would be based around a network
of syndicates who communicate information between each other. Instead of
the "price" being communicated between workplaces as in capitalism, actual
physical data will be sent. This data is a summary of the use values
of the good (for example labour time and energy used to produce it,
pollution details, relative scarcity and so forth). With this information a
cost-benefit analysis will be conducted to determine which good will be best
to use in a given situation based upon mutually agreed common values. The
data for a given workplace could be compared to the industry as a whole (as
confederations of syndicates would gather and produce such information --
see
section I.3.5)
in order to determine whether a specific workplace will
efficiently produce the required goods (this system has the additional
advantage of indicating which workplaces require investment to bring them
in line, or improve upon, the industrial average in terms of working
conditions, hours worked and so on). In addition, common rules of thumb
would possibly be agreed, such as agreements not to use scarce materials
unless there is no alternative (either ones that use a lot of labour,
energy and time to produce or those whose demand is currently exceeding
supply capacity).
Similarly, when ordering goods, the syndicate, commune or individual involved
will have to inform the syndicate why it is required in order to allow the
syndicate to determine if they desire to produce the good and to enable them
to prioritise the orders they receive. In this way, resource use can be guided
by social considerations and "unreasonable" requests ignored (for example, if
an individual "needs" a ship-builders syndicate to build a ship for his
personal use, the ship-builders may not "need" to build it and instead builds
ships for the transportation of freight). However, in almost all cases of
individual consumption, no such information will be needed as communal stores
would order consumer goods in bulk as they do now. Hence the economy would be
a vast network of co-operating individuals and workplaces and the dispersed
knowledge which exists within any society can be put to good effect (better
effect than under capitalism because it does not hide social and ecological
costs in the way market prices do and co-operation will eliminate the business
cycle and its resulting social problems).
Therefore, production units in a social anarchist society, by virtue of
their autonomy within association, are aware of what is socially useful
for them to produce and, by virtue of their links with communes, also
aware of the social (human and ecological) cost of the resources they
need to produce it. They can combine this knowledge, reflecting overall
social priorities, with their local knowledge of the detailed circumstances
of their workplaces and communities to decide how they can best use their
productive capacity. In this way the division of knowledge within society
can be used by the syndicates effectively as well as overcoming the
restrictions within knowledge communication imposed by the price mechanism.
Moreover, production units, by their association within confederations
(or Guilds) ensure that there is effective communication between them. This
results in a process of negotiated co-ordination between equals (i.e. horizontal
links and agreements) for major investment decisions, thus bringing together
supply and demand and allowing the plans of the various units to be
co-ordinated. By this process of co-operation, production units can reduce
duplicating effort and so reduce the waste associated with over-investment
(and so the irrationalities of booms and slumps associated with the price
mechanism, which does not provide sufficient information to allow
workplaces to efficiently co-ordinate their plans - see
section C.7.2).
Needless to say, this issue is related to the "socialist calculation"
issue we discussed in
section I.1.2. To clarify our ideas, we shall
present an example.
Consider two production processes. Method A requires 70 tons of steel
and 60 tons of concrete while Method B requires 60 tons of steel and
70 tons of concrete. Which method should be preferred? One of the
methods will be more economical in terms of leaving more resources
available for other uses than the other but in order to establish
which we need to compare the relevant quantities.
Supporters of capitalism argue that only prices can supply the necessary
information as they are heterogeneous quantities. Both steel and
concrete have a price (say $10 per ton for steel and $5 per ton for
concrete). The method to choose is clearly B as it has a lower
price that A ($950 for B compared to $1000 for A). However, this
does not actually tell us whether B is the more economical method
of production in terms of minimising waste and resource use, it
just tells us which costs less in terms of money.
Why is this? Simply because, as we argued in
section I.1.2,
prices do not totally reflect social, economic and ecological
costs. They are influenced by market power, for example, and
produce externalities, environmental and health costs which
are not reflected in the price. Indeed, passing on costs in
the form of externalities and inhuman working conditions
actually are rewarded in the market as it allows the company
so doing to cut their prices. As far as market power goes, this
has a massive influence on prices, directly in terms of prices
charged and indirectly in terms of wages and conditions of
workers. Due to natural barriers to entry (see
section C.4),
prices are maintained artificially high by the market power of big
business. For example, steel could, in fact cost $5 per ton to
produce but market power allows the company to charge $10 per ton,
Wage costs are, again, determined by the bargaining power of
labour and so do not reflect the real costs in terms of health,
personality and alienation the workers experience. They may
be working in unhealthy conditions simply to get by, with
unemployment or job insecurity hindering their attempts to
improve their conditions or find a new job. Nor are the social
and individual costs of hierarchy and alienation factored
into the price, quite the reverse. It seems ironic that an
economy which it defenders claim meets human needs (as
expressed by money, of course) totally ignores individuals
in the workplace, the place they spend most of their waking
hours in adult life.
So the relative costs of each production method have to be
evaluated but price does not, indeed cannot, provide an real
indication of whether a method is economical in the sense of
actually minimising resource use. Prices do reflect some of
these costs, of course, but filtered through the effects of
market power, hierarchy and externalities they become less
and less accurate. Unless you take the term "economical" to
simply mean "has the least cost in price" rather than the
sensible "has the least cost in resource use, ecological
impact and human pain" you have to accept that the price
mechanism is not a great indicator of economic use.
What is the alternative? Obviously the exact details will be
worked out in practice by the members of a free society,
but we can suggest a few ideas based on our comments above.
When evaluating production methods we need to take into account
as many social and ecological costs as possible and these have
to be evaluated. Which costs will be taken into account, of
course, be decided by those involved, as will how important
they are relative to each other (i.e. how they are weighted).
Moreover, it is likely that they will factor in the desirability
of the work performed to indicate the potential waste in human
time involved in production (see
section I.4.13 for a discussion
of how the desirability of productive activity could be indicated
in an anarchist society). The logic behind this is simple, a
resource which people like to produce will be a better use
of the scare resource of an individual's time than one people
hate producing.
So, for example, steel may take 3 person hours to produce one
ton, produce 200 cubic metres of waste gas, 2000 kilo-joules
of energy, and has excellent working conditions. Concrete,
on the other hand, may take 4 person hours to produce one ton,
produce 300 cubic metres of waste gas, uses 1000 kilo-joules
of energy and has dangerous working conditions due to dust.
What would be the best method? Assuming that each factor is
weighted the same, then obviously Method A is the better
method as it produces the least ecological impact and has the
safest working environment -- the higher energy cost is offset
by the other, more important, factors.
What factors to take into account and how to weigh them
in the decision making process will be evaluated constantly
and reviewed so to ensure that it reflects real costs and
social concerns. Moreover, simply accounting tools can be
created (as a spreadsheet or computer programme) that
takes the decided factors as inputs and returns a cost
benefit analysis of the choices available.
Therefore, the claim that communism cannot evaluate different
production methods due to lack of prices is inaccurate. Indeed,
a look at the actual capitalist market -- marked as it is by
differences in bargaining and market power, externalities
and wage labour -- soon shows that the claims that prices
accurately reflect costs is simply not accurate.
One final point on this subject. As social anarchists consider it important
to encourage all to participate in the decisions that affect their lives,
it would be the role of communal confederations to determine the relative
points value of given inputs and outputs. In this way, all individuals in a
community determine how their society develops, so ensuring that economic
activity is responsible to social needs and takes into account the desires of
everyone affected by production. In this way the problems associated with
the "Isolation Paradox" (see
section B.6) can be over come and so consumption
and production can be harmonised with the needs of individuals as members
of society and the environment they live in.
Anarchists do not ignore the facts of life, namely that at a given moment
there is so much a certain good produced and so much of is desired to be
consumed or used. Neither do we deny that different individuals have different
interests and tastes. However, this is not what is usually meant by "supply
and demand." Often in general economic debate, this formula is given a
certain mythical quality which ignores the underlying realities which it
reflects as well as some unwholesome implications of the theory. So, before
discussing "supply and demand" in an anarchist society, it is worthwhile to
make a few points about the "law of supply and demand" in general.
Firstly, as E.P. Thompson argues, "supply and demand" promotes "the notion
that high prices were a (painful) remedy for dearth, in drawing supplies to
the afflicted region of scarcity. But what draws supply are not high prices
but sufficient money in their purses to pay high prices. A characteristic
phenomenon in times of dearth is that it generates unemployment and empty
pursues; in purchasing necessities at inflated prices people cease to be
able to buy inessentials [causing unemployment] . . . Hence the number of
those able to pay the inflated prices declines in the afflicted regions,
and food may be exported to neighbouring, less afflicted, regions where
employment is holding up and consumers still have money with which to pay.
In this sequence, high prices can actually withdraw supply from the most
afflicted area." [Customs in Common, pp. 283-4]
Therefore "the law of supply and demand" may not be the "most efficient"
means of distribution in a society based on inequality. This is clearly
reflected in the "rationing" by purse which this system is based on. While
in the economics books, price is the means by which scare resources are
"rationed" in reality this creates many errors. Adam Smith argued that
high prices discourage consumption, putting "everybody more or less, but
particularly the inferior ranks of people, upon thrift and good management."
[cited by Thompson, Op. Cit., p. 284] However, as Thompson notes, "[h]owever
persuasive the metaphor, there is an elision of the real relationships
assigned by price, which suggests. . .ideological sleight-of-mind. Rationing
by price does not allocate resources equally among those in need; it
reserves the supply to those who can pay the price and excludes those
who can't. . .The raising of prices during dearth could 'ration' them
[the poor] out of the market altogether." [Op. Cit., p. 285]
In other words, the market cannot be isolated and abstracted from the network
of political, social and legal relations within which it is situated. This
means that all that "supply and demand" tells us is that those with money
can demand more, and be supplied with more, than those without. Whether this
is the "most efficient" result for society cannot be determined (unless, of
course, you assume that rich people are more valuable than working class
ones because they are rich). This has an obvious effect on production,
with "effective demand" twisting economic activity. As Chomsky notes,
"[t]hose who have more money tend to consume more, for obvious reasons. So
consumption is skewed towards luxuries for the rich, rather than necessities
for the poor." George Barrett brings home of the evil of such a "skewed"
form of production:
Therefore, as far as "supply and demand" is concerned, anarchists are
well aware of the need to create and distribute necessary goods to those
who require them. This, however, cannot be achieved under capitalism. In
effect, supply and demand under capitalism results in those with most money
determining what is an "efficient" allocation of resources for if financial
profit is the sole consideration for resource allocation, then the wealthy
can outbid the poor and ensure the highest returns. The less wealthy can
do without.
However, the question remains of how, in an anarchist society, do you know
that valuable labour and materials might be better employed elsewhere? How
do workers judge which tools are most appropriate? How do they decide
among different materials if they all meet the technical specifications?
How important are some goods than others? How important is cellophane
compared to vacuum-cleaner bags?
It is answers like this that the supporters of the market claim that their
system answers. However, as indicated, it does answer them in irrational and
dehumanising ways under capitalism but the question is: can anarchism answer
them? Yes, although the manner in which this is done varies between anarchist
threads. In a mutualist economy, based on independent and co-operative labour,
differences in wealth would be vastly reduced, so ensuring that irrational
aspects of the market that exist within capitalism would be minimised.
The workings of supply and demand would provide a more just result than
under the current system.
However, collectivist, syndicalist and communist anarchists reject the
market. This rejection often implies, to some, central planning. As the
market socialist David Schweickart puts it, "[i]f profit considerations do
not dictate resource usage and production techniques, then central direction
must do so. If profit is not the goal of a productive organisation, then
physical output (use values) must be." [Against Capitalism, p. 86]
However, Schweickart is wrong. Horizontal links need not be market
based and co-operation between individuals and groups need not be
hierarchical. What is implied in this comment is that there is just
two ways to relate to others -- namely, by bribery or by authority.
In other words, either by prostitution (purely by cash) or by
hierarchy (the way of the state, the army or capitalist workplace).
But people relate to each other in other ways, such as friendship,
love, solidarity, mutual aid and so on. Thus you can help or
associate with others without having to be ordered to do so or
by being paid cash to do so -- we do so all the time. You can
work together because by so doing you benefit yourself and
the other person. This is the real communist way, that of
mutual aid and free agreement.
So Schweickart is ignoring the vast majority of relations in any
society. For example, love/attraction is a horizontal link between
two autonomous individuals and profit considerations do not enter
into the relationship. Thus anarchists argue that Schweickart's
argument is flawed as it fails to recognise that resource usage
and production techniques can be organised in terms of human need
and free agreement between economic actors, without profits or
central command. This system does not mean that we all have to
love each other (an impossible wish). Rather, it means that we
recognise that by voluntarily co-operating as equals we ensure
that we remain free individuals and that we can gain the
advantages of sharing resources and work (for example, a reduced
working day and week, self-managed work in safe and hygienic
working conditions and a free selection of the product of
a whole society). In other words, a self-interest which exceeds
the narrow and impoverished "egotism" of capitalist society.
In the words of John O'Neil:
Thus free agreement and horizontal links are not limited
to market transactions -- they develop for numerous reasons
and anarchists recognise this. As George Barret argues:
To make productive decisions we need to know what others need and
information in order to evaluate the alternative options available
to us to satisfy that need. Therefore, it is a question of distributing
information between producers and consumers, information which the market
often hides (or actively blocks) or distorts due to inequalities in
resources (i.e. need does not count in the market, "effective demand"
does and this skews the market in favour of the wealthy). This information
network has partly been discussed in the
last section where a method of
comparison between different materials, techniques and resources based
upon use value was discussed. However, the need to indicate the current
fluctuations in production and consumption needs to be indicated which
complements that method.
In a non-Mutualist anarchist system it is assumed that confederations of
syndicates will wish to adjust their capacity if they are aware of the need
to do so. Hence, price changes in response to changes in demand would not
be necessary to provide the information that such changes are required. This
is because a "change in demand first becomes apparent as a change in the
quantity being sold at existing prices [or being consumed in a moneyless
system] and is therefore reflected in changes in stocks or orders. Such
changes are perfectly good indicators or signals that an imbalance between
demand and current output has developed. If a change in demand for its
products proved to be permanent, a production unit would find its stocks
being run down and its order book lengthening, or its stocks increasing and
orders falling . . . Price changes in response to changes in demand are
therefore not necessary for the purpose of providing information about the
need to adjust capacity." [Pat Devine, Democracy and Economic Planning,
p. 242]
To indicate the relative changes in scarcity of a given good it
will be necessary to calculate a "scarcity index." This would inform
potential users of this good whether its demand is outstripping its
supply so that they may effectively adjust their decisions in light
of the decisions of others. This index could be, for example, a
percentage figure which indicates the relation of orders placed
for a commodity to the amount actually produced. For example, a good
which has a demand higher than its supply would have an index value
of 101% or higher. This value would inform potential users to start
looking for substitutes for it or to economise on its use. Such a
scarcity figure would exist for each collective as well as (possibly)
a generalised figure for the industry as a whole on a regional,
"national," etc. level.
In this way, a specific good could be seen to be in high demand and
so only those producers who really required it would place orders
for it (so ensuring effective use of resources). Needless to say,
stock levels and other basic book-keeping techniques would be
utilised in order to ensure a suitable buffer level of a specific
good existed. This may result in some excess supply of goods being
produced and used as stock to buffer out unexpected changes in the
aggregate demand for a good.
Such a buffer system would work on an individual workplace level and at
a communal level. Syndicates would obviously have their inventories,
stores of raw materials and finished goods "on the shelf," which can be
used to meet excesses in demand. Communal stores, hospitals and so on
would have their stores of supplies in case of unexpected disruptions
in supply. This is a common practice even in capitalism, although it
would (perhaps) be extended in a free society to ensure changes in
supply and demand do not have disruptive effects.
Communes and confederations of communes may also create buffer stocks
of goods to handle unforeseen changes in demand and supply. This
sort of inventory has been used by capitalist countries like the
USA to prevent changes in market conditions for agricultural products
and other strategic raw materials producing wild spot-price
movements and inflation. Post-Keynesian economist Paul Davidson
argued that the stability of commodity prices this produced "was
an essential aspect of the unprecedented prosperous economic
growth of the world's economy" between 1945 and 1972. US President
Nixon dismantled these buffer zone programmes, resulting in
"violent commodity price fluctuations" which had serious economic
effects. [Controversies in Post-Keynesian Economics, p. 114
and p. 115]
Again, an anarchist society is likely to utilise this sort of buffer
system to iron out short-term changes in supply and demand. By reducing
short-term fluctuations of the supply of commodities, bad investment
decisions would be reduced as syndicates would not be mislead, as is
the case under capitalism, by market prices being too high or too low
at the time when the decisions where being made. Indeed, if market
prices are not at their equilibrium level then they do not (and
cannot) provide adequate knowledge for rational calculation. The
misinformation conveyed by dis-equilibrium prices can cause very
substantial macroeconomic distortions as profit-maximising
capitalists response to unsustainable prices for, say, tin, and
over-invest in a given branch of industry. Such mal-invest could
spread through the economy, causing chaos and recession.
This, combined with cost-benefit analysis described in
section I.4.4,
would allow information about changes within the "economy" to rapidly
spread throughout the whole system and influence all decision makers
without the great majority knowing anything about the original causes
of these changes (which rest in the decisions of those directly affected).
The relevant information is communicated to all involved, without having
to be order by an "all-knowing" central body as in a Leninist centrally
planned economy. As argued in
section I.1.2, anarchists have long realised
that no centralised body could possibly be able to possess all the
information dispersed throughout the economy and if such a body attempted
to do so, the resulting bureaucracy would effectively reduce the amount of
information available to society and so cause shortages and inefficiencies.
To get an idea how this system could work, let use take the example
of a change in the copper industry. Let use assume that a source of
copper unexpectedly dries up or, what amounts to the same thing, that
the demand for copper increases. What would happen?
First, the initial difference would be a diminishing of stocks of
copper which each syndicate maintains to take into account
unexpected changes in requests for copper. This would help "buffer
out" expected, and short lived, changes in supply or requests.
Second, naturally, there is an increase in demand for copper
for those syndicates which are producing it. This immediately
increases the "scarcity index" of those firms, and so the
"scarcity index" for the copper they produce and for the
industry as a whole. For example, the index may rise from
95% (indicating a slight over-production in respect to current
demand) to 115% (indicating that the demand for copper has
risen in respect to the current level of production).
This change in the "scarcity index" (combined with difficulties in
finding copper producing syndicates which can supply their orders)
enters into the decision making algorithms of other syndicates.
This, in turn, results in changes in their plans (for example,
substitutes for copper may be used as they have become a more
efficient resource to use).
This would aid a syndicate when it determined which method of
production to use when creating a consumer good. The
cost-benefit analysis out-lined in the
last section would
allow a syndicate to determine the costs involved between
competing productive techniques (i.e. to ascertain which
used up least resources and therefore left the most over
for other uses). Producers would already have an idea of
the absolute costs involved in any good they are planning to
use, so relative changes between them would be a deciding factor.
In this way, requests for copper products fall and soon only reflects
those requests that need copper and do not have realistic substitutes
available for it. This would result in the demand falling with
respect to the current supply (as indicated by requests from other
syndicates and to maintain buffer stock levels). Thus a general
message has been sent across the "economy" that copper has become
(relatively) scare and syndicates plans have changed in light of
this information. No central planner made these decisions nor was money
required to facilitate them. We have a decentralised, non-market
system based on the free exchange of products between self-governing
associations.
Looking at the wider picture, the question of how to response
to this change in supply/requests for copper presents itself.
The copper syndicate federation and cross-industry syndicate
federations have regular meetings and the question of the
changes in the copper situation present themselves. The
copper syndicates, and their federation, must consider how
to response to these changes. Part of this is to determine
whether this change is likely to be short term or long term.
A short term change (say caused by a mine accident, for example)
would not need new investments to be planned. However, long
term changes (say the new requests are due to a new product
being created by another syndicate or an existing mine becoming
exhausted) may need co-ordinated investment (we can expect
syndicates to make their own plans in light of changes, for
example, by investing in new machinery to produce copper
more efficiently or to increase efficiency). If the expected
changes of these plans approximately equal the predicted
long term changes, then the federation need not act. However,
if they do then investment in new copper mines or large scale
new investment across the industry may be required. The
federation would propose such plans.
Needless to say, the future can be guessed, it cannot be
accurately predicted. Thus there may be over-investment in
certain industries as expected changes do not materialise.
However, unlike capitalism, this would not result in an
economic crisis as production would continue (with over
investment within capitalism, workplaces close due to lack
of profits, regardless of social need). All that would happen
is that the syndicates would rationalise production, close
down relatively inefficient plant and concentrate production
in the more efficient ones. The sweeping economic crises
of capitalism would be a thing of the past.
Therefore, each syndicate receives its own orders and supplies and sends
its own produce out. Similarly, communal distribution centres would order
required goods from syndicates it determines. In this way consumers can
change to syndicates which respond to their needs and so production units
are aware of what it is socially useful for them to produce as well as the
social cost of the resources they need to produce it. In this way a network
of horizontal relations spread across society, with co-ordination achieved
by equality of association and not the hierarchy of the corporate structure.
This system ensures a co-operative response to changes in supply and
demand and so reduces the communication problems associated with the
market which help causes periods of unemployment and economic downturn
(see section C.7.2).
While anarchists are aware of the "isolation paradox" (see
section B.6)
this does not mean that they think the commune should make decisions for
people on what they were to consume. This would be a prison. No, all
anarchists agree that is up to the individual to determine their own needs
and for the collectives they join to determine social requirements like parks,
infrastructure improvements and so on. However, social anarchists think that
it would be beneficial to discuss the framework around which these decisions
would be made. This would mean, for example, that communes would agree to
produce eco-friendly products, reduce waste and generally make decisions
enriched by social interaction. Individuals would still decide which sort
goods they desire, based on what the collectives produce but these goods
would be based on a socially agreed agenda. In this way waste, pollution
and other "externalities" of atomised consumption could be reduced. For
example, while it is rational for individuals to drive a car to work,
collectively this results in massive irrationality (for example, traffic
jams, pollution, illness, unpleasant social infrastructures). A sane society
would discuss the problems associated with car use and would agree to
produce a fully integrated public transport network which would reduce
pollution, stress, illness, and so on.
Therefore, while anarchists recognise individual tastes and desires,
they are also aware of the social impact of them and so try to create
a social environment where individuals can enrich their personal
decisions with the input of other people's ideas.
On a related subject, it is obvious that different collectives would
produce slightly different goods, so ensuring that people have a choice.
It is doubtful that the current waste implied in multiple products from
different companies (sometimes the same company) all doing the same job
would be continued in an anarchist society. However, production will be
"variations on a theme" in order to ensure consumer choice and to allow
the producers to know what features consumers prefer. It would be
impossible to sit down beforehand and make a list of what features a
good should have -- that assumes perfect knowledge and that technology
is fairly constant. Both these assumptions are of limited use in real life.
Therefore, co-operatives would produce goods with different features and
production would change to meet the demand these differences suggest (for
example, factory A produces a new CD player, and consumption patterns
indicate that this is popular and so the rest of the factories convert).
This is in addition to R&D experiments and test populations. In this way
consumer choice would be maintained, and enhanced as consumers would be
able to influence the decisions of the syndicates as producers (in some
cases) and through syndicate/commune dialogue.
Therefore, anarchists do not ignore "supply and demand." Instead, they
recognise the limitations of the capitalist version of this truism and
point out that capitalism is based on effective demand which has no
necessary basis with efficient use of resources. Instead of the market,
social anarchists advocate a system based on horizontal links between
producers which effectively communicates information across society about
the relative changes in supply and demand which reflect actual needs of
society and not bank balances. The response to changes in supply and
demand will be discussed in section I.4.8
(What about investment decisions?")
and section I.4.13 ("Who will do
the dirty or unpleasant work?") will discuss the allocation of work tasks.
I.4.1 What is the point of economic activity in anarchy?
I.4.2 Why do anarchists desire to abolish work?
"You are what you do. If you do boring, stupid, monotonous work, chances
are you'll end up boring, stupid, and monotonous. Work is a much better
explanation for the creeping cretinisation all around us than even such
significant moronising mechanisms as television and education. People who
are regimented all their lives, handed to work from school and bracketed by
the family in the beginning and the nursing home in the end, are habituated
to hierarchy and psychologically enslaved. Their aptitude for autonomy is so
atrophied that their fear of freedom is among their few rationally grounded
phobias. Their obedience training at work carries over into the families
they start, thus reproducing the system in more ways than one, and into
politics, culture and everything else. Once you drain the vitality from
people at work, they'll likely submit to hierarchy and expertise in
everything. They're used to it." [The Abolition of Work]
"We do not live by bread alone. True, existence is not possible without
opportunity to satisfy our physical needs. But the gratification of these
by no means constitutes all of life. Our present system of disinheriting
millions, made the belly the centre of the universe, so to speak. But in
a sensible society . . . [t]he feelings of human sympathy, of justice and
right would have a chance to develop, to be satisfied, to broaden and grow."
[ABC of Anarchism, p. 15]
"Anarchism aims to strip labour of its deadening, dulling aspect, of its gloom
and compulsion. It aims to make work an instrument of joy, of strength, of
colour, of real harmony, so that the poorest sort of a man should find in
work both recreation and hope." [Anarchism and Other Essays, p. 61]
"[W]e must recognise the distinction which Hatta made between
the 'division of labour' . . . and the 'division of work' . . .
he did not see anything sinister in the division of work . . .
On the contrary, Hatta believed that the division of work
was a benign and unavoidable feature of any productive
process: 'it goes without saying that within society,
whatever the kind of production, there has to be a
division of work.'" [Hatta Shuzo and Pure Anarchism in
Interwar Japan, pp. 146-7]
"while a temporary division of functions remains the surest
guarantee of success in each separate undertaking, the permanent
division is doomed to disappear, and to be substituted by a variety
of pursuits -- intellectual, industrial, and agricultural --
corresponding to the different capacities of the individual, as
well as to the variety of capacities within every human aggregate."
[Fields, Factories and Workshops Tomorrow, p. 26]
"Modern production has destroyed many traditional professional
qualifications. It has created automatic or semi-automatic
machines. It has thereby itself demolished its own traditional
framework for the industrial division of labour. It has given
birth to a universal worker who is capable, after a relatively
short apprenticeship, of using most machines. Once one gets
beyond its class aspects, the 'posting' of workers to
particular jobs in a big modern factory corresponds less and
less to a genuine division of labour and more and more
to a simple division of tasks. Workers are not allocated to
given areas of the productive process and then riveted to
them because their 'occupational skills' invariably
correspond to the 'skills required' by management. They
are placed there . . . just because a particular vacancy
happened to exist." [Political and Social Writings,
vol. 2, p. 117]
I.4.3 How do anarchists intend to abolish work?
"Two figures drive the point home. In the long term, productivity (i.e.
output per hour of work) increases at about 2 percent per annum, meaning
that each 35 years we could cut the work week by half while producing as
much as we were at the beginning. A number of OECD . . . countries could
actually have cut from a five-day work week to around a one-day work
week in the last 25 years while maintaining their output at the same
level. In this economy we must therefore double the annual amount we
consume per person every 35 years just to prevent unemployment from
rising and to avoid reduction in outlets available to soak up
investable capital.
"If workers' councils and workers' management of production
do not transform the work into a joyful activity, free time
into a marvellous experience, and the workplace into a
community, then they remain merely formal structures, in
fact, class structures. They perpetuate the limitations
of the proletariat as a product of bourgeois social conditions.
Indeed, no movement that raises the demand for workers'
councils can be regarded as revolutionary unless it tries to
promote sweeping transformations in the environment of the
work place." [Post-Scarcity Anarchism, p. 146]
"Anarcho-syndicalists are convinced that a Socialist economic
order cannot be created by the decrees and statutes of a
government, but only by the solidaric collaboration of the
workers with hand and brain in each special branch of production;
that is, through the taking over of the management of all plants
by the producers themselves under such form that the separate
groups, plants, and branches of industry are independent members
of the general economic organism and systematically carry on
production and the distribution of the products in the interest
of the community on the basis of free mutual agreements."
[Op. Cit., p. 55]
"We undertake to give you the use of our houses, stores, streets,
means of transport, schools, museums, etc., on condition that, from
twenty to forty-five or fifty years of age, you consecrate four or
five hours a day to some work recognised as necessary to existence.
Choose yourself the producing group which you wish to join, or organise
a new group, provided that it will undertake to produce necessaries. And
as for the remainder of your time, combine together with whomsoever you
like, for recreation, art, or science, according to the bent of your
taste . . . Twelve or fifteen hundred hours of work a year . . . is
all we ask of you. For that amount of work we guarantee to you the
free use of all that these groups produce, or will produce." [The
Conquest of Bread, pp. 153-4]
I.4.4 What economic decision making criteria could be used in anarchy?
"As to decisions involving choices of a general nature, such as what
forms of energy to use, which of two or more materials to employ to
produce a particular good, whether to build a new factory, there is
a . . . technique . . . that could be [used] . . . 'cost-benefit
analysis' . . . in socialism a points scheme for attributing relative
importance to the various relevant considerations could be used . . .
The points attributed to these considerations would be subjective,
in the sense that this would depend on a deliberate social decision
rather than some objective standard, but this is the case even under
capitalism when a monetary value has to be attributed to some such
'cost' or 'benefit' . . . In the sense that one of the aims of socialism
is precisely to rescue humankind from the capitalist fixation with
production time/money, cost-benefit analyses, as a means of taking into
account other factors, could therefore be said to be more appropriate for
use in socialism than under capitalism. Using points systems to attribute
relative importance in this way would not be to recreate some universal
unit of evaluation and calculation, but simply to employ a technique to
facilitate decision-making in particular concrete cases." [Adam Buick and
John Crump, State Capitalism: The Wages System Under New Management,
pp. 138-139]
"it is plan that in the decision as to whether to build a bridge
or a tunnel there is a human question that should outweigh the
question of cheapness or mechanical feasibility: namely the number
of lives that will be lost in the actual building or the advisability
of condemning a certain number of men [and women] to spend their
entire working days underground supervising tunnel traffic. As soon
as our thought ceases to be automatically conditioned by the mine,
such questions become important. Similarly the social choice
between silk and rayon is not one that can be made simply on
the different costs of production, or the difference in quality
between the fibres themselves: there also remains, to be integrated
in the decision, the question as to difference in working-pleasure
between tending silkworms and assisting in rayon production. What
the product contributes to the labourer is just as important as what
the worker contributes to the product. A well-managed society might
alter the process of motor car assemblage, at some loss of speed
and cheapness, in order to produce a more interesting routine for
the worker: similarly, it would either go to the expense of
equipping dry-process cement making plants with dust removers --
or replace the product itself with a less noxious substitute. When
none of these alternatives was available, it would drastically
reduce the demand itself to the lowest possible level." [The
Future of Technics and Civilisation, pp. 160-1]
I.4.5 What about "supply and demand"?
"To-day the scramble is to compete for the greatest profits. If there is
more profit to be made in satisfying my lady's passing whim than there is
in feeding hungry children, then competition brings us in feverish haste
to supply the former, whilst cold charity or the poor law can supply the
latter, or leave it unsupplied, just as it feels disposed. That is how it
works out." [Objections to Anarchism]
"[F]or it is the institutions themselves that define what
counts as one's interests. In particular, the market
encourages egoism, not primarily because it encourages
an individual to be 'self-interested' -- it would be
unrealistic not to expect individuals to act for the
greater part in a 'self-interested' manner -- but rather
because it defines an individual's interests in a
particularly narrow fashion, most notably in terms of
possession of certain material goods. In consequence,
where market mechanism enter a particular sphere of
life, the pursuit of goods outside this narrow range
of market goods is institutionally defined as an act
of altruism." [The Market, p. 158]
"Let us imagine now that the great revolt of the workers has taken
place, that their direct action has made them masters of the
situation. It is not easy to see that some man in a street that
grew hungry would soon draw a list of the loaves that were needed,
and take it to the bakery where the strikers were in possession?
Is there any difficulty in supposing that the necessary amount
would then be baked according to this list? By this time the
bakers would know what carts and delivery vans were needed to
send the bread out to the people, and if they let the carters
and vanmen know of this, would these not do their utmost to
supply the vehicles. . . If . . . [the bakers needed] more
benches [to make bread] . . . the carpenters would supply
them [and so on] . . . So the endless continuity goes on
-- a well-balanced interdependence of parts guaranteed, because
need is the motive force behind it all. . . In the same way
that each free individual has associated with his brothers
[and sisters] to produce bread, machinery, and all that is
necessary for life, driven by no other force than his desire
for the full enjoyment of life, so each institution is free
and self-contained, and co-operates and enters into agreements
with other because by so doing it extends its own possibilities.
There is no centralised State exploiting or dictating, but the
complete structure is supported because each part is dependent
on the whole . . . It will be a society responsive to the wants
of the people; it will supply their everyday needs as quickly
as it will respond to their highest aspirations. Its changing
forms will be the passing expressions of humanity." [The
Anarchist Revolution, pp. 17-19]