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marmar

(77,077 posts)
Tue Mar 11, 2014, 07:48 AM Mar 2014

Professor Richard Wolff: Enterprise Structure Is Key to the Shape of a Post-Capitalist Future

Richard Wolff: Enterprise Structure Is Key to the Shape of a Post-Capitalist Future

Wednesday, 26 February 2014 09:33
By Leslie Thatcher, Truthout | Interview


[font size="4"]"Marx stressed there that a central dimension of capitalism that he wished to see transformed was 'exploitation.' "[/font]


Richard Wolff talks about "The Shape of a Post-Capitalist Future," his entry in the new anthology Imagine: Living in a Socialist USA, and his conviction that making the transition from capitalism to socialism requires a deliberate critique of capitalist workplace organization.

Leslie Thatcher for Truthout: What motivated you to choose (of all things!) "corporate structure" in your search for a "powerful, attractive and credible vision of socialism?"

Richard Wolff: Chiefly because the internal organization of our workplaces has been so badly undervalued and thus so little transformed in and by socialist practices. This was true not only in the efforts to establish actual socialism but likewise in the theoretical and political projects for transition from capitalism to socialism.

Human beings spend most of their adult lives - the central parts of most days of most weeks - at work. How their work structures their interactions with other people (their interdependencies, interactions, freedoms and responsibilities) are crucial to everything from daily personal life to politics, culture ... everything. Socialists have focused on changing ownership of means of production - from private to social - and on changing the mechanism of distributing resources and products - from market to planning. Those foci meant that the internal organization of workplaces was neglected and/or treated as a secondary matter of what technology and efficiency require, something largely independent of the transition from capitalism to socialism.

I am convinced that to make the transition from capitalism to socialism requires a deliberate critique of how capitalism organizes its workplaces. It likewise requires a deliberate specification of how and why socialism organizes its workplaces very differently.

.......(snip).......

A transition to socialism would thus require the transformation of capitalism's exploitative internal organization of enterprises. In other words, the transition to socialism requires that workers not only produce surpluses, but also themselves appropriate and distribute them. Workplaces stop being conflict-ridden confrontations of two different groups of people - employers and employees - and become instead cooperatives in which the same people who produce the surpluses also - collectively and democratically - appropriate those surpluses. Workplaces are reorganized into workers self-directed enterprises (WSDEs). In WSDEs, workers (rather than capitalists) decide what, how and where to produce and what to do with the surpluses their labor generates.

Imagine a socialism for the 21st century that included among its central goals the democratic transformation of the workplace, a dramatic advance beyond the major 19th and 20th century versions of socialism. .......................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/22108-richard-wolff-enterprise-structure-is-key-to-the-shape-of-a-post-capitalist-future



7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Professor Richard Wolff: Enterprise Structure Is Key to the Shape of a Post-Capitalist Future (Original Post) marmar Mar 2014 OP
du rec. xchrom Mar 2014 #1
co-operatives • the third way FraDon Mar 2014 #2
K & R malaise Mar 2014 #3
cooperatives + complementary currency + local trade = unstoppable. BelgianMadCow Mar 2014 #4
D'accord. marmar Mar 2014 #5
Let us use DU as an example RobertEarl Mar 2014 #6
This is the "change within current system" answer. PowerToThePeople Mar 2014 #7

FraDon

(518 posts)
2. co-operatives • the third way
Tue Mar 11, 2014, 08:48 AM
Mar 2014

It's long past time we rediscover the wisdom of removing greed and exploitation from our workplaces.

 

RobertEarl

(13,685 posts)
6. Let us use DU as an example
Wed Mar 12, 2014, 12:07 AM
Mar 2014

Say we are all employees of DU.

DU has a capital worth, with owners and suppliers. It has income, expenses, etc. It is a business. If we were all owners and if all of us laboring to type up the words were to share in the business, how would that happen?

 

PowerToThePeople

(9,610 posts)
7. This is the "change within current system" answer.
Wed Mar 12, 2014, 12:09 AM
Mar 2014

Bookmarking for later as this is of great interest to me.

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