People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 27 July 03, 2005 |
IN
order to advance this struggle for socialism, the Political Organisational
Report states the following:
“The struggle for an alternative socialist order has to be based on the revolutionary transformation of the existing order. This, in turn, needs an engagement (i.e., joining issues) of the revolutionary forces with the existing world realities with the sole objective of changing the correlation of forces in favour of socialism. This process of revolutionary transformation has to be based on such an engagement and not on the wishful thinking of escaping from the existing realities. The entire history of the revolutionary movement led by the working class is the history of such an engagement with the existing realities in order to shape the material force required to establish the alternative in socialism”.
This,
first, recognises that there is no other world than the real world that exists.
It is this real world that has to be transformed. Such a transformation needs to
be undertaken by joining issues with the existing reality in order to sharpen
the class struggle. Such an engagement with the existing reality is to create
through the process of confronting and joining issues with the real world that
material force --- popular people’s upsurge under the leadership of the
working class --- which can bring about a revolutionary social transformation.
Further, it recollects the fact that the history of the working class movement
is based on joining issues with the existing reality in order to change it
through a revolutionary transformation.
There
are two important points to be noted here. Firstly, the revolutionary forces
join issues with the existing realities with the objective not of surrendering
or succumbing to these realities (often referred to, in today’s context, as
the TINA – there is no alternative – factor). Such joining of issues and
confronting the realities is with the specific purpose of sharpening the class
struggle to strengthen the material force that will affect the revolutionary
transformation.
Secondly,
a revolutionary cannot be a wishful thinker escaping from the existing reality
since he/she rejects the existing reality and its accompanying exploitation,
misery etc etc. It is this real world that needs to be transformed. The
emergence of the socialist alternative is also the product of such a
confrontation with the existing realities.
Marx
and Engels did not compose the Communist
Manifesto because of any divine intervention or inspiration. The entire
Marxist world outlook and its revolutionary content emerges with the constant
interaction and confrontation that Marx, alongwith Engels and later Lenin and
other Marxists, had undertaken to change the existing realities.
Such
joining of issues has, in fact, been the basis for the development and growth of
the working class movement itself. For instance, Marx, in his analysis of
capitalism, tells us that there is a tendency for the immerserisation of the
workers. In their urge to maximise profits, the capitalists seek to continuously
depress wages, thus, impoverishing further the working class. Capitalism
maintains a vast reserved army of labour in order to depress the wage levels.
However, once this tendency is reorganised, then the working class organises
itself in order to bargain for better wages. Thus emerged the trade union
movement and the concept of collective bargaining.
Marx,
in Wages, Prices and Profit which
actually was his report to the General Council of the First International in
June 1865, lashes out at one John Weston who advanced the wages fund theory.
Weston argued that the sum total of wages under capitalism is fixed. Therefore,
trade union activity for higher wages can succeed only at the expense of workers
in other industries. He, hence, concluded that trade union activity was actually
detrimental to worker’s interests. Marx, severely criticising this position
and also that of Lassaleans who
were preaching passivity and submissiveness of workers, maintained that the
organised strength of the working class can improve the situation
and sharpen the class struggle.
Marx
and Engels, both, in fact, argued that the First International, which consisted
mainly of the worker’s organisations, needs to be transformed by the workers
organising their own political parties. This was necessary to wage political
struggles (for instance, to organise the reserved army of labour to launch
struggles and movements for employment, thus, sharpening the class struggle
etc). Thus was born the Second International, which consisted of communist and
workers parties.
Similarly,
from the other side, one can also see the capitalist response and how they
engage with the existing realities. Marx had also shown that there is a tendency
of the falling rate of profit under capitalism. Once this tendency is recognised,
the capitalist responds by countering this through changes in the organic
composition of capital which, in the first place, creates this tendency. The
organic composition of capital is the ratio of constant capital (Eg, machinery
etc) to variable capital (Eg, wages, rawmaterials etc). Any increase in the
organic composition of capital leads to the fall in the rate of profit.
Therefore, in order to maintain or increase the rate of profit, the capitalists
will have to lower the organic composition of capital. This, they do, by
reducing the variable capital. In today’s world, we see this expressing itself
(amongst many others) in the erosion of permanent job security into the
increasingly rising contract and casual labour. The whole concept of outsourcing
or shifting “call centers” from advanced countries to developing countries
is nothing else but the means to reduce the wage cost, i.e., variable capital.
Thus,
in any given situation, it is the sharpening of the class struggle and the
strength of the working class-led people’s movement, which determines the
content and the intensity of the movement for revolutionary transformation.
Thus,
it would be ridiculous to argue that since Communists and revolutionaries are
opposed to capitalism, there shall be nothing to do with it.
Taken to absurd levels, this can mean the following – the raison
d’etre of capitalism is maximising profits. Profits are generated through
the surplus value creating in the production process. Surplus value is created
by the exploitation of labour power. In other words, if the workers do not work,
then the capitalists can never make any profit. The revolutionary, surely, is
not going to give a call to the workers to stop working and starve them to death
because that is one way capitalism can be destroyed.
On
the contrary, a revolutionary will strengthen the people’s struggles against
exploitation under capitalism and, through that process, build and strengthen
the material force that can destroy capitalism and, in its place, establish the
socialist alternative.
It
is with this perspective that this political organisational report of 18th
congress joins forces with existing realities in order, to repeat once again, to
strengthen the material force for a social transformation.
Those
who apprehend that such an approach will dilute or weaken the revolutionary
forces must remember that the process of engaging with existing realities does
have a danger of slipping into revisionism or diluting the revolutionary
character and content of the working class-led people’s movement. In fact, the
first revisionist in the international Communist movement, Bernstein, argued
that there is no need to overthrow capitalism but reforming capitalism can make
it a non-exploitative social order. He was seeking to revise Marx. Hence the
word `revisionism.’
Marxists
and revolutionaries, on the contrary, combating such revisionist tendencies
argue that exploitation under capitalism does not happen because the workers are
“cheated” by being paid lower wages, for instance. No amount of reform can
erase the exploitative character under capitalism because exploitation occurs in
its production process itself. It does not arise because of unequal exchange. It
arises because there exists one commodity – labour power – which has a
peculiar characteristic. Its use itself creates a value that is larger than what
it commands in the market, i.e., the labour required for the reproduction of
this commodity, labour power, is less than the value this commodity creates in
producing another commodity. Exploitation, therefore, takes place not in the
market but in the production process itself. Surplus value is generated not in
the market because the workers are cheated, but in the production process.
Exploitation under capitalism is not there because of cheating or unequal
exchange. Therefore, overthrowing capitalism to end exploitation, it is not only
a moral question. Exploitation under capitalism is inherent in its dynamics. If
exploitation has to be ended, then the system which exploits the worker in the
production process – this production process itself needs to be overthrown.
Therefore,
those who apprehend a muting or diluting class struggle in this process of
confronting the existing realities must recollect revolutionary fire and class
hatred alone cannot bring about a successful revolution. In this context, it is
necessary to recollect what Lenin had said about Marxism: “The
irresistible attraction of this theory, which draws to itself the socialists of
all countries lies precisely in the fact that it combines the quality of being
strictly and supremely scientific (being the last word in social sciences) with
that of being revolutionary. It does not combine them accidentally and not only
because the founder of the doctrine combined in his own person the qualities of
a scientist and revolutionary, but does so intrinsically and inseparably”.
The failure to grasp this essence leads to distortions, deviations and
consequent derailment of the revolutionary movement.
Emphasising
only the revolutionary character of Marxism while ignoring its supremely
scientific character has the danger of sliding into a Left adventurist
deviation. The other way around, by emphasising the scientific character and
ignoring its revolutionary content has the danger of sliding into a revisionist
deviation. The CPI(M) was born in a bitter struggle against revisionism.
Subsequently, it was steeled in a bitter struggle against Left adventurism. The
CPI(M) is constantly vigilant on
this score and shall never lower its guard in the ideological
struggles against all such deviations to uphold the revolutionary content
of Marxism and its emancipatory potential.
It
is with this approach that this understanding of the Political Organisational
Report sets down the CPI(M)’s approach and guidelines on important issues of
the existing reality that we need to confront.
(To be continued)