I
The world is full of preventible evils
which most men would be glad to see prevented.
Nevertheless, these evils persist,
and nothing effective is done toward abolishing them.
This paradox produces astonishment
in inexperienced reformers, and too often produces
disillusionment in those who have come to know the
difficulty of changing human institutions.
War is recognized as an evil by an
immense majority in every civilized country; but this
recognition does not prevent war.
The unjust distribution of wealth
must be obviously an evil to those who are not prosperous,
and they are nine tenths of the population. Nevertheless
it continues unabated.
The tyranny of the holders of power
is a source of needless suffering and misfortune to
very large sections of mankind; but power remains in
few hands, and tends, if anything, to grow more concentrated.
I wish first to study the evils of
our present institutions, and the causes of the very
limited success of reformers in the past, and then
to suggest reasons for the hope of a more lasting and
permanent success in the near future.
The war has come as a challenge to
all who desire a better world. The system which
cannot save mankind from such an appalling disaster
is at fault somewhere, and cannot be amended in any
lasting way unless the danger of great wars in the
future can be made very small.
But war is only the final flower of
an evil tree. Even in times of peace, most men
live lives of monotonous labor, most women are condemned
to a drudgery which almost kills the possibility of
happiness before youth is past, most children are allowed
to grow up in ignorance of all that would enlarge
their thoughts or stimulate their imagination.
The few who are more fortunate are rendered illiberal
by their unjust privileges, and oppressive through
fear of the awakening indignation of the masses.
From the highest to the lowest, almost all men are
absorbed in the economic struggle - the struggle
to acquire what is their due or to retain what is not
their due. Material possessions, in fact or
in desire, dominate our outlook, usually to the exclusion
of all generous and creative impulses. Possessiveness the
passion to have and to hold is the ultimate
source of war, and the foundation of all the ills from
which the political world is suffering. Only
by diminishing the strength of this passion and its
hold upon our daily lives can new institutions bring
permanent benefit to mankind.
Institutions which will diminish the
sway of greed are possible, but only through a complete
reconstruction of our whole economic system.
Capitalism and the wage system must be abolished; they
are twin monsters which are eating up the life of
the world. In place of them we need a system
which will hold in cheek men’s predatory impulses,
and will diminish the economic injustice that allows
some to be rich in idleness while others are poor
in spite of unremitting labor; but above all we need
a system which will destroy the tyranny of the employer,
by making men at the same time secure against destitution
and able to find scope for individual initiative in
the control of the industry by which they live.
A better system can do all these things, and can
be established by the democracy whenever it grows weary
of enduring evils which there is no reason to endure.
We may distinguish four purposes at
which an economic system may aim - first, it may
aim at the greatest possible production of goods and
at facilitating technical progress; second, it may
aim at securing distributive justice; third, it may
aim at giving security against destitution; and, fourth,
it may aim at liberating creative impulses and diminishing
possessive impulses.
Of these four purposes the last is
the most important. Security is chiefly important
as a means to it. State socialism, though it
might give material security and more justice than
we have at present, would probably fail to liberate
creative impulses or produce a progressive society.
Our present system fails in all four
purposes. It is chiefly defended on the ground
that it achieves the first of the four purposes, namely,
the greatest possible production of material goods,
but it only does this in a very short-sighted way,
by methods which are wasteful in the long run both
of human material and of natural resources.
Capitalistic enterprise involves a
ruthless belief in the importance of increasing material
production to the utmost possible extent now and in
the immediate future. In obedience to this belief,
new portions of the earth’s surface are continually
brought under the sway of industrialism. Vast
tracts of Africa become recruiting grounds for the
labor required in the gold and diamond mines of the
Rand, Rhodesia, and Kimberley; for this purpose, the
population is demoralized, taxed, driven into revolt,
and exposed to the contamination of European vice
and disease. Healthy and vigorous races from
Southern Europe are tempted to America, where sweating
and slum life reduce their vitality if they do not
actually cause their death. What damage is done
to our own urban populations by the conditions under
which they live, we all know. And what is true
of the human riches of the world is no less true of
the physical resources. The mines, forests,
and wheat-fields of the world are all being exploited
at a rate which must practically exhaust them at no
distant date. On the side of material production,
the world is living too fast; in a kind of delirium,
almost all the energy of the world has rushed into
the immediate production of something, no matter what,
and no matter at what cost. And yet our present
system is defended on the ground that it safeguards
progress!
It cannot be said that our present
economic system is any more successful in regard to
the other three objects which ought to be aimed at.
Among the many obvious evils of capitalism and the
wage system, none are more glaring than that they
encourage predatory instincts, that they allow economic
injustice, and that they give great scope to the tyranny
of the employer.
As to predatory instincts, we may
say, broadly speaking, that in a state of nature there
would be two ways of acquiring riches one
by production, the other by robbery. Under our
existing system, although what is recognized as robbery
is forbidden, there are nevertheless many ways of
becoming rich without contributing anything to the
wealth of the community. Ownership of land or
capital, whether acquired or inherited, gives a legal
right to a permanent income. Although most people
have to produce in order to live, a privileged minority
are able to live in luxury without producing anything
at all. As these are the men who are not only
the most fortunate but also the most respected, there
is a general desire to enter their ranks, and a widespread
unwillingness to face the fact that there is no justification
whatever for incomes derived in this way. And
apart from the passive enjoyment of rent or interest,
the methods of acquiring wealth are very largely predatory.
It is not, as a rule, by means of useful inventions,
or of any other action which increases the general
wealth of the community, that men amass fortunes; it
is much more often by skill in exploiting or circumventing
others. Nor is it only among the rich that our
present regime promotes a narrowly acquisitive spirit.
The constant risk of destitution compels most men
to fill a great part of their time and thought with
the economic struggle. There is a theory that
this increases the total output of wealth by the community.
But for reasons to which I shall return later, I
believe this theory to be wholly mistaken.
Economic injustice is perhaps the
most obvious evil of our present system. It
would be utterly absurd to maintain that the men who
inherit great wealth deserve better of the community
than those who have to work for their living.
I am not prepared to maintain that economic justice
requires an exactly equal income for everybody.
Some kinds of work require a larger income for efficiency
than others do; but there is economic injustice as
soon as a man has more than his share, unless it is
because his efficiency in his work requires it, or
as a reward for some definite service. But this
point is so obvious that it needs no elaboration.
The modern growth of monopolies in
the shape of trusts, cartels, federations of employers
and so on has greatly increased the power of the capitalist
to levy toll on the community. This tendency
will not cease of itself, but only through definite
action on the part of those who do not profit by the
capitalist regime. Unfortunately the distinction
between the proletariat and the capitalist is not so
sharp as it was in the minds of socialist theorizers.
Trade-unions have funds in various securities; friendly
societies are large capitalists; and many individuals
eke out their wages by invested savings. All
this increases the difficulty of any clear-cut radical
change in our economic system. But it does not
diminish the desirability of such a change.
Such a system as that suggested by
the French syndicalists, in which each trade would
be self-governing and completely independent, without
the control of any central authority, would not secure
economic justice. Some trades are in a much
stronger bargaining position than others. Coal
and transport, for example, could paralyze the national
life, and could levy blackmail by threatening to do
so. On the other hand, such people as school
teachers, for example, could rouse very little terror
by the threat of a strike and would be in a very weak
bargaining position. Justice can never be secured
by any system of unrestrained force exercised by interested
parties in their own interests. For this reason
the abolition of the state, which the syndicalists
seem to desire, would be a measure not compatible with
economic justice.
The tyranny of the employer, which
at present robs the greater part of most men’s
lives of all liberty and all initiative, is unavoidable
so long as the employer retains the right of dismissal
with consequent loss of pay. This right is supposed
to be essential in order that men may have an incentive
to work thoroughly. But as men grow more civilized,
incentives based on hope become increasingly preferable
to those that are based on fear. It would be
far better that men should be rewarded for working
well than that they should be punished for working
badly. This system is already in operation in
the civil service, where a man is only dismissed for
some exceptional degree of vice or virtue, such as
murder or illegal abstention from it. Sufficient
pay to ensure a livelihood ought to be given to every
person who is willing to work, independently of the
question whether the particular work at which he is
skilled is wanted at the moment or not. If it
is not wanted, some new trade which is wanted ought
to be taught at the public expense. Why, for
example, should a hansom-cab driver be allowed to
suffer on account of the introduction of taxies?
He has not committed any crime, and the fact that his
work is no longer wanted is due to causes entirely
outside his control. Instead of being allowed
to starve, he ought to be given instruction in motor
driving or in whatever other trade may seem most suitable.
At present, owing to the fact that all industrial
changes tend to cause hardships to some section of
wage-earners, there is a tendency to technical conservatism
on the part of labor, a dislike of innovations, new
processes, and new methods. But such changes,
if they are in the permanent interest of the community,
ought to be carried out without allowing them to bring
unmerited loss to those sections of the community
whose labor is no longer wanted in the old form.
The instinctive conservatism of mankind is sure to
make all processes of production change more slowly
than they should. It is a pity to add to this
by the avoidable conservatism which is forced upon
organized labor at present through the unjust workings
of a change.
It will be said that men will not
work well if the fear of dismissal does not spur them
on. I think it is only a small percentage of
whom this would be true at present. And those
of whom it would be true might easily become industrious
if they were given more congenial work or a wiser
training. The residue who cannot be coaxed into
industry by any such methods are probably to be regarded
as pathological cases, requiring medical rather than
penal treatment. And against this residue must
be set the very much larger number who are now ruined
in health or in morale by the terrible uncertainty
of their livelihood and the great irregularity of
their employment. To very many, security would
bring a quite new possibility of physical and moral
health.
The most dangerous aspect of the tyranny
of the employer is the power which it gives him of
interfering with men’s activities outside their
working hours. A man may be dismissed because
the employer dislikes his religion or his politics,
or chooses to think his private life immoral.
He may be dismissed because he tries to produce a
spirit of independence among his fellow employees.
He may fail completely to find employment merely
on the ground that he is better educated than most
and therefore more dangerous. Such cases actually
occur at present. This evil would not be remedied,
but rather intensified, under state socialism, because,
where the State is the only employer, there is no
refuge from its prejudices such as may now accidentally
arise through the differing opinions of different men.
The State would be able to enforce any system of
beliefs it happened to like, and it is almost certain
that it would do so. Freedom of thought would
be penalized, and all independence of spirit would
die out.
Any rigid system would involve this
evil. It is very necessary that there should
be diversity and lack of complete systematization.
Minorities must be able to live and develop their opinions
freely. If this is not secured, the instinct
of persecution and conformity will force all men into
one mold and make all vital progress impossible.
For these reasons, no one ought to
be allowed to suffer destitution so long as he or
she is willing to work. And no kind of
inquiry ought to be made into opinion or private life.
It is only on this basis that it is possible to build
up an economic system not founded upon tyranny and
terror.
II
The power of the economic reformer
is limited by the technical productivity of labor.
So long as it was necessary to the bare subsistence
of the human race that most men should work very long
hours for a pittance, so long no civilization was possible
except an aristocratic one; if there were to be men
with sufficient leisure for any mental life, there
had to be others who were sacrificed for the good
of the few. But the time when such a system was
necessary has passed away with the progress of machinery.
It would be possible now, if we had a wise economic
system, for all who have mental needs to find satisfaction
for them. By a few hours a day of manual work,
a man can produce as much as is necessary for his
own subsistence; and if he is willing to forgo luxuries,
that is all that the community has a right to demand
of him. It ought to be open to all who so desire
to do short hours of work for little pay, and devote
their leisure to whatever pursuit happens to attract
them. No doubt the great majority of those who
chose this course would spend their time in mere amusement,
as most of the rich do at present. But it could
not be said, in such a society, that they were parasites
upon the labor of others. And there would be
a minority who would give their hours of nominal idleness
to science or art or literature, or some other pursuit
out of which fundamental progress may come. In
all such matters, organization and system can only
do harm. The one thing that can be done is to
provide opportunity, without repining at the waste
that results from most men failing to make good use
of the opportunity.
But except in cases of unusual laziness
or eccentric ambition, most men would elect to do
a full day’s work for a full day’s pay.
For these, who would form the immense majority, the
important thing is that ordinary work should, as far
as possible, afford interest and independence and
scope for initiative. These things are more
important than income, as soon as a certain minimum
has been reached. They can be secured by gild
socialism, by industrial self-government subject to
state control as regards the relations of a trade to
the rest of the community. So far as I know,
they cannot be secured in any other way.
Guild socialism, as advocated by Mr.
Orage and the “New Age,” is associated
with a polemic against “political” action,
and in favor of direct economic action by trade-unions.
It shares this with syndicalism, from which most
of what is new in it is derived. But I see no
reason for this attitude; political and economic action
seem to me equally necessary, each in its own time
and place. I think there is danger in the attempt
to use the machinery of the present capitalist state
for socialistic purposes. But there is need of
political action to transform the machinery of the
state, side by side with the transformation which
we hope to see in economic institutions. In this
country, neither transformation is likely to be brought
about by a sudden revolution; we must expect each
to come step by step, if at all, and I doubt if either
could or should advance very far without the other.
The economic system we should ultimately
wish to see would be one in which the state would
be the sole recipient of economic rent, while private
capitalistic enterprises should be replaced by self-governing
combinations of those who actually do the work.
It ought to be optional whether a man does a whole
day’s work for a whole day’s pay, or half
a day’s work for half a day’s pay, except
in cases where such an arrangement would cause practical
inconvenience. A man’s pay should not
cease through the accident of his work being no longer
needed, but should continue so long as he is willing
to work, a new trade being taught him at the public
expense, if necessary. Unwillingness to work
should be treated medically or educationally, when
it could not be overcome by a change to some more congenial
occupation.
The workers in a given industry should
all be combined in one autonomous unit, and their
work should not be subject to any outside control.
The state should fix the price at which they produce,
but should leave the industry self-governing in all
other respects. In fixing prices, the state
should, as far as possible, allow each industry to
profit by any improvements which it might introduce
into its own processes, but should endeavor to prevent
undeserved loss or gain through changes in external
economic conditions. In this way there would
be every incentive to progress, with the least possible
danger of unmerited destitution. And although
large economic organizations will continue, as they
are bound to do, there will be a diffusion of power
which will take away the sense of individual impotence
from which men and women suffer at present.
III
Some men, though they may admit that
such a system would be desirable, will argue that
it is impossible to bring it about, and that therefore
we must concentrate on more immediate objects.
I think it must be conceded that a
political party ought to have proximate aims, measures
which it hopes to carry in the next session or the
next parliament, as well as a more distant goal.
Marxian socialism, as it existed in Germany, seemed
to me to suffer in this way - although the party
was numerically powerful, it was politically weak,
because it had no minor measures to demand while waiting
for the revolution. And when, at last, German
socialism was captured by those who desired a less
impracticable policy, the modification which occurred
was of exactly the wrong kind - acquiescence in
bad policies, such as militarism and imperialism,
rather than advocacy of partial reforms which, however
inadequate, would still have been steps in the right
direction.
A similar defect was inherent in the
policy of French syndicalism as it existed before
the war. Everything was to wait for the general
strike; after adequate preparation, one day the whole
proletariat would unanimously refuse to work, the
property owners would acknowledge their defeat, and
agree to abandon all their privileges rather than
starve. This is a dramatic conception; but love
of drama is a great enemy of true vision. Men
cannot be trained, except under very rare circumstances,
to do something suddenly which is very different from
what they have been doing before. If the general
strike were to succeed, the victors, despite their
anarchism, would be compelled at once to form an administration,
to create a new police force to prevent looting and
wanton destruction, to establish a provisional government
issuing dictatorial orders to the various sections
of revolutionaries. Now the syndicalists are
opposed in principle to all political action; they
would feel that they were departing from their theory
in taking the necessary practical steps, and they
would be without the required training because of their
previous abstention from politics. For these
reasons it is likely that, even after a syndicalist
revolution, actual power would fall into the hands
of men who were not really syndicalists.
Another objection to a program which
is to be realized suddenly at some remote date by
a revolution or a general strike is that enthusiasm
flags when there is nothing to do meanwhile, and no
partial success to lessen the weariness of waiting.
The only sort of movement which can succeed by such
methods is one where the sentiment and the program
are both very simple, as is the case in rebellions
of oppressed nations. But the line of demarcation
between capitalist and wage-earner is not sharp, like
the line between Turk and Armenian, or between an
Englishman and a native of India. Those who have
advocated the social revolution have been mistaken
in their political methods, chiefly because they have
not realized how many people there are in the community
whose sympathies and interests lie half on the side
of capital, half on the side of labor. These
people make a clear-cut revolutionary policy very
difficult.
For these reasons, those who aim at
an economic reconstruction which is not likely to
be completed to-morrow must, if they are to have any
hope of success, be able to approach their goal by
degrees, through measures which are of some use in
themselves, even if they should not ultimately lead
to the desired end. There must be activities
which train men for those that they are ultimately
to carry out, and there must be possible achievements
in the near future, not only a vague hope of a distant
paradise.
But although I believe that all this
is true, I believe no less firmly that really vital
and radical reform requires some vision beyond the
immediate future, some realization of what human beings
might make of human life if they chose. Without
some such hope, men will not have the energy and enthusiasm
necessary to overcome opposition, or the steadfastness
to persist when their aims are for the moment unpopular.
Every man who has really sincere desire for any great
amelioration in the conditions of life has first to
face ridicule, then persecution, then cajolery and
attempts at subtle corruption. We know from painful
experience how few pass unscathed through these three
ordeals. The last especially, when the reformer
is shown all the kingdoms of the earth, is difficult,
indeed almost impossible, except for those who have
made their ultimate goal vivid to themselves by clear
and definite thought.
Economic systems are concerned essentially
with the production and distribution of material goods.
Our present system is wasteful on the production
side, and unjust on the side of distribution.
It involves a life of slavery to economic forces
for the great majority of the community, and for the
minority a degree of power over the lives of others
which no man ought to have. In a good community
the production of the necessaries of existence would
be a mere preliminary to the important and interesting
part of life, except for those who find a pleasure
in some part of the work of producing necessaries.
It is not in the least necessary that economic needs
should dominate man as they do at present. This
is rendered necessary at present, partly by the inequalities
of wealth, partly by the fact that things of real value,
such as a good education, are difficult to acquire,
except for the well-to-do.
Private ownership of land and capital
is not defensible on grounds of justice, or on the
ground that it is an economical way of producing what
the community needs. But the chief objections
to it are that it stunts the lives of men and women,
that it enshrines a ruthless possessiveness in all
the respect which is given to success, that it leads
men to fill the greater part of their time and thought
with the acquisition of purely material goods, and
that it affords a terrible obstacle to the advancement
of civilization and creative energy.
The approach to a system free from
these evils need not be sudden; it is perfectly possible
to proceed step by step towards economic freedom and
industrial self-government. It is not true that
there is any outward difficulty in creating the kind
of institutions that we have been considering.
If organized labor wishes to create them, nothing
could stand in its way. The difficulty involved
is merely the difficulty of inspiring men with hope,
of giving them enough imagination to see that the
evils from which they suffer are unnecessary, and
enough thought to understand how the evils are to be
cured. This is a difficulty which can be overcome
by time and energy. But it will not be overcome
if the leaders of organized labor have no breadth
of outlook, no vision, no hopes beyond some slight
superficial improvement within the framework of the
existing system. Revolutionary action may be
unnecessary, but revolutionary thought is indispensable,
and, as the outcome of thought, a rational and constructive
hope.