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Gavin Kitching - Rethinking Socialism: A Theory for a Better Practice

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Gavin Kitching Rethinking Socialism: A Theory for a Better Practice
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First published in 1983. Socialism was generally unpopular in Britain in the 1980s. The Left needed new ideas and fresh approaches if it was ever to escape its isolation from the mainstream of political and cultural life. Rethinking Socialism brought such a perspective to socialist thought and practice in Britain. Gavin Kitching contended that the unpopularity of the Left was not due primarily to the pernicious influence of the press and media, as many socialists argued, but reflected fundamental changes in the British social structure and, above all, the simple incredibility and irrelevance of many socialist beliefs and policies. He also claims that socialism will continue to be unpopular so long as it is divorced from the values and concerns of the majority of British people.Kitching shows how basic and obvious facts about Britain, and other advanced capitalist countries, were ignored or wished away, and how crucial lessons of the Soviet and East European experience had not been learnt. He argues that radical politics in Britain both reflected and reinforced a ghetto mentality bred by the Lefts political and intellectual isolation. The book is more than just a critique, however; it presented as well a more relevant and popular alternative strategy for the Left. This focused on extending and deepening political and economic democracy, and aimed to preserve the benefits which people had derived from capitalism and parliamentary democracy while extending them and thus transforming the system that conferred them.

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ROUTLEDGE LIBRARY EDITIONS:
POLITICAL THOUGHT AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Volume 32
RETHINKING SOCIALISM
RETHINKING SOCIALISM
A Theory for a Better Practice
GAVIN KITCHING
Rethinking Socialism A Theory for a Better Practice - image 1
First published in 1983 by Methuen & Co. Ltd.
This edition first published in 2020
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
and by Routledge
52 Vanderbilt Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
1983 Gavin Kitching
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-0-367-21961-1 (Set)
ISBN: 978-0-429-35434-2 (Set) (ebk)
ISBN: 978-0-367-23365-5 (Volume 32) (hbk)
ISBN: 978-0-429-27955-3 (Volume 32) (ebk)
Publishers Note
The publisher has gone to great lengths to ensure the quality of this reprint but points out that some imperfections in the original copies may be apparent.
Disclaimer
The publisher has made every effort to trace copyright holders and would welcome correspondence from those they have been unable to trace.
New Foreword (2019)
Rethinking Socialism was written in the immediate aftermath of the Conservative victory in the 1983 British General Election. It expressed my anger at the inability of the Labour Party, led by Neil Kinnock, to defeat what was (then) the most right-wing British government since the Second World War, despite that government having presided over a major economic recession which had left over 3 million people unemployed. It also expressed my conviction that the standard left-wing explanations for its defeat the role of the reactionary press in preventing the Lefts message from getting across, the role of the Falklands War in distracting voters from the Thatcher governments domestic failures were partial at best, and mere excuse-finding at worst.
I therefore set out, in the book, to analyse some more basic shortcomings of the British Labour Left in particular and of left-wing radicalism in Britain generally. I argued that the most fundamental of these was a failure to understand contemporary capitalism its economic dynamics and the complex moral and political problems they create for left-wing policies. Given this focus, the book was seen, by some of its reviewers at least, as a harbinger of the subsequent Blairite takeover of the Labour Party and the embrace of neo-liberal economic policies by the Labour governments of the 1990s.
However, to read Rethinking Socialism that way is to ignore one of its major themes the ominous and ever-worsening competitive failure of capitalism in Britain. As I put it in the books fifth chapter, since 1945 British managers had conspicuously failed to manage, to maintain or increase the national and international competitiveness of their enterprises. In this situation the British Labour Party, and the British left generally, was handicapped by its continued Keynesian approach to economic policy. It saw its role as maintaining full employment and distributing income and wealth more fairly or justly, but not as interfering with wealth creation. (That, it seemed, could be left entirely to British capitalists and their Conservative Party.) In short, I argued that the British Left had a politics which made sense in the context of a dynamic and successful capitalism (and which tended to do best, electorally, in times of relative prosperity) but which was inadequate to deal with the difficult policy problems posed by an ever more struggling British capitalism.
This analysis did not, however, lead me to endorse neo-liberal (or what were then called monetarist) economic policies. Although I had reservations about the performance of some nationalised industries, I never supported the privatisation of natural monopolies such as railways or energy and water utilities. Nor did I think that the competitiveness of British industry could be restored simply by lowering its tax burden or enacting labour market reforms to weaken trade unions and strengthen the power of employers. In my view, shared by a number of other economists, the fundamental problem of British industry, and of the British economy generally, was a failure to technologically innovate and modernise and to invest on the scale and in the manner required to maintain national and international competitiveness. I was therefore, and still am, a strong believer in a state-directed industry policy, on a broadly Japanese or Korean model, designed to encourage and assist existing UK-based industries to modernise, to maintain or increase market share and to facilitate new start-ups in sectors with rapid growth potential.
However, I was remiss in not making this policy preference clearer in the book (although it is strongly implied in its last chapter) and in thus allowing space for reading it in Blairite ways. Despite this however, I believe that this central theme of Rethinking Socialism, the severe shortcomings of gradualist social democracy when confronted with a failing or misfiring capitalism remains as pertinent now as it was in 1983. Then, as now, far too much self-identified radical or left-wing thought in Britain consists of decontextualized, economically nave moralising.
But if it is still pertinent in this way, other aspects of the book have been severely outdated by changes over the last 36 years. Firstly, the period from the early 1980s to the present has seen the rapid and deep globalisation of the world economy. This has had a mass of effects which cannot be dealt with here, (although I have written about them elsewhere). One of the most significant of them has been the narrowing of the space for national economic policy-making of any type, and most especially for policies which are uncongenial to global financial and capital markets. In fact, if social democratic policies are to be carried out effectively now, they have to be pursued at the transnational as well as the national level. For if they are not, they can easily be undermined or nullified by currency attacks and/or capital flight. In short, its lack of any analysis of capitalism as a global system is one respect in which Rethinking Socialism is seriously out-dated.
The other is its treatment of feminism, which is almost entirely concerned with socialist feminism. But socialist feminism has been marginalised to the point of irrelevance in the development of second wave feminism since the 1980s. Feminism is now liberal feminism in its organising assumptions and policy concerns, and Rethinking Socialism seriously underestimated its political potential in that form. In fact, liberal feminism (concerned exclusively with increasing gender equality throughout civil society) has been, along with neo-liberalism, the most influential political ideology of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. And now it is producing deep social, cultural and political reverberations in virtually every human society on the planet. And whilst I continue to have some reservations about its exclusive focus on gender equality (whatever happened to class, for example?) it would be churlish not to recognise, and applaud, the empowerment and hope liberal feminism has provided, and is providing, for half the worlds population. If only one could say anything remotely similar about socialism!
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