• cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml
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    9 months ago

    You are either ignorant of history or you have a different definition of what constitutes failure than normal people. State directed economies have been objectively the most successful model in human history for rapidly and as widely as possible improving material conditions.

    What has failed in the past and continues to fail is actually the liberal economic model.

    • Neato@ttrpg.network
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      9 months ago

      Which command economies are providing increases in material conditions right now?

      • cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml
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        9 months ago

        China, Cuba, Vietnam, Venezuela, Belarus, DPRK, and if it is true that Russia is switching to a more state driven model then you can count Russia too because they are seeing a lot of growth with even more forecasted to come.

        Meanwhile most of Europe is in recession, the US only has fake financialized growth, while the countries in the global south where the neoliberal model has been imposed are utter failures, just look at the disaster in Argentina.

        You seem confused as to what the terms we are using actually mean since you speak of “command economies” rather than state led economies. State led does not mean absence of a market and it does not imply total economic planning. It means that the commanding heights of the economy are in the hands of the state which steers the overall direction of the economy. It does not have to look exactly like the USSR did, though that was a very successful model that was fit for the purpose of turning a backwards agrarian society into a modern industrial superpower.

        And by the way, many of the advanced capitalist economies also got to where they are because in the past they employed state driven models of economic development as well as heavy protectionism. This is particularly true for Japan and occupied (“South”) Korea, but also for European countries like Germany (the latter just did it earlier).

        • sinovictorchan@lemmygrad.ml
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          9 months ago

          The Pax Americana often rely on redefinition of words through education system, ‘educational’ article, and media to manipulate their citizens so most people in Western European diaspora often do not know about the definition of Socialism, Capitalism, ‘state’, ‘dictatorship’, or centralized economy. To them, Socialism and Capitalism simply refers to the amount of government intervention or the level of absolutism even when the labeling practice by Pax Americana of real life economic system is more consistent with the original distinction of the economic class in power than with the level of authoritarianism. This is why Venezuela under Socialist president Maduro could implement a highly competitive free market economy where uneducated elderly people with no funding could start a successful enterprise despite the current series of recessions that Pax Americana planned while a recession in Pax Americana would cause failure of small enterprises, barricade the start of new entrepreneurship, stop market competition, and increase wealth gap that allow the rich 1% to get richer during the recession.

          • cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml
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            9 months ago

            I don’t know if i’d describe it as “Keynesian” but yes you are right, it’s not “centrally planned” in the traditional sense. Most of the countries i mentioned do not have centrally planned economies. This is not about central planning, it’s about state driven vs liberal “free market” models. Economic planning is just one tool that a state can employ to guide and shape its economy. The key distinction here is about who ultimately has the power. Does the state control capital or does capital control the state?

            • pigginz@lemmygrad.ml
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              9 months ago

              In a liberal democracy, a dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, what is the distinction between capital and the state? The bourgeoisie both own the capital and control the state, so what do you mean by the state controlling capital or vice versa? Is it just the extent to which whatever faction of the bourgeoisie controls the state can bring the rest of the class to heel?

              • cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml
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                9 months ago

                That’s a good point. And yet in western liberal democracies the bourgeois state has become increasingly unwilling or incapable of bringing the rest of the capitalist class to heel. Even traditionally social democratic Europe is becoming more and more neoliberal, while at the same time states in the global south that are trying to assert their independence from western neo-colonialism, as well as semi-peripheral states like Russia find themselves going in the opposite direction and rejecting neoliberalism in favor of a more state led model, if only for the purely pragmatic reason that they are finding that neoliberalism is not just a hindrance to their development but is actively anti-development. The western states that have embraced it have been de-industrializing and de-developing before our eyes.

                And the fact that this phenomenon is happening in both bourgeois states like Russia and in proletarian ones like the AES states which had opened up and liberalized to a degree in the 80s and 90s illustrates a point that Marxist-Leninists who support China have been making for a while now: that socialism is not synonymous with economic planning nor capitalism with markets, but that these are merely economic tools that both proletarian and bourgeois states can use. At the end of the day, as you correctly point out, the real determinant of socialism vs capitalism is which class controls the state. And so far Russia is still very clearly a dictatorship of the bourgeoisie.

                So yes, to sum up, you are right, however there is still something interesting happening in terms of the economic model that we are seeing have success and the one which is not.

                • pigginz@lemmygrad.ml
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                  9 months ago

                  I’m glad you think I’m right but I wasn’t asking rhetorical questions, I just actually don’t understand what the difference is between capital and the bourgeoisie, lol.

                  • cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml
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                    9 months ago

                    The bourgeoisie are not a unified monolith. There are sharp contradictions between finance capital and industrial capital. Finance capital’s extreme parasitism, self-destructiveness and tendency toward de-development poses a threat to industrial capital and creates inter-capitalist conflict. So i suppose it would be more accurate to say that finance capital does not control the state in state led economies.

              • QueerCommie@lemmygrad.ml
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                9 months ago

                What matters is if capital controls the government. The state can manage the economy in the interests of the capitalists or the workers. It can manage it to a greater or lesser extent. State run companies would make it a greater extent, but its socialist or capitalist character is in who controls the government and where the surplus goes.

        • Neato@ttrpg.network
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          9 months ago

          DPRK

          OK, now I know you’re not serious. Also, what about people who don’t want to live under dictators? This is a joke, it has to be.

      • Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        Check out “People’s Republic of Walmart” it’s great, goes into how the big corporations are centrally planned and that’s why they’re so efficient. Second Thought did a 10 minute cover of it if youtube essays are more your style.

        • sinovictorchan@lemmygrad.ml
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          9 months ago

          The ability to form a centralized government had allowed the European immigrants to kill many Native Americans, force Native Americans into federal reserve concentration camps, and enslave and kill many Indigenous children in fake schools compared to the First Nation Native Americans in North America who lack experience to organize a large centralized government.