logo
Socialism doesn't deliver prosperity or produce equality. Does it give freedom? Of course not

Socialism doesn't deliver prosperity or produce equality. Does it give freedom? Of course not

The Print3 days ago
Now, Gandhi taught us two things, basically. One was that ends and means are interlinked, that you cannot produce a better society by methods that are not clean and decent, that the end does not justify the means. By the time your means, which are dubious, are practised, your end gets vitiated. In other words, to cite the Soviet Union, by liquidations and butchery, by distortion and lying, you cannot produce a more fraternal society.
Our great leader, Mahatma Gandhi, used to say that consistency in political affairs is 'the virtue of an ass.' He was himself a very inconsistent person, who moved from position to position as he developed and the world developed. The point I am making is that it would be very stupid for anyone to hold on to a point of view or a dogma, disregarding what is happening around him.
There is an idea afoot that liberalism came before socialism and therefore must fade out before socialism. I would like to examine that assumption and, looking fifty or a hundred years ahead, to consider which is more likely to survive, and which is getting outdated today.
The other thing Gandhiji taught us was that the State in the 20th century is no longer a great friend of freedom and progress, that perhaps the biggest threat to human freedom comes from the State. This Gandhi repeated a hundred times in different ways, by saying that there is no violence as evil as the violence of the Government. All other violence can be forgiven, understood or controlled, but when the Government becomes violent and dominates and oppresses the people, that is the most foul kind of violence.
Socialism does not deliver prosperity. It does not produce equality. Does it give freedom? Of course not. The loss of liberty is the most obvious thing in the socialist countries. Lenin was a great man. He was an idealist gone wrong. He imagined that, after a short period of dictatorship, liberty would be restored by the benign Communist Party to the people. The State would 'wither away.' Now, some of us have been waiting patiently for this process to start. There are no signs of it yet, either in the Soviet Union or in any other communist country. The State keeps its monopoly of power very securely in its hands.
Now, all this had been foreseen by a very wise Italian philosopher, Benedetto Croce, who said that in any country where there were no 'autonomous social forces,' liberty was bound to disappear. By 'autonomous social force' he meant people who own their factories, people who own their shops, people who own their land, people who practise independent professions like lawyers, doctors, engineers and accountants. In other words, when everyone is an employee of the Government, you cannot have freedom or democracy because there is no one to oppose or criticize the Government. It is only when a peasant can say: 'This land is mine,' that he can stand up to the official. But when you have no peasant proprietors, no businessmen, no free professional people, it becomes a slave State.
Also read: Socialism hinders India's industrial growth. We need free enterprise first
Now, let us consider what has been happening in a semi socialist society like India. We have been practising, or trying to practise, socialist methods for the last 15 years. Is there more prosperity? Are we better off than we were in 1947? The answer is 'No.' Living standards have been stagnant since the British left in 1947. Some classes have benefited, some are worse off.
The Government admits that the real income of the agricultural labourer, the landless labourer in the village, has gone down in the last fifteen years. He does not take home as much as he could in the old days under the British. The real income of the industrial labourer is more or less stagnant, thanks to dearness allowances. Anyone who knows anything about the middle class knows that its standards have gone down shockingly in the last fifteen years. In fact, the middle class is being ground out of existence today in India. The biggest victim of socialism is the lower middle class, the educated man with a small income, the clerk, the schoolmaster, the shopkeeper.
Then, who has benefited? If the middle class, the working class and the landless labourer are all worse off, who has benefited? The answer is a small number of people have benefited. Because we have a mixed economy, we have a mixed 'New Class.' They are not all commissars. Some of them are commissars and some are businessmen. What they do is that by means of a controlled so-called socialist economy, where more or less sheltered conditions are created, they share the profit. If I am in power and I give a licence to somebody to produce something with a protected market, he gives me back 10 per cent or 20 per cent of what he makes. So political patronage, operated by dishonest politicians, officials and businessmen, creates a new ring of exploiters which replaces the old system.
Equality? Even the advocates of socialism themselves complain that every time a Five Year Plan is put across, it creates more inequalities, for the reason I have just explained.
Now I come to the alternative, the Liberal path. If socialism does not serve the purposes for which it was intended, that is, moving towards a freer and more equal society, is liberalism the alternative?
What is liberalism? Liberalism, according to Hobhouse, the great British liberal, in his book on Liberalism, which is a classic, is 'a belief that society can safely be founded on the self-directing power of personality, that it is only on this foundation that the true community can be built. Liberty then becomes not so much a right of the individual, as a necessity of society.' Professor Parkinson said in an article recently published in England: 'The word Liberal means generous or open-handed. Be generous with what? With freedom and political responsibility.'
Now, these are two quite good definitions of liberalism. How do we apply them to the problems of social welfare or social justice with which we are concerned? Their application to the economy means a free economy. What is a free economy? There are many variations of the free economy in different parts of the world, but one thing is common to all of them—the Government plays a limited and restricted part. Liberal economics are the economics of limited government. Social controls and regulations are necessary, but must be restricted to the minimum. That is one aspect.
The other aspect of a free economy is that 'the consumer must be king.' What does this mean? Who is the consumer? All of us are consumers. We all buy something or other. Therefore, the whole country is made up of consumers. What does it mean that the consumer must be king? This means that what is produced in a country should be what the people want, should be something for which the people are prepared to pay a price in the market. The pattern of production must be dictated, not by Government, not by a Planning Commission, not by the dictates of anyone, but by the collective will of the people, as expressed in the market place. This has been well described as 'the ballot of the market place.' The ballot of the market place is superior to the ballot of the political election. You can shift your choice from hour to hour and day to day. You can buy one brand of soap one day, change over to another brand the next day, if you do not find it good. You can change your perfume, your shoes, your clothes—everything.
How does this choice of the small man—it does not matter whether he has ten rupees in his pocket or a thousand rupees—affect the pattern of production? It affects it through the profit motive, through what is called the law of the market, which is the only sane economic law—the law of supply and demand. The industrialist or the businessman does not produce for fun or for love. He produces for a profit. He produces what will get him a profit in the market. A profit is made when the demand exceeds the supply because when the demand exceeds the supply, then prices go up. But where the supply exceeds the demand, prices drop.
The biggest capitalist has thus to consider what the smallest man in the market wants. This is how the consumer is king and this is what is called a free market economy. This is the liberal economy, as opposed to the socialist.
What are the results? One is prosperity. The buying power of the man in these countries is out of all proportion to what it is in the socialist countries. Even the Indian worker, under so-called capitalism is better off than Russia under socialism, since he does not have to work as long as a Russian worker, to get a pair of shoes or some cloth.
Liberal methods, which are economic freedom or economic democracy, lead to social justice, equality, prosperity and freedom much quicker than the methods of State Capitalism or State-ism, which in France is called Etatisme. That is a much more accurate name than socialism, which may mean anything or nothing.
It is interesting that most of the world is beginning to see this. The world trend is away from communism and socialism and towards liberal democracy. This is not surprising because, after all, human intelligence wins in the end.
This essay is part of a series from the Indian Liberals archive, a project of the Centre for Civil Society. It is excerpted from Minoo Masani's essay in the book Congress Misrule and the Swatantra Alternative, published in November 1966. The original version can be accessed here.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

France denounces US-European Union trade deal, French PM calls it..., Emmanuel Macron...
France denounces US-European Union trade deal, French PM calls it..., Emmanuel Macron...

India.com

time22 minutes ago

  • India.com

France denounces US-European Union trade deal, French PM calls it..., Emmanuel Macron...

(Image: President Donald Trump shakes hands with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen in Turnberry. Pic: Reuters) New Delhi: France has criticized Sunday's, July 28 trade deal between US President Donald Trump and European Union (EU) President Ursula von der Leyen. French Prime Minister François Bayrou called it a dark day for the EU. What did France say over US-EU trade deal? François Bayrou said the EU had bowed to President Trump's increasing tariff pressure. He wrote on X: 'It is sad when a coalition of independent countries, formed to protect their common values and interests, buckles under pressure.' At the same time, French Minister of European Affairs Benjamin Haddad said that this situation is not good and the EU should take countermeasures. French Trade Minister Laurent Saint-Martin said, 'Trump only understands the language of power. If we should have taken countermeasures earlier, the deal might have been better.' However, French President Emmanuel Macron has remained silent on the matter. What is the response of Italy and Germany? German Chancellor Friedrich Mertz and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni welcomed the agreement. European Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic called it a 'big step' as it averted a trade war between the USA and Europe. Under the agreement, most goods going from Europe to the US will face a 15% tariff, three times the current 4.8%. However, the 30% tariff was avoided after Trump's threat of August 1. How much of Europe's goods will face 15% tariff? According to the details of the agreement, 70% of goods from Europe will be subject to 15% tariff. This includes cars, medicines and electronics. However, some agricultural products such as aircraft parts, some chemicals, semiconductor equipment and cork will not be subject to tariffs. There will be no tariff on drugs yet, and if there is one in the future, it will not be more than 15%. The EU will buy energy worth 750 billion dollars or about 64 lakh crore rupees from America in the next three years. Along with this, the EU will invest 600 billion dollars i.e. 51 lakh crore rupees in America.

297 inscriptions from Nataraja temple in Chidambaram date back to Rajendra I: Union Minister Shekhawat
297 inscriptions from Nataraja temple in Chidambaram date back to Rajendra I: Union Minister Shekhawat

The Hindu

time2 hours ago

  • The Hindu

297 inscriptions from Nataraja temple in Chidambaram date back to Rajendra I: Union Minister Shekhawat

Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi general secretary and Villupuram M.P., D. Ravikumar, on Monday asked the Union Minister of Culture and Tourism, Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, whether the Government was aware of the numerous 10th century CE from the reign of Aditya Chola-I inscriptions in the Nataraja Temple in Chidambaram and if the Union Government has plans to document, edit and publish these inscriptions in the form of a book for 'scholarly and public access'. He further sought to know whether such a publication would be available free of cost or at a subsidised rate to devotees visiting the temple and if it would preserve, publish and distribute the inscriptions, given their historical and cultural significance. Responding to Mr. Ravikumar, Union Minister Shekhawat said, 'Yes. Epigraphy Branch of the Archeological Suvery of India has copied 297 inscriptions from the Nataraja Temple in Chidambaram, the earliest dating to the reign of Rajendra-I (1036 CE). All these inscriptions have been deciphered, transcribed and their gist published in the Annual Reports of Epigraphy from 1888 to 1963. Out of them, texts of 157 inscriptions have been published in the volumes of South Indian inscription.'

Tamil Nadu urges SC to return presidential reference on timelines to clear Bills as unanswered
Tamil Nadu urges SC to return presidential reference on timelines to clear Bills as unanswered

Deccan Herald

time3 hours ago

  • Deccan Herald

Tamil Nadu urges SC to return presidential reference on timelines to clear Bills as unanswered

New Delhi: After Kerala, Tamil Nadu on Monday also filed a plea in the Supreme Court urging it to return the presidential reference related to timelines for clearing Bills, as "unanswered in whole" for it is intended to overrule the April 8, 2025 judgment, settling the the reference as "headless and devoid of merits", it contended that the presidential reference of May 13, 2025 raised questions of law pertaining to interpretation of the powers of the Governor under the Article 200 of the Constitution and the powers of the President under the Article 201 of the Constitution along with ancillary issues, which have been directly answered by the Supreme Court recently in the State of Tamil Nadu Vs the Governor of Tamil Nadu (2025) in an exhaustive manner."The reference has been issued to overrule the decision and directions of this court in State of Tamil Nadu judgement and it is nothing but an appeal in disguise, which is impermissible in law as this court has no power to overrule its own judgements by way of Article 143," the application settled by senior advocate P Wilson State also pointed out that this court in Ahmedabad St Xavier's College Society Vs State of Gujarat, (1974) has opined that an opinion rendered by this court in a presidential reference under Article 143 of the Constitution is advisory in nature and not binding in subsequent cases, though it carries great persuasive value."Therefore, the present presidential reference is headless and devoid of merit," it state also pointed out, currently, no review or curative petition has been preferred by the Governor of Tamil Nadu against the April 8 reference ceases to raise any legitimate substantial questions of law leading to an expediency in obtaining the opinion of this court, the state government added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store