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Book Reivew
Looking Forward: Participatory Economic for the Twenty First
Century by Michael Albert and Robin Hahnel. Boston, South End Press,
1991 - Review by Jeff Stein [Published in Libertarian Labor Review
No. 12]
The economy in the Soviet Union is a mess and always has been," say
Marxist theorists Michael Albert and Robin Hahnel. The problem isn't with
having a planned economy, but a matter of who is doing the planning. In
the Soviet Union, economic planning was exclusively a power of an elite
class of "coordinators" [i.e. the Communist bureaucrats]. Thus it should
have come as no surprise whose interest the Soviet economy served.
Instead of "coordinatorism" the authors propose a rough model of a system
of economic planning in which all workers and consumers would have a
voice.
The model proposed by the authors is based upon a sort of democratic
bargaining in which yearly production proposals made by workplace councils
are compared to yearly consumption request made by consumer councils. A
series of "facilitation boards" tabulate all the proposals and revises the
"prices" of goods and services in terms of additional labor required to
meet consumer demands. Goods and services, for which supply is not
expected to meet demands, go up in price and vice versa. The councils
then revise their previous proposals based upon the new prices. This
continues for several rounds or "iteration" of planning proposals until at
some point an exact match is made between projected yearly production and
consumption. In order to encourage a convergence towards a final plan,
councils are limited by how much they can alter a previous proposal in the
next round. Proposals leading in direction of convergence can be changed
up to 50%. Proposals leading away from an agreement can only be changed
by 25%.
To make sure that everyone benefits equally from their economic model,
Albert and Hahnel propose that every worker receive an equal share of
consumption and be required to work an equal number of hours. In the
former case, this can be modified somewhat by local consumer councils,
based upon individual needs. A local consumer council can decide to
increase or decrease the share of individual members; as long as the
council's total consumption stays the same. In the case of the latter,
the requirement to work an equal number of hours is accompanied by the
requirement that the overall quality of working conditions also be equal
for all workers. Thus every worker is required to have a "balanced job
complex", made up of an average amount of pleasant tasks and drudgery.
The idea of "balanced job complexes" comes from the traditional
socialist rejection of the capitalist division of labor, which condemns
most individuals to a life of dull, repetitive, often dangerous hand
labor, in order to free up a minority for the more creative and artistic
work. Unlike some socialists (principally other Marxists) who merely
propose to ameliorate the bad side effects of the division of labor by
complex wage schemes, etc., Albert and Hahnel insist on doing away with
the division of labor entirely. They argue that the quality of work
assignments determines the amount of power an individual worker has within
the economy. People with more interesting and enjoyable jobs have more
control. As the authors put it, "Classlessness and real rather than
formal workplace democracy require that each worker has a job complex
composed of comparably fulfilling responsibilities.the half dozen or so
tasks that I regularly do must be roughly as empowering as the half dozen
or so tasks that you regularly do if we are to participate as equals in
council decision making." (p.19, my emphasis)
I am sure many will find Looking Forward a thought-provoking
read. However I am not so sure how useful a guide it is towards creating
a self-managed social economy. The general idea of allowing everyone to
take part in the planning process is good, although I don't agree on their
specific suggestions for how to implement it. I also think their
suggestion for making economic planning into a sort of bargaining process
through several sessions or "iterations" could be useful. However in many
ways I thought their system to be far less decentralized and
"participatory" than they claim it to be. The authors tend to be somewhat
vague about the role of the government in enforcing their system. For
instance what about a workplace council which finds the final plan so
intolerable that they refuse to go along with it? Can they negotiate
their own separate agreement, or will some higher authority lock them out
of their facilities, cut their rations, or worse? The authors say nothing
about the right to strike, not to mention the right of voluntary
association, the basis of federalism.
The authors, being Marxists, still tend to be complacent about the
potential for authoritarian abuses in their model. Their economic
organization requires a large number of "facilitation boards": CFCBs .
"Collective Consumption Facilitation Boards," CFBs . "Consumption
Facilitation Boards", EFBs . "Employment Facilitation Boards," HFBs .
"Housing Facilitation Boards," IFBs . "Iteration Facilitation Boards,"
PFBs . "Production Facilitation Boards," and UFBs . "Updating Facilitation
Boards." Supposedly the facilitators have no power other than collecting
information and communicating it back to society via computer networks.
But there is a tremendous amount of power involved in the control of
information and its flow, particularly when this information is presented
as being "objective and unbiased" (even more so when it is presented as
computer data . about which the authors suggest "computers never lie").
Albert and Hahnel argue that such power would not be abused since the
facilitator would (theoretically) be limited to the same consumption
levels as everyone else and would therefore have nothing to gain by
cooking the data. The authors somehow can not envision any other reason
for distorting data other than direct economic benefit, such as
ideological bias or pursuit of political objectives.
It is not hard to imagine a "facilitatorism" developing if these boards
do not have sufficient safeguards placed upon them. It is somewhat
disturbing that Albert and Hahnel seem reluctant to insist upon even the
most elementary safeguards, such as limiting the terms of board members,
since [as they say] this might interfere with the need for "expertise" at
facilitation. This is even more surprising considering that they see
expertise in every other job as being so unnecessary that it doesn't
interfere with their "job complex" work rotation scheme at all.
Apparently anybody can fly a passenger airline jet but it takes a special
breed to "facilitate" society.
Even supposing the facilitator had to be changed once and a while
(every four years?), however, "job complexing" would not necessarily end
the division of labor. The point of doing away with divided labor is to
help workers control their own work, to understand the full implications
of their efforts by allowing them to play a role in the design of their
products and organize their own jobs as they see fit. Thus the artificial
separation between hand work and brain work, labor and management, is
abolished. Albert and Hahnel, however, have devised more of a socialist
job enrichment scheme in which workers would be required to move between
several workplaces each week, doing one task here, one task there, as
though the sum total of all these fragmented experiences would give them a
sense of control over the entire economy. Spending a few hours each week
picking apples will not give a construction worker a better understanding
of either agriculture or the construction industry. Nor would it
necessarily give farm workers more control of their industry. The influx
of thousands of part-time workers with no particular knowledge of or
interest in the industry, could make matters worse on the job if the
part-timers had an equal vote in workplace matters and were played off
against the regular workforce.
The division of labor is not negated by forcing workers to frequently
change jobs. Instead of empowering workers, such a scheme could make them
even more dependent on the few within industry who "facilitate" all the
job rating and the rotation of work assignments. Proudhon made this point
in reference to similar suggestions by utopian socialists, "As if to
change ten, fifteen, twenty times a day from one kind of divided labor to
another was to make labor synthetic.Even if such industrial vaulting was
practicable . and it may be asserted in advance that it would disappear in
the presence of making laborers responsible and therefore their functions
personal . it would not change at all the physical, moral, and
intellectual condition of the laborer; the dissipation would only be a
surer guarantee of his incapacity and, consequently, his dependence."
(System of Economic Contradictions, Tucker, trans., p.186)
Job complexing could certainly work at the workplace level and may be
desirable, but making it a strict requirement for shuffling workers
between industries is incompatible with self-management. Albert and
Hahnel have the relationship between power and desirable work reversed.
People do not lack power at their workplaces because they do the lousy
jobs; rather they do the lousy jobs because they lack power. It is far
more important to discuss the distribution of decision-making within
workplaces and industry, than to try to formulate an elaborate job-sharing
scheme which should be left up to the workers themselves. Formal
democracy hat hides an informal class system is a valid concern, but I
suspect that wherever this exists it may have more to do with a minority
having a monopoly on information and education and a "good ol' boy"
political network, than with the absence of a system for rating every job
for some abstract enjoyment level.
Another problem with the Albert-Hahnel model is its use of the labor
theory of value as a means for determining individual consumption levels.
The authors are correct in making the simple observation that if society
as a whole wants to consume more, that at any given technological level,
some people will have to work more. It only seems fair that those who
wish to do the extra consuming should have to do the extra working. A
problem comes in determining exactly how much each individual's labor is
worth when production is a complex and interdependent social undertaking.
Albert and Hahnel get around this problem with their "job complexing". In
theory, every hour of labor is equal to some average because every worker
works at the same average level of intensity under the same average
working conditions. (This certainly makes things easier for the
statisticians.)
Yet even if it were possible to balance all jobs in society according
to some average level (and ignoring the huge bureaucracy this might
require), Albert and Hahnel sacrifice the most valid application of the
labor theory of value, its connection to technological change, while they
retain the theory's negative side effect, its neglect of ecological
devastation. One might say, they have kept the bath water and thrown out
the baby.
Let's take a look at the "baby", the labor theory of value and its
connection to technological change. If you wish to make goods and
services more plentiful, you must economize and reduce the amount of labor
required to reduce them. According to the Albert-Hahnel model, workers at
workplaces who adopt more efficient labor-saving technologies would be
"rewarded" by being forced to work the hours they saved at less desirable
jobs in other industries. Although it is true that this is no worse than
under capitalism where labor-saving technology "rewards" workers with
unemployment and subsequent loss of income, the point is that under the
Albert-Hahnel model workers would be reluctant to adopt new technology
since they would not benefit directly. Under a socialist system it would
seem that the best reward for improving productivity would be to allow
workers to decrease their work hours with no loss of income.
Albert and Hahnel would probably argue that their system would still
reward labor saving efforts by giving a collective benefit to all workers.
If workplace A, for instance, cuts its labor needs by say five hours a
week per worker, then all workers throughout society would experience some
small fraction of that reduction spread out proportionally. So even
though the workers at workplace A might have to work part of the time
elsewhere, instead of the five hours, it might be only 4 hours and 45
minutes at the other job. Even supposing that is sufficient incentive to
keep technological progress going, there still remains the problem of
using labor time as a method of pricing commodities and services.
One of the criticisms used by the Marxists against any sort of market
system for determining prices has been that the "law of supply and demand"
creates"commodity fetishism". Consumers only concerned with getting the
most commodities for the lowest price, ignore the labor involved and that
lowest price often is accompanied by maximum labor exploitation. Although
a pricing system based on labor time, may make this more apparent to
consumers, the labor theory of value ignores the ecological costs of
goods: energy, raw materials, wastes generated, natural habitats
destroyed, etc. These costs can't be measured in labor units. Thus
instead of "commodity fetishism", Albert and Hahnel would create a "labor
fetish".
For an example of how their use of the labor theory of value ignores
ecological costs, let's use one of their own examples. In the chapter on
"Participatory Allocation", Albert and Hahnel pose the problem of an
increased demand for milk. "Sometimes, however, changes will not balance
so that the net increase, say, in milk demand must be communicated to milk
producers, who then either produce more . by increasing work intensity,
hours worked by each employee, or adding personnel . or refuse to increase
production.' (p.80) Clearly, the assumption is that increased production
only requires additional human labor. But how about the cattle that
actually produce this milk? How about the extra land that must be set
aside to feed the cattle, perhaps wilderness and wetlands destroyed? How
about the degraded water supply from the animal wastes in the run-off from
feed lots or pastures? These ecological consequences can't be factored
into a labor pricing system, and therefore would not show up on the
computer terminals of consumers voting on the yearly economic plan.
Looking Forward has been accused by more orthodox Marxists of
being an anarcho-syndicalist inspired proposal. Unfortunately this is not
so. Although the authors clearly would like to give local economic bodies
some autonomy, there still lingers a central plan and a state authority in
the background (one the authors claim will wither away as their system has
less "need" for it). Some rather ambiguous remarks made towards that end
about Cuba suggest that the authors haven't strayed too far from the
Marxist fold. At best the Albert-Hahnel model could be described as
"central-planning by referendum".
While terms like "councils" and "federations" and anarchist quotes
litter the text, there is no clear understanding of these demonstrated by
the authors. Looking Forward is a utopian Marxist proposal with
little anarchism in it.
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