What Is Living and What Is Dead in Social Democracy?
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  What Is Living and What Is Dead in Social Democracy?
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Author Topic: What Is Living and What Is Dead in Social Democracy?  (Read 4672 times)
Beet
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« on: December 18, 2009, 01:00:35 PM »

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/23519

A startlingly good essay, particularly on the big picture.
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A18
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« Reply #1 on: December 18, 2009, 01:29:51 PM »

What do you like about it? I only read the first half, but nothing struck me as particularly novel or insightful. It seemed to me like social democracy at its worst: moral indignation as political philosophy.
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Beet
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« Reply #2 on: December 18, 2009, 01:36:37 PM »

What do you like about it? I only read the first half, but nothing struck me as particularly novel or insightful. It seemed to me like social democracy at its worst: moral indignation as political philosophy.

I like the framing of social democracy as an 'ideology' of fear. I like the framing of it as somewhat conservative. I like the idea that it has the same contextual genesis as the 20th century libertarians, only very different conclusions. These things help make it far more than just 'moral indignation'.
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A18
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« Reply #3 on: December 18, 2009, 01:59:47 PM »

That social democrats want to conserve social democracy doesn't strike me as particularly insightful. And surely any child over the age of 10 knows that the surest way to "conserve" something is to make people think the sky would fall without it.

By the way, at one point the author curiously writes that, "If we ask who exercised the greatest influence over contemporary Anglophone economic thought, five foreign-born thinkers spring to mind: Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, Joseph Schumpeter, Karl Popper, and Peter Drucker. The first two were the outstanding 'grandfathers' of the Chicago School of free-market macroeconomics." One might be able to tie Hayek, however tangentially, to the Chicago School (as I recall, he was a professor of history there)—but Mises?!
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Beet
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« Reply #4 on: December 18, 2009, 02:28:27 PM »

It's not just that they want to conserve social democracy itself, but the idea that social democracy is a means of conserving the liberal order, partly politically through society, and partly economically. The goal is stability, and each part should be judged on how well it serves its respective goal.

As for the Chicago School, I noticed that too, but this article is America- centric, Chicago is in the Anglo world, Austria is not. And the Austrian School was an influence on the Chicago School, partly through Hayek, who was Mises's student.
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Tetro Kornbluth
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« Reply #5 on: December 18, 2009, 04:50:49 PM »

I find Tony Judt a bit of a self-righteous bore sometimes (at least in his Postwar) and curiously obsessed with the history of the Marxism and Communism and yet only distantly with the Soviet Union (It's complicated).

I would also disagree with the whole Europe-America binary he employs which yet again pretends that 'Europe' (and Judt should really know not to do this) is a singular entity rather than a collective of over 50 nation states all with their different politics and systems of government

I like what he has to say about Clinton however - pretty much a perfect summing up of his time in office. And also on economism.

I'm taking it that Judt is confabulating 'the chicago school' with *shudder* 'neo-liberalism' in general.

As an otherwise social democrat I find it's mixed bag though he is surely true correct that social democracy is now identifiable as a conservative force. What he doesn't argue, which he perhaps should, is that that is its problem.
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Beet
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« Reply #6 on: December 18, 2009, 04:55:04 PM »

I find Tony Judt a bit of a self-righteous bore sometimes (at least in his Postwar) and curiously obsessed with the history of the Marxism and Communism and yet only distantly with the Soviet Union (It's complicated).

Actually, he came off as quite conservative in Postwar, so something like this came off as a surprise.

Still, you can't begrudge a recent past historian like himself of seeing the value of social democracy through a twentieth century lens. The triumph of social democracy in the West was a twentieth century product.
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Tetro Kornbluth
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« Reply #7 on: December 18, 2009, 04:59:46 PM »

I find Tony Judt a bit of a self-righteous bore sometimes (at least in his Postwar) and curiously obsessed with the history of the Marxism and Communism and yet only distantly with the Soviet Union (It's complicated).

Actually, he came off as quite conservative in Postwar, so something like this came off as a surprise.

Still, you can't begrudge a recent past historian like himself of seeing the value of social democracy through a twentieth century lens. The triumph of social democracy in the West was a twentieth century product.

That's not surprising (I've never read all of Postwar only large chunks of it - but I've read many of his online article like the one there) he is essentially a conservative social democrat. If that makes sense. Or if the representation of European social democracy the moment it seized to be 'reformist' and started being conservative - he's even going nostalgia for the 50s and 60s (though thankfully not in the way others are nostalgic are those particular decades).

I value him as a historian, I just said that he is a bit of bore sometimes. Especially on Marxism and its relationship to European especially French intellectuals.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #8 on: December 18, 2009, 08:12:40 PM »

Something to read tomorrow, I guess. Judt is a weird one, but can be interesting when he wants to be.

he is essentially a conservative social democrat. If that makes sense.

Yes, it makes sense.
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Junior Chimp
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« Reply #9 on: December 18, 2009, 08:13:09 PM »

The problem is that social-democracy is inefficient even in achieving its historical goals: merely redistributing wealth through taxation is hardly enough to secure a lasting economic security for the lower classes. The Marxists were right in this one thing: the material means of wealth generation have to be in the hands of a man if he is to make something lasting for himself. And social-democracy, and 20th century liberalism more generally, can't do that.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #10 on: December 18, 2009, 08:26:18 PM »

Social Democracy has no historical goal (not since the belief in progress was crushed by events in Germany and Austria in the '30's). Taking a long view, I guess that's always been one of its main problems. Still, it's done more for ordinary people than any other ideology, so maybe that doesn't matter much.
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Junior Chimp
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« Reply #11 on: December 18, 2009, 08:28:01 PM »

Social Democracy has no historical goal (not since the belief in progress was crushed by events in Germany and Austria in the '30's). Taking a long view, I guess that's always been one of its main problems. Still, it's done more for ordinary people than any other ideology, so maybe that doesn't matter much.

It once did. And that's a big part of the problem - it can no longer provide "a Yes, a No, a straight line, a goal". I'd sooner see it return to the historical mission of the Left than continue on its present course.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #12 on: December 18, 2009, 08:39:04 PM »


Only in a very loose sense - and was really just a Socialist version of the idea of Progress, sometimes combined at a non-intellectual level (or so I would argue) with certain older popular utopias (daft term, but best I can think up at this late hour). None of which really survived what happened in the '30's; the second crisis of Social Democracy, really. The thing is that the death of this goal (as something really believed in that is... most Social Democratic parties only formally abandoned utopia in the '50's and '60's; Labour in Britain didn't until the '90's and I think the Austrian Social Democrats might still officially believe in it. But the key terms here are 'formally' and 'officially'...) predates the major practical achievements of the ideology.
I do actually think that it is a problem at an ideological and intellectual level, but...

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And that is? (btw, if this is something you've gone on about elsewhere, better to direct me in that direction than potentially fill this thread up).
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Junior Chimp
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« Reply #13 on: December 18, 2009, 08:43:48 PM »

As I've said before, the minimum demand of virtually all Leftist and working-class Parties (before they actually assumed power beginning in the first and second decades of the last century) was in giving control of the means of production to the workers. How they went about it was a major point of contention, but it was almost universally agreed upon that the workers themselves had to physically control the tools of wealth-creation.

And, indeed, this is something I've gone on before about, because I actually agree with this. Perhaps that makes me a far-leftist - I certainly don't think so, because I base it on what I consider to be libertarian principles of self-sufficiency and self-ownership. But that ideal can now be realized with technologies emerging today, and I want the social-democrats to reconsider their time-worn tactic of merely indirectly redistributing wealth. Give a needy man a dollar and he'll spend it on temporary goods; give a needy man a machine and he can begin generating his own wealth.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #14 on: December 18, 2009, 08:55:05 PM »

I'd have to disagree that it was the minimum demand. That was usually universal suffrage, or an extension in political rights and working class representation in the political system generally. Of course, the ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange was something that all Social Democratic parties with Marxist roots agreed on (and which the largest non-Marxist Social Democratic party adopted in 1918) but there was never any real understanding of what this actually meant (except in an abstract sense). One of the main problems the early Social Democratic governments had (those that came to power in anything like 'normal' circumstances, anyway) was the gap between their official goals and political reality - there was no way of bridging the two and the result was often pretty sad.
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« Reply #15 on: December 18, 2009, 08:57:19 PM »

If not the minimum demand, then certainly one which formed a core component of the movement. And I don't think it's really all that radical an idea today, since it could be done - with investment in the right areas - without a drop of blood being shed, without the need for revolution.

Moreover, it would accomplish goals agreeable to virtually all ends of the political spectrum: by massively broadening the tax base, it would make it far easier to pay down the national debt, which is a very conservative concern.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #16 on: December 24, 2009, 02:24:05 PM »
« Edited: December 28, 2009, 09:07:19 PM by Alonzo Lot »

Finally got round to reading it. Very good, although there are a few minor issues here and there - one I'd pick up on is the emphasis on intellectual contribution and elite political life. Keynes, for example, was in reality far less influential on the development of postwar Social Democracy than Judt seems to think (and Keynes was no Social Democrat, obviously).
But these don't really detract from his analysis or argument. Most of it isn't exactly original, but I've not really seen the idea of Social Democracy as a conservative force being potentially a good thing being put forward in such detail before. In places it uses far-left arguments against Social Democracy and Social Democratic parties for a very different purposes to that originally intended - the sort of intellectual inversion that's always interesting.
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