The Western Welfare State: Its Rise and Demise and the Soviet Bloc
By Prof. James Petras
Global Research, July 4, 2012
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=31753
Introduction
One of the most striking socio-economic features of
the past two decades is the reversal of the previous half-century of
welfare legislation in Europe and North America . Unprecedented cuts in
social services, severance pay, public employment, pensions, health
programs, educational stipends, vacation time, and job security are
matched by increases in tuition, regressive taxation, and the age of
retirement as well as increased inequalities, job insecurity and
workplace speed-up.
The demise of the ‘welfare state’ demolishes the idea
put forth by orthodox economists, who argued that the ‘maturation’ of
capitalism, its ‘advanced state’, high technology and sophisticated
services, would be accompanied by greater welfare and higher
income/standard of living. While it is true that ‘services and
technology’ have multiplied, the economic sector has become even more
polarized, between low paid retail clerks and super rich stock brokers
and financiers. The computerization of the economy has led to electronic
bookkeeping, cost controls and the rapid movements of speculative funds
in search of maximum profit while at the same time ushering in brutal
budgetary reductions for social programs.
The ‘Great Reversal’ appears to be a long-term,
large-scale process centered in the dominant capitalist countries of
Western Europe and North America and in the former Communist states of
Eastern Europe . It behooves us to examine the systemic causes that
transcend the particular idiosyncrasies of each nation.
The Origins of the Great Reversal
There are two lines of inquiry which need to be
elucidated in order to come to terms with the demise of the welfare
state and the massive decline of living standards. One line of analysis
examines the profound change in the international environment: We have
moved from a competitive bi-polar system, based on a rivalry between the
collectivist – welfare states of the Eastern bloc and the capitalist
states of Europe and North America to an international system
monopolized by competing capitalist states.
A second line of inquiry directs us to examine the
changes in the internal social relations of the capitalist states:
namely the shift from intense class struggles to long-term class
collaboration, as the organizing principle in the relation between labor
and capital.
The main proposition informing this essay is that the
emergence of the welfare state was a historical outcome of a period
when there were high levels of competition between collectivist
welfarism and capitalism and when class-struggle oriented trade unions
and social movements had ascendancy over class-collaborationist
organizations.
Clearly the two processes are inter-related: As the
collectivist states implemented greater welfare provisions for their
citizens, trade unions and social movements in the West had social
incentives and positive examples to motivate their members and challenge
capitalists to match the welfare legislation in the collectivist bloc.
The Origins and Development of the Western Welfare State
Immediately following the defeat of
fascist-capitalist regimes with the defeat of Nazi Germany, the Soviet
Union and its political allies in Eastern Europe embarked on a massive
program of reconstruction, recovery, economic growth and the
consolidation of power, based on far-reaching socio-economic welfare
reforms. The great fear among Western capitalist regimes was that the
working class in the West would “follow” the Soviet example or, at a
minimum, support parties and actions which would undermine capitalist
recovery. Given the political discredit of many Western capitalists
because of their collaboration with the Nazis or their belated, weak
opposition to the fascist version of capitalism, they could not resort
to the highly repressive methods of the past. Instead, the Western
capitalist classes applied a two-fold strategy to counter the Soviet
collectivist-welfare reforms: Selective repression of the domestic
Communist and radical Left and welfare concessions to secure the loyalty
of the Social and Christian Democratic trade unions and parties.
With economic recovery and post-war growth, the
political, ideological and economic competition intensified: The Soviet
bloc introduced wide-ranging reforms, including full employment,
guaranteed job security, universal health care, free higher education,
one month paid vacation leave, full pay pensions, free summer camps and
vacation resorts for worker families and prolonged paid maternity leave.
They emphasized the importance of social welfare over individual
consumption. The capitalist West was under pressure to approximate the
welfare offerings from the East, while expanding individual consumption
based on cheap credit and installment payments made possible by their
more advanced economies. From the mid 1940’s to the mid 1970’s the West
competed with the Soviet bloc with two goals in mind: To retain workers
loyalties in the West while isolating the militant sectors of the trade
unions and to entice the workers of the East with promises of comparable
welfare programs and greater individual consumption.
Despite the advances in social welfare programs, East
and West, there were major worker protests in East Europe : These
focused on national independence, authoritarian paternalistic tutelage
of trade unions and insufficient access to private consumer goods. In
the West, there were major worker-student upheavals in France and Italy
demanding an end of capitalist dominance in the workplace and social
life. Popular opposition to imperialist wars ( Indo-China , Algeria ,
etc.), the authoritarian features of the capitalist state (racism) and
the concentration of wealth was widespread.
In other words, the new struggles in the East and
West were premised on the consolidation of the welfare state and the
expansion of popular political and social power over the state and
productive process.
The continuing competition between collectivist and
capitalist welfare systems ensured that there would be no roll-back of
the reforms thus far achieved. However, the defeats of the popular
rebellions of the sixties and seventies ensured that no further advances
in social welfare would take place. More importantly a social
‘deadlock’ developed between the ruling classes and the workers in both
blocs leading to stagnation of the economies, bureaucratization of the
trade unions and demands by the capitalist classes for a dynamic, new
leadership, capable of challenging the collectivist bloc and
systematically dismantling the welfare state.
The Process of Reversal: From Reagan-Thatcher to Gorbachev
The great illusion, which gripped the masses of the
collectivist-welfare bloc, was the notion that the Western promise of
mass consumerism could be combined with the advanced welfare programs
that they had long taken for granted. The political signals from the
West however were moving in the opposite direction. With the ascendancy
of President Ronald Reagan in the US and Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher in Great Britain, the capitalists regained full control over
the social agenda, dealing mortal blows to what remained of trade union
militancy and launching a full scale arms race with the Soviet Union in
order to bankrupt its economy. In addition, ‘welfarism’ in the East was
thoroughly undermined by an emerging class of upwardly mobile, educated
elites who teamed up with kleptocrats, neo-liberals, budding gangsters
and anyone else who professed ‘Western values’. They received political
and material support from Western foundations, Western intelligence
agencies, the Vatican (especially in Poland ), European Social
Democratic parties and the US AFL-CIO while, on the fringes, an
ideological veneer was provided by the self-described ‘anti-Stalinist’
leftists in the West.
The entire Soviet bloc welfare program had been built
from the top-down and, as a result, did not have a class-conscious,
politicized, independent and militant class organization to defend it
from the full-scale assault launched by the
gangster-kleptocratic-clerical-neo-liberal-‘anti-Stalinist’ bloc.
Likewise in the West, the entire social welfare program was tied to
European Social Democratic parties, the US Democratic Party and a trade
union hierarchy lacking both class consciousness and any interest in
class struggle. Their main concern, as union bureaucrats was reduced to
collecting members’ dues, maintaining internal organizational power over
their fiefdoms and their own personal enrichment.
The collapse of the Soviet bloc was precipitated by
the Gorbachev regime’s unprecedented handover of the allied states of
the Warsaw Pact to the NATO powers .The local communist officials were
quickly recycled as neo-liberal proxies and pro-western surrogates. They
quickly proceeded to launch a full-scale assault on public ownership of
property and dismantling the basic protective labor legislation and job
security, which had been an inherent part of collectivist
management-labor relations.
With a few noteworthy exceptions, the entire formal
framework of collectivist-welfarism was crushed. Soon after came mass
disillusion among the Eastern bloc workers as their ‘anti-Stalinist’
western-oriented trade unions presented them with massive lay-offs. The
vast majority of the militant Gdansk shipyard workers, affiliated to
Poland’s ‘Solidarity’ Movement were fired and reduced to chasing odd
jobs, while their wildly feted ‘leaders’, long-time recipients of
material support from Western intelligence agencies and trade unions,
moved on to become prosperous politicians, editors and businesspeople.
The Western trade unions and the ‘anti-Stalinist’
Left (Social Democrats , Trotskyists and every sect and intellectual
current in between), did yeoman service in not only ending the
collectivist system (under the slogan: ‘Anything is better than
Stalinism’) but of ending the welfare state for scores of millions of
workers, pensioners and their families.
Once the collectivist-welfare state was destroyed,
the Western capitalist class no longer needed to compete in matching
social welfare concessions. The Great Rollback moved into full gear.
For the next two decades, Western regimes, Liberal,
Conservative and Social Democratic, each in their turn, sliced off
welfare legislation: Pensions were cut and retirement age was extended
as they instituted the doctrine of ‘work ‘til you drop’. Job security
disappeared, work place protections were eliminated, severance pay was
cut and the firing of workers was simplified, while capital mobility
flourished.
Neo-liberal globalization exploited the vast
reservoirs of qualified low-paid labor from the former collectivist
countries. The ‘anti-Stalinist’ workers inherited the worst of all
worlds: They lost the social welfare net of the East and failed to
secure the individual consumption levels and prosperity of the West.
German capital exploited cheaper Polish and Czech labor, while Czech
politicos privatized highly sophisticated state industries and social
services, increasing the costs and restricting access to what services
remained.
In the name of ‘competitiveness’ Western capital
de-industrialized and relocated vast industries successfully with
virtual no resistance from the bureaucratized ‘anti-Stalinist’ trade
unions. No longer competing with the collectivists over who has the
better welfare system, Western capitalists now competed among themselves
over who had the lowest labor costs and social expenditures, the most
lax environmental and workplace protection and the easiest and cheapest
laws for firing employees and hiring contingent workers.
The entire army of impotent ‘anti-Stalinist’
leftists, comfortably established in the universities, brayed till they
were hoarse against the ‘neo-liberal offensive’ and the ‘need for an
anti-capitalist strategy’, without the tiniest reflection over how they
had contributed to undermining the very welfare state that had educated,
fed and employed the workers.
Labor Militancy: North and South
Welfare programs in Western Europe and North America
were especially hit by the loss of a competing social system in the
East, by the influx and impact of cheap labor from the East and because
their own trade unions had become adjuncts of the neo-liberal Socialist,
Labor and Democratic Parties.
In contrast, in the South, in particular in Latin
America and, to a lesser degree, in Asia , anti-welfare neo-liberalism
lasted only for a decade. In Latin America neo-liberalism soon came
under intensive pressure, as a new wave of class militancy erupted and
regained some of the lost ground. By the end of the first decade of the
new century – labor in Latin America was increasing its share of
national income, social expenditures were increasing and the welfare
state was in the process of re-gaining momentum in direct contrast to
what was occurring in Western Europe and North America .
Social revolts and powerful popular movements led to
left and center-left regimes and policies in Latin America . A powerful
series of national struggles overthrew neo-liberal regimes. A growing
wave of worker and peasant protests in China led to 10% to 30% wage
increases in the industrial belts and moves to restore the health and
public educational system. Facing a new grassroots, worker-based
socio-cultural revolt, the Chinese state and business elite hastily
promoted social welfare legislation at a time when Southern European
nations like Greece , Spain , Portugal and Italy were in the process of
firing workers and slashing salaries, reducing minimum wages, increasing
retirement age and cutting social expenditures.
The capitalist regimes of the West no longer faced
competition from the rival welfare systems of the Eastern bloc since all
have embraced the ethos of ‘the less the better’: Lower social
expenditures meant bigger subsidies for business, greater budgets to
launch imperial wars and to establish the massive ‘homeland security’
police state apparatus. Lower taxes on capital led to greater profits.
Western Left and Liberal intellectuals played a vital
role in obfuscating the important positive role which Soviet welfarism
had in pressuring the capitalist regimes of the West to follow their
lead. Instead, during the decades following the death of Stalin and as
Soviet society evolved toward a hybrid system of authoritarian
welfarism, these intellectuals continued to refer to these regimes as
‘Stalinist’, obscuring the principle source of legitimacy among their
citizens – their advanced welfare system. The same intellectuals would
claim that the ‘Stalinist system’ was an obstacle to socialism and
turned the workers against its positive aspects as a welfare state, by
their exclusive focus on the past ‘Gulag’. They argued that the ‘demise
of Stalinism’ would provide a great opening for ‘democratic
revolutionary socialism’. In reality, the fall of collectivist-welfarism
led to the catastrophic destruction of the welfare state in both the
East and West and the ascendancy of the most virulent forms of primitive
neo-liberal capitalism. This, in turn, led to the further shrinking of
the trade union movement and spurred the ‘right-turn’ of the
Social-Democratic and Labor Parties via the ‘New Labor’ and ‘Third Way ”
ideologies.
The ‘anti-Stalinist’ Left intellectuals have never
engaged in any serious reflection regarding their own role in bringing
down the collective welfare state nor have they assumed any
responsibility for the devastating socio-economic consequences in both
the East and West. Furthermore the same intellectuals have had no
reservations in this ‘post-Soviet era’ in supporting (‘critically’ of
course) the British Labor Party, the French Socialist Party, the
Clinton-Obama Democratic Party and other ‘lesser evils’ which practice
neo-liberalism. They supported the utter destruction of Yugoslavia and
US-led colonial wars in the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia .
Not a few ‘anti-Stalinist’ intellectuals in England and France will have
clinked champagne glasses with the generals, bankers and oil elites
over NATO’s bloody invasion and devastation of Libya – Africa’s only
welfare state.
The ‘anti-Stalinist’ left intellectuals, now
well-ensconced in privileged university positions in London , Paris ,
New York and Los Angeles have not been personally affected by the
roll-back of the Western welfare programs. They adamantly refuse to
recognize the constructive role that the competing Soviet welfare
programs played in forcing the West to ‘keep up’ in a kind of ‘social
welfare race’ by providing benefits for its working class. Instead, they
argue (in their academic forums) that greater ‘workers militancy’
(hardly possible with a bureaucratized and shrinking trade union
membership) and bigger and more frequent ‘socialist scholars’ forums’
(where they can present their own radical analyses... to each other)
will eventually restore the welfare system. In fact, historic levels of
regression, insofar as welfare legislation is concerned, continue
unabated. There is an inverse (and perverse) relation between the
academic prominence of the ‘anti-Stalinist’ Left and the demise of
welfare state policies. And still the ‘anti-Stalinist’ intellectuals
wonder about the shift to far-right demagogic populism among the
hard-pressed working class!
If we examine and compare the relative influence of
the ‘anti-Stalinist’ intellectuals in the making of the welfare state to
the impact of the competing collectivist welfare system of the Eastern
bloc, the evidence is overwhelmingly clear: Western welfare systems were
far more influenced by their systemic competitors than by the pious
critiques of the marginal ‘anti-Stalinist’ academics. ‘Anti-Stalinist’
metaphysics have blinded a whole generation of intellectuals to the
complex interplay and advantages of a competitive international system
where rivals bid up welfare measures to legitimate their own rule and
undermine their adversaries. The reality of world power politics led the
‘anti-Stalinist’ Left to become a pawn in the struggle of Western
capitalists to contain welfare costs and establish the launch pad for a
neo-liberal counter-revolution. The deep structures of capitalism were
the primary beneficiaries of anti-Stalinism.
The demise of the legal order of the collectivist
states has led to the most egregious forms of predator-gangster
capitalism in the former USSR and Warsaw Pact nations. Contrary to the
delusions of the ‘anti-Stalinist’ Left, no ‘post-Stalinist’ socialist
democracy has emerged anywhere. The key operatives in overthrowing the
collectivist-welfare state and benefiting from the power vacuum have
been the billionaire oligarchs, who pillaged Russia and the East, the
multi-billion dollar drug and white slave cartel kingpins, who turned
hundreds of thousands of jobless factory workers and their children in
the Ukraine, Moldova, Poland, Hungary, Kosova, Romania and elsewhere
into alcoholics, prostitutes and drug addicts.
Demographically, the biggest losers from the
overthrow of the collectivist-welfare system have been woman workers:
They lost their jobs, their maternity leave, child care and legal
protections. They suffered from an epidemic of domestic violence under
the fists of their unemployed and drunken spouses. The rates of maternal
and infant deaths soared from a faltering public health system. The
working class women of the East suffered an unprecedented loss of
material status and legal rights. This has led to the greatest
demographic decline in post-war history – plummeting birth rates,
soaring death rates and generalized hopelessness. In the West, the
feminist ‘anti-Stalinists’ have ignored their own complicity in the
enslavement and degradation of their ‘sisters’ in the East. (They were
too busy feting the likes of Vaclav Havel).
Of course, the ‘anti-Stalinist’ intellectuals will
claim that the outcomes that they had envisioned are a far cry from what
evolved and they will refuse to assume any responsibility for the real
consequences of their actions, complicity and the illusions they
created. Their outrageous claim ‘that anything is better than Stalinism’
rings hollow in the great chasm containing a lost generation of Eastern
bloc workers and families. They need to start counting up the
multi-million strong army of unemployed throughout the East, the
millions of TB and HIV-ravaged victims in Russia and Eastern Europe
(where neither TB nor HIV posed a threat before the ‘break-up’), the
mangled lives of millions of young women trapped in the brothels of Tel
Aviv, Pristina, Bucharest, Hamburg, Barcelona, Amman, Tangiers, and
Brooklyn ...
Conclusion
The single biggest blow to the welfare programs as we
knew them, which were developed during the four decades from 1940’s to
the 1980’s, was the end of the rivalry between the Soviet bloc and
Western Europe and North America . Despite the authoritarian nature of
the Eastern bloc and the imperial character of the West, both sought
legitimacy and political advantage by securing the loyalty of the mass
of workers via tangible social-economic concessions.
Today, in the face of the neo-liberal ‘roll back’,
the major labor struggles revolve around defending the remnants of the
welfare state, the skeletal remains of an earlier period. At present
there are very few prospects of any return to competing international
welfare systems, unless one were to look at a few progressive countries,
like Venezuela, which have instituted a series of health, educational
and labor reforms financed by their nationalized petroleum sector.
One of the paradoxes of the history of welfarism in
Eastern Europe can be found in the fact that the major ongoing labor
struggles (in the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary and other countries,
which had overthrown their collectivist regimes, involve a defense of
the pension, retirement, public health, employment, educational and
other welfare policies – the ‘Stalinist’ leftovers. In other words,
while Western intellectuals still boast of their triumphs over
Stalinism, the real existing workers in the East are engaged in
day-to-day militant struggles to retain and regain the positive welfare
features of those maligned states. Nowhere is this more evident than in
China and Russia , where privatizations have meant a loss of employment
and, in the case of China , the brutal loss of public health benefits.
Today workers’ families with serious illnesses are ruined by the costs
of privatized medical care.
In the current world ‘anti-Stalinism’ is a metaphor
for a failed generation on the margins of mass politics. They have been
overtaken by a virulent neo-liberalism, which borrowed their pejorative
language (Blair and Bush also were ‘anti-Stalinists’) in the course of
demolishing the welfare state. Today the mass impetus for the
reconstruction of a welfare state is found in those countries, which
have lost or are in the process of losing their entire social safety net
- like Greece , Portugal , Spain and Italy- and in those Latin American
countries, where popular upheavals, based on class struggles linked to
national liberation movements, are on the rise.
The new mass struggles for welfarism make few direct
references to the earlier collectivist experiences and even less to the
empty discourse of the ‘anti-Stalinist’ Left. The latter are stuck in a
stale and irrelevant time warp. What is abundantly clear, however, is
that the welfare, labor and social programs, which were gained and lost,
in the aftermath of the demise of the Soviet bloc, have returned as
strategic objectives motivating present and future workers struggles.
What needs to be further explored is the relation
between the rise of the vast police state apparatuses in the West and
the decline and dismantling of their respective welfare states: The
growth of ‘Homeland Security’ and the ‘War on Terror’ parallels the
decline of Social Security, public health programs and the great drop in
living standards for hundreds of millions.