EUROPEAN SOCIALISM

Replying to Comment and Criticism from Britain, Germany, Italy
and America.
IT IS necessary in the development of new ideas to hold firmly the essentials.
We must not lose them in the discussion of detail, vital as detail is to a policy
whose whole fibre is practical. But we are in some danger in this debate of
not" seeing the wood for the trees "; as the English and German proverb
puts it. We are coming to the point when we must decide whether we are for or
against the main principles. I have replied to some interesting questions which
dealt in detail, because it was necessary to show that such questions could
be answered. So far no point of detail has been put which presented any considerable
difficulty ; in fact, most of these minor problems could be met in several ways.
At a later stage those of us who are united on the principles of this matter
will have to spend many hours together on questions of ever closer detail. But
at this point it seems to me necessary to recapitulate the main principles and
to ask those interested to make up their minds on certain preliminary questions.
I gave recently a broad definition of European Socialism as follows :
"European Socialism is the development by a fully united Europe of all
the resources in our own continent, for the benefit of all the peoples of Europe,
with every energy and incentive that the active leadership of European government
can give to private enterprise, workers' ownership or any other method of progress
which science and a dynamic system of government find most effective for the
enrichment of all our people and the lifting of European civilisation to ever
higher forms of life."
It is an error to regard European Socialism simply as a synthesis between private
enterprise and syndicalism. That is a component of a far larger whole. I was
myself mostly responsible for this overemphasis of one aspect because I was
so attracted by the idea of the synthesis between the previous contradictions
of private enterprise and syndicalism when it first occurred to me. In discussion
I tended to put it out of perspective with the whole, but this has since been
corrected in my own writing. There is, of course, nothing new in either private
enterprise or syndicalism. What was new was the synthesis of the two ideas by
employing them both in their appropriate chronological order and devising a
natural transition from one to the other. Another new factor was, also, possibly,
the introduction of the hard and practical motive of profit to the starry-eyed
anarchy of earlier syndicalist thinking. This recognised the basic fact that
the pure ideal of service is only for a dedicated elite, and that a more personal
motive is necessary to the mass ; a fact which both purifies socialism and reduces
it to the practical. But it was the synthesis of the full urge of individual
initiative with the collective urge of syndicalism which was the real contribution
of our thinking. And I became for the time being so interested by this idea
that I tended to over-emphasize it in relation to the rest. That policy stands,
but it is now in perspective with the whole.
In fact, the idea of European Socialism has developed continually since I first
used the phrase in a speech on May Day 1950 todescribe the ideas we had developed
to meet the facts of the post-war world. That is inevitable, and in full accord
with the intention. European Socialism is a dynamic and not a static creed,
an organic and continuing development, not a petrified revelation on a tablet
of stone. The influence of many minds, the stress of controversy, and above
all fresh facts will continually contribute to its full development. The principles
of European Socialism are a constant advance, not a frigid is, nor, worse still,
like the policies of the old parties in the present world, a frozen was. We
have direction which is very definite, but not rigidity ; our principles are
flowing, not frigid. So we seek accord with nature which is ever evolving and
developing to higher forms, and reject the artificial systems by which small
men seek to imprison both science and the forward urge of humanity within their
narrow and transient preconceptions. Do not reproach us for constantly developing
our ideas ; it is our principle and not our weakness, our pride and not our
shame. We strive always to march forward ; we should betray only if we turned
back or halted on the march.
Summary
of European Socialism
May I now recapitulate very briefly the main principles of this thinking as
they stand after a decade of development since the war.
1. Europe
a Nation. I first used this phrase after the war to describe the complete integration
of the European peoples which I believe to be essential to the survival and
advance of European civilisation. No lesser degree of union than that of an
integral nation can give the will and power to act on the great scale, and with
the decision, which are now necessary. No lesser space than all Europe, and
the overseas possessions of Europe in a common pool, can give the roomwithin
which to act effectively. The necessity for the close union of the European
peoples as a third power has been emphasized by the appearance of the rival
giants, America and Russia.
2. Government
with the Power to Act. The revolution which science has brought can only be
faced by government armed with power to act by the free vote of the people.
This does not mean dictatorship or any form of totalitarian state, as I have
made clear in my essay Government of Tomorrow and on previous occasions. But
it does mean a clearly defined division of functions between executive, judiciary
and legislature, and that, within the limits so prescribed, the executive shall
have a free hand to carry out the mandate conferred by the people's vote. Opposition
parties will have every right to criticise, and to enter elections at regular
intervals, in an attempt to change the government, but they will not be able
by obstruction to impede the work of an elected government and thus to thwart
the people's will.
3. The deliberate
equation of production and consumption within the viable area of Europe-Africa.
We have long believed that the individual nations of Europe would founder in
the chaos of world competition when normal conditions returned. Each strives
to export more than it imports in order to pay by competition on world markets
for the raw materials and supplies which none possess in sufficient quantity
within their own borders. We propose therefore that the economy of Europe-Africa
shall be insulated from world chaos ; it will form an area large enough to supply
both its own raw materials and its own markets. The aim of government and of
a new trade unionism will be deliberately to equate production and consumption
by raising the standard of life equably throughcomparable industries, as science
increases the power to produce. The European peoples will thus acquire the power
to consume what they produce. This is impossible while they have to face on
world markets the competition of labour with a far lower standard of life which
is equipped by international finance with modern, simplified machinery. The
isolated nations of Europe will also, in the end, not have the strength to meet
the dumped surpluses of great industrial countries like America with large home
markets, or the below-cost sales of large slave industrial systems like Russia,
directly the full force of the coming competition is felt. Developments such
as automation will also oblige the active leadership of government in a constructive
wage-price policy to prevent production outstripping demand and causing an economic
crash. The part of government will be to lead to the utmost, but to control
to the minimum, the necessary industrial organisation.
4. The method of industrial organisation will be a dynamic pragmatism. We shall experiment, find out what works, change a method quickly if it does not work, and follow success with every energy. We will be bound by no preconceptions or economic shibboleths of the old world. Science has made them all obsolete. We believe the development of new enterprise is best done by an unfettered private enterprise which should not only be free but by every means encouraged. When private enterprise is exhausted and the concern becomes too big for any individual management, we prefer workers' ownership to state ownership or nationalisation. What is begun by a creative individual should finally be continued by a collective individualism of workers who own the enterprise to which they have given their lives, and not by a state bureaucracy without interest or contact with workers or industry.
5. All reward
should be according to effort and the acceptance of responsibility. The present
tendency to reduce all reward to the dead level is fatal. Reward for skill,
effort and responsibility in industry should not be reduced but increased. We
clash here fundamentally with all egalitarian doctrine. But it must be reward
for work, skill and service and for that alone. In all European countries the
extra reward for skill, effort and the acceptance of responsibility is tending
to disappear. It must be restored and emphasized. The future must rest on those
who can, and those who do.
6. The burden
of taxation should be shifted from income to spending. A man should be taxed
not on what he earns but on what he spends, not on what he brings in but on
what he pays out. Thus saving, thrift, the power of the individual to accumulate
the fruits of his labour, and, himself, thereby to develop new enterprises would
not only be preserved but be increased, and by every means encouraged. But the
luxury spender and the spendthrift, the fool with money to burn, should carry
the burden which today cripples the hardworking. We propose that this should
be done by a graduated expenditure tax on all high spending groups, coupled
with indirect taxation of everything except necessities.* All direct taxation
of earning would be eliminated. All basic necessities of life to the mass of
the people would also be freed from tax. The definition of necessities would
vary naturally with national prosperity. For instance the standard of life would
be much higher within the developed union of Europe-Africa than in an economically
beleaguered island. There are various effective administrative plans for implementing
the principle : tax spending, free earning. We propose a combination of expenditure
tax and indirect taxation which would be graduated sharply on luxury articles.
I am well aware that at this point there may be complaint I have introduced
a number of principles which are fresh to this discussion before I have answered
many outstanding questions. It is not with the object of avoiding questions,
which can be answered without much difficulty, but of putting the matter in
perspective with our whole thesis. The above six points are simple to the verge
of crudity, but they give a brief summary of principles evolved in our thinking
since the war. If we are to discuss effectively particular aspects of European
Socialism, we have to regard them in relation to the whole.
Workers' ownership combined with private enterprise by the creative individual
Recently debate has concentrated almost entirely on point 4, the question of
workers' ownership. It was in pursuing this topic that we tended to lose perspective.
Personally I believe that workers' ownership of completely developed industries
is an immense possibility which should be given the fairest chance in a series
of well thought out experiments. I believe that some will succeed ; but, if
they did not, it would be no disaster ; that is the advantage of the pragmatic
method. It is probable, in practice, that some will succeed and others will
not. By much trial and some error we shall find the right way to go about it
; if we plan seriously in advance, we shall minimise loss where things go wrong
and rapidly exploit success where things go right. For instance, the debenture
provision to which some questions have been addressed not only affords just
compensation but secures naturally, easily and rapidly a new direction if things
go wrong.
It appears
clear from the proposals as they stand that the debenture interest represents
three parties. The first debenture represents the compensation paid to the creator
of the enterprise and to retiring workers according to the number of years they
have put into the business, and, I would add, the degree of responsibility they
exercised. It seems fair that the contribution of the original owner and of
his team of workers should fall into the same category. Whether it is in the
form of a marketable annuity which is the first charge on the business, or whether
it ranks as a first debenture, makes no great difference in practice. The second
debenture represents money raised for the development of the business by the
workers in a syndicalised industry, after they have taken it over. If the business
is sound, and the compensation paid to the original owner is not excessive,
this should present no insuperable difficulty in normal market conditions. It
would be attractive to the investor as it would have a speculative in addition
to a security interest, as we shall see.
In the event of the workers in a particular industry proving incapable of running
it, these debenture interests would foreclose in the ordinary way. By agreement
among them in proportion to their interest the industry would be reconstructed
under private management. Those who believe, therefore, that workers are always
incapable of running their industries under any condition, should hurry to buy
either the first debenture from the original owner and retired workers, or the
second debenture when offered to the market. I believe a wise man would not
be found among the speculators as he would have no such disbelief in the workers,
who would be on their mettle to transform these speculative hopes into a normal
loan security based on a sound business. But in some cases, no doubt, there
would be failure, and the industries would then revert to private management
rapidly and painlessly when it could not pay its way. No more dislocation would
occur than takes place daily in capitalist industry when once prosperous concerns
which have fallen into difficulties are re-constructed under more competent
management.
For my part, I believe many of the worker owned industries would succeed, and
only time can prove who is right. But it seems to me a great act of justice
to, and of faith in, the workers to make it possible for them to conduct their
own industry, rather than to make it dully inevitable that, in the stage of
full development beyond any possibility of individual control, they should fall
to the machine management of state or capitalist bureaucracy.
We need first a revolution of the spirit
Many cogent arguments have been advanced against the whole conception, which
really can be reduced to the simple proposition that you cannot run a factory
by an anarchic, obstructive, chattering mob. After some recent experience of
the degeneracy of great states this may very often be true in present conditions.
It is, indeed, difficult to imagine anything working with the spirit abroad
in some quarters. But these critics overlook one decisive factor : the revolution
we intend to make, and to whose struggle our lives are dedicated. It is not
a law of nature that when workers own a concern it becomes a rabble-driven nonsense,
it is only a rule of a society in decay. For instance the workers own our Movement.
They made it, and they own it. More than 90 per cent of our members have always
been workers in the narrowest definition of that term. They have always been
volunteers who can leave at any moment, but, in fact, remain in conditions of
great sacrifice and hardship, work for nothing and pay to be members. No one
by any stretch of the imagination could call our Movement, or any similar band
of workers, a rabble. In fact our movement of workers has been violently denounced
for being a highly disciplined army, and a special Act of Parliament was passed
to deprive it of that character. The law was obeyed and we are not so organised,
but we certainly have the spirit of an army and not of a mob.
The point of all this is that it has been proved again and again in movements
with which many of my readers will be familiar that the workers are perfectly
capable of acting in union and discipline for great ends which they clearly
understand ; in fact, they have often proved themselves much more capable of
so acting together than some of the middle class people who regard them as anarchic
mobs. Our movement, and all similar movements if they are to be effective, depend
on the organised workers acting in a voluntary union and co-operation. Without
them such movements could not exist. But that knowledge does not turn them into
a chattering mob, a discordant rabble. On the contrary, in such movements the
workers move in calm and self-disciplined solidarity under leadership they have
selected and trust, to objectives they have studied and know. It is true that
the details of policy are not always known to them all, and that only the deep
principles are universally known and accepted. Decision in many matters needing
rapid action is, also, left to leadership, because it becomes trusted over a
period of time as judgment appears correct, and character is proved under hard
test. But trust comes, too, from the capacity for constant consultation with
colleagues and supporters before decisions are taken. This enables leadership
to know what the workers are feeling and think ing and, therefore, continually
to interpret their best ideals and, on occasion, to lift their eyes to yet higher
aims. I write this to illustrate that leadership which is constantly and completely
dependant on the support of the workers can be very remote from a waste of time
in constant debate, or from continual danger of upset owing to the anarchic
impulses of mobs. But such leadership must not be, and cannot be, remote from
the workers. The day of the remote boss has gone ; certainly in real politics
and almost certainly in industry. Even in war it is gone, and some successful
generals were recently much concerned to explain and to popularise their measures
(some almost to the point of playing the monkey on the democratic barrel organ).
It may be that in the heyday of American capitalism the managerial class, or
a few great promoters, are exercising a remote dictatorship without check of
any kind, or any necessity to explain beyond the natural persuasion of high
wages. This goes as long as the system goes, but when things go less well, or
even when a dynamic generation petrifies into a bureaucracy - as all remote
controls do in the end -American industry will either develop leadership or
revolution. At any rate in this seething European continent of individuals,
ideas and ideals, men have to be persuaded and not just paid. And to an almost
fantastic degree the question of status rises above the question of mere reward
among the elite of the workers. So, above all this turmoil can rise the majestic
and inspiring ideal of the worker as owner. It can become an ambition that moves
much, and is worth a trial that has safeguards from disaster. It may be argued
that the workers to whom I refer are a self-proved elite, moved by an idea and
not by the present materialism. But the answer is surely that before we can
succeed, this elite and their ideas will have prevailed; that is precisely why
the revolution in ideas is the premise of all achievement. They will, of course
be aided in this struggle by the manifest breakdown of the present system which
will open the way to their ideas. When the mass of the workers have learnt in
bitter experience that an anarchy of chatter means industrial death, they will
be more disposed to accept both the leadership and the ideals of those who have
devised the means of action and recovery. In short a revolution in thinking
is a necessary prelude to a revolution in action. That is the present task of
our movement, everywhere.
The combination of an attack which can roll up the left flank of labour by its
syndicalism, with an attack which can roll up the right flank of conservatism
by its support of the creative individual and the freeing of his enterprise
from repression and taxation, is certainly a revolution in thinking. We can
by this new combination capture the main position of the present system in classic
fashion, as its centre collapses through an internal disintegration which is
already well advanced. It is natural that those who come from the right, and
are still thinking in the outmoded terminology of old world politics, should
at first be alarmed by the thought of syndicalism, however well guarded it may
be from anarchy both by practical safeguards and by the far more powerful factor
of a revolution in feeling as well as in thinking, without which our system
cannot begin to function ; in fact, without which we shall not win power. It
is equally natural that men from the left who have faced employers in many a
bitter clash should now sometimes view with suspicion a system of thinking which
would free from all burden of direct taxation even men with great resources,
provided they use their powerful means in creative enterprises to serve rather
than injure the state and its peoples ; (curiously enough this inhibition does
not arise so often among the workers). But, when the central objective becomes
clearer, the sentiments of the different wings become fused as they converge
upon it, and they begin to realise that they are meeting in order to enter a
new civilisation.
Government - Taxation - Europe a Nation
Once again we must emphasize that our thinking must be regarded as a whole.
So far we have not had much criticism of points 5 and 6 above, though the thinking
in point 5 was published in my writing after the war some time before my syndicalist
thinking. It is beginning now to win very wide acceptance in theory, but no
one outside our ranks dreams of implementing it in practice. The reason is that
it cannot be implemented without the strong government suggested in point 2
which, at present, is regarded as almost improper to discuss ; that phase will
pass when the necessity emerges strongly in a situation presenting the clear
alternative : act or crash.
The most recent development of our thinking which for us dates back a little
more than two years, is, also, not much discussed in our debates. Point 6 contains
the suggestion for shifting taxation from income to expenditure. This is not
original to our thinking ; in principle, it has been debated by English economists
for generations and was reduced to a practical administrative system by the
contribution of American economists during the war. It was at this point that
America entered with a constructive thought which could be of great benefit
to Europe. In America apparently it provoked a storm of opposition from various
interests who find the present system of taxation more convenient. Our only
contribution in the matter has been to relate this traditional thinking and
its recent development in transatlantic practice to our basic position of sustaining
the creative individual. It is inherent to our thinking that he must be free
of the burden of mob impulse and mob jealousy, that he may perform his destined
service for the well being of the present and the elevation of the future.
The creative spirit, whether he be scientist, technician, individual pioneer
or the deviser of new forms of service to the people which enrich or illumine
daily life, is the key of our system because he is the key to higher forms of
life. All devices that free and encourage him in his task must be welcome additions
to our thought and method. Their discovery and development become imperative
at a moment when this main hope of the future seeks release from the burden
of taxation, restriction, jealousy and prejudice. If our views on this matter
be regarded as impracticable, let them be criticised, and we will either defend
them or improve them.
The policy of Europe a Nation in point 1 has now long been debated in strenuous
controversy. We are, at any rate, emerging from the period when everyone paid
lip service to the ideal of the united Europe while most sabotaged it in practice.
The nominal adherents who came from the old world parties have fallen away in
a variety of directions, or so reduced the concept of union that it becomes
meaningless. In fact, this is an occasion on which an all or nothing policy
poses a true dilemma. This union of Europe will not work in any form less complete
than an integral nation. Scores of conflicting local interests will generate
friction and ill-will enough to destroy union a score of times if the conflicting
local interests still exist ; if separate nations still exist within Europe.
Post-war experience has proved this again and again. What was regarded as our
extreme emerges as the plain sense of the matter. It is Europe a Nation or nothing.
Then let it be nothing answer the men of the old world, and will so answer until
their old world falls about their ears. Ideas so great and so decisive as the
union of Europe are only fully implemented with the aid of some compulsion from
events. Few men are ready to step into greatness without that persuasion. Those
few are the leaders of mankind. They are followed only when the old tenements
of small minds tumble about their occupants in the earthquake of the system.
This is not the occasion to discuss in detail our belief that a crisis of this
system will arise, and that the only escape is into an insulated economic area
of Europe-Africa, with the possible addition of South America ; we have done
this exhaustively elsewhere. It now remains to be seen over a period of time
whether we are right or wrong in regarding this as necessary as well as desirable.
When we prove to be right, many who agree with our general philosophy of life,
but are repelled by economic ideas which seem to be unnecessary in present conditions,
will be disposed to regard them with a more urgent attention ; "sharp is
the glance of necessity". In this sphere as in others the presentiment
of the workers, who have suffered before, awakens first.
The Relations of State and Industry
But it is necessary here to deal with the basic question of the structure of
state and industry under our system, notably the relation of the state to syndicalised
industries and the degree of planning, government direction or interference,
which will be necessary in the insulated system of Europe-Africa. The great
dilemma of early syndicalist thinking was, of course, precisely this question
of relationship with the state. This arose directly syndicalist thinking developed
sufficiently from the original anarchic urge to think at all in terms of system,
and that dilemma was never really resolved. It is at this point that the original
element in our thinking - synthesis between private enterprise and syndicalism
- can make another very effective contribution ; in fact, it can overcome the
hitherto insuperable dilemma. Originally syndicalism was baffled by the choice
of being entirely independent syndical industries, each with the unfettered
power to hold the community up to ransom, or being subject to such a degree
of state control, bureaucratic interference, that it would all end again in
the old state socialism.
So far as I know, no effective compromise was ever worked out between the all
powerful syndical industry and the all powerful state ; no system of balance
was attained. The corporate system reached some balance in another way, but
it did not admit workers' ownership and was, therefore, an entirely different
principle. In European Socialism the synthesis between private enterprise and
syndicalism achieves this balance without the continual interference of the
state which entails government by bureaucracy. Competition between syndical
industries and private enterprise will be entirely free. It will be impossible
for a syndicalised industry to hold the community up to ransom without being
undercut by a competitive private enterprise. It will, therefore, be unnecessary
for the state to interfere in the normal conditions of industry. We resolve
the dilemma : either the omnipotent syndicate or the omnipotent state. Nature
can take its course in the freedom of this synthesis and can evolve its own
industrial efficiency. Conditions are, of course, different in industries which
are natural monopolies ; for example the railways. In theory it is possible
to check exploitation by the development of other forms of transport. But, in
practice, this can be an expensive pedantry. In such case the state must surely
fix both the price charged and the wage paid in the industry, in practice it
does so today in most such cases. But over the whole field of industry it should
not normally be necessary for the state to interfere so intimately when syndicalised
industries and private enterprise exist side by side.
What then is the degree of government planning or direction, interference or
leadership as divergent views would phrase it, which will be necessary ? As
I stated in a recent essay on automation a far higher degree of government leadership
in industry is likely to be necessary than we contemplated soon after the war.
We were repelled, as were most people, by the spectacle of bureaucracy in action,
and strove to the utmost in our system to avoid bureaucratic control. It ends
invariably in disaster, and can easily also become a tyranny as in Soviet Russia.
The idea we then evolved was that the state should define the broad boundaries
within which industry might operate, and should, itself, only intervene in the
event of breakdown ; something like the administration of the Charlemagne state
in modern industrial terms, if I may take a remote illustration which is yet
apt. Never interfere except when it is necessary, but retain the power to do
so with a strong hand when occasion arises. It was a system which was free -
in a sense almost liberal - but with the latent power of decisive action which
modern necessity and our creed of life alike impose. Even our pre-war corporate
ideas seemed to us at that time a good deal too bureaucratic, while anything
like state socialism could all too easily end in the dull and brutal hordes
of Soviet officialdom throttling all creative life as well as all personal freedom.
Such in very brief and crude summary was the direction in which our thought
was then moving. But science has lately been moving a great deal faster than
any political thinking of the old world, and it is vital that our creed, whose
first principle is a recognition of facts, and whose second principle is rapid
action to meet them, should not also lag behind the onrush of this deciding
factor. The creed of dynamism must come to its own in the epoch of dynamic change.
That is the moment of supreme opportunity for our spirit, not the moment of
its petrifaction.
State action by leadership, without bureaucratic control
The question arose how the problems of automation and other questions of scientific
development can be resolved except by continual state action ? Did this then
mean the control of a universal bureaucracy ? That would bring everything to
a standstill just when everything must move faster in order to keep pace with
events. Such was the beginning of my thinking in terms of wage-price mechanism.
The state should direct not by control but by leadership, not by bureaucracy
but by wage-price mechanism. It is possible to guide the industrial state in
the necessary degree, and in the desired direction, by fixing wages in comparable
fields of industry, and, when necessary because competition does not exist,
by fixing prices. Over the whole great field of competitive industry where both
private enterprise and syndicalised industry will exist side by side it will
only be necessary to fix wages ; when no monopoly or combine exists prices will
look after themselves, if a reasonably sound monetary policy is pursued. But
in monopoly conditions prices as well as wages will have to be fixed by the
state or exploitation can occur, and, conversely, when a great increase of productive
power is evoked by such factors as automation in productive industry, wages,
and, consequently, in some degree prices, must be fixed in the basic services,
which are virtually monopolies, in order to provide the enlarged market which
productive industry cannot secure in sufficient degree by raising its own wages.
I will not here repeat my whole argument in the study of automation, but the
method of wages being raised within an insulated economy in a similar degree
over comparable fields of industry is, in my contention, the only possible way
of producing a market to absorb a sudden advance in productive capacity.
Present wages in the basic services like railways are held down by the fear
that any increase in costs will make productive industry uncompetitive in foreign
markets. In an insulated Europe-African economy, which is free from world chaos,
such problems as automation will be resolved by a measured increase of purchasing
power not only in the wages and salaries of productive industry but, also, in
the basic services such as railways, agriculture, housing, banking, insurance,
civil service, etc. The leadership of the state will be exercised by the planned
and regulated raising of wages over the whole field of industry as science increases
the power to produce.
It is thus, also, that the problem of redundant industry can be solved ; or
the solution can be assisted. If, for instance, a particular industry is tending
to over-produce, the problem will to some extent settle itself if a uniform
wage has to be paid throughout the industry ; and, of course, to some extent
this has happened through trade union action. When the market is limited, less
effective firms will tend to go out in face of a stronger price or quality competition
within the industry. In our old phrase, any man may undercut his neighbour by
being more efficient but not by paying lower wages.
It is at
least arguable that the state should plan further in advance, and should consciously
guide the development of industry by deliberately making wages more attractive
in the area to which it desires to draw labour ; thus introducing a flexibility
often lacking to present capitalism, and forestalling the problems of obsolescence
and redundancy. At this point we break new territory in examining the possibilities
of a wage-price mechanism, and certainly enter highly debatable ground. These
are problems which will sooner or later have to be faced as the revolutionary
development of science imposes them on statesmanship. We must devise methods
in every sphere for moving far quicker than any system can move today, or any
present principle can suggest. What I want here to propose is one simple principle
; within an insulated economy the wage-price mechanism can give government the
power of leadership and action without bureaucratic control. If that contention
be valid we can be at the beginning of a certain revolution in economic thinking.
I more than welcome criticism, and contribution to thinking which is so far
only in the early stages. In principle we must have a system which leads free
men by a method of rapid action to meet the revolution of science ; I believe
the wage-price mechanism can supply that method. When capitalism abdicates to
chaos throughout the west, such leadership alone can meet and defeat the cumbersome
machine of the soviet system, which is enforced by the brutal tyranny of the
Communist Party.
Our present policy in relation to the past
It remains a question whether those who think as we do should advance in union,
in what has been called a pan-European movement, or in separate national movements.
As long as the objective is Europe a Nation I do not greatly care whether we
march together, or march separately and arrive together. What matters is that
we should hold the same objective. For my part I am always a protagonist of
union, when it is possible, because union gives strength. But, in cases where
physical union is difficult, it matters not, if there be a union of the spirit.
Our main exponents in Europe now know and understand each other well enough
to make the question of formal union almost irrelevant. That work is now done,
and nothing will shake it. First comes the idea, and the union of the spirit.
All else follows.
I am not particularly interested in debating to what extent our thinking is
original, and to what extent it is derived from previous thinking or is a synthesis
of prior conceptions. If we had to choose between the power of synthesis and
the capacity for original thought, I should be inclined to the view, which Aristotle
at least indicated, that the former quality is the more vital attribute. Yet
none of these considerations really matter at all. What matters is that our
thinking now exists as a conscious and comprehensive European policy, which
is open to the helpful criticism and suggestion of our friends to aid its full
development, and is certainly exposed to the assault of our enemies on the open
battlefield where we are eager to exchange with them blow for blow, and more.
I think on the whole it fulfils the postulate that I suggested at the beginning
of these researches : what is desirable is a synthesis of the best elements
of fascism and of the old democracy to which is added new thinking to meet the
new facts of the new age. In part our thinking is a synthesis of what previously
existed and, in part, it is original thought. That is as it should be in the
development of a creed which is organic and, therefore, is both related to the
past and responsible to the future. No thinking is entirely original in that
it has no relation to what has gone before. Man is the child of man and not
of a camel, and our thinking is either the child of generations of European
thinkers or it is unworthy to exist. It was the most literary of English Prime
Ministers who observed that if any man made an entirely original speech no one
would understand a word that he was saying. Everything that we think and say
is inevitably connected with what has previously been thought and said. When
we can see further than great predecessors it is because we are standing on
their shoulders, as Shaw said of Shakespeare. All men - even men of genius -
are to some extent the prisoners of their time and circumstance. We live in
an age of unprecedented opportunity because science has broken so many bonds,
and has so greatly enlarged the horizons of men. It seems to me therefore, true
to say that we present a new creed to meet new facts. And the emphasis of differences
in this discussion between what we advocate and the pre-war policies of Fascism
appear merely to prove this point.
It is suggested that the leaders of Fascism and National Socialism, so late
as the 1940's had contemplated some form of European movement which would transcend
nationalism. I will go further and recall from my own experience the very favourable
reception they gave to my own advocacy of a united Europe in an article entitled
in English The World Alternative, which was published in Germany by Geo Politik
in 1937 ; so from my own experience I can confirm and pre-date this event. Yet
the sad fact remains, whatever the merits of the dispute or the justice of the
cause, Europe was divided and temporarily destroyed shortly afterwards in a
fratricidal war which had the narrowest of national origins ! Many then had
such feelings, but remained the prisoners of their time. It seems to me unnecessary
and undesirable in practice to debate at length whether, as I think, and can
prove in some detail, we formulate a new creed, or whether fascism with its
"doctrine of immanence", "perpetual reappraisal and re-orientation"
could transform itself sufficiently to become approximately the same thing.
It is sufficient to agree : "it is needless to deny that the fascism of
1919 must be inadequate to express the needs of our time" ; there we can
agree, and further debate would only lose time in splitting hairs. What matters
is whether we agree now, and the debate has shown a considerable communion of
principle can be developed.
If men in an age of new facts are prepared to find new policies to meet them,
they are our natural companions ; provided, of course, that we hold together
that all-important "spiritual kinship". What would have rendered co-operation
difficult would have been a tendency in German or Italian friends simply to
regard all truth as contained in the original revelations of the Fascist and
National Socialist revolutions. In that event we should have left such Italian
and German friends to debate between themselves whether final truth was revealed
to man in the year 1922, or in the year 1933, while, in our dull English way,
we got on with answering the question of what to do now. But, as the discussion
has shown, this view is happily not present to any serious thinkers. I have,
however, sometimes come across it during my European travels and labours. It
is one of the two rival stupidities, as I term them. The first is to say that
nothing good came out of fascism or national socialism. To such a crude error
the crude answer is : then begin by flooding the Pontine Marshes and ploughing
up the Autobahn. The second is to say that final truth was declared before the
war, and that those programmes should never be varied or developed. The second
error is nobler because it is born of loyalty which is one of the highest qualities,
while the first error is born of spite which is one of the lowest. But they
are both errors, and elementary errors. In fact we Europeans are part of an
organic process which has already 3,000 years of great history and is moving
to ever higher forms. It is at one with nature as are all real things, because
nothing can succeed in defiance of nature's laws. Nature works not in a steady
progression, but in great leaps after long lethargies ; and the greatest of
all these forward springs is expressed by modern science. That is why for practical
purposes all things are new after the cataclysm which precipitated this great
advance. For this reason we must think again ; then act most strenuously, and
on a greater scale than ever because we have greater possibilities. But we remain
in the service of the European spirit in a movement to ever higher forms, which
began millenia before us and will continue long after we are gone.
This essay was printed in May 1956 in the German monthly Nation
Europa.