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Socialism in your country?


mike777

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While in grad school I had a friend who ran for governor on the Socialist ticket. He claimed that

1. There had never been a war between two socialist countries

2. No country in the world is truly socialist.

 

 

I pointed out that 2. might explain 1. He regarded this as unpleasantly argumentative.

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Neither pure socialism nor pure capitalism seems to work successfully anywhere. Socialism focuses on an equitable division of the goods and services produced by society, but undervalues the role of incentives in creating sufficient goods and services for distribution. Capitalism focuses on maximizing production, but undervalues the benefits of filling the basic needs of all individuals and of conserving resources for future generations.

 

It seems that most industrialized countries, the US included, blend both socialism and capitalism in ways that reflect the priorities of their most influential groups.

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1. There had never been a war between two socialist countries

f. ex.

 

In 1979, China invaded Vietnam, this war is known as Third Indochina War.

 

 

Robert

Well, I was surprised to read about a "war" between China and Vietnam,

... but I thought also, that Vietnam could be mentioned as going to war

against Cambodia. So I looked it up.

 

Vietnam stopped the Khmer Rouge rule in Cambodia.

The Khmer claimed to be Socialst / Maoist, being backed by China, so

the war between China and Vietnam was part of the war between

Vietnam and the Khmer Rouge (Cambodia).

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

 

PS: On a side note - Vietnam got a lot of bad press in the western world,

because of the invasion into Cambodia, the Khmer partially being pictured

as victims, although Vietnam stopped the mass murder organised by the

Khmer.

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I once met a guy from Algeria who mentioned in some discussion that his country was "socialist". I asked him what that meant. He said in all seriousness that they import their fighter jets from the USSR. During the cold war it makes sense to divide the World into countries that import fighter jets from a Warsaw pact country and those which import them from a NATO country. The former were called "socialist" and the latter "capitalist" :)
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I once met a guy from Algeria who mentioned in some discussion that his country was "socialist". I asked him what that meant. He said in all seriousness that they import their fighter jets from the USSR. During the cold war it makes sense to divide the World into countries that import fighter jets from a Warsaw pact country and those which import them from a NATO country. The former were called "socialist" and the latter "capitalist" :)

Or "debtors" and "payers", you figure out which is which... :D

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Whether a system works or not is dependent on the results it produces and whether humans judge those results to be good or bad. So, this question is effectively, "do you think the results socialism produces are good or bad." Given that people in general have no coherent system of good or bad but some hodge-podge of superficial instinctual feelings about it, it seems to me people should first figure out what is good and bad and only then ask if a certain system produces that result.

 

The problem is that if your starting point for good and bad is rated in terms of human happiness then you wind up with the impossible task of trying to quantify how happy people are when they get stuff from government they didn't earn versus how unhappy people are when stuff they did earn (or their freedoms) is forcibly taken from them. In a world where people get enjoyment from merely have more than others (keeping up with the Jones') or get upset at having less than others even though they have adequate food, clothing and shelter you will never get agreement on some mythical ideal distribution of wealth.

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Whether a system works or not is dependent on the results it produces and whether humans judge those results to be good or bad. So, this question is effectively, "do you think the results socialism produces are good or bad." Given that people in general have no coherent system of good or bad but some hodge-podge of superficial instinctual feelings about it, it seems to me people should first figure out what is good and bad and only then ask if a certain system produces that result.

 

The problem is that if your starting point for good and bad is rated in terms of human happiness then you wind up with the impossible task of trying to quantify how happy people are when they get stuff from government they didn't earn versus how unhappy people are when stuff they did earn (or their freedoms) is forcibly taken from them. In a world where people get enjoyment from merely have more than others (keeping up with the Jones') or get upset at having less than others even though they have adequate food, clothing and shelter you will never get agreement on some mythical ideal distribution of wealth.

True. That's why no one tries to use happiness to measure the relative effectiveness of different economic systems.

 

To quantify the differences among systems (all of them hybrids these days), you need to compare things such as infant mortality, life span, literacy percentage, crime rates, prison populations, and so on.

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Whether a system works or not is dependent on the results it produces and whether humans judge those results to be good or bad.  So, this question is effectively, "do you think the results socialism produces are good or bad."  Given that people in general have no coherent system of good or bad but some hodge-podge of superficial instinctual feelings about it, it seems to me people should first figure out what is good and bad and only then ask if a certain system produces that result.

 

The problem is that if your starting point for good and bad is rated in terms of human happiness then you wind up with the impossible task of trying to quantify how happy people are when they get stuff from government they didn't earn versus how unhappy people are when stuff they did earn (or their freedoms) is forcibly taken from them.  In a world where people get enjoyment from merely have more than others (keeping up with the Jones') or get upset at having less than others even though they have adequate food, clothing and shelter you will never get agreement on some mythical ideal distribution of wealth.

True. That's why no one tries to use happiness to measure the relative effectiveness of different economic systems.

 

To quantify the differences among systems (all of them hybrids these days), you need to compare things such as infant mortality, life span, literacy percentage, crime rates, prison populations, and so on.

Well, I would guess that the GDR would be brilliant,

if it comes to those measuring those points, and

Cuba would also not be too bad, maybe need to

exclude prison population, which are in prison due to

political reasons.

 

Volker Braun (a writer and human rights activist) once

said, that the GDR valued the social human rights higer,

than the polictical human rights.

At least I believe it was Volker Braun.

 

The points you listed are basically social human rights.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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Of course, the capitalism-socialism scale in the real world goes from light grey to dark grey. Pure capitalism and pure socialism are unlikely to work.

 

Having said that, I think that the Nordic countries are very far to the socialist side of the scale. And it works. It isn't perfect, but it works.

 

The USA, on the other hand, is clearly on the capitalist side of the scale. That works too and it isn't perfect either.

 

I have lived in both the USA (5 years) and Sweden (7 years) with a background from the Netherlands. I think that am capable of comparing the two. The result is that both countries chose the economic model that fits the character of the country best. I am sure that the Swedish model wouldn't work in the USA and I am sure that the American model wouldn't work in Sweden.

 

I can even understand some Americans who say that the Swedish model cannot possibly work at all. They cannot comprehend that CEO's are willing to earn a much, no: MUCH lower salary than their American counterparts while they are equally qualified. And all that these Swedish CEO's get back for it is free health care, free libraries, free education (, free etcetera...) that they have to share with all the Swedish people. They would be perfectly able to pay for any private doctor, any book they would ever want to read and a Harvard education for each of their children if they would live and work in the USA. And for some reason, these Swedish CEO's don't do that. They stay in Sweden. The reason is in their Swedish culture.

 

On the other side, some Europeans cannot understand why American employees aren't moving to Sweden. Don't they want good health care? Don't they want unemployment benefits? Don't they want (virtually) free daycare for their children when they are working? Don't they want more vacation days? Of course they do. But still, for some reason, they stay in the USA. The reason is that they are American.

 

Rik

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Having said that, I think that the Nordic countries are very far to the socialist side of the scale. And it works. It isn't perfect, but it works.

It still works, but there is a strong downward trend in Germany for example.

The costs for the health care, unenployment benefits, pensions etc. are exploded, the german goverment started to cut massively all these services at the end of the century, giving always the same reason for it : forced by Globalisation.

 

Robert

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Having said that, I think that the Nordic countries are very far to the socialist side of the scale. And it works. It isn't perfect, but it works.

It still works, but there is a strong downward trend in Germany for example.

The costs for the health care, unenployment benefits, pensions etc. are exploded, the german goverment started to cut massively all these services at the end of the century, giving always the same reason for it : forced by Globalisation.

 

Robert

I doubt that anyone from the Nordic countries (Iceland, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Finland) would call Germany a Nordic country.

 

As I grew up in The Netherlands, I wouldn't have thought of calling Germany socialist either. Not even in the end of the '70s and early 80's when Helmut Schmidt was Bundeskanzler.

 

Other than that Germany obviously still has another problem. It still needs to put a lot of money in the joining of the East and West.

 

Rik

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That Germany does not belong to the group of nordic states is everybody clear, but this country endowment with social systems, benefits, employment rights etc. was in 70' and 80's comparable with these of the nordic states, partial maybe here and there better. Surely, it was still a state with market economy but the social elements were enormous extended.

 

Robert

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That Germany does not belong to the group of nordic states is everybody clear, but this country endowment with social systems, benefits, employment rights etc. was in 70' and 80's comparable with these of the nordic states, partial maybe here and there better. Surely, it was still a state with market economy but the social elements were enormous extended.

 

What is worrying me most in Germany is the popularity of left-wing parties, some of which really want to start GDR 2.0 it seems. The high incomes of managers (although still much lower than the US counterparts in the same positions) are used to take away money from the middle class.

 

Current plans include: Raising social benefits with the idea that this would help kids from jobless parents. Unfortunately the extra money will lower the pressure to actively look for a job, and be spent on beer and cigarettes and not reach the kids.

 

My plan would be: Make lots of things free for kids whose parents earn no money, but under no circumstances raise the benefits. Working must be worth it otherwise people will choose not to.

 

Another thing that is broken is the pension plan, which is really based on that current generation pays for the current pensioners, and that the future generations (much fewer people) pay for future pensioners. What is needed is that every year pays for its own group, i.e. a system where everyone born in 1979 pays the pensions for that year, and those born in 1959 pay for their year. Only this assures safety, as this avoids the mess that few people have to pay for many.

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What is worrying me most in Germany is the popularity of left-wing parties, some of which really want to start GDR 2.0 it seems.

Sure, their electorate grew up to 11-13% last year , but something strange was happened in last weaks. Due to the global financial and economic crises and connecting with it savage criticism on current capitalism in all german media, I expected they will win new voters...it didn't happen, they "fell down" to 7% (todays Politbarometer)

 

Robert

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