Fighting For System Change


WAR AND conflict are rooted in the exploitative and oppressive nature of capitalism and imperialism.

Capitalism is a social and economic system which exists to perpetuate the control of the ruling class in its drive for profits. These profits come from the exploitation of those who produce the wealth in society and run the service industries – the working-class.

Because workers only receive a portion of the value of what they produce in the form of wages, they cannot buy back all the goods produced. This means that the extension of the market can never keep pace with the expansion of production, causing periodic crises, stagnation and conflict between nation states.

Super-exploitation

Economic power is concentrated in the hands of a small minority whose priority is to defend their own profits and interests.

The combined sales of the world’s richest 200 companies are greater than the combined GDP of all but ten nations on earth.

Through their political, economic and military domination of the globe, the most powerful imperialist countries practice policies of super-exploitation against the workers and poor of the neo-colonial word in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The globalisation of the world economy has speeded up and deepened this process over the last two decades.

Western economies, through their control of the world economy, determine what prices these countries buy and sell goods at on the world market. They are forced to buy consumer goods at inflated prices and sell raw materials for less than they are actually worth. This means super profits for Western companies.

On top of this, through institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, the workers and poor of the neo-colonial world are suffocated by huge ‘debts’. In 1999, the poorest countries in the world ‘owed’ $2.5 trillion to the industrialised economies.

It is capitalism and imperialism that have created the conditions of poverty and exploitation which opens the way to conflict, wars and civil wars. A world in peace and stability is utopian as long as 1.2 billion people ‘live’ on $1 or less a day and when more than half of the world’s poorest countries are embroiled in ongoing or incipient crises.

The situation is made worse by the policies of divide and rule which particularly US imperialism has used to maintain its control in the neo-colonial world.

Capitalism means violence, conflict and huge spending on military weapons. In the last century, 200 million people died in wars that were basically about profits, domination of world markets and the prestige of the big powers.

As a result of these conflicts, huge waves of refugees have swept across the globe – in the 1990s, 50 million people were forced to flee their homes in Africa.

The arms race means huge profits for big business as well. Since the end of World War Two, military spending has been approximately $1 trillion a year. The governments of India and Pakistan who between them have 350 million people living on less than $1 a day, have six times more soldiers than doctors.

System in crisis

IS IT possible to reform capitalism, to turn it into a more humane, caring and peaceful system?

The Socialist Party supports any reforms that can be won under this system. We fight for higher wages, to improve working conditions, for better public services etc.

But capitalism is a system in crisis which cannot overcome its own contradictions. It is based on exploitation and oppression and the capitalist class will always seek to defend and extend their profits and interests by attacking the living standards of working people and the poor and through the use of military force when necessary.

Only through a revolutionary transformation of the way that society is organised and structured will it be possible to bring about an end to war, poverty, environmental destruction and all the problems that the profit system creates.

We have to fight for a different society; one that is based on the needs of the majority of humankind not on the profits, power and prestige of the tiny layer of capitalists and the politicians who represent them.

To do this we must mobilise millions across the planet in a struggle to overthrow capitalism and to create a socialist society worldwide.

Over the last decade increasing numbers of young people have declared themselves to be ‘anti-capitalist’. Hundreds of thousands have taken part in demonstrations from Seattle to Seville from Porto Alegre to Genoa.

For every young person who has actively participated in protests, hundreds of others identify with the idea that the existing order of things is unjust and needs to be changed.

Many anti-capitalists have become involved in the growing anti-war movement. Amongst the hundreds of thousands who have protested against war with Iraq, many are also drawing the conclusion that the system needs to be changed.

Collective action

‘SYSTEM CHANGE’ requires the building of a mass movement and one in which the working-class have a decisive role to play.

Because of their role in production, workers face common attacks from the capitalists which can only be defeated by collective action.

They have the power and strength to bring production and the economy to a halt and challenge the control of the capitalist class.

The massive 24-hour general strikes in Spain and Italy in 2002 showed graphically the potential power that workers have. Millions withdrew their labour, virtually closing the country down.

Strike action also lays the basis for the collective, democratic control and management of society which is essential for beginning the task of building a socialist alternative to the capitalist profit system.

Recently, there have been examples internationally of mass movements which have had the potential to challenge capitalism.

In Argentina at the end of 2001 and beginning of 2002, two weeks of mass protests forced the resignation of four presidents. In Serbia in 2000, a mass movement – the ‘bulldozer revolution’ – involving action by the organised working-class, overthrew Slobodan Milosevic.

However, in both movements there was no clear idea about how to end the poverty, exploitation and repression of the existing system. Merely switching governments solved none of the problems which ordinary Serbs and Argentinians were experiencing.

As in Serbia and Argentina, working-class, young people and sections of the middle classes internationally will move into struggle when they feel that they have no choice but to fight back against the way that capitalism affects their lives and those of others around the globe. But they won’t all do so with the same ideas, attitudes and outlook.

There is a burning need internationally for mass, democratic parties that can play the role of uniting together, around a fighting, anti-capitalist programme, all those who want to struggle against the system and its effects; parties that can give a revolutionary, socialist lead and direction to the struggles that will inevitably develop in order to build a socialist alternative to war, poverty, oppression and the horrors of capitalism.

This is what the Socialist Party is campaigning for here and internationally through our sister organisations in the Committee for a Workers’ International.

Join us in our fight to change the world.