Stalin
today
Organisation for the Construction of the Proletarian Party of Italy
Typescript of the speech made by the delegation of the Organisation for the Construction of the Proletarian Party of Italy at the seminar "Stalin Today" held in Moscow on 4-6 November 1994.
Comrades,
History follows its course relentlessly erasing from memory or marking with
infamy everything which hinders human progress. Notwithstanding, there are events
and personalities which stand out as giants in history even though the dark
forces of reaction have tried to obliterate them from our collective consciousness
under a berrage of lies.
With the passage of time, Stalin's works and thought have gained the esteem
of Spartacists and the Paris Commune and can be rightly placed alongside those
of other thinkers and revolutionaries such as Robespiere, Marx and Lenin.
The gathering clouds of revolutionary storm bring to mind the teaching and practices
of Stalin. The whole of Stalin's works, without exception, are an invaluable
source from which communists, revolutionaries and patriots should take example.
There is no field of social science to which Stalin has not contributed, to
which he has not rigorously and scientifically applied Marxism-Leninism to hugely
successful result.
A study of Stalin's works confirm his status as a classical theoretician of
Marxism, applying Marxism for decades along the then as yet undiscovered road
to socialism and communism.
The task left by Lenin was so huge that only a man of exceptional capabilities
and will power could have succeeded. Stalin was this man. He represented the
banner of proletarians throughout the world and showed that a brave new world
could be built. He was the scourge of capitalists and opportunists. For the
bourgeoisie and petit-bourgeois "revolutionaries", their attacks on
Stalin and their lies are an integral part of their current fight against socialism
and communism. In philosophy, in economics, in politics, in linguistic, in military
sciences, in diplomacy, in questions of strategy and tactics, in the organisation
of party, state and trade unions, Stalin has been the Great Helmsman of the
Communist Movement. He was the builder and unrivalled leader of the Communist
International. Thanks to his lead the Movement became a world force, present
in every corner of the earth, ideologically sound, monolithic in its aspiration
and inspired by the highest of ideals. In the name of Stalin, millions of men
have borne sacrifices of every nature and even given up their lives. Stalin
embodied the best and noblest in us communists.
With Stalin as head of the Soviet Communist Party, the forces of socialism defeated
the imperialistic forces of Nazi fascism in the Great Patriotic War. Thus, he
created the conditions for the formation of the Communist Bloc and the collapse
of old style colonialism throughout the world. These are the facts. This is
the truth that history teaches us.
Comrades,
Stalin's works are very relevant today. However, in this period of general malaise
in modern Titoist-Kruschevite revisionism, are there impacts of Stalinist thought
which could be explored further? Are there aspects which could help explain
the temporary defeat of the Communist Movement?
We Italian Marxist-Leninists, propose a few aspects to this group, knowing well
that no one knows Soviet history and the works of Stalin as well as our Soviet
comrades. As well known, the fight against revisionism marks the whole history
of our Movement from Karl Marx onwards. However, it is with the death of Stalin
and the advent of Kruschevism that the struggle becomes one against a modern
type of revisionism firmly placed in power. A revisionism which saw its birth
in Titoist Yugoslavia. ( See comrade Enver Hoxha's historic contribution to
the Moscow Conference in 1960, foretelling this danger.)
Thirty years have passed from the Moscow Conference and throughout this period
the International Marxist-Leninist Movement has defended and built on revolutionary
theories and practice and today leads important class battles across the globe.
They have been years of harsh and complex struggle, a struggle which has prevented
the complete victory of revisionism. It is during these years that Marxist-Leninist
theory has developed as regards to its analysis of revisionism, especially in
reference to the new forms of revisionism of the first countries to experience
socialism.
Our conclusion is that history shows that Stalin had brought to the attention
of the Party the question related to the restoration of capitalism within the
Soviet Union.
The most important points of our conclusion are these:
- For a country which builds a socialist society, the contradictions between
it and imperialism are not merely secondary and external but are dependent upon
the contradictions and struggle between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie,
the struggle on which final victory depends. These contradictions are reflected
within a socialist society and express themselves in their highest and purest
form in the political infighting within the ranks of the governing Party.
- The class struggle continues in a socialist society even though the exploiting
classes, at least in the economic sense, no longer exist. Stalin points out
that the ideological struggle is not only a cultural struggle, i.e. a struggle
against bourgeois psychology, but a class struggle, a political struggle, a
concrete and acute struggle which confirms the Marxist principle that thought
is a form of matter. It is for this reason that the International Marxist-Leninist
Movement affirms that revisionism in power is the bourgeoisie in power.
- Stalin highlights how the proletarian revolution, introducing the collectivisation
of the means of production, creates the form of a socialist society but how
this form can have a non-socialist content. This confirms the Marxist theory
that property is a function of effective de facto ownership, of consumption.
Therefore the real question one has to ask is who does this ownership benefit.
Stalin explained to the Party that the creation of the Sovhos and Kolhos could
become sand-castles if the class struggle, both internally and internationally,
was not placed at the centre of the struggle for communism.
- To the end of his life Stalin warned the party of the danger of counter-revolution,
as, for example, in his polemic against the economist Yaroshenko in 1952. "The
relations of production lag behind the development of productive forces. If
the directing bodies pursue a correct policy, it is possible to prevent these
contradictions from becoming antagonistic. A wrong policy, on the other hand,
would inevitably lead to an antagonism and to the relations of production becoming
a brake on the development of productive forces."
We believe that Stalinism is the most advanced form of Marxism-Leninism, a sound
base for analysis, understanding and defeat of modern revisionism. Stalinism
(that is Leninism or Bolshevism) was not the only current of thought within
the Soviet Communist Party. Already, during the last years of Stalin's life,
right-wing tendencies managed clearly to influence the men surrounding him.
There is no other explanation for the failure of the Party to react to Stalin's
repeated warnings of counter-revolution and to the limited exposure given to
his warnings.
Just one example: Internationally, Stalin's report and closing speech to the
Plenum of the Central Committee of the Soviet Party in 1937 are unknown. These
writings are of fundamental importance and should have been inserted in his
collected works "Problems of Leninism".
Comrades,
Your contributions will undoubtedly deal more specifically with other matters
such as those relating to the transition phase of socialist society, the limitations
of every revolution, the bureaucratisation of the apparatus, the role of the
market, the division of manual and intellectual labour, the dictatorship of
the proletariat and its march towards communism, and the counter-revolution.
Naturally, we as communists, reject the bourgeois theory that socialism in one
country is impossible, that communism can be built without the guidance of the
party, that the USSR was not a socialist country and other foolishness.
We condemn the conclusions of the XXth Congress of the Soviet Communist Party
on the role of the state and the party, on the peaceful road to socialism and
on peaceful competition and co-existence, theories which went relatively unnoticed
because of the controversy surrounding Kruschev's criticism of the Stalinist
cult of personality and general demagogy concerning greater democracy and such
like.
Proletarian democracy is expressed by the dictatorship of the proletariat by
the Marxist-Leninist party and by the leadership of eminent personalities like
Lenin and Stalin. It is the lowest stage of a superior political form which
is communism.
Comrades,
The advent of revisionism in the USSR has been a great national and international
tragedy which has now come to its natural end. By its capitulation to imperialism,
the clique of Kruschev, Brejnev and Gorbachev has shown its true nature, which
is the political tool of a new bourgeoisie which has been forming in the last
few decades. The collapse of the Soviet Union represents both the defeat of
this new bourgeoisie by international imperialism and a deeper crisis in world
capitalism. However, it is the task of our Soviet comrades above all to analyse
the restoration of capitalism in the Soviet Union more deeply. To understand
why and how, after the death of Stalin, his brothers-in-arms did not fully understand
the dangers of nascent Kruschevism? Why did they allow the formation of a class
of bureaucrats and technocrats which became the backbone of Kruschevism? Why
were property relations, distribution and the exchange of goods totally transformed?
We Marxist-Leninists know that the counter-revolutionary transformation of the
super-structure leads to the alteration of the economic base. We also know that
the nature of state property is modified according to the socio-economic organisation
and class structure of the state.
The question how collective ownership in the USSR was transformed into the form
of capitalistic private property with a high degree of concentration of production
and capital will have to be explained. As will the affirmation of the laws of
capitalist economics such as profit and value in the USSR and the transformation
of the means of production into saleable commodities.
We have to ask ourselves the question how labour could have peacefully been
transformed into a commodity, while at the same time describing Soviet society
as a socialist society and knowing all too well (as Lenin teaches us) that when
the producers are deprived of the means of production the economic system becomes
bourgeois. The bureaucrats and technocrats (the new bourgeoisie) had the right
to sack workers, to decide their pay levels and could determine how much profit
to keep to themselves. Price levels were fixed by these bureaucrats as a function
of the relationship with other monopolistic state companies.
Marxist-Leninist theory teaches us that capital is nothing without waged labour,
without value, without money and without prices. Marx, in analysing the essence
of capitalist production, noted two specific aspects: The relationship between
commodities and money and that the fundamental goal of production is surplus
value. Now, were these two essential requisites of a capitalist economy at the
base of the Kruschev-Brejnev mode of production? What effect have the economic
reforms of the last decades had? To answer the last question these meant unlimited
freedom of action for state companies in production, distribution, accumulation
and fixed investment. Huge powers were given to state managers in the management
of the means of production and in the distribution of products, the goal being
the accumulation of profits.
Can a society whose fundamental aim is profit be classified as socialist? Profits
which are divided down a social pyramid. All decisions concerning investments,
employment and strategic management were motivated by profit. The new bourgeoisie
ensured maximum profit above all with the exploitation of the working class.
With this in mind, capitalist terms such as production bonuses, profit levels
and interest rates were reintroduced. The laws of competition and the anarchy
of production were foremost.
An analysis of figures provided by the official Soviet press in the 1970s and
80s is based on the concepts of profit levels and surplus value.
Profit levels in 1971 reached 27.3% and 36% in 1976. In the period 1971-1976
profits reached 500 billion rouble, 1.5 times that of 1966-70.
The "Planovoje Hozjistvo" nr.7 - 1976, p.124 concluded that private
capital had reached 90 billion rouble earning an interest of 3-4 billion rouble
a year. At the same time in 1975 the level of exploitation of the Soviet working
class had increased by 25% from its 1960 level.
During the same period unemployment, underemployment and the number of female
redundancies increased exponentially.
The working classes, deprived of the means of production by state managers,
only received a capitalist wage for their labour while the remaining part of
the value produced by their labour became surplus value for the bourgeois revisionists.
The bourgeoisie converted a large part of this surplus value into capital in
effect corresponding to a form of monopolistic state capitalism. Another part
of the surplus value was distributed among the bureaucrats and managers of this
new bourgeois class in the form of fringe benefits and bonus payments. The salaries
and bonuses of these managers and of the state and party elite, e.g. KGB, scientists,
army officers, etc. were 15-20 times that of ordinary working men's wages.
As already mentioned above, this analysis, only touched upon here, will have
to be deepened enormously by our Soviet comrades.
Other facts will also have to be explained. For example, how the growth in the
Kolhos system (as a function of land cultivated and the growth of the volume
of production) was not mirrored by the growth in consumption of the average
Soviet citizen, with, in some cases, the level of consumption being merely above
subsistence levels.
The total degeneration of socialism into a capitalist system was due to the
lack of centralised planning and management of the economy. In its place state
companies had complete autonomy and the system of retributing workers was based
on levels of production. Profit was at the base of the wage system.
The value of labour also depended upon the volume of sales. These depended upon
the levels of demand in the market at any one time. So, in effect, it was the
market which determined levels of production. At the same time, the level and
choice of investment was determined by the normative coefficient of capital
investment, it too determined by levels of profit.
Price formation was decentralised and fixed by the market. Throughout the USSR,
interest, as an instrument of capitalism, was earned on capital. State companies
autonomously decided pricing policy to ensure the highest profit possible. The
price of goods was determined in the following way; current costs were added
to average earnings, that is according to the formula of the average cost of
production in a capitalist system. This ensures equal profits for equal amount
of capital invested.
Pricing policy was used by state companies as a form of open competition. Some
prices were centrally fixed but even these were determined by demand and supply.
The outcome was, as comrade Enver Hoxha stated, that the modern revisionists
transformed socialism, in their respective countries, into a capitalist system.
Comrades! Changes in the social structure of the USSR could not but be reflected
on its foreign policy. The Kruschevite clique exported its model to various
democratic republics. It set up official and secret pacts with US imperialism.
It tied itself hand and foot to foreign economies, heavily indebting the Soviet
people to multinational financial oligarchies. Furthermore, it exerted its influence
as a great power without favouring the growth of authentic socialism and, in
so doing, attempted to impose revisionism on world communism. It became one
of the major world exporter of arms. It favoured opportunism and sabotaged the
revolution. The USSR, the great example of socialism, was transformed into an
enormous prison of peoples and nationalities, a socio-imperialistic power. Kruschev's
politics favoured the restoration and not progress. It favoured the destruction
of communism's historic victories.
Comrades! We believe that the rebirth of the International Communist Movement
can begin again from the experience of the October Revolution and from the enormous
practical and theoretical patrimony left to us by Stalin, a patrimony which
provides a sure base on which to build our struggle for revolution and against
imperialism. It also provides us with the base for a solution to all tactical
and strategic questions, for the creation of a new International and for the
future building of new socialist societies.
Stalinist thought is the most powerful weapon against the most sophisticated
modern forms of revisionism. The works and figure of Stalin must act as a great
demarcation line between us and all our enemies and false communists.
Comrades! We wholeheartedly hope that Soviet communists and the Soviet people
will unite with us in a great world revolutionary front. We hope the revolutionary
process initiated by Lenin's coming to power in October 1917 will reawaken in
the ex-USSR and lead to the setting up of the dictatorship of the proletariat
and the reconstruction of socialism.
Today, as conditions stand, the advantage in the struggle between world revolution
and reaction lies firmly and completely with the proletariat.
Imperialism is weak and dying and revolution, as a real possibility, is being
considered throughout the world.
The collapse of revisionism is the first stage to revolution.
Long live the Soviet working
class!
Long live proletarian internationalism!
Long live the immortal revolutionary doctrine , Marxism-Leninism!
Eternal glory to great Stalin, the victorious figure head of communists all
over the world!