Workers' self-directed enterprises  (WSDEs) are a response to capitalism's failure to deliver economic  prosperity and socialism's failure to deliver economic democracy. 
  
Among factors impeding formation of an organized, politically  effective new left in the United States are deep frustrations among  activists interested in doing that. The decline since the 1970s (and  since 2008 especially) of capitalism's ability to "deliver the goods" to  most citizens has opened many minds to question, criticize and  challenge the capitalist system. The remarkable Pew Research  Center poll of December 2011 showed large percentages of Americans  favorably disposed toward socialism. Many more would agree today. Yet  left activists are increasingly frustrated by their lack of a viable  systemic alternative that could attract those disaffected from  capitalism. 
  
Leftists are further frustrated because the traditional socialist  alternatives fail to inspire the public or even mobilize leftists  themselves. The implosions of Soviet and eastern European socialisms, coupled with major shifts in China and beyond, have fueled that frustration. So too, in different ways, did western European  socialist parties' embraces of neoliberalism since the 1970s and  austerity policies since 2007-2008. The Greek socialist party's collapse  and likewise serious declines in electoral support for the German and  other socialist parties reflect frustrations with the traditional  socialisms they advocate. 
  
Traditional socialist programs of major government economic  intervention (via varying mixtures of regulation of enterprises and  markets, state ownership and operation of enterprises, central planning,  etc.) no longer rally much support. When sometimes they seem to (e.g.,  France's last presidential and legislative elections), traditional  socialism proves thinly rhetorical and symbolic. Because French  socialists failed to define or pursue a genuine alternative to a deeply  unpopular capitalism, their support melted quickly. 
  
Audiences offered traditional socialist visions have increasingly  responded with skeptical indifference translatable as "been there, done  that." Many have formed the judgment that traditional socialisms, where  achieved, exhibited too many shortcomings, were unsustainable, or both.  Provoked by the capitalist crisis since 2008, rapidly rising public interest in alternatives to capitalism has confronted falling confidence in traditional socialism. 
  
The frustration of the left, given this exhaustion of traditional  socialisms' appeal, arose from having no other broadly agreed-upon  vision of an attractive alternative to capitalism. The left could not  provide what mass audiences craved as they deepened their criticisms of  capitalism's longer-term decline and short-term crisis. 
  
Enter the notion of workers' cooperatives or, better, the awkward but  more specific term: workers self-directed enterprises (WSDEs). This  centuries-old idea has been revived, redesigned and applied to go well  beyond traditional socialism. The result is a new vision of an  alternative to capitalism that could help to mobilize a new left. 
  
WSDEs replace hierarchical, top-down capitalist enterprises run by  major shareholders and the boards of directors they select with a  democratic enterprise directed by all its workers. The latter,  collectively and democratically, make all the key decisions of what, how  and where to produce. Most importantly, they decide how to use the  enterprise's net revenue. 
  
Governments' dependence (at municipal, regional and national levels)  on enterprise tax payments thereby becomes dependence on the people as  workers. No longer will a separate interest - capitalists within  enterprises - use taxes or any other distributions of net revenues to  shape government policies against workers or citizens. Enterprise  decisions on what, how and where to produce will likewise no longer be  capitalists' decisions, but instead will reflect enterprise workers'  democratic choices. 
  
The importance of such micro-level transformations of enterprises  into WSDEs cannot be overstated. Because it had located key economic  powers in state hands (regulating or owning enterprises and imposing  planning above or in place of market exchanges), traditional socialism  usually accumulated too much power in the state alone or in the state  together with the major capitalist businesses it "regulated." Far too  little real, institutionalized countervailing power resided with the  workers inside enterprises. As a result, accountability and transparency  were absent from economic life, as was economic democracy. That in turn  undermined real political democracy. 
  
WSDEs could solve that problem. In economies where WSDEs prevail, key  financial resources of the state - its taxes on and/or borrowings from  enterprises - represent distributions of those enterprises' net revenues  made by their workers. Likewise, the use of any enterprise's  net revenues to fund political parties, politicians, lobbying efforts  and think tanks would reflect its workers' democratic decisions. A key  structural feature of capitalism - capital's dictatorship inside  enterprises - always generated the incentives and provided the resources  for capitalists to bend government to the service of capital against  labor. In contrast, a WSDE-based economy would abolish that dictatorship  and thus its political effects. 
  
By establishing democracy inside the enterprise, WSDEs make  government responsible and accountable to the people as workers.  Political democracy remains merely formal when governments' direct  dependence on people as voting citizens is not matched by governments'  direct dependence on people - in large part the same people - as  workers. Real political democracy requires its integrated partnership  with economic democracy as envisioned in economies where WSDEs prevail.  Traditional socialisms' over-emphases on macro-level differences from  capitalism (substituting state-regulated or state-owned for private  property and state planning for market exchanges) would be radically  corrected by the micro-level transformation of enterprise organization  from capitalist to WSDE. 
  
Of course, democratized enterprises would need to share powers with  democratic, residence-based political structures at all government  levels (municipal, regional, and national). The political consequences  of enterprise decisions, like the enterprise consequences of political  decisions, would require that decision-making at both social sites  (enterprise and residential community) be co-respective and  interdependent. Enterprise-based democracy would co-determine with  residence-based democracy the full spectrum of social decisions,  including any state apparatus's functions and policies. 
  
Transforming capitalist enterprises into WSDEs in this context would  radically change workplaces, residential communities, and hence, the  daily life of virtually everyone. It could realize the systemic change  that traditional socialisms pointed toward but never achieved: a viable  and attractive alternative preferable to capitalism. It offers leftists a  means to overcome their frustrations and a focus around which to  regroup, existing, as well as building, new left movements and  organizations. 
	   	  	  	   
 Copyright, Truthout.  
 
 
 		 		 	   	   	   		 
  		 
Richard D. Wolff is Professor of Economics Emeritus, University  of Massachusetts, Amherst where he taught economics from 1973 to 2008.  He is currently a Visiting Professor in the Graduate Program in  International Affairs of the New School University, New York City. He  also teaches classes regularly at the Brecht Forum in Manhattan. Earlier  he taught economics at Yale University (1967-1969) and at the City  College of the City University of New York (1969-1973). In 1994, he was a  Visiting Professor of Economics at the University of Paris (France), I  (Sorbonne). His work is available at rdwolff.com and at democracyatwork.info.  
 
 
 
 
 	 			   	   
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