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THE GREEN BOOK
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PART ONE
PART
TWO
PART THREE
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| The
Solution of the
Economic Problem |
"Socialism" |
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Important historical
developments contributing to the solution of the problem of
work and wages - the relationship between producers and
owners, workers and employers - have occurred in recent
history. These developments include the determination of fixed
working hours, overtime pay, leaves, minimal wages, profit
sharing, the participation of workers in administration, the
banning of arbitrary dismissal, social security, the right to
strike, and other provisions contained in labour codes of
almost all contemporary legislation. Of no less significance
are changes in the realm of ownership, such as the enactment
of laws transferring private ownership to the state, and also
those limiting income. Despite these not inconsiderable
developments in the history of economics, the problem still
fundamentally exists, even though it has been made less severe
than in past centuries through improvements, refinements and
developments that have brought many benefits to the workers.
However, the economic
problem still persists unsolved in the world. Attempts aimed
at ownership have failed to solve the problems of producers.
They are still wage-earners, despite the state ownership which
may vary from the extreme right to the extreme left to the
centre of the political spectrum.
Attempts to improve wages
were equally significant to those that were aimed at the
transferral of ownership. In the wake of the Industrial
Revolution, benefits from wage negotiations secured for
workers certain privileges that were guaranteed by legislation
and protected by trade unions, thus improving the lot of the
workers. As time passed, workers, technicians, and
administrators have acquired certain rights which were
previously unattainable. However, in reality, the economic
problem still exists.
Attempts that were aimed at
wages were contrived and reformative, and have failed to
provide a solution. They were more of a charity than a
recognition of the rights of the workers. Why do workers
receive wages? Because they carry out a production process for
the benefit of others who hire them to produce a certain
product. In this case, they do not consume what they produce;
rather, they are compelled to concede their product for wages.
Hence, the sound rule: those who produce consume.
Wage-earners, however improved their wages may be, are a type
of slave.
Wage-earners are but slaves
to the masters who hire them. They are temporary slaves, and
their slavery lasts as long as they work for wages from
employers, be they individuals or the state. The workers'
relationship to the owner or the productive establishment, and
to their own interests, is similar under all prevailing
conditions in the world today, regardless of whether ownership
is right or left. Even publicly-owned establishments give
workers wages as well as other social benefits, similar to the
charity endowed by the rich owners of economic establishments
upon those who work for them.
Unlike the privately-owned
establishment where income benefits the owner, the claim that
the income from the public-owned establishment benefits all of
the society, including the workers, is true only if we take
into consideration the general welfare of the society and not
the private well-being of the workers. Further, we would have
to assume that the political authority controlling ownership
is that of all the people, practised through the Popular
Conferences and People's Committees, and not the authority of
one class, one party, several parties, one sect, tribe,
family, individual, or any form of representative authority.
Failing this, what is received directly by the workers with
respect to their own interests, in the form of wages,
percentage of profits or social benefits, is the same as that
received by workers in a private corporation. In both
instances, the producers are wage-earners, despite the
difference in ownership. Thus, this change in ownership has
not solved the problem of the producer's right to benefit
directly from what he produces, and not through the society
nor through wages. The proof thereof is the fact that
producers are still wage-earners despite the change in this
state of ownership.
The ultimate solution lies
in abolishing the wage-system, emancipating people from its
bondage and reverting to the natural laws which defined
relationships before the emergence of classes, forms of
governments and man-made laws. These natural rules are the
only measures that ought to govern human relations.
These natural rules have
produced natural socialism based on equality among the
components of economic production, and have maintained public
consumption almost equal to natural production among
individuals. The exploitation of man by man and the possession
by some individuals of more of the general wealth than their
needs required is a manifest departure from the natural rule
and the beginning of distortion and corruption in the life of
the human community. It heralds the start of the exploitative
society.
If we analyse the factors of
economic production from ancient times to the present, we
always find that they essentially consist of certain basic
production components, i.e., raw materials, means of
production, and a producer. The natural rule of equality
requires that each of these components receives a share of
this production. Because production cannot be achieved without
the essential role of each of these components, it has to be
equally divided amongst them. The preponderance of one of them
contravenes the natural rule of equality and becomes an
encroachment upon the others' rights. Thus, each must be
awarded an equal share, regardless of the number of components
in the process of production. If the components are two, each
receives half of the production; if three, then one-third.
Applying this natural rule
to both ancient and modern situations, we arrive at the
following. At the stage of manual production, the process of
production resulted from raw material and a producer. Later,
new means of production were added to the process. Animals,
utilized as power units, constitute a good example. Gradually,
machines replaced animals, types and amounts of raw materials
evolved from the simple and inexpensive to the valuable and
complex. Likewise, the unskilled workers became skilled
workers and engineers; their former huge numbers dwindling to
a few specialized technicians.
Despite the fact that
components have qualitatively and quantitatively changed,
their essential role in production has remained basically
unaltered. For example, iron ore, a component of both past and
present production, was manufactured primitively by iron
smiths into knives, axes, spears, etc. The same iron ore is
now manufactured by engineers and technicians by means of
smelting furnaces into all kinds of machines, engines and
vehicles. The animal - horse, mule, camel, or the like - which
was a component of production, has been replaced by factories
and huge machines. Production, based upon primitive tools, is
now founded upon sophisticated technical instruments. Despite
these tremendous changes, the components of natural production
remain basically the same. This consistency inevitably
necessitates returning to sound natural rules to solve the
economic problems that are the result of all previous
historical attempts to formulate solutions that ignore these
rules.
All previous historical
theories tackled the economic problem either from the angle of
ownership of any of the components of production, or from that
of wages for production. They failed to solve the real
problem; the problem of production itself. Thus, the most
important characteristic of economic order prevailing in the
world today is a wage system that deprives the workers of any
right to the products being produced, be it for the society or
for a private establishment.
An industrial establishment
is composed of material for production, machines and workers.
Production is achieved by workers manufacturing materials and
using machines. Thus, manufactured goods would not have been
ready for use and consumption had they not gone through a
production process requiring raw materials, factories, and
workers. Clearly, without basic raw materials, the factory
cannot operate and without the factory, raw materials will not
be manufactured. Likewise, without producers, the factory
comes to a halt. Thus, the three factors are equally essential
to the process of production, and without them there can be no
production. The absence of any one of these components cannot
be replaced by the others. Therefore, the natural rule
necessitates each component receiving an equal share of the
benefits of production. It is not only the factory that is
important, but those who consume its production as well.
The same is applicable to
agricultural production processes resulting from only two
components: man and land. The product must be divided equally
into two shares congruent with the number of production
components. Furthermore, if any additional mode, mechanical or
otherwise is utilized in the process, production must be
equally divided into three shares: the land, the farmer, and
the means of production. Consequently, a socialist system
emerges under which all production processes are governed by
this natural rule.
The producers are the
workers; they are called producers because the terms
"worker," "labourer," and
"toiler" have become invalid. The traditional
definition is revised because workers are undergoing
qualitative and quantitative changes. The working class is
declining proportionately to the advancement of science and
technology.
Tasks once performed by a
number of workers are now being carried out by a single
machine. Operating a machine requires fewer workers; this has
brought about a quantitative change in the labour force, while
the replacement of physical force by technical skill has
resulted in a qualitative change in the labour force.
The labour force has become
a component of the production process. As a result of
technical advancement, multitudes of unskilled toilers have
been transformed into limited numbers of technicians,
engineers and scientists. Consequently, trade unions will
subsequently disappear and be replaced by syndicates of
engineers and technicians. Scientific advancement is an
irreversible gain for humankind. Thanks to this process,
illiteracy will be eliminated and unskilled workers will
become a temporary phenomenon destined to gradual
disappearance. However, even in this new environment, persons
will always remain the basic component in the production
process. |
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NEED
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The freedom of a human being is
lacking if his or her needs are controlled by others, for need
may lead to the enslavement of one person by another.
Furthermore, exploitation is caused by need. Need is an
intrinsic problem and conflict is initiated by the control of
one's needs by another. |
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Housing is an essential need
for both the individual and the family and should not be owned
by others. Living in another's house, whether paying rent or
not, compromises freedom. Attempts made by various countries
to solve the housing problem did not provide a definite
solution because such attempts did not target the ultimate
solution - the necessity that people own their dwellings - but
rather offered the reduction, increase, or standardization of
rent, whether it went to privately or publicly-owned
enterprise. In a socialist society, no one, including society
itself, has the right to control people's needs. No one has
the right to acquire a house additional to his or her own
dwelling and that of his or her heirs for the purpose of
renting it because this additional house is, in fact, a need
of someone else. Acquiring it for such a purpose is the
beginning of controlling the needs of others, and "in
need freedom is latent". |
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Income is an imperative need
for man. In a socialist society, it should not be in the form
of wages from any source or charity from any one. In this
society, there are no wage-earners, but only partners. One's
income is a private matter and should either be managed
privately to meet one's needs or be a share from a production
process of which one is an essential component. It should not
be a wage in return for production. |
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MEANS
OF TRANSPORTATION
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| Transportation
is also a necessity both to the individual and to the family.
It should not be owned by others. In a socialist society, no
person or authority has the right to own a means of
transportation for the purpose of renting it, for this also
means controlling the needs of others. |
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LAND
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Land is the private property of
none. Rather, everyone has the right to beneficially utilize
it by working, farming or pasturing as long as he and his
heirs live on it - to satisfy their needs, but without
employing others with or without a wage. If lands were
privately owned, only the living would have a share in it.
Land is permanent, while
those who benefit from the land undergo, in the course of
time, changes in profession, capabilities and existence.
The aspiration of the new
socialist society is to create a society which is happy
because it is free. This can only be achieved by satisfying,
man's material and spiritual needs, and that, in turn, comes
about through the liberation of these needs from the control
of others. Satisfaction of these needs must be attained
without exploiting or enslaving others; otherwise, the
aspirations of the new socialist society are contradicted.
Thus, the citizen in this
new society secures his material needs either through
self-employment, or by being a partner in a collectively-owned
establishment, or by rendering public service to society
which, in return, provides for his material needs.
Economic activity in the new
socialist society is a productive one aimed at the
satisfaction of material needs. It is not an unproductive
activity, nor one which seeks profit for surplus savings
beyond the satisfaction of such needs. This, according to the
new socialist basis, is unacceptable. The legitimate purpose
for private economic activities is only to satisfy one's needs
because the wealth of the world, as well as that of each
individual society, is finite at each stage. No one has the
right to undertake an economic activity whereby wealth
exceeding the satisfaction of one's needs can be amassed. Such
accumulations are, in fact, the deprived right of others. One
only has the right to save from his own production and not by
employing others, or to save at the expense of his or her own
needs and not of others. If economic activity is allowed to
extend beyond the satisfaction of needs, some will acquire
more than required for their needs while others will be
deprived. The savings which are in excess of one's needs are
another person's share of the wealth of society. Allowing
private economic activity to amass wealth beyond the
satisfaction of one's needs and employing others to satisfy
one's needs or beyond, or to secure savings, is the very
essence of exploitation.
Work for wages, in addition
to being enslavement as previously mentioned, is void of
incentives because the producer is a wage-earner and not a
partner. Self-employed persons are undoubtedly devoted to
their work because from it they satisfy their material needs.
Likewise, those who work in a collective establishment are
also devoted to their work because they are partners in it and
they satisfy their material needs from the production. Whoever
works for a wage, on the other hand, has little incentive to
work.
Work for wages has failed to
solve the problem of motivation for increasing and developing
production. Whether it is a service or goods production, work
for wages is continuously deteriorating because it is
performed by unmotivated wage-earners.
EXAMPLES OF
WAGE-LABOUR: FOR THE SOCIETY, FOR PRIVATE ENTERPRISE, AND
SELF-EMPLOYMENT:
First example:
(a) A worker produces ten
apples for society. The society gives him one apple for his
production and it fully satisfies his needs.
(b) A worker produces ten
apples for society. The society gives him one apple for his
production which does not satisfy his needs.
Second example:
A worker produces ten apples
for another person and gets wages less than the price of one
apple.
Third example:
A worker produces ten apples
for himself.
The conclusion:
In the first example (a),
because the worker's wages are limited to one unit which
satisfies his needs, he has no incentive to increase his
production. Thus, all the labour force that works for society
is psychologically apathetic.
(b) The worker has no
incentive even to produce because he cannot satisfy his needs
from the wages. However, he continues working without any
incentives because generally, like all members, he is forced
to acquiesce to the working conditions of the society.
In the second example, the
worker works basically to get wages and not to produce. Since
his wages cannot satisfy his needs, the choices are either to
look for another master to get a better price for his work, or
be forced, as a matter of survival, to remain where he is.
In the third example, the
self-employed alone is the one who produces eagerly and
voluntarily.
In a socialist society,
there is no possibility for private production to exceed the
satisfaction of one's needs because satisfaction of needs at
the expense or by means of others is not permitted. Moreover,
socialist establishments operate only for the satisfaction of
the needs of society. Accordingly, the third example
demonstrates the sound basis of its economic production.
However, in all instances,
even the bad ones production is associated with survival. The
proof thereof is that, even though in capitalist societies
production accumulates and expands in the hands of only a few
owners who do not work but exploit the efforts of others, the
toilers are still forced to produce in order to survive.
However, THE GREEN BOOK not only solves the
problem of material production but also prescribes a
comprehensive solution for the problems facing human societies
so that individuals may be totally liberated, materially and
spiritually, in order to attain their happiness.
Other examples:
If we assume that the wealth
of a society is ten units and its inhabitants are ten persons,
then the share of each member is one-tenth of the total one
unit per person. If some members of this society get more than
one unit each, then a certain number from the society get
nothing. Their share of the wealth of their society has been
acquired by others. Hence, the presence of rich and poor in an
exploitative society. Let us also suppose that five members of
that particular society each own two units. In such a case,
half of the society is deprived of their rights to the wealth
of their society, for what should be theirs has been acquired
by others.
If an individual of that
society needs only one of the units of the wealth of the
society to satisfy his needs, then those who possess more than
one unit are, in fact, seizing the rights of other members of
the society. Because the one unit is all that is required to
satisfy the needs of an individual, the additional units are
acquired for the purpose of savings. This can only be achieved
at the expense of the needs of others; the acquisition of
others' share in this wealth. This is the reason behind the
existence of those who hoard and do not spend; those who save
beyond the satisfaction of their needs; and the existence of
those who beg and are deprived of their right to the wealth of
the society and do not find enough to consume. Such is an act
of plunder and theft, yet according to the unjust and
exploitative rules governing such a society, it is legitimate
and overt.
Any surplus beyond the
satisfaction of needs should ultimately belong to all members
of society. Individuals, however, have a right to effect
savings from the share allocated to their own needs since it
is the amassing of wealth beyond the satisfaction of one's
needs that is an encroachment upon public wealth.
The industrious and skilful
in a society have no right, as a result of this advantage, to
take from the shares of others. They can use their talents to
satisfy their own needs and save from those needs. Like any
other member of the society, the aged and the mentally and
physically disabled should have their fair share of the wealth
of the society.
The wealth of a society may
be likened to a supply establishment or a store providing a
certain number of people with daily rations satisfying their
needs. Each person has a right to save from such provisions
what he wants, i.e., to consume or save whatever portions of
his share he decides, utilizing his talents and skill for such
purposes. However, those who use their talents to acquire
excessively from the "supply establishment" are
undoubtedly thieves. Therefore, those using their skill to
acquire wealth exceeding the satisfaction of their needs are,
in fact, infringing upon the public right, namely, the wealth
of society which is like the store in the said example.
Disparity in the wealth of
individuals in the new socialist society is not tolerated,
save for those rendering certain services to the society for
which they are accorded an amount congruent with their
services. Individual shares only differ relative to the amount
of production or public service rendered in excess.
Hence, human experiences
through history have produced a new experiment in a unique
attempt to culminate the struggle of persons to complete their
freedom, to achieve happiness through satisfying their needs,
to ward off exploitation by others, to put an end to tyranny,
and to find a method to distribute the wealth of the society
equitably, without exploiting others or compromising their
needs. It is the theory of the fulfilment of needs for the
emancipation of humanity.
The new socialist society is
but a dialectical outcome of the unjust relationships
prevailing in the world today. The new socialist society will
introduce the natural solution - privately-owned property to
satisfy one's needs without exploitation, and collective
property in which the producers are partners replacing private
enterprise, which is based on the production of others without
recognizing their right to a just share of the product.
Whoever possesses the house
in which you dwell, the vehicle in which you ride or the
income on which you live, possesses your freedom, or part of
it. Freedom is indivisible. For people to be happy, they must
be free, and to be free, they must possess the possibility of
satisfying their own needs. Whoever possesses the means of
fulfilling your needs controls or exploits you, and may
enslave you despite any legislation to the contrary.
The material needs of people
that are basic and personal start with food, housing, clothing
and transport and must be regarded as private and sacred and
their satisfaction should not depend on hire.
To satisfy these material
needs through rent, gives the original owner the right to
interfere in your personal life and to control your imperative
needs, even if the original owner be the society in general.
The original owner can usurp your freedom and take away your
happiness. The interference of the original owner may include
repossessing your clothes, even leaving you naked on the
street. Likewise, the owner of your means of transportation
may leave you stranded on the sidewalk, and the owner of your
house may make you homeless.
People's imperative needs
cannot be regulated by legal or administrative procedures.
They must be fundamentally implanted into the society in
accordance with natural rules.
The aim of the socialist
society is the happiness of the human being, which cannot be
attained except by the establishment of one's material, and
spiritual freedom. The achievement of freedom depends on the
private and sacred attainment of man's needs. One's needs
should not be under the domination of others and should not be
subject to plunder by any source in society, otherwise one
will live in insecurity. Deprivation of the means of
fulfilment compromises freedom because, in attempting to
satisfy basic needs, one would be subject to the interference
of outside forces in one's basic interests.
The transformation of
existing societies of wage-earners into those of partners is
inevitable as a dialectical outcome of the contradictory
economic theories prevailing in the world today. It is also a
dialectical outcome of the unjust relationship based on the
wage system. None of these issues have been resolved to date.
The antagonistic force of
the trade unions in the capitalist world is capable of
replacing capitalistic wage societies by a society of
partnerships. The possibility of a socialist revolution starts
by producers taking over their share of the production.
Consequently, the aims of the producers' strikes will change
from demanding increases in wages to controlling their share
in production. Guided by THE GREEN BOOK ,
this will sooner or later take place. The final step is for
the new socialist society to reach a stage in which profit and
money disappear. Society will become fully productive; the
material needs of society will be met. In this final stage,
profit will disappear, as will the need for money.
The recognition of profit is
an acknowledgment of exploitation, for profit has no limit.
Attempts so far to limit profit by various means have been
reformative, not radical, intending to prohibit exploitation
of man by man. The final solution lies in eradicating profit,
but because profit is the dynamic force behind the economic
process, eliminating profit is not a matter of decree but,
rather, an outcome of the evolving socialist process. This
solution can be attained when the material satisfaction of the
needs of society and its members is achieved. Work to increase
profit will itself lead to its final eradication. |
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DOMESTIC
SERVANTS
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Domestic servants, paid or
unpaid, are a type of slave. Indeed, they are the slaves of
the modern age.
Since the new socialist
society is based on partnership and not on a wage system,
natural socialist rules do not apply to domestic servants
because they render services rather than production. Services
have no tangible material product and cannot be divided into
shares according to the natural socialist rule.
Domestic servants have no
alternative but to work for wages, or even be unpaid in the
worst of situations. As wage-earners are a type of slave and
their slavery exists as long as they work for wages, domestic
servants, whose position is lower than that of wage-earners in
economic establishments and corporations, have an even greater
need to be emancipated from the society of wage-labour and the
society of slaves.
Domestic servants is a
phenomenon that comes next to slavery.
The Third Universal
Theory heralds emancipation from the fetters of
injustice, despotism, exploitation, and economic and political
hegemony, for the purpose of establishing a society of all the
people where all are free and share equally in authority,
wealth and arms. Freedom will then triumph definitively and
universally.
THE GREEN BOOK thus
defines the path of liberation to masses of wage-earners and
domestic servants in order that human beings may achieve
freedom. The struggle to liberate domestic servants from their
status of slavery and to transform them into partners, where
their material production can be divided into its necessary
basic components, is an inevitable process. Households should
be serviced by their habitants. Essential household services
should not be performed by domestic servants, paid or unpaid,
but by employees who can be promoted in rendering their
services and can enjoy social and material benefits as any
other public employee would. |
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