The Age of Extremes: The Short Twentieth Century, 1914-1991 - PDF Free Download (2024)

Also by Eric Hobsbawm THE AGE OF REVOLUTION THE AGE OF CAPITAL THE AGE OF EMPIRE

1789-1848

1848-1875

1875-1914

AGE OF EXTREMES THE SHORT TWENTIETH CENTURY 1914-1991

Eric Hobsbawm

(ABAcus)

An Abacus Book First published in Great Britain by Michael Joseph 1994 This edition published by Abacus 1995 Copyright © Eric Hobsbawm 1994 The moral right of the author has been asserted. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 0 349 10671 1 Printed and bound in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St lves pic Abacus A Division of Little, Brown and Company (UK) Brettenham House Lancaster Place London WC2E 7EN

Contents

Illustrations Preface and Acknowledgements The Century: A Bird's Eye View

Vll IX

I

PART ONE: THE AGE OF CATASTROPHE I.

The Age of Total War

21

2.

The World Revolution

54

3.

Into the Economic Abyss

85

4.

The Fall of Liberalism

109

5.

Against the Common Enemy

142

6.

The Arts 1914-45

178

7.

End of Empires

199

PART TWO: THE GOLDEN AGE 8.

Cold War

225

9.

The Golden Years

257

10.

The Social Revolution 1945-1990

287

II.

Cultural Revolution

320

12. 13.

The Third World

344

'Real Socialism'

372

PART THREE: THE LANDSLIDE 14. 1 5. 16. 17. 18. 19.

The Crisis Decades Third World and Revolution End of Socialism The Avant-garde Dies- The Arts After 1950 Sorcerers and Apprentices- The Natural Sciences Towards the Millennium

References Further Reading Index

403 433 461 500 522 558 587 610 615

I1/ustrations

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31.

The Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife (Roger

Viollet) Canadian soldiers among shell craters, 1918 (Popperfoto) War cemetery, Chalons-sur-Marne (Roger Viollet) Russian soldiers, 1917 (Hulton Deutsch) The October revolution: Lenin (Hulton Deutsch) May Day poster, c. 1920 (David King Collection) A German banknote for twenty million marks (Hulton Deutsch) The Wall Street crash of 1929 (Icon Communications) British unemployed in the 1930s (Hulton Deutsch) Adolf Hider and Benito Mussolini (Hulton Deutsch) Italian Fascists marching past Mussolini (Hulton Deutsch) Nazi rally at Nuremberg (Robert Harding Picture Library) Anarchist militia in Barcelona, 1 936 (Hulton Deutsch) Adolf Hitler in occupied Paris (Hulton Deutsch) US 'Flying Fortresses' raid Berlin (Popperfoto) The battle of Kursk, 1943 (Robert Harding) London burning, 1940 (Hulton Deutsch) Dresden burned, 1945 (Hulton Deutsch) Hiroshima after the atom bomb, 1945 (Rex Features) Josip Broz, Marshal Tito (Rex Features) A British wartime poster (Imperial War Museum) Algiers, 1961 (Robert Harding Picture Library) Premier Indira Gandhi (Rex Features) A US cruise missile (Rex Features) A silo for Soviet SS missiles (Popperfoto) The Berlin Wall (Popperfoto) Fidel Castro's rebel army in Santa Clara (Magnum) Insurrectionaries in El Salvador (Hulton Deutsch) Anti-Vietnam War demonstration, London (Hulton Deutsch) Iran, 1979 (Hulton Deutsch) Michael Sergeyevich Gorbachev (Rex Features)

32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44.

The Berlin Wall falls, 1989

(Hulton Deutsch) Stalin removed in Prague (BBC Photographic Library) Agricultural terracing in the Liping valley, China (Comstock) Electron micrograph of a bacterium (Science Photo Library) Chinese peasant ploughing (Robert Harding) Turkish immigrant couple in West Berlin (Magnum) West Indians arriving in London in the 1950s (Hulton Deutsch) Africa at the end of the century (Gideon Mendel/Network) Ahmedabad, India (Robert Harding) Chicago, USA (Robert Harding) Rush hour in Shinjuku, Tokyo (Rex Features) Railyard, Augsburg, Germany (Comstock) Motorways, cars and pollution in Houston, Texas (Magnum) The first moon landing, 1 969 (Hulton Deutsch) A 1930s cannery, Amarillo, Texas (FPC/Robert Harding) Dungeness nuclear power station (Rex Features) Deindustrialisation in North England, Middlesbrough (Magnum) The refrigerator (Robert Harding) The television set (Robert Harding) The supermarket (Rex Features) The portable tape-cassette player (Robert Harding) Neville Chamberlain fishing (Popperfoto) Earl Mountbatten of Burma (Hulton Deutsch) Lenin, 1917 (Hulton Deutsch)

45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. Gandhi on the way to negotiate with the British government 57. 58. 59.

(Rex Features) Stalin (FPC International/Robert Harding) Hitler's birthday parade, 1 939 (Hulton Deutsch) 'Chairman Mao' by Andy Warhol (© 1994 The Andy Warhol Foundationfor the Visual Arts, Inc. Photo: Bridgeman Art Library) The corpse of Ayatollah Khomeini lying in state (Magnum)

60. 61. George Grosz savages the German ruling class 62. British workers march on London (Hulton Deutsch) 63. Anti-Vietnam War demonstration, Berkeley, California (Magnum) 64. Oaims to world conquest

65. 66. 67. 68.

After the Gulf War, 1991 Homeless

(Magnum)

(Rex Features) (Rex Features) 1 914 (Popperfoto)

Waiting to vote in South Africa Sarajevo eighty years after

(Copyright holders are indicated in italics)

Preface and Acknowledgements

Nobody can write the history of the twentieth century like that of any other era, if only because nobody can write about his or her lifetime as one can (and must) write about a period known only from outside, at second or third-hand, from sources of the period or the works of later historians. My own lifetime coincides with most of the period with which this book deals, and for most of it, from early teen-age to the present, I have been conscious of public affairs, that is to say I have accumulated views and prejudices about it as a contemporary rather than as a scholar. This is one reason why under my professional hat as a historian I avoided working on the era since 1914 for most of my career, though not refraining from writing about it in other capacities. 'My period', as they say in the trade, is the nineteenth century. I think it is now possible to see the Short Twentieth Century from 1914 to the end of the Soviet era in some historical perspective, but I come to it without the knowledge of the scholarly literature, let alone of all but a tiny sprinkle of archive sources, which historians of the twentieth century, of whom there is an enormous number, have accumulated. It is, of course, utterly impossible for any single person to know the historiography of the present century, even that in any single major language, as, let us say, the historian of classical antiquity or of the Byzantine Empire knows what has been written in and about those long periods. Nevertheless, my own knowledge is casual and patchy even by the standards of historical erudition in the field of contemporary history. The most I have been able to do is to dip into the literature of particularly thorny and controverted questions - say, the history of the Cold War or that of the 1930s - far enough to satisfy myself that the views expressed in this book are tenable in the light of specialist research. Of course, I cannot have succeeded. There must be any number

of questions

controversial views.

on

which

I

display

ignorance

as

well

as

x

Preface and AclmoJPkdgements This book, therefore, rests on curiously uneven foundations. In addi­

tion to the wide and miscellaneous reading of a good many years, supplemented by what reading was necessary to give lecture courses on twentieth-century history to the graduate students of the New School for Social Research, I have drawn on the accumulated knowledge, memories and opinions of someone who has lived through the Short Twentieth Century, as what the social anthropologists call a 'participant observer', or simply as an open-eyed traveller, or what my ancestors would have called a

kibbitzer,

in quite a lot of countries. The historical value of such

experiences does not depend on being present on great historic occasions, or having known or even met prominent history-makers or statesmen. As a matter of fact, my experience as an occasional journalist enquiring into this or that country, chiefly in Latin America, has been that interviews with presidents or other decision-makers are usually unrewarding, for the obvious reason that most of what such people say is for the public record. The people from whom illumination comes are those who can, or want to, speak freely, preferably if they have no responsibility for great affairs. Nevertheless, though necessarily partial and misleading, to have known people and places has helped me enormously. It may be no more than the sight of the same city at an interval of thirty years- Valencia or Palermo - which alone brings home the speed and scale of social transformation in the third quarter of the present century. It may be simply a memory of something said in conversations long ago and stored away, sometimes for no clear reason, for future

use.

If the historian can make some sense of this

century it is in large part because of watching and listening. I hope I have communicated to readers something of what I have learned through doing so. The book also, and necessarily, rests on the information drawn from colleagues, students, and anyone else whom I buttonholed while I was working on it. In some cases the debt is systematic. The chapter on the sciences was submitted to my friends Alan Mackay FRS, who is not only a crystallographer but an encyclopedist, and John Maddox. Some of what I have written about economic development was read by my colleague at the New School, Lance Taylor, formerly of MIT, and much more was based on reading the papers, listening to the discussions and generally keeping my ears open during the conferences organized on various macro-economic problems at the World Institute for Development Econ­ omic Research of the UN University (UNU/WIDER) in Helsinki when it was transformed into a major international centre of research and discussion under the direction of Dr Lal Jayawardena. In general, the summers I was able to spend at that admirable institution as a McDonnell Douglas visiting scholar were invaluable to me, not least through its

Preface and Acknowledgements

XJ

proximity to, and intellectual concern with, the USSR in its last years. I have not always accepted the advice of those I consulted, and, even when I hav.e, the errors are strictly my own. I have derived much benefit from the conferences and colloquia at which academics spend much of their time meeting their colleagues largely for the purpose of picking each others' brains. I cannot possibly acknowledge all the colleagues from whom I have derived benefit or correction on formal or informal occa­ sions, nor even all the information I have incidentally acquired from being lucky enough to teach a particularly international group of students at the New School. However, I think I must specifically acknowledge what I learned about the Turkish revolution and about the nature of Third World migration and social mobility from term papers produced by Ferdan Ergut and Alex Julca. I am also indebted to the doctoral dissertation of my pupil Margarita Giesecke on APRA and the Trujillo Rising of 1932. As the historian of the twentieth century draws closer to the present he or she becomes increasingly dependent on two types of sources: the daily or periodical press and the periodic reports, economic and other surveys, statistical compilations and other publications by national governments and international institutions. My debt to such papers as the London

Guardian,

the

Financial Times

and the

New York Times

should be

obvious. My debt to the invaluable publications of the United Nations and its various agencies, and the World Bank, is recorded in the biblio­ graphy. Nor should their predecessor, the League of Nations, be forgot­ ten. Though an almost total failure in practice, its admirable economic enquiries and analyses, culminating in the pioneering_ Industrialisation

World Trade of 1945 deserve

and

our gratitude. No history of economic social

and cultural changes in this century could be written without such sources. Most of what I have written in this bopk, except obvious personal judgments of the author, readers will have to take on trust. There is no point in overloading a book such as this with a vast apparatus of references or other signs of erudition. I have tried to confine my references to the source of actual quotations,

to

the source of statistics

and other quantitative data - different sources sometimes give different figures - and to the

occasional

support for statements which readers may

find unusual, unfamiliar or unexpected, and some points where the author's controversial view might require some backing. These references are in brackets in the text. The full title of the source is to be found at the end of the volume. This bibliography is no more than a full list of all the sources actually cited or referred to in the text. It is

not

a systematic

guide to further reading. A brief pointer to further reading is printed

xii

Preface and Ackno'Q)/edgements

separately. The apparatus of references, such as it is, is also quite separate from the footnotes, which merely amplify or qualify the text. Nevertheless, it is only fair to point to some works on which I have relied quite a lot or to which I

am

particularly indebted. I would not

want their authors to feel unappreciated. In general I owe much to the work of two friends: the economic historian and indefatigable compiler of quantitative data, Paul Bairoch, and Ivan Berend, formerly President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, to whom I owe the concept of the Short Twentieth Century. For the general political history of the world since the Second World War, P. Calvocoressi

( World Politics Since 1945)

has been a sound, and sometimes- understandably- tart guide. For the Second World War I owe much to Alan Milward's superb

War, Economy

and Society 1939-45, and for the post-1945 economy I have found Herman Van der Wee's Prosperity and Upheaval: The World Economy 1945-1980 and also Capitalism Since 1945 by Philip Armstrong, Andrew Glyn and John Harrison most useful. Martin Walker's The Cold War deserves far more appreciation than most of the lukewarm reviewers have given it. For the history of the Left since the Second World War I am greatly indebted to Dr Donald Sassoon of Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London, who has kindly let me read his

so

far

uncompleted vast and perceptive study on this subject. For the history of the USSR I am particularly indebted to the writings ofMoshe Lewin, Alec Nove, R.W. Davies and Sheila Fitzpatrick; for China to those of Benjamin Schwartz and Stuart Schram; for the Islamic world to Ira Lapidus and Nikki Keddie.My views on the arts owe much to John Willett's works on Weimar culture (and to his conversation), and to Francis Haskell. In chapter 6 my debt to Lynn Garafola's Diaghilev should be obvious. My special thanks go to those who have actually helped me to prepare this book. They are, first, my research assistants Joanna Bedford in London and Lise Grande in New York. I would particularly like to stress my debt to the exceptional Ms Grande, without whom I could not possibly have filled the enorritous gaps in my knowledge, and verified half-remembered facts and references. I am greatly indebted to Ruth Syers, who typed my drafts, and to Marlene Hobsbawm, who read the chapters from the point of view of the non-academic reader with a general interest in the modem world, to whom this book is addressed. I have already indicated my debt to the students of the New School, who listened to the lectures in which I tried to formulate my ideas and interpretations. To them this book is dedicated. Eric Hobsbawm London-New York, 1993-94

The Century: A Bird's Eye View

TWELVE PEOPLE LOOK AT THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

Isaiah Berlin (philosopher, Britain): ' I have lived through most of the twentieth century without, I must add, suffering personal hardship. I remember it only

as

the most terrible century in

Western history.'

Julio Caro Baroja (anthropologist, Spain): 'There's a patent contra­ diction between one's own life experience - childhood, youth and old age passed quietly and without major adventures - and the facts of the twentieth century . .. the terrible events which humanity has lived through.'

Primo Levi (writer, Italy): 'We who survived the Camps are not true witnesses. This is an uncomfortable notion which I have gradually come to accept by reading what other survivors have written, including myself, when I re-read my writings after a lapse of years. We, the survivors, are not only a tiny but also an anomalous minority. We are those who, through prevarication, skill or luck, never touched bottom. Those who have, and who have seen the face of the Gorgon, did not return, or returned wordless.'

Rene Dumont (agronomist, ecologist, France): ' I see it only as a century of massacres and wars.'

Rita Levi Montalcini (Nobel Laureate, science, Italy): ' In spite of everything there have been revolutions for the better in this century . . . the rise of the fourth estate, and the emergence of women after centuries of repression.'

William Golding (Nobel Laureate, writer, Britain): ' I can't help thinking that this has been the most violent century in human history.'

2

Age ofExtremes Ernst Gombrich (art historian, Britain): 'The chief characteristic of the twentieth century is the terrible multiplication of the world's population. It is a catastrophe, a disaster. We don't know what to do about it.'

Yehudi Menuhin (musician, Britain): 'If I had to sum up the twentieth century, I would say that it raised the greatest hopes ever conceived by humanity, and destroyed all illusions and ideals.'

Severo Ochoa (Nobel Laureate, science, Spain): 'The most fundamen­ tal thing is the progress of science, which has been truly extra­

ordinary .. . This is what characterizes our century.'

Raymond Firth (anthropologist, Britain): 'Technologically, I single out the development of electronics among the most significant developments of the twentieth century; in terms of ideas, the change from a relatively rational and scientific view of things to a non-rational and less scientific one.'

Leo Va/iani (historian, Italy): 'Our century demonstrates that the victory of the ideals of justice and equality is always ephemeral, but also that, if we manage to preserve liberty, we can always start all over again . . . There is no need to despair, even in the most desperate situations.'

Franco Venturi (historian, Italy): 'Historians can't answer this ques­ tion. For me the twentieth century is only the ever-renewed effort to understand it.' (Agosti and Borgese, 1992, pp. 42, 210, 154, 76, 4, 8, 204, 2, 62, 80, 140, 160.)

I On the 28 June 1992 President Mitterrand of France made a sudden, unannounced and unexpected appearance in Sarajevo, already the centre of a Balkan war that was to cost perhaps 150,000 lives during the remainder of the year. His object was to remind world opinion of the seriousness of the Bosnian crisis. Indeed, the presence of a distinguished, elderly and visibly frail statesman under small-arms and artillery fire was

The Century: A Bird's Eye View

3

much remarked on and admired. However, one aspect of M. Mitterrand's visit passed virtually without comment, even though it was plainly central to it: the date. Why had the President of France chosen to go to Sarajevo on that particular day? Because the 28 June was the anniversary of the assassination, in Sarajevo, in 1914, of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary, which led, within a matter of weeks, to the outbreak of the First World War. For any educated European of Mitterrand's age, the connection between date, place and the reminder of a historic catastrophe precipitated by political error and miscalculation leaped to the eye. How better to dramatize the potential implications of the Bosnian crisis than by choosing so symbolic a date? But hardly anyone caught the allusion except a few professional historians and very senior citizens. The historical memory was no longer alive. The destruction of the past, or rather of the social mechanisms that link one's contemporary experience to that of earlier generations, is one of the most characteristic and eerie phenomena of the late twentieth century. Most young men and women at the century's end grow up in a sort of permanent present lacking any organic relation to the public past of the times they live in. This makes historians, whose business it is to remember what others forget, more essential at the end of the second millennium than ever before. But for that very reason they must be more than simply chroniclers, remembrancers and compilers, though this is also the historians' necessary function. In 1989 all governments, and especially all Foreign Ministries, in the world would have benefited from a seminar on the peace settlements after the two world wars, which most of them had apparently forgotten. However, it is not the purpose of this book to tell the story of the period which is its subject, the Short Twentieth Century from 1914 to

1991, although no one who has been asked by an intelligent American student whether the phrase 'Second World War' meant that there had been a 'First World War' is unaware that knowledge of even the basic facts of the century cannot be taken for granted. My object is to understand and explain

why things

turned out the way they did, and how

they hang together. For anyone of my age-group who has lived through all or most of the Short Twentieth Century this is inevitably also an autobiographical endeavour. We are talking about, amplifying (and correct­ ing) our own memories. And we are talking as men and women of a particular time and place, involved, in various ways, in its history as actors in its dramas - however insignificant. our parts - as observers of our times and, not least, as people whose views of the century have been formed by what we have come to

see

as its crucial events. We

4

Age ofExtremes

are part of this century. It is part of us. Readers who belong to another era, for instance the student entering university at the time this is written, for whom even the Vietnam War is prehistory, should not forget this. For historians of my generation and background, the past is indestruct­ ible, not only because we belong to the generation when streets and public places were still called after public men and events (the Wilson station in pre-war Prague, the Metro Stalingrad in Paris), when peace treaties were still signed and therefore had to be identified (Treaty of Versailles) and war memorials recalled yesterdays, but because public events are part of the texture of our lives. They are not merely markers in our private lives, but what has formed our lives, private and public. For this author the 30 January 1933 is not simply an otherwise arbitrary date when Hitler became Chancellor of Germany, but a winter afternoon in Berlin when a fifteen-year-old and his younger sister were on the way home from their neighbouring schools in Wilmersdorf to Halensee and, somewhere on the way, saw the headline. I can see it still, as in a dream. But not only one old historian has the past as part of his permanent present. Over huge stretches of the globe everybody over a certain age, irrespective of their personal background and life-story, has passed through the same central experiences. These have marked us all, to some extent in the same ways. The world that went to pieces at the end of the 1980s was the world shaped by the impact of the Russian Revolution of 1917. We have all been marked by it, for instance, inasmuch as we got used to thinking of the modern industrial economy in terms of binary opposites, 'capitalism' and 'socialism' as alternatives mutually excluding one another, the one being identified with economies organized on the model of the USSR, the other with all the rest. It should now be becoming clear that this was an arbitrary and to some extent artificial construction, which can only be understood as part of a particular historical context. And yet, even .as I write, it is not easy to envisage, even in retrospect, other principles of classification which might have been more realistic than that which placed the USA, Japan, Sweden, Brazil, the German Federal Republic and South Korea in a single pigeon-hole, and the state economies and systems of the Soviet region which collapsed after the 1980s in the same compartment as those in East and Southeast Asia which demonstrably did not collapse. Again, even the world which has survived the end of the October Revolution is one whose institutions and assumptions were shaped by those who were on the winning side of the Second World War. Those

The Century: A Bird's Eye View

5

who were on the losing side or associated with it were not only silent and silenced, but virtually written out of history and intellectual life except in the role of 'the enemy' in the moral world drama of Good versus Evil. (This may now also be happening to the losers in the Cold War of the second half of the century, though probably not to quite the same extent or for

so

long.) This is one of the penalties of living through a century of

religious wars. Intolerance is their chief characteristic. Even those who advertised the pluralism of their own non-ideologies did not think the world was big enough for permanent coexistence with rival secular religions. Religious or ideological confrontations, such as those which have filled this century, build barricades in the way of the historian, whose major task is not to judge but to understand even what we can least comprehend. Yet what stands in the way of understanding is not only our passionate convictions, but the historical experience that has formed them. The first is easier to overcome, for there is no truth in the familiar but mistaken French phrase

tout comprendre c'st tout pardonner

(to understand all is to forgive all). To understand the Nazi era in German history and to fit it into its historical context is not to forgive the genocide. In any case, no one who has lived through this extraordinary century is likely to abstain from judgement. It is understanding that comes hard.

II How are we to make sense of the Short Twentieth Century, that is to say of the years from the outbreak of the First World War to the collapse of the USSR which, as we can now see in retrospect, forms a coherent historical period that has now ended? We do not know what will come next, and what the third millennium will be like, even though we can be certain that the Short Twentieth Century will have shaped it. However, there can be no serious doubt that in the late 1980s and early 1990s an era in world history ended and a new one began. That is the essential information for historians of the century, for though they can speculate about the future in the light of their understanding of the past, their business is not that of the racing tipster. The only horse-races they can claim to report and analyse are those already won or lost. In any case, the record of forecasters in the past thirty or forty years, whatever their professional qualification as prophets, has been

so

spectacularly bad that

only governments and economic research institutes still have, or pretend

Age ofExtremes

6-

to have, much confidence in it. It is even possible that it has got worse since the Second World War. In this book the structure of the Short Twentieth Century appears like a sort of triptych or historical sandwich. An Age of Catastrophe from 1914 to the aftermath of the Second World War was followed by some twenty-five or thirty years of extraordinary economic growth and social transformation, which probably changed human society more profoundly than any other period of comparable brevity. In retrospect it can be seen as a sort of Golden Age, and was so

seen

almost immediately it had come

to an end in the early 1970s. The last part of the century was a new era of decomposition, uncertainty and crisis - and indeed, for large parts of the world such as Africa, the former USSR and the formerly socialist parts of Europe, of catastrophe. As the 1980s gave way to the 1990s, the mood of those who reflected on the century's past and future was a growingfin­

de-siicle gloom. From the vantage-point of the 1990s, the Short Twentieth Century passed through a brief Golden Age, on the way from one era of crisis to another, into an unknown and problematic but not necessarily apocalyptic future. However, as historians may wish to remind metaphysi­ cal speculators about 'The End of History', there will be a future. The

only completely certain generalization about history is that, so long as there is a human race, it will go on. The argument of this book is organized accordingly. It begins with the First World War, which marked the breakdown of the (western) civiliza­ tion of the nineteenth century. This civilization was capitalist in its economy; liberal in its legal and constitutional structure; bourgeois in the image of its characteristic hegemonic class; glorying in the advance of science, knowledge and education, material and moral progress; and profoundly convinced of the centrality of Europe, birthplace of the revolutions of the sciences, arts, politics and industry, whose economy had penetrated, and whose soldiers had conquered and subjugated most of the world; whose populations had grown until (including the vast and growing outflow of European emigrants and their descendants) they had risen to form a third of the human race; and whose major states constituted the system of world politics. • The decades from the outbreak of the First World War to the

I have tried to describe and explain the rise of this civilization in a three-volume

history of the 'long nineteenth century' (from the 1780s to 1914) and tried to analyse the reasons for its breakdown. The present text will refer back to these volumes, The Age ofRevolution, 17�1848, The Age of Capital, 1848-1875 and The Age of Empire 1875-1914, from time to time, where this seems useful.

The Century: A Bird's Eye View

7

aftermath of the Second, was an Age of Catastrophe for this society. For forty years it stumbled from one calamity to another. There were times when even intelligent conservatives would not take bets on its survival. It was shaken by two world wars, followed by two waves of global rebellion and revolution, which brought to power a system that claimed to be the historically predestined alternative to bourgeois and capitalist society, first over one sixth of the world's land surface, and after the Second World War over one third of the globe's population. The huge colonial empires, built up before and during the Age of Empire, were shaken and crumbled into dust. The entire history of modem imperialism, so firm and self-confident when Queen Victoria of Great Britain died, had lasted no longer than a single lifetime - say, that of Winston Churchill ( 1874--1965). More than this: a world economic crisis of unprecedented depth brought even the strongest capitalist economies to their knees and seemed to reverse the creation of a single universal world economy, which had been so remarkable an achievement of nineteenth-century liberal capital­ ism. Even the USA, safe from war and revolution, seemed close to collapse. While the economy tottered, the institutions of liberal democracy virtually disappeared between 1917 and 1942 from all but a fringe of Europe and parts of North America and Australasia, as fascism and its satellite authoritarian movements and regimes advanced. Only the temporary and bizzare alliance of liberal capitalism and communism in self-defence against this challenger saved democracy, for the victory over Hitler's Germany was essentially won, and could only have been won, by the Red Army. In many ways this period of capitalist­ communist alliance against fascism - essentially the 1930s and 1940s forms the hinge of twentieth-century history and its decisive moment. In many ways it is a moment of historical paradox in the relations of capitalism and communism, placed, for most of the century - except for the brief period of antifascism - in a posture of irreconcilable antagonism. The victory of the Soviet Union over Hitler was the achievement of the regime installed there by the October Revolution, as a comparison of the performance of the Russian Tsarist economy in the First World War and the Soviet economy in the Second World War demonstrates (Gatrell/ Harrison, 1993). Without it the Western world today would probably consist (outside the USA) of a set of variations on authoritarian and fascist themes rather than a set of variations on liberal parliamentary ones. It is one of the ironies of this strange century that the most lasting results of the October revolution, whose object was the global overthrow of capitalism, was to save its antagonist, both in war and in peace - that

Age ofExtremes

8

is to say, by providing it with the incentive, fear, to reform itself after the Second World War, and, by establishing the popularity of economic planning, furnishing it with some of the procedures for its reform. Still, even when liberal capitalism had - and only just - survived the triple challenge of slump, fascism and war, it still seemed to face the global advance of revolution, which could now rally round the USSR, which had emerged from the Second World War as a superpower. And yet,

as

we can now see in retrospect, the strength of the global

socialist challenge to capitalism was that of the weakness of its opponent. Without the breakdown of nineteenth-century bourgeois society in the Age of Catastrophe, there would have been no October revolution and no USSR. The economic system improvised in the ruined rural Eurasian hulk of the former Tsarist Empire under the name of socialism would not have considered itself, nor been considered elsewhere, as a realistic global alternative to the capitalist economy. It was the Great Slump of the 1930s that made it look as though it was so, as it was the challenge of fascism which made the USSR into the indispensable instrument of Hitler's defeat, and tJterefore into one of the two superpowers whose confronta­ tions dominated and terrified the second half of the Short Twentieth Century, while - as we can also now see - in many respects stabilizing its political structure. The USSR would not have found itself, for a decade­ and-a-half in the middle of the century, at the head of a 'socialist camp' comprising a third of the human race, and an economy that briefly looked as though it might out-race capitalist economic growth. Just how and why capitalism after the Second World War found itself, to everyone's surprise including its own, surging forward into the unprec­ edented and possibly anomalous Golden Age of 1947-73, is perhaps the major question which faces historians of the twentieth century. There is as yet no agreement on an answer, nor can I claim to provide a persuasive one. Probably a more convincing analysis will have to wait until the entire 'long wave' of the second half of the twentieth century can be

seen

in perspective, but, although we can now look back on the Golden Age as a whole, the Crisis Decades through which the world has lived since then are not yet complete at the time this is written. However, what

can

already be assessed with great confidence is the extraordinary scale and impact of the consequent economic, social and cultural transformation, the greatest, most rapid and most fundamental in recorded history. Various aspects of it are discussed in the second part of this book. Historians of the twentieth century in the third millennium will probably see

the century's major impact on history

as

the one made by and in this

astonishing period. For the changes in human life it brought about all

The Century: A Bird's Eye View

9

over the globe were as profound as they were irreversible. Moreover, they are still continuing. The journalists and philosophical essayists who detected 'the end of history' in the fall of the Soviet Empire were wrong. A better

case

can be made for saying that the third quarter of the century

marked the end of the seven or eight millennia of human history that began with the invention of agriculture in the stone age, if only because it ended the long era when the overwhelming majority of the human race lived by growing food and herding animals. Compared to this, the history of the confrontation between 'capitalism' and 'socialism', with or without the intervention of states and governments such as the USA and the USSR claiming to represent one or the other, will probably seem of more limited historical interest - comparable, in the long run, to the sixteenth and seventeenth-century wars of religion or the Crusades. For those who lived through any part of the Short Twentieth Century they naturally bulked large, and so they do in this book, since it is written by a twentieth-century writer for late-twentieth­ century readers. Social revolutions, the Cold War, the nature, limits and fatal flaws of 'really existing socialism' and its breakdown, are discussed at length. Nevertheless, it is important to remember that the major and lasting impact of the regimes inspired by the October revolution was as a powerful accelerator of the modernization of backward agrarian countries. As it happened, its major achievements in this respect coincided with the capitalist Golden Age. How effective, or even how consciously held, the rival strategies for burying the world of our forefathers were, need not be considered here. As we shall see, until the early 1960s, they

seemed

at

least evenly matched, a view which seems preposterous in the light of the collapse of Soviet socialism, though a British prime minister, conversing with an American president, could then still see the USSR as a state whose 'buoyant economy . . . will soon outmatch capitalist society in the race for material wealth' (Home, 1989, p. 303). However, the point to note is simply that, in the 1980s, socialist Bulgaria and non-socialist Ecuador had more in common than either had with the Bulgaria or Ecuador of 1939. Although the collapse of Soviet socialism and its enormous and still not fully calculable, but mainly negative, consequences were the most dramatic incident in the Crisis Decades which followed the Golden Age, these were to be decades of

universal or global crisis. The crisis affected the

various parts of the world in different ways and degrees, but it affected all, irespective of their political, social and economic configurations, because the Golden Age had, for the first time in history, created a single, increasingly integrated and universal world economy largely operating across state

10

Age ofExtremes

frontiers ('transnationally'), and therefore also increasingly across the frontiers of state ideology. Consequently the accepted ideas of institutions of all regimes and systems were undermined. Initially the troubles of the 1970s were seen only as a hopefully, temporary pause in the Great Leap Forward of the world economy, and countries of all economic and political types and patterns looked for temporary solutions. Increasingly it became clear that this was an era of long-term difficulties, for which capitalist countries sought radical solutions, often by following secular theologians of the unrestricted free market who rejected the policies that had served the world economy so well in the Golden Age, but now seemed to be failing. The ultras of

laissez-faire

were no more successful

than anyone else. In the 1980s and early 1990s the capitalist world found itself once again staggering under the burdens of the inter-war years, which the Golden Age appeared to have removed: mass unemployment, severe cyclical slumps, the ever-more spectacular confrontation of home­ less beggars and luxurious plenty, between limited state revenues and limitless state expenditures. Socialist countries, with their now flagging and vulnerable economies, were driven towards equally or even more radical breaks with their past, and, as we know, towards breakdown. That breakdown can stand as the marker for the end of the Short Twentieth Century, as the First World War can stand as the marker for its beginning. At this point my history concludes. It concludes - as any book completed in the early 1990s must - with a view into obscurity. The collapse of one part of the world revealed the malaise of the rest. As the 1980s passed into the 1990s it became evident that the world crisis was not only general in an economic sense, but equally general in politics. The collapse of the communist regimes between !stria and Vladivostok not only produced an enormous zone of political uncertainty, instability, chaos and civil war, but also destroyed the international system that had stabilized international relations for some forty years. It also revealed the precariousness of the domestic political systems that had essentially rested on that stability. The tensions of troubled economies undermined the political systems of liberal democ­ racy, parliamentary or presidential, which had functioned so well in the developed capitalist countries since the Second World War. They also undermined whatever political systems operated in the Third World. The basic units of politics themselves, the territorial, sovereign and independent 'nation-states', including the oldest and stablest, found themselves pulled apart by the forces of a supranational or transnational economy, and by the infranational forces of secessionist regions and ethnic groups. Some of these - such is the irony of history - demanded

The Century: A Bird's Eye View

ll

the outdated and unreal status of miniature sovereign 'nation-states' for themselves. The future of politics was obscure, but its crisis at the end of the Short Twentieth Century was patent. Even more obvious than the uncertainties of world economics and world politics was the social and moral crisis, reflecting the post-1950 upheavals in human life, which also found widespread if confused expres­ sion in these Crisis Decades. It was a crisis of the beliefs and assumptions on which modern society had been founded since the Moderns won their famous battle against the Ancients in the early eighteenth century - of the rationalist and humanist assumptions, shared by liberal capitalism arid communism, and which made possible their brief but decisive alliance against fascism, which rejected them. A conservative German observer, Michael Stiirmer, rightly observed in 1993 that the beliefs of both East and West were at issue: There is a strange parallelism between East and West. In the East state doctrine insisted that humanity was the master of its destiny. However, even we believed in a less official and less extreme version of the same slogan: mankind was on the way to becoming master of its destinies. The claim to omnipotence has disappeared absolutely in the East, only relatively chez nous- but both sides have suffered shipwreck. (From Bergedorf, 98, p. 95) Paradoxically, an era whose only claim to have benefited humanity rested on the enormous triumphs of a material progress based on science and technology ended in a rejection of these by substantial bodies of public opinion and people claiming to be thinkers in the West. However, the moral crisis was not only one of the assumptions of modem civilization, but also one of the historic structures of human relations which modern society inherited from a pre-industrial and pre­ capitalist past, and which, as we can now see, had enabled it to function. It was not a crisis of one form of organizing societies, but of all forms. The strange calls for an otherwise unidentified 'civil society', for 'commu­ nity' were the voice of lost and drifting generations. They were heard in an age when such words, having lost their traditional meanings, became vapid phrases. There was no other way left to define group identity, except by defining the outsiders who were not in it. For the poet T.S. Eliot 'this is the way the world ends- not with a bang but a whimper.' The Short Twentieth century ended with both.

12

Age ofExtremes III

How did the world of the 1990s compare with the world of 1914? It contained five or six billion human beings, perhaps three times as many people as at the outbreak of the First World War, and this in spite of the fact that during the Short Century more human beings had been killed or allowed to die by human decision than ever before in history. A recent estimate of the century's 'megadeaths' is 187 millions (Brzezinski, 1993), which is the equivalent of more than one in ten of the total world population in 1900. Most people in the 1990s were taller and heavier than their parents, better fed, and far longer-lived, though the catastrophes of the 1980s and 1990s in Africa, Latin America and the ex-USSR may make this difficult to believe. The world was incomparably richer than ever before in its capacity to produce goods and services and in their endless variety. It could not have managed otherwise to maintain a global population several times larger than ever before in the world's history. Most people until the 1980s lived better than their parents, and, in the advanced economies, better than they had ever expected to live or even imagined it possible to live. For some decades in the middle of the century it even looked as though ways had been found of distributing at least some of this enormous wealth with a degree of fairness to the working people of the richer countries, but at the end of the century inequality had once again the upper hand. It had also made a massive entry into the former 'socialist' countries where a certain equality of poverty had previously reigned. Humanity was far better educated than in 1914. Indeed, probably for the first time in history most human beings could be described as literate, at least in official statistics, though the significance of this achievement was far less clear at the end of the century than it would have been in 1914, given the enormous and probably growing gap between the minimum of competence officially accepted as literacy, often shading into 'functional illiteracy', and the command of reading and writing still expected at elite levels. The world was filled with a revolutionary and constantly advancing technology, based on triumphs of natural science which could be antici­ pated in 1914, but had then barely begun to be pioneered. Perhaps the most dramatic practical consequence of these was a revolution in transport and communications which virtually annihilated time and distance.· It was a world which could bring more information and entertainment than had been available to emperors in 1914, daily, hourly, into every household. It let people speak to one another across oceans and continents at the touch of a few buttons, and, for most practical

The Century: A Bird's Eye View

13

purposes, abolished the cultural advantages of city over countryside. Why, then, did the century end, not with a celebration of this unparalleled and

marvellous

progress, but in a mood of uneasiness? Why,

as the epigraphs to this chapter show, did so many reflective minds look back upon it without satisfaction, and certainly without confidence in the future? Not only because it was without doubt the most murderous century of which we have record, both by the scale, frequency and length of the warfare which filled it, barely ceasing for a moment in the

1920s,

but also by the unparalleled scale of the human catastrophes it produced, from the greatest famines in history to systematic genocide. Unlike the 'long nineteenth century', which seemed, and actually was, a period of

and moral progress, that is to say of civilized life, there has, since 1914,

almost unbroken material, intellectual improvement in the conditions of

been a marked regression from the standards then regarded as normal in the developed countries and in the milieus of the middle classes and which were confidently believed to be spreading to the more backward regions and the less enlightened strata of the population. Since this century has taught us, and continues to teach us, that human beings can learn to live under the most brutalized and theoretically intolerable conditions, it is not easy to grasp the extent of the, unfortu­ nately accelerating, return to what our nineteenth-century ancestors would have called the standards of barbarism. We forget that the old revolutionary Frederick Engels was horrified at the explosion of an Irish Republican bomb in Westminster Hall, because, as an old soldier, he held that war was waged against combatants and not non-combatants. We forget that the pogroms in Tsarist Russia which (justifiably) outraged world opinion and drove Russian Jews across the Atlantic in their millions between

1881 and 1914, were small, almost negligible, by the

standards of modern massacre: the dead were counted in dozens, not hundreds, let alone millions. We forget that an international Convention once provided that hostilities in war 'must not commence without previ­ ous and explicit warning in the form of a reasoned declaration of war or of an ultimatum with conditional declaration of war', for when was the last war that began with such an explicit or implicit declaration? Or one that ended with a formal treaty of peace negotiated between the belligerent states? In the course of the twentieth century, wars have been increasingly waged against the economy and infrastructure of states and against their civilian populations. Since the First World War the number of c_ivilian casualties in war has been far greater than that of military casualties in all belligerent countries except the USA. How many of us recall that it was taken for granted in

1914 that:

14

Age ofExtremes Civilized warfare, the textbooks tell us, is confined, as far as possible, to disablement of the armed forces of the enemy; otherwise war would continue till one of the parties was exterminated. 'It is with good reason . . . that this practice has grown into a custom with the nations of Europe'. (Encyclopedia Britannica, XI ed., 1911, art: War.)

We do not quite overlook the revival of torture or even murder as a normal part of the operations of public security in modern states, but we probably fail to appreciate quite how dramatic a reversal this constitutes of the long era of legal development, from the first formal abolition of torture in a Western country in the 1780s to 1914. And yet, the world at the end of the Short Twentieth Century cannot be compared with the world at its beginning in the terms of the historical accountancy of 'more' and 'less'. It was a qualitatively different world in at least three respects. First, it was no longer Eurocentric. It had brought the decline and fall of Europe, still the unquestioned centre of power, wealth, intellect and 'Western civilization' when the century began. Europeans and their descendants were now reduced from perhaps a third of humanity to at most one sixth, a diminishing minority living in countries which barely, if at all, reproduced their populations, surrounded by, and in most cases with some shining exceptions such as the USA (until the 1990s) barricading themselves against the pressure of immigration from the regions of the poor. The industries Europe had pioneered were migrating elsewhere. The countries which had once looked across the oceans to Europe looked elsewhere. Australia, New Zealand, even the hi-oceanic USA, saw the future in the Pacific, whatever exactly this meant. The 'great powers' of 1914, all of them European, had disappeared, like the USSR, inheritor of Tsarist Russia, or were reduced to regional or provincial status, with the possible exception of Germany. The very effort to create a single supranational 'European Community' and to invent a sense of European identity to correspond to it, replacing the old loyalties to historic nations and states, demonstrated the depth of this decline. Was this a change of major significance, except for political historians? Perhaps not, since it reflected only minor changes in the economic, intellectual and cultural configuration of the world. Even in 1914 the USA had been the major industrial economy, and the major pioneer, model and propulsive force of the mass production and mass culture which conquered the globe during the Short Twentieth Century, and the USA, in spite of its many peculiarities, was the overseas extension of

The Century: A Bird's Eye View

15

Europe, and bracketed itself with the old continent under the heading 'western civilization'. Whatever its future pros�ts, the USA looked back from the 1990s on 'The American Century', an age of its rise and triumph. The ensemble of the countries of nineteenth-ktuuc'). The "'.-\,"'' \unncr rnlk•\11 JlO"'n' ID the Soucn'.

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1� ...tloci\m rriutnf\hanll \dol( Jlnk-r, (OOQiotl'f'OI' ofF"rope, 19�1. rtl 0oe01p1td P1rilonial or dependent part of the globe were now committed, in one way or another, to policies which required them to have exactly those stable, functioning and efficient states which so few of them had. They were committed to economic independence and 'development'. In the aftermath of the second round of world war, world revolution and its consequence, global decolonization, it seemed that there was no future for the old programme of prosperity as primary-producers for the world market of the imperialist countries: the programme of the Argentine and Uruguayan estancieros, hopefully imitated by Mexico's Porfirio Diaz and Peru's Leguia. In any case it had ceased to look plausible since the Great Slump. Moreover, both nationalism and anti-imperialism called for policies less dependent on the old empires, and the example of the U S S R provided an alternative model of 'development'. Never did that example look more impressive than in the years after 1945. The more ambitious states therefore called for an end to agrarian backwardness by systematic industrialization, whether on the centrally­ planned Soviet model or by import substitution. Both, in different ways, rested on state action and state control. Even the less ambitious, who did not dream of a future of great tropical steelworks, powered by huge hydro-electric installations overshadowed by titanic dams, wanted to control and develop their own national resources themselves. Oil had been traditionally produced by private Western corporations, usually with the closest relations to imperial powers. Governments, following the example of Mexico in 1938, now took to nationalizing them and operating them as state enterprises. Those which refrained from nationalization discovered (especially after 1950 when ARAMCO offered Saudi Arabia the hitherto unimaginable deal of a 50/50 revenue split) that physical possession of oil and gas gave them the whip-hand in negotiations with the foreign corporations. In practice the Organization of Petrol Exporting Countries (OPEC), which eventually held the world to ransom in the 1970s, became possible because the ownership of the world's oil had shifted from companies to a relatively few producer-governments. In short, even those governments of decolonized or dependent states which were quite happy with relying on foreign capitalists old or new ('neo­ colonialism' in contemporary Left-wing terminology), did so within a state-controlled economy. Probably the most successful of such states until the 1980s was the former French Ivory Coast. Probably the least successful were new countries which underestimated

The Third World

351

the constraints of backwardness - lack of skilled and experienced experts, administrators and economic cadres; illiteracy; unfamiliarity or lack of sympathy with programmes of economic modernization - especially when their governments set themselves targets which even developed countries found difficult, such as centrally state-planned industrialization. Ghana, with Sudan the first sub-Saharan African state to be granted independ­ ence, thus threw away currency reserves of two hundred millions, accumu­ lated thanks to high cocoa prices and wartime earnings - higher than the sterling balances of independent India - in an attempt to build an industrialized state-controlled economy, not to mention Kwame Nkru­ mah's plans for pan-African union. The results were disastrous, and made worse by the collapse of cocoa prices in the 1960s. By 1972 the great projects had failed, the domestic industries in the small country could survive only behind high tariff walls, price controls and import licences, which led to a flourishing black economy and generalized corruption that has remained ineradicable. Three quarters of all wage­ earners were employed in the public sector, while subsistence agriculture (as in so many other African states) was neglected. After Nkrumah's overthrow by the usual military coup (1966) the country continued on its disillusioned way amid a succession of usually disappointed military, and occasionally civilian governments. The dismal record of sub-Saharan Africa's new states should not lead us to underestimate the substantial achievements of better-placed ex­ colonial or dependent countries, who chose the road of state-planned or state-sponsored economic development. What came to be known from the 1970s in international functionaries' jargon as the NICs (Newly Industrializing Countries) were all, with the exception of the city-state of Hong Kong, based on such policies. As anyone with the slightest know­ ledge of Brazil and Mexico will testify, they produced bureaucracy, spectacular corruption and much waste - but also a 7 per cent annual rate of growth in both countries for decades: in short, both achieved the desired transition to modern industrial economies. In fact, Brazil became for a time the eighth-largest industrial country of the non-communist world. Both countries had a sufficiently vast population to provide a substantial home market, so that industrialization by import substitution made sense, at least for quite a long time. Public spending and activities sustained high demand at home. At one time the Brazilian public sector handled about half the gross domestic product and represented nineteen out of the twenty largest companies, while in Mexico it employed a fifth of the total workforce and paid two fifths of the national wage-bill (Harris, 1987, pp. 84-85). State-planning in the Far East tended to rely

352

The Golden Age

less on direct public enterprise and more on favoured business groups dominated by government control of credit and investment, but the dependence of economic development on the state was the same. Planning and state initiative was the name of the game everywhere in the world in the 1950s and 1960s and in the N I Cs until the 1990s. Whether this form of economic development produced satisfactory or disappointing results depended on local conditions and human errors.

III Development, state-controlled or not, was not of immediate interest to the great majority of the inhabitants of the Third World who lived by growing their own food; for even in countries or colonies whose public revenues relied on the income from one or two major export crops coffee, bananas or cocoa - these were usually concentrated in a few restricted areas. In sub-Saharan Africa and most of South and South-east Asia as well as in China, the mass of people continued to live by agriculture. Only in the western hemisphere and in the dry lands of western Islam did the countryside as yet drain into the giant cities, turning rural into urban societies in a couple of dramatic decades (see chapter 10). In fertile and not too densely populated regions, like much of black Africa, most people would have managed pretty well if left to themselves. Most of its inhabitants did not need their states, which were usually too weak to do much harm, and, if they grew too troublesome, could probably be by-passed by a retreat into village self-sufficiency. Few continents started the era of independence with greater advantages, which were soon to be thrown away. Most Asian and Islamic peasants were much poorer, or at least worse fed - sometimes, as in India, desperately and historically poor - and the pressure of men and women on limited lands was already more severe. Nevertheless, it seemed to a good many of them that the best solution to their problems was not to get involved with those who told them that economic development would bring untold wealth and prosperity, but to keep them at bay. Long experience had shown them and their ancestors before them, that no good came from outside. Generations of silent calculation had taught them that minimizing risks was a better policy than maximising profits. This did not keep them entirely outside the ambit of a global economic revolution which reached even the more isolated among them in the form of plastic sandals, petrol-cans, ancient trucks and - of course - govern­ ment offices with pieces of paper in them, but it tended to divide

The Third World

353

humanity in such areas into those who operated in and through the world of writing and offices and the rest. In most of the rural Third World the central

distinction was between

'coast'

and

'interior' or city and

backwoods.• The trouble was that, since modernity and government went together, 'the interior' was governed by 'the coast', the backwoods by the city, the illiterate by the educated. In the beginning was the word. The House of Assembly of what would shortly become the independent state of Ghana, included among its 104 members sixty-eight who had had some form of post-primary education. The 106 members of the Legislative Assembly for the Telengana (South India) contained ninety-seven with secondary or higher education, including fifty graduates. In both these regions the great majority of the inhabitants at the time were illiterate (Hodgkin, 1961, p. 29; Gray, 1970, p. 1 35 ). What is more, anyone wishing to be active in the

national

government of Third World states needed to be

literate not only in the common language of the region (which was not necessarily that of his or her community) but in one of the small number of international languages (English, French, Spanish, Arabic, Mandarin Chinese), or at least the regional lingua franca which new governments tended to develop into written 'national' languages (Swahili, Bahasa, Pidgin). The only exception was in those parts of Latin America where the written official languages (Spanish and Portuguese) coincided with the spoken language of the majority. Out of the candidates for public office in Hyderabad (India) in the general election of 1967 only three (out of thirty-four) spoke no English (Bernstorff, 1970, p. 146). Even the more remote and backward people therefore increasingly recognized the advantages of superior education, even when they could not themselves share them; perhaps especially when they could not. In a literal sense, knowledge meant power, most obviously in countries where the state appeared to its subjects to be a machine that extracted their resources and then distributed these resources to state employees. Educa­ tion meant a post, often a guaranteed post,t in the public service, with luck a career, which enabled men to extract bribes and commissions and to provide jobs for family and friends. A village in, say, Central Africa, which invested in the education of one of its young men, hoped for a

Similar divisions were to be found in some of the backward regions of socialist states, e.g. in Soviet Kazakhstan, where the indigenous inhabitants showed no interest in abandoning farming and livestock, leaving industrialization and cities to a correspondingly large body of (Russian) immigrants. t E.g. until the mid-1980s in Benin, Congo, Guinea, Somalia, Sudan, Mali, Rwanda and the Central African Republic (World Labour, 1989, p. 49). •

354

The Golden Age

return in the form of income and protection for the whole community from the government post which education would guarantee. In any case the successful civil servant was the best-paid man in the population. In a country like Uganda in the 1960s he could expect a (legal) salary 1 12 times the average per capita income of his countrymen (as against a comparable ratio of 10: 1 in Great Britain) (UN World Social Situation, 1970, p. 66). Where it seemed that poor people from the countryside might them­ selves share in the advantages of education, or provide them for their children (as in Latin America, the Third World region closest to moder­ nity and most distant from colonialism), the desire to learn was virtually universal. 'They all want to learn something,' a Chilean communist organizer among the Mapuche Indians told the author in 1962. 'I'm not an intellectual, and I can't teach them school knowledge, so I teach them how to play football.' This thirst for knowledge explains much of the amazing mass migration from village to city which emptied the country­ side of the South American continent from the 1950s on. For all enquiries concur that the attraction of the city lay not least in the better chances of education and training for the children. There they 'could become something else'. Schooling naturally opened the best prospects, but in backward agrarian regions even so simple a skill as being able to drive a motor vehicle could be the key to a better life. It was the first thing that an emigrant from a Quechua village in the Andes taught the cousins and nephews from home who joined him in the city, hoping to make their own way into the modern world, for had not his employment as an ambulance driver proved to be the foundation of his own family's success? Uulca, 1992). Probably it was not until the 1960s or later that rural people outside parts of Latin America began systematically to see modernity as a promise rather than a threat. And yet there was one aspect of the policy of economic development which might have been expected to appeal to them since it directly affected the three fifths or more of human beings who lived by agriculture: land reform. This general slogan of politics in agrarian countries might cover anything from the break-up of large landholdings and their re-distribution to peasants and landless labourers to the abolition of feudal tenures or servitudes; rent reduction and tenancy reforms of various kinds to revolutionary land nationalization and collectivization. There has probably never been more of it than in the decade after the e�d of the Second World War, for it was practised along the entire spectrum of politics. Between 1945 and 1 950 almost half of the human

The Third World

355

race found themselves living in countries undergoing some kind of land reform - of the communist type in Eastern Europe and, after 1949 China, as a consequence of decolonization in the former British Indian empire and as a consequence of Japan's defeat, or rather American occupation policy, in Japan, Taiwan and Korea. The Egyptian revolution of 1952 extended its range to the western Islamic world: Iraq, Syria and Algeria followed the Cairo example. The Bolivian revolution of 1952 introduced it into South America, though Mexico since the revolution of 1910, or, more precisely, since its revival in the 1930s, had long championed

agrarismo.

Still, in spite of an increasing flood of political declarations

and statistical enquiry on the subject, Latin America had too few revolu­ tions, decolonisations or lost wars to have much actual land reform, until Fidel Castro's Cuban revolution (which introduced it on that island) put the matter on the political agenda. For the modernizers the

case

for land reform

was

political (gaining

peasant support for revolutionary regimes or for those which could pre­ empt revolution or the like), ideological ('giving the land back to the toilers' etc.), and sometimes economic, although most revolutionaries or reformers did not expect too much from a mere distribution of land to a traditional peasantry and the landless or land-poor. Indeed, farm output fell drastically in Bolivia and Iraq immediately after these countries' respective land reforms in 1952 and 1958, though in fairness one should add that, where peasant skill and productivity were already high, land reform could quickly release a great deal of productive potential hitherto held in reserve by sceptical villagers, strikingly, Taiwan (Land Reform,

as

in Egypt, Japan and, most

1968, pp. 570--7 5). The

maintaining a large peasantry in being

was

case

for

and is non-economic, since in

the history of the modem world the enormous rise in agrarian output has gone together with an equally spectacular decline in the number and proportion of agriculturists; most dramatically so since the Second World War. Land reform could and did, however, demonstrate that peasant farming, especially by larger, modem-minded farmers, could be

as

effi­

cient as, and more flexible than the traditional landed estate, the imperial­ ist plantation, and, indeed, ill-judged modem attempts to conduct agricul­ ture on a quasi-industrial basis, such as Soviet-type giant state farms and the British scheme for producing ground-nuts in Tanganyika (the present Tanzania) after 1945. Crops like coffee, or even sugar and rubber, once thought of as essentially plantation-produced, are so no longer, even if the plantation still maintains a clear advantage over small-scale and unskilled producers in some

cases.

Still, the major advances of Third World

agriculture since the war, the 'Green revolution' of new scientifically

356

The Golden Age

selected crops, have been achieved by business-minded farmers, as

m

the Punjab. However, the strongest economic case for land reform rests not on productivity but on equality. On the whole economic development has tended, first to increase and later to diminish the inequality of national income distribution over the long haul, although economic decline and a theological belief in the free market have lately begun to reverse this here and there. Equality at the end of the Golden Age was greater in the developed Western countries than in the Third World. Yet while income inequality was at its highest in Latin America, followed by Africa, it was unusually low in a number of Asian countries, where a very radical land reform had been imposed under the auspices, or by, the American occupying forces: Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. (None, however, were as egalitarian as the socialist countries of Eastern Europe or, at the time, Australia.) (Kakwani, 1980.) Observers of the industrialising tri­ umphs of these countries have naturally speculated how far they have been assisted by the social or economic advantages of this situation, just as observers of the much more fitful advance of the Brazilian economy, always on the verge of but never achieving its destiny as the USA of the southern hemisphere, have wondered how far it has been held back by the spectacular inequality of its income distribution - which inevitably restricts the domestic market for industry. Indeed, the striking social inequality of Latin America can hardly be unconnected with the equally striking absence of systematic agrarian reform from so many of its countries. Land reform was undoubtedly welcomed by the peasantry of the Third World, at least until it was transformed into collective farming or cooperative production, as it usually was in communist countries. How­ ever, what the modernisers saw in it was not what it meant to the peasants, who were uninterested in macro-economic problems, who saw national politics in a different perspective from the city reformers, and whose demand for land was not based on general principle but on specific claims. Thus the radical land reform instituted by a government of reformist generals in Peru in 1969, which destroyed the country's system of large estates

(haciendas)

at one blow, failed for this reason. For the

Indian highland communities, which had lived in unstable coexistence with the vast Andean livestock ranches to whom they supplied labour, reform simply meant the just return to the 'native communities' of the common lands and pastures once alienated from them by the landlords, whose boundaries were accurately remembered over the centuries, and whose loss they had never accepted (Hobsbawm, 1 974). They were not

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357

interested in the maintenance of the old enterprise as a productive unit (now under the ownership of the

comunidades

and its former workforce),

in cooperative experiments, or in other agrarian novelties, other than the traditional mutual aid within the - far from egalitarian - community. After the reform the communities went back to 'invading' the lands of the cooperativized estates (of which they were now co-proprietors), as though nothing had changed in the conflict between estate and community (and between communities in dispute about their lands) (Gomez Rod­ riguez, pp. 242-55). As far as they were concerned, nothing had changed. The land reform closest to the peasant ideal was probably the Mexican one of the 1 930s, which gave the common land inalienably to village communities to organize as they wished

(ejidos)

and assumed

peasants were engaged in subsistence agriculture. It was a huge political success, but economically irrelevant to subsequent Mexican agrarian development.

IV It is not surprising that the dozens of post-colonial states which emerged after the Second World War, together with most of Latin America, which also plainly belonged to the regions dependent on the old imperial and industrial world, soon found themselves grouped together as the 'Third World' - the term is said to have been coined in 1 952 (Harris, 1987, p. l8) - by contrast with the 'First World' of the developed capitalist countries and the 'Second World' of the communist ones. In spite of the evident absurdity of treating Egypt and Gabon, India and Papua-New Guinea as societies of the same kind, this was not wholly implausible, inasmuch as all were poor (compared to the 'developed' world), • all were dependent, all had governments that wanted to 'develop', and none believed, in the aftermath of the Great Slump and the Second World War, that the capitalist world market (i.e. the economists' doctrine of 'comparative advantage') or spontaneous private enterprise at home would achieve this end. Moreover, as the iron grille of the Cold War

was

clamped across the

globe, all who had any freedom of action wanted to avoid joining either of the two alliance systems, i.e. to keep out of the Third World War which everyone feared. • With the rarest exceptions, notably Argentina, which though rich, never recov­ ered from the decline and fall of the British Empire, which had given it prosperity as a food exporter until 1929.

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The Golden Age

This does not mean that the 'non-aligned' were equally opposed to both sides in the Cold War. The inspirers and champions of the move­ ment (usually called after its first international conference in 1955 at Bandung in Indonesia), were radical colonial ex-revolutionaries - Jawahar­ lal Nehru of India, Sukarno of Indonesia, Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, and a dissident communist, President Tito of Yugoslavia. All these, like so many of the ex-colonial regimes, were or claimed to be socialist in their own (i.e. non-Soviet) way, including the Royal Buddhist socialism of Cambodia. All had some sympathies for the Soviet Union or were at least ready to accept economic and military help from it; not surprisingly, since the United States had abandoned its old anti-colonial traditions at a moment's notice after the world divided, and visibly looked for support among the most conservative elements of the Third World: Iraq (before the 1 958 revolution), Turkey, Pakistan and the Shah's Iran, which formed the Central Treaty Organization ( CENTO); Pakistan, the Philippines and Thailand in the South-east Asia Treaty Organization ( SEATO), both designed to complete the anti-Soviet military system whose main pillar was NATO (neither amounted to much). When the essentially Afro-Asian non-aligned group became tri-continental after the Cuban revolution of 1959, its Latin American members not surprisingly came from the republics of the western hemisphere least sympathetic to the Big Brother of the North. Nevertheless, unlike the US sympathisers in the Third World, who might actually join the western alliance system, the non-communist Bandung states had no intention of being involved in a global superpower confrontation, since, as the Korean and the Vietnam War and the Cuban missile crisis proved, they were the perpetual potential front line in such a conflict. The more the actual (European) border between the two camps was stabilized, the more likely, if the guns were to fire, the bombs to drop, it would be in some Asian mountains or African bush. Yet though the superpower confrontation dominated, and to some extent stabilized, inter-state relations world-wide, it did not entirely control them. There were two regions in which indigenous Third World tensions, essentially unconnected with the Cold War, created permanent conditions for conflict which periodically erupted in war: the Middle East and the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. (Both, not by chance, were the heirs to imperial schemes of partition.) The latter conflict zone was more easily insulated from the global Cold War, in spite of Pakistan's attempts to involve the Americans, which failed until the Afghan War of the 1 980s (see chapters 8 and 16). Hence the West heard little and remembers even less of the three regional wars: the Siner-Indian War of

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359

1962 over the ill-defined border between the two countries, won by China; the Indo-Pakistan War of 1965 (handily won by India); and the second Indo-Pakistan conflict of 197 1, arising out of the breakaway of East Pakistan (Bangladesh), which India supported. USA and USSR tried

to

act as benevolent neutrals and mediators. The situation in the

Middle East could not be so isolated, because several of America's allies were directly involved: Israel, Turkey and the Shah's Iran. Moreover, as the succession of local revolutions, military and civilian, proved - from Egypt in 1952 via Iraq and Syria in the 1950s and 1960s; South Arabia in the 1960s and 1970s, to Iran itself in 1979 - the region was and remains sOcially unstable. These regional conflicts had no essential connection with the Cold War: the USSR had been among the first to recognize the new state of Israel, which later established itself as the main ally of the USA, and the Arab or other Islamic states, Right or Left, were united in repressing communism within their frontiers. The main force of disruption was Israel, where the Jewish settlers built a larger Jewish state than had been envisaged under the British partition (driving out seven hundred thou­ sand non-Jewish Palestinians, perhaps a larger number than the Jewish population in 1948) (Calvocoressi, 1989, p. 2 1 5), fighting one war per decade for the purpose ( 1948, 1 956, 1 967, 1973, 1982). In the course of these wars, which can best be compared with the wars fought by the Prussian king Frederick II in the eighteenth century to win recognition for his possession of Silesia, which he had robbed from his neighbour, Austria, Israel also turned itself into the most formidable military force in the region and acquired nuclear arms, but failed to establish a stable basis of relations with its neighbour states, let alone with the perman­ ently embittered Palestinians within its extended frontiers or in the diaspora of the Middle East. The collapse of the USSR removed the Middle East from the front line of the Cold War, but left it as explosive as before. Three lesser centres of conflict helped to keep it so: the eastern Mediterranean, the Persian Gulf and the border region between Turkey, Iran, Iraq and Syria where the Kurds attempted vainly to win the national independence which President Wilson had incautiously urged them to demand in 1 9 1 8. Unable to find a permanent backer among the powerful states, they disturbed the relations between all their neighbours, who

cred them by all available means, including in the 1 980s

massa

poison gas, insofar as not resisted by the proverbial skill of the Kurds as mountain guerrilla fighters. The eastern Mediterranean remained relatively quiet, since both Greece and Turkey were members of NATO,

360

The Golden Age

even though the conflict between the two led to a Turkish invasion of Cyprus, which was partitioned in 1 974. On the other hand the rivalry between the western powers, Iraq and Iran, for positions in the Persian Gulf was to lead to the savage eight-year war between Iraq and revolution­ ary Iran 1 980--88 and, after the end of the Cold War, between the USA and its allies and Iraq in 199 1 . One part of the Third World remained fairly remote from both global and local international conflicts until after the Cuban revolution: Latin America. Except for small patches on the mainland (the Guyanas, Belize - then known as British Honduras and the smaller islands of the Caribbean), it had been decolonized long ago. Culturally and linguistically its populations were Western, inasmuch as the great bulk of even its poor inhabitants were Roman Catholics and, but for some areas of the Andes and continental central America, spoke or understood a culture-language shared by Europeans. While the region had inherited an elaborate racial hierarchy from the Iberian conquerors, it also inherited from an over­ whelmingly male conquest a tradition of massive miscegenation. There were few genuine whites, except in the southern cone of South America (Argentina, Uruguay, southern Brazil) populated by European mass immigration, where there were very few natives. In both cases achieve­ ment and social status cancelled out race. Mexico elected a recognizably Zapotec Indian, Benito Juarez, as president as early as 1 8 6 1 . At the time of writing Argentina has as president a Lebanese Muslim immigrant and Peru a Japanese immigrant. Both choices were still unthinkable in the USA. To this day Latin America still remains outside the vicious circle of ethnic politics and ethnic nationalism which ravages the other continents. Moreover, while most of the continent clearly recognized itself to be what was now called a 'neocolonial' dependency on a single dominant imperial power, the USA was realistic enough not to send gunboats and marines into the larger states - it did not hesitate to use them against the small ones - and the Latin governments from the Rio Grande to Cape Hom knew perfectly well that the wise thing was to keep on the right side of Washington. The Organization of American States (OAS), founded in 1 948, its headquarters in Washington, was not a body inclined to disagree with the USA. When Cuba made its revolution, the OAS expelled it.

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361

v And yet, at the very moment when the Third World and the ideologies based on it were at their peak, the concept began to crumble. In the

1970s it became increasingly evident that no single name or label could adequately cover a set of increasingly divergent countries. The term was still convenient to distinguish poor countries of the world from the rich, and insofar as the gap between the two zones, often now called 'the North' and 'the South', was visibly widening, there was much point to the distinction. The gap in per capita GNP between the 'developed' and the backward world (i.e. the OECD countries and the 'low and middle economies')• continued to widen: the first group averaged 1 4.5 times the GNP per capita of the second in 1 970 but over twenty-four times the poor countries' GNP per capita in 1990

( World

Tables, 199 1 , Table 1 ).

However, the Third World is demonstrably no longer a single entity. What split it was primarily economic development. The triumph of OPEC in 1973 produced, for the first time, a body of Third World states, mostly backward by any criteria and hitherto poor, which now emerged as world-scale super-millionaires, especially when they consisted of smallish thinly inhabited stretches of sand or forest ruled by (usually Muslim) sheikhs or sultans. It was plainly impossible to class, say, the United Arab Emirates, each of whose half-million inhabitants ( 1 975) had,

in theory, a share of the GNP worth over $ 13,000 - almost double the GNP per capita of the U SA at this date

604)

-

( World

Tables, 199 1 , pp. 596,

in the same pigeon-hole as, say, Pakistan, which then enjoyed a

GNP per capita of $ 1 30. Oil states with a large population did not do so well, but it nevertheless became evident that states dependent on the export of a single primary commodity, however disadvantaged in other respects, could become extremely rich, even if this easy money also, almost invariably, tempted them into throwing it out of the window.t By the early 1990s even Saudi Arabia had managed to run into debt. In the second place, part of the Third World was visibly and rapidly becoming industrialized and joining the First World, even though it •

The OECD, which comprises most of the 'developed' capitalist countries,

includes Belgium, Denmark, the German Federal Republic, France, Great Britain, Ireland, Iceland, Italy, Luxemburg, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland,

Canada and the USA, Japan and Australia. For political reasons this organization, set up during the Cold War, also included Greece, Portugal, Spain and Turkey. t This is not a Third World phenomenon. When informed of the wealth of the · British North Sea oil fields, a cynical French politician is said to have remarked prophetically: 'They will waste it and run into a crisis.'

362

The Golden Age

remained much poorer. South Korea, as spectacular an industrial success story as any in history, had a GNP per capita ( 1989) barely higher than that of Portugal, the poorest by far of the members of the European Community (World Bank Atlas , 1990, p. 7). Once again, qualitative differences apart, South Korea is no longer comparable with, say, Papua­ New Guinea, although the GNP per capita of the two countries was exactly the same in 1969 and remained of the same order of magnitude until the middle of the 1970s: it is now about five times as large (World Tables, 199 1, pp. 352, 456). As we have seen, a new category, the NICs, entered the international jargon. There was no precise definition, but practically all lists include the four 'Pacific tigers' (Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea), India, Brazil and Mexico, but the process of Third World industrialization is such that Malaya and the Philippines, Colombia, Pakistan and Thailand as well as some others have also been included. Actually, a category of new and rapid industrializers crosses the borders of the three worlds, for strictly it should also include such 'industrialized market economies' (i.e. capitalist countries) as Spain and Finland, and most of the ex-socialist states of Eastern Europe; not to mention, since the late 1970s, Communist China. In fact, in the 1970s observers began to draw attention to a 'new international division of labour', i.e. a massive shift of industries produc­ ing for the world market from the first generation of industrial economies, which had previously monopolized them, to other parts of the world. This was partly due to the deliberate transfer by firms from the old industrial world of part or all of their production or supplies

to

the

Second and Third Worlds, eventually followed by some transfers of even very sophisticated processes in high-tech industries, such as research and development. The revolution in modern transport and communications made genuinely worldwide production both possible and economic. It was also due to the deliberate efforts of Third World governments to industrialize by conquering export markets, if need be (but preferably not) at the expense of the old protection of home markets. This economic globalization, which can be verified by anyone who checks the national origins of products sold in any North American shopping mall, developed slowly in the 1960s and accelerated strikingly during the decades of the world's economic troubles after 1973. How rapidly it advanced may once again be illustrated by South Korea which, at the end of the 1950s, still had almost 80 per cent of its working population in agriculture, from which it derived almost three quarters of its national income (Rado, 1962, pp. 740, 742-43). It inaugurated the first of its Five-Year development plans in 1962. By the late 1980s it got only

The Third World

363

10 per cent of its GOP from agriculture and had become the eighth­ largest industrial economy of the non-communist world. In the third place, a number of countries emerged (or rather were submerged) at the bottom of the international statistics, which even international euphemism found it difficult to describe simply as 'develop­ ing', since they were plainly both poor and increasingly lagging. A sub­ group of low-income developing countries was tactfully established to distinguish the three billion human beings whose GNP per capita (had they received it) would have worked out at an average of $330 in 1989, from the five hundred luckier millions in less destitute countries, like the Dominican Republic, Ecuador and Guatemala, whose average GNP was about three times as high and the even more luxurious members of the next group (Brazil, Malaysia, Mexico and the like) which averaged about eight times as much. (The eight hundred or so millions in the most prosperous group enjoyed a theoretical GNP allocation per head of $18,280 or fifty-five times as much as the bottom three-fifths of humanity (World Bank Atlas, 1990, p. 1 0). In effect, as the world economy became genuinely global and, especially after the fall of the Soviet region, more purely capitalist and business-dominated, investors and entrepreneurs discovered that large parts of it were of no profitable interest to them, unless, perhaps, they could bribe its politicians and civil servants into wasting the money extracted from their unfortunate citizens on arma­ ments or prestige projects.• A disproportionately large number of these countries were to be found in the unhappy continent of Africa. The end of the Cold War deprived such states of the economic (i.e. largely military) aid which had turned some of them, like Somalia, into armed camps and eventual battlefields. Moreover, as divisions among the poor increased, so globalization brought movements most obviously of human beings that crossed the dividing lines between regions and classifications. From the rich countries tourists flowed into the Third World as never before. In the middle of the 1980s (1985), to take only some Muslim countries, the sixteen millions of Malaysia received three million tourists per year; the seven million Tunisians two millions; the three million Jordanians two millions (Din, 1989, p. 545). From the poor countries the streams of labour migration into the rich swelled into huge torrents, insofar as they were • 'As a rule of thumb 5 per cent of $200,000 will win the help of a senior official below top rank. The same percentage of S2m and you are dealing with the permanent secretary. At $20m enter the minister and senior staff, while a cut from $200m "justifies the serious attention of the head of state" ' (Holman, 1993).

364

The Golden Age

not dammed back by political barriers. By 1968 migrants from the Maghreb (Tunisia, Morocco and, above all, Algeria) already formed almost a quarter of all foreigners in France (in 1975 5.5 per cent of the Algerian population emigrated) and one third of all immigrants to the US A came from Latin America - at that time still overwhelmingly from Central America (Potts, 1990, pp. 145, 146, 1 50). Nor did this migration move only towards the old industrial countries. The number of foreign workers in the oil-producing states of the Middle East and Libya shot up from 1 .8 to 2.8 millions in a mere five years ( 1975-80) (Population, 1984, p. 1 09). Most of them came from the region, but a large body came from South Asia and even further afield. Unfortunately in the grim 1970s and 1980s labour migration became increasingly hard to separate from the torrents of men, women and children who fled from, or were uprooted by, famine, political or ethnic persecution, war and civil war, thus facing the countries of the First World, equally committed (in theory) to helping refugees and (in practice) to preventing immigration from poor countries, with severe problems of political and legal casuistry. With the exception of the USA, and to a lesser extent Canada and Australia, which encouraged or permitted mass immigration from the Third World, they opted to keep them out under the pressure of a growing xenophobia among their native populations.

VI The astonishing 'great leap forward' of the (capitalist) world economy, and its growing globalization not only divided and disrupted the concept of a Third World, it also brought virtually all its inhabitants consciously into the modern world. They did not necessarily like it. Indeed, many 'fundamentalist' and other nominally traditionalist movements which now gained ground in several Third World countries, especially, but not exclusively, in the Islamic region, were specifically revolts against moder­ nity, though this is certainly not true of all movements to which this imprecise label is attached. • But they knew themselves to be part of a world which was not like their fathers'. It came to them in the form of the dusty backroads bus or truck; the petrol pump; the battery-powered • Thus conversion to 'fundamentalist' Protestant sects, which is common in Latin America, is, if anything, a 'modernist' reaction against the ancient status quo represented by local Catholicism. Other 'fundamentalisms' are analagous to ethnic nationalism, e.g. in India.

The Third World

365

transistor radio, which brought the world to them - perhaps even to the illiterates in their own unwritten dialect or language, though this was probably the privilege of the urban immigrant. But in a world where country people migrated to the cities in their millions, and even in rural Africa countries with urban populations of a third or more becoming common - Nigeria, Zaire, Tanzania, Senegal, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Chad, Central African Republic, Gabon, Benin, Zambia, Congo, Somalia, Libe­ ria - almost everybody had worked in the city, or had a relative who lived there. Village and city were henceforth interwoven. Even the most remote now lived in a world of plastic sheeting, Coca-Cola bottles, cheap digital watches and artificial fibres. By a strange inversion of history the back country of the Third World even began to commercialize its skills in the First World. On city street-corners of Europe small groups of peripatetic Indians from the South American Andes played their melan­ choly flutes and on the pavements of New York, Paris and Rome black pedlars from West Africa sold trinkets to the natives as the natives' ancestors had done on their trading voyages to the Dark Continent. Almost certainly the big city was the crucible of change, if only because it was modern by definition. 'In Lima', as an upwardly mobile migrant from the Andes used to tell his children, 'there's more progress, there's much more stimulation' (mtis roce) Uulca, 1992). However much the migrants used the tool-kit of traditional society to construct their urban existence, building and structuring the new shanty-towns like the old rural communities, too much in the city was novel and unprecedented, too many of its mores conflicted with those of the olden days. Nowhere was this more dramatic than in the expected behaviour of young women, whose break with tradition was deplored from Africa to Peru. In a traditional huayno song from Lima ('La gringa') an immigrant boy complains: When you came from your homeland, you came as a country girl Now you are in Lima you comb your hair in a city way You even say, wait 'please'. I'm going to dance the twist Don't be pretentious, be less proud Between your hair and my hair, there is no difference. (Mangin, 1970, pp. 3 1-32.)* • Or, from Nigeria in the image of a new type of African girl in the market literature of Onitsha: 'The girls are no longer the traditional, quiet, modest playthings

366

The Golden Age

Yet from the city the consciousness of modernity spread to the countryside (even where rural life was not itself transformed by new crops, new technology, and new forms of organization and marketing) through the

dramatic 'green revolution' of grain-crop farming by scientifica�ly de­ signed crop varieties in parts of Asia, which spread from the 1960s on, or, a little later, by the development of new export crops for the world market, made possible both by the mass air-freighting of perishables (tropical fruit, flowers) and new consumer tastes in the 'developed' world (cocaine). The effect of such rural changes is not to be underestimated. Nowhere did the old ways and the new come into more frontal collision than on the Amazonian frontier of Colombia, which in the 1970s became a staging-post for the transport of Bolivian and Peruvian coca, and the location of the laboratories processing it into cocaine. This happened a few years after it had been settled by peasant frontier colonists escaping from state and landlords, and who were defended by those recognized protectors of the peasant way of life, the (communist) guerrillas of the F ARC. Here the market, in its most ruthless form, clashed with those who lived by subsistence farming and what men could get with a gun, a dog and a fishing-net. How could a patch of yucca and bananas compete against the temptation to cultivate a crop commanding bonanza prices even though unstable ones - and the old way of life against the airstrips and the boomtown settlements of the drug-makers and traffickers and their freewheeling gunmen, bars and brothels? (Molano, 1988.) The countryside was indeed being transformed, but even its transforma­ tions depended on the city civilization and its industries, for often enough its very economy depended on the earnings of the emigrants, as in the so­ called 'black homelands' of apartheid South Africa, which generated only 10- 1 5 per cent of their inhabitants' income, the remainder coming from the earnings of migrant workers in the white territories (Ripken and Wellmer, 1978, pp. 196). Paradoxically, in the Third World as in parts of the First, the city could become the saviour of a rural economy which, but for its impact, might have been abandoned by people who had learned from migrant experience - their own or their neighbours' - that men and women had alternatives. They discovered that it was not inevitable that they should slave a lifetime away scratching a wretched livelihood from marginal, exhausted and stony land, as their ancestors had done. Plenty of rural settlements across the globe, in romantic, and of their parents. They write love letters. They are coy. They demand presents from their boy-friends and victims. They even deceive men. They are no longer the dumb creatures to be won through their parents' (Nwoga, 1965, pp. 178-79).

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therefore agriculturally marginal landscapes, were emptied of all except the elderly from the 1960s on. Yet a highland community whose emigrants discovered a niche in the economy of the big city which they could occupy - in this case selling fruit, or, more precisely, strawberries in Lima - could maintain or revitalize its pastoral character by a shift from farm-income to non-farm-income operating through a complicated sym­ biosis of migrant and resident households (Smith, 1989, chapter 4). It is perhaps significant that, in this particular

case,

which has been unusually

well studied, the migrants rarely became workers. They chose to fit into the great network of the Third World 'informal economy' as petty traders. For the major social change in the Third World was probably that carried by the new and growing middle and lower-middle classes of migrants engaged in some method, or more likely multiple methods, of earning money, and the major form of its economic life was - especially in the poorest countries - the informal economy which escaped official statistics. So, some time in the last third of the century the wide trench that separated the small modernising or Westernized ruling minorities of Third World countries from the mass of their peoples began to be filled by the general transformation of their societies. We do not yet know how or when this happened or what forms the new consciousness of this transformation took, for most of these countries still lacked even adequate government statistical services or the machinery of market and public opinion research, or the academic social science departments with research students to keep busy. In any case, what happens at the grassroots of societies is difficult to discover even in the best-documented countries, until it has happened, which is why the early stages of new social and cultural fashions among the young are unpredictable, unpredicted and often unrecognized even by those who live by making money out of them, like the popular culture industry, let alone by the parental genera­ tion. Yet clearly something was stirring in Third World cities below the level of elite consciousness, even in an apparently completely stagnant country like the Belgian Congo (now Zaire), for how else can we explain that the type of popular music developed there in the inert 1 950s became the most influential in Africa in the 1 960s and 1 970s (Manuel, 1988, pp. 86, 97-101)? For that matter, how can we explain the rise of political conscious­ ness which causes the Belgians to send the Congo off to independence in 1 960 virtually at a moment's notice, though until then this colony, almost equally hostile to native education as to native political activity, looked, to most observers, as 'likely to remain as shut off from the rest of the world as Japan before the Meiji restoration' (Calvocoressi, 1989, p. 377)?

368

The Golden Age

Whatever the stirrings in the 1950s, by the 1 960s and 1970s the signs of major social transformation were quite evident in the western hemi­ sphere, and undeniable in the Islamic world and the major countries of South and Southeast Asia. Paradoxically, they were probably least visible in the parts of the socialist world which corresponded to the Third World, e.g. in Soviet central Asia and the Caucasus. For it is not often recognized that communist revolution was an engine of conservation. While it set out to transform a specified number of aspects of life - state power, property relations, economic structure and the like - it froze others in their pre-revolutionary shapes, or at any rate protected them against the universal continuous subversion of change in capitalist socie­ ties. In any case its strongest weapon, sheer state power, was less effective at transforming human behaviour than either the positive rhetoric about 'the new socialist man' or the negative rhetoric about 'totalitarianism' liked to think. Uzbeks and Tadjiks who lived north of the Soviet-Afghan border were almost certainly more literate and more secularized and better-off than those who lived south of it, but they may not have differed as much in their mores as seventy years of socialism would have led one to expect. Blood-feud was probably not a major preoccupation of the authorities in the Caucasus since the 1930s (though during collectivisa­ tion the death of a man in a

kolkhoz

threshing-machine accident led to a

feud which entered the annals of Soviet jurisprudence), but in the early 1990s observers warned of 'the danger of national self-extermination [in Chechnia] since the majority of the Chechen families have been dragged into a vendetta type relationship' (Trofimov/Djangava, 1993). The cultural consequences of this social transformation await the historian. They cannot be considered here, though it is clear that, even in very traditional societies, the network of mutual obligation and customs came under increasing strain. 'The extended family in Ghana and across Africa' it was observed (Harden, 1990, p. 67) 'functions under immense stress. Like a bridge that has borne too much high-speed traffic for too many years, its foundations are cracking . . . The rural old and the urban young are separated by hundreds of miles of bad roads and centuries of development.' Politically it is easier to assess the paradoxical consequences. For, with the entry of the masses of the population, or at least the young and city people, into a modern world, the monopoly of the small, Westernized elites who shaped the first generation of post-colonial history was being challenged. And with them, the programmes, the ideologies, the very vocabulary and syntax of the public discourse, on which the new states rested. For the new urban and urbanised masses, even the new massive

The Third World

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middle classes, however educated, were not, and by virtue of sheer numbers, could not be, the old elites, whose members could hold their own with the colonialists or with their fellow-graduates from European or American schools. Often - this was very obvious in South Asia - they resented them. In any case, the masses of the poor did not share the belief in the Western nineteenth-century aspiration of secular progress. In the western Islamic countries the conflict between the old secular leaders and the new Islamic mass democracy became patent, and explo­ sive. From Algeria to Turkey the values which, in the countries of Western liberalism, are associated with constitutional government and the rule of law, as for instance the rights of women, were being protected - insofar as they existed - against democracy by the military force of the liberators of their nations, or their heirs. The conflict was not confined to Islamic countries, nor the reaction against the old values of progress to the

masses

of the poor. The Hindu

exclusivism of the BJP party in India had substantial support among the new business and middle classes. The impassioned and savage ethno­ religious nationalism which in the 1980s turned peaceful Sri Lanka into a killing field, comparable only to El Salvador, occurred, unexpectedly, in a prosperous Buddhist country. It was rooted in two social transformations: the profound identity crisis of villages whose social order had gone to pieces, and the rise of a mass stratum of better-educated youth (Spencer, 1990). Villages transmuted by in-and out-migration, divided by the widening differences between rich and poor that the cash economy brought, racked with the instability brought by the unevenness of an education-based social mobility, the fading of the physical and linguistic markers of caste and status which separated people but also left no doubt about their positions - these inevitably lived in anxiety about their community. This has been used to explain, among other things, the appearance of novel symbols and rituals of a togetherness which was itself novel, such as the sudden development of congregational forms of Buddhist worship in the 1970s, replacing older private and household forms of devotion; or the institution of school sports days opened with the national anthem played on borrowed tape cassettes. These were the politics of a changing and inflammable world. What made them less predictable was that in many countries of the Third World nationwide politics in the sense invented and recognized in the West since the French Revolution had never existed, or had not been allowed to function. Where there was a long tradition of politics with some kind of mass roots, or even a substantial acceptance among the passive citizens of the legitimacy of the 'political classes' who conducted

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their affairs, a degree of continuity could be maintained. Colombians, as readers of Garcia Marquez know, continued to be born little liberals or little conservatives, as they had for more than a century, though they might change the content of the bottles with these labels. The Indian National Congress changed, split and reformed in the half-century since independence, but until the 1990s Indian general elections - with only fleeting exceptions - continued to be won by those who appealed to its historic aims and traditions. Though communism disintegrated elsewhere, the deep-rooted Left-wing tradition of Hindu (West) Bengal, as well as competent administration maintained the Communist Party (Marxist) in almost permanent government in the state where the national struggle against Britain had meant not Gandhi nor even Nehru, but the terrorists and Subhas Bose. Moreover, structural change might itself lead politics in directions familiar in the history of the First World. 'Newly industrializing countries' were likely to develop industrial working classes who demanded workers' rights and labour unions, as the record of Brazil and South Korea showed, as indeed did that of Eastern Europe. They did not have to develop political labour-cum-people's parties reminiscent of the mass social democratic movements of pre-1914 Europe, although it is not insignificant that Brazil generated just such a successful national party in the 1980s, the Workers' Party (PT). (But the tradition of the workers' movement in its home base, the automobile industry of Sao Paulo, was a combination of populist labour law and communist factory militants, and that of the intellectuals who flocked to support it was solidly Left, as was the ideology of the Catholic clergy, whose support helped to put it on its feet.)* Again, the rapid industrial growth tended to generate large and educated professional classes which, though far from subversive, would have welcomed the civic liberalization of authoritarian industrializing regimes. Such longings for liberalization were to be found, in the 1980s, in different contexts and with varying results, in Latin America and the Far-Eastern NICs (South Korea and Taiwan), as well as within the Soviet block. Nevertheless, there were vast areas of the Third World where the political consequences of social transformation were indeed impossible to • Except for the socialist orientation of the one, the anti-socialist ideology of the other, the similarities between the Brazilian Workers' Party and the contemporary Polish Solidarity movement were striking: a bona fide proletarian leader - a shipyard electrician and skilled auto-worker - a brains trust of intellectuals and strong Church backing. They are even greater if we remember that the PT sought to replace the communist organization, which opposed it.

The Third World

371

foresee . All that was certain, was the instability and inflammability of that world, to which the half-century since the Second World War had borne witness. We must now turn to that part of the world which, for most of the Third World after decolonisation, appeared to provide a more suitable and encouraging model for progress than the West: the 'Second World' of the socialist systems modelled on the Soviet Union.

C HAPTER T H I RTEEN

'Real Socialism'

The October Revolution did not only produce a world-historical division by establishing the first post-capitalist state and society, but it also divided Marxism and socialist politics . . . After the October Revolution, socialist strategies and perspectives began to be based upon political example instead of upon analyses of capitalism. - Goran Therbom (1985, p. 227)

Economists today . . . understand much better than before the real versus the formal modes of the economy's functioning. They know about the 'second economy', maybe even a third one too, and about a welter of informal but widespread practices without which nothing works. - Moshe Lewin in Kerblay (1983, p. xxii)

I When the dust of the battles of war and civil war had settled in the early 1920s, and the blood of the corpses and wounds had congealed, most of what had before 1 9 14 been the Orthodox Russian Empire of the Tsars emerged intact as an empire, but under the government of the Bolsheviks and dedicated to the construction of world socialism. It was the only one of the antique dynastic-cum-religious empires to survive the First World War, which shattered both the Ottoman Empire, whose sultan was khalif of all faithful Muslims, and the Habsburg Empire which maintained a special relationship with the Roman Church. Both broke up under the pressures of defeat. That Russia survived

as

a single multi-ethnic entity

stretching from the Polish border in the west to the Japanese border in

'Real Socialism'

373

the east was almost certainly due to the October revolution, for the tensions which had broken up the earlier empires elsewhere emerged or re-emerged in the Soviet Union at the end of the 1980s, when the communist system that had held the union together since 1917 effect­ ively abdicated. Whatever the future was to bring, what emerged

in

the early 1920s was a single state, desperately impoverished and back­ ward -far more backward even than Tsarist Russia - but of enormous size: 'one sixth of the world's surface', as communists liked to boast between the wars - dedicated to a society different from and opposed to capitalism. In 1945 the borders of the region that seceded from world capitalism were dramatically extended. In Europe they now included the entire area east of a line running, roughly, from the river Elbe in Germany to the Adriatic

sea,

and the entire Balkan peninsula except Greece and the small

part of Turkey that remained on that continent. Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria and Albania now moved into the socialist zone, as well as that part of Germany occupied by the Red Army after the war and transformed into a 'German Democratic Republic' in 1954. Most of the areas lost by Russia in the aftermath of war and revolution after 1 9 1 7 and one or two territories previously belonging to the Habsburg Empire were also recuperated or acquired by the Soviet Union between 1939 and 1945. Meanwhile a vast new extension of the future socialist region took place in the Far East with the transfer of power to communist regimes in China ( 1949) and, partly, in Korea ( 1 945) and what had been French Indochina (Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia)

in the

course of a thirty years' war ( 1 945-75). There were a few further extensions of the communist region somewhat later, both in the western hemisphere - Cuba ( 1959) and in Africa

in the 1970s - but substantially

the socialist sector of the globe had taken shape by 1 950. Thanks to the enormous numbers of the Chinese people, it now included about one third of the world's population, though the average size of the socialist states other than China, the U S S R and Vietnam (fifty-eight millions) was not particularly large. Their populations ranged from the 1.8 million of Mongolia to the thirty-six millions of Poland. This was the part of the world whose social systems some time in the

1960s came to be called, in the terminology of Soviet ideology, the countries of 'really existing socialism'; an ambiguous term which implied or suggested that there might be other and better kinds of socialism, but in practice this was the only kind actually functioning. This was also the region whose social and economic systems as well as whose political regimes collapsed totally in Europe as the 1980s gave way to the 1990s.

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The Golden Age

In the East the political systems maintained themselves for the time being, though the actual economic restructuring they undertook in varying degrees amounted to a liquidation of socialism as hitherto understood by those regimes, notably in China. The scattered regimes elsewhere imitat­ ing or inspired by 'really existing socialism' in other parts of the world had either collapsed or were probably not destined for a long life. The first thing to observe about the socialist region of the globe was that for most of its existence it formed a separate and largely self­ contained sub-universe both economically and politically. Its relations with the rest of the world economy, capitalist or dominated by the capitalism of the developed countries, were surprisingly scanty. Even at the height of the great boom in international trade during the Golden Years, only something like 4 per cent of the exports of the developed market economies went to the 'centrally planned economies' and by the 1980s the share of Third World exports going to them was not much more. The socialist economies sent rather more of their modest exports to the rest of the world but even so two thirds of their international trade in the 1960s ( 1 965) was within their own sector• (UN International Trade, 1983, vol. 1, p. 1 046). There was, for obvious reasons, little movement of people from the 'first' to the 'second' world, though some East European states began to encourage mass tourism from the 1960s. Emigration to non-socialist countries as well as temporary travel were strictly controlled, and at times virtually impossible. The political systems of the socialist world, essen­ tially modelled on the Soviet system, had no real equivalent elsewhere. They were based on a strongly hierarchical and authoritarian single party which monopolized state power - in fact it sometimes virtually substituted itself for the state - operating a centrally planned command economy and (at least in theory) imposing a single mandatory Marxist-Leninist ideology on its country's inhabitants. The segregation or self-segregation of the 'socialist camp' (as Soviet terminology came to call it from the late 1940s) gradually crumbled in the 1970s and 1980s. Nevertheless, the sheer degree of mutual ignorance and incomprehension that persisted between the two worlds was quite extraordinary, especially when we bear in mind that this was a period when both travel and communication of information were utterly revolutionized. For long periods very little information about these countries was allowed out and very little about other parts of the world was permitted to enter. In return, even non-expert educated • The data refer strictly speaking, to the USSR and its associated states, but it will serve as an order of magnitude.

'Real Socialism'

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and sophisticated citizens of the First World often found they could not make sense of what they saw or heard in countries whose past and present was so different from their own and whose languages were often beyond their reach. The fundamental reason for the separation of the two 'camps' was no doubt political. As we have seen, after the October revolution Soviet Russia saw world capitalism as the enemy to be overthrown as soon as practicable by world revolution. That revolution did not take place and Soviet Russia was isolated, surrounded by a capitalist world, many of whose most powerful governments wanted to prevent the establishment of this centre of global subversion, and, later, to eliminate it as soon as possible. The mere fact that the U S S R did not acquire official diplomatic recognition of its existence by the USA until

1933 demonstrates its

initial outlaw status. Moreover, even when the always realistic Lenin was prepared, and indeed anxious, to make the most far-reaching concessions to foreign investors in return for their assistance in Russia's economic development, in practice he found no takers. Thus the young U S S R was necessarily launched on a course of self-contained development, in virtual isolation from the rest of the world economy. Paradoxically this was soon to provide it with its most powerful ideological argument. It seemed immune to the gigantic economic depression which devastated the capital­ ist economy after the Wall Street crash of 1929.

1930s and, even more dramatically, the expanded Soviet sphere after 1945. The Politics once again helped to isolate the Soviet economy in the

Cold War froze both the economic and the political relations between the two sides. For practical purposes all economic relations between them other than the most trivial (or the unavowable) had to pass through the state controls imposed by both. Trade between the blocs was a function of political relations. Not until the

1970s and 1980s were there signs that

the separate economic universe of the 'socialist camp' was being integrated into the wider world economy. In retrospect we can see that this was the beginning of the end for 'really existing socialism'. Yet there is no theoretical reason why the Soviet economy, as it emerged from revolution and civil war, could not have evolved in a far closer relationship with the

rest of the world economy. Centrally planned and Western-type econo­ mies can be closely linked, as shown by the case of Finland, which at one point

( 1 983) took over a quarter of its imports from the USSR and sent

a similar proportion of its exports there. However, the 'socialist camp' that concerns the historian is the one which actually emerged, not what might have been . The central fact of Soviet Russia was that its new rulers, the Bolshevik

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The

Golden Age

Party, had never expected it to survive in isolation, let alone to become the nucleus of a self-contained collectivist economy ('socialism in one country'). None of the conditions which Marx or any of his followers had hitherto considered essential to the establishment of a socialist economy were present in this enormous hulk of a territory which was virtually a synonym for economic and social backwardness in Europe. The founders of Marxism assumed that the function of a Russian revolution could only be to spark off the revolutionary explosion in the more advanced industrial countries where the preconditions for the construction of socialism were present. As we have seen this was exactly what looked like happening in 1917-18, and it appeared to justify Lenin's highly controversial decision ­ at least among Marxists - to set the course of the Russian Bolsheviks for Soviet power and socialism. In Lenin's view, Moscow would only be the temporary headquarters of socialism until it could move to its permanent capital in Berlin. It is no accident that the official language of the Communist International, set up as the general staff of world revolution in 1919, was - and remained - not Russian but German. When it became clear that Soviet Russia was to be, for the time being, which would certainly not be short, the only country in which proletarian revolution had triumphed, the logical, indeed the only persuasive policy for the Bolsheviks, was to transform it from a backward into an advanced economy and society as soon as possible. The most obvious known way to do this was to combine an all-out offensive against the cultural backward­ ness of the notoriously 'dark', ignorant, illiterate and superstitious masses with an all-out drive for technological modernization and industrial revolution. A Soviet-based communism therefore became primarily a programme for transforming backward countries into advanced ones. This concentration on ultra-rapid economic growth was not without its appeal even in the developed capitalist world in its age of catastrophe, desperately seeking for a way to recover its economic dynamism. It was even more directly relevant to the problems of the world outside Western Europe and North America, most of which could recognize its own image in the agrarian backwardness of Soviet Russia. The Soviet recipe for economic development - centralized state economic planning aimed at the . ultra-rapid construction of the basic industries and infrastructure essential to a modem industrial society - seemed designed for them. Moscow was not only a more attractive model than Detroit or Manchester because it stood for anti-imperialism, but it also seemed a more suitable model, especially for countries lacking both in private capital and a large body of private and profit-oriented industry. 'Socialism' in this sense inspired a number of newly independent ex-colonial countries after the

'Real Socialism'

377

Second World War whose governments rejected the communist political system (see chapter 12). Since the countries joining that system were also backward and agrarian, with the exception of Czechoslovakia, the future German Democratic Republic and, to a lesser extent, Hungary, the Soviet economic recipe also seemed to suit them, and their new rulers launched themselves into the task of economic construction with genuine enthusiasm. Moreover, the recipe seemed to be effective. Between the wars, and especially during the 1930s, the rate of growth of the Soviet economy outpaced all other countries except Japan, and in the first fifteen years after the Second World War the economies of the 'socialist camp' grew considerably faster than those of the West, so much so that Soviet leaders like Nikita Khrushchev sincerely believed that, the curve of their growth continuing upwards at the same rate, socialism would outproduce capitalism within a foreseeable future; as indeed did the British premier Harold Macmillan. More than one economic observer in the 1950s wondered whether this might not happen. Curiously enough no discussion of 'planning', which was to be the central criterion of socialism, nor of rapid industrialization with priority for the heavy industries, was to be found in the writings of Marx and Engels, though planning is implicit in a socialized economy. But socialists, Marxist or otherwise, before 1917 had been too busy opposing capitalism to give much thought to the nature of the economy that would replace it, and after October Lenin himself, dipping, as he himself put it, one foot into the deep waters of socialism, made no attempt to dive into the unknown. It was the crisis of the Civil War that brought matters to a head. It led to the nationalisation of all industries in mid-1918, and to the 'War Communism' by means of which an embattled Bolshevik state organized its life-and-death struggle against counter-revolution and for­ eign intervention, and tried to raise the resources for it. All war economies, even in capitalist countries, involve planning and control by the state. In fact, the specific inspiration for Lenin's idea of planning was the German war economy of 1914-18 (which, as we have seen, was probably not the best model of its period and kind). Communist war economies were naturally inclined on grounds of principle to replace private by public property and management, and to dispense with the market and the price-mechanism, especially as none of these were of much use to improvise a national war effort at a moment's notice, and there were indeed communist idealists, like Nikolai Bukharin, who saw the civil war as the opportunity to establish the main structures of a Communist Utopia, and the grim economy of crisis, permanent and universal shortage, and the non-monetary allocation of rationed basic necessities to the

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The Golden Age

people in kind - bread, clothes, bus-tickets - as a spartan pre-view of that social ideal. In fact, as the Soviet regime emerged victorious from the struggles of 1918--20 it was evident that War Communism, however necessary for the time being, could not continue, partly because the peasants would rebel against the military requisitioning of their grain, which had been its base, and the workers against its hardships, partly because it provided no effective means for restoring an economy which had been virtually destroyed: iron and steel production was down from 4.2 million tons in 1913 to two hundred thousand in 1920. With his habitual realism Lenin introduced the New Economic Policy in 1921, which in effect reintroduced the market and, indeed, in his own words, retreated from War Communism to 'State Capitalism'. Yet it was at this very moment, when Russia's already retrograde economy had fallen to 10 per cent of its pre-war size (see chapter 2), that the need to industrialize massively, and to do so by government planning, became the obvious priority task for the Soviet government. And while the New Economic Policy dismantled War Communism, state control and compul­ sion remained as the only known model of an economy of socialized ownership and management. The first planning institution, the State Commission for the Electrification of Russia (GoELRo), in 1920 aimed, naturally enough, at modernizing technology, but the State Planning Commission set up in 1921 (Gosplan) had more universal objectives. It remained in being under that name until the end of the USSR. It became the ancestor and inspirer of all state institutions designed to plan, or even to exercise macro-economic supervision over, the economies of twentieth-century states. The New Economic Policy (NEP) was the subject of impassioned debate in Russia in the 1920s and again in the early Gorbachev years of the 1980s, but for the opposite reasons. In the 1920s it was clearly recognized as a defeat for communism, or at least a diversion of the columns marching towards socialism from the main highway to which, in one way or another, the way back had to be found. Radicals, such as the followers of Trotsky, wanted a break with NEP as soon as possible and a massive drive for industrialization, which was the policy eventually adopted under Stalin. Moderates, headed by Bukharin, who had put the ultra-radicalism of the War Communist years behind him, were keenly aware of the political and economic constraints under which the Bolshevik government had to operate in a country more overwhelmingly dominated by peasant agriculture than before the revolution. They favoured a gradual transformation. Lenin's own views could not be adequately expressed after paralysis hit him in 1922 - he survived only until early

'Real Socialism'

379

1924 but, while he could express himself, he seems to have favoured gradualism. On the other hand, the debates of the 1980s were retrospective searches for an historical socialist alternative to the Stalinism which actually succeeded NEP: a different road to socialism from the one actually envisaged by Bolshevik Right and Left in the 1920s. In retrospect Bukharin became a sort of proto-Gorbachev. These debates are no longer relevant. Looking back we can see that the original justification for the decision to establish socialist power in Russia disappeared when 'proletarian revolution' failed to conquer Germany. Worse than this, Russia survived the Civil War in ruins and far more backward than it had been under Tsarism. True, Tsar, nobility, gentry and bourgeoisie had gone. Two millions emigrated, incidentally depriving the Soviet state of a large section of its educated cadres. But so had the industrial development of the Tsarist era, and most of the industrial workers who provided the social and political base for the Bolshevik party. Revolution and civil war had killed or dispersed them or transferred them from factories into the offices of state and party. What remained was a Russia even more firmly anchored in the past, the immobile, unshiftable mass of peasants in the restored village communities, to whom the revolution had (against earlier Marxist judgment) given the land, or rather whose occupation and distribution of the land in 1917-18 it had accepted as the necessary price of victory and survival. In many ways NEP was a brief golden age of peasant &:ussia. Suspended above this mass was the Bolshevik Party no longer representing anyone. As Lenin recognized with his usual lucidity, all it had going for it was the fact that it was, and was likely to remain, the accepted and established government of the country. It had nothing else. Even so, what actually governed the country was an undergrowth of smaller and larger bureau­ crats, on average even less educated and qualified than before. What options had this regime, which was, moreover, isolated and boycotted by foreign governments and capitalists, and mindful of the expropriation of Russian assets and investments by the Revolution? NEP was indeed brilliantly successful in restoring the Soviet economy from the ruin of 1920. By 1926 Soviet industrial production had more or less recovered its pre-war level, though this did not mean much. The U S S R remained as overwhelmingly rural as in 1 9 1 3 (82 per cent of the popula­ tion in both cases) (Bergson/Levine, 1983, p. 100; Nove, 1969), and indeed only 7.5 per cent were employed outside agriculture. What this mass of peasants wanted to sell to the cities; what it wanted to buy from them; how much of its income it wanted to save; and how many of the many millions who chose to feed themselves in the villages rather than -

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The Golden Age

face city poverty wanted to leave the farms: this determined Russia's economic future, for, apart from the state's tax income, the country had no other available source of investment and labour. Leaving aside all political considerations, a continuation of NEP, modified or not, would at best produce a modest rate of industrialisation. Moreover, until there was a great deal more industrial development, there was little that the peasants could buy in the city to tempt them to sell their surplus rather than to eat and drink it in the villages. This (known as the 'scissors crisis') was to be the noose that eventually strangled N EP. Sixty years later a similar but proletarian 'scissors' undermined Gorbachev's

estroika.

per­

Why, Soviet workers were to argue, should they raise their

productivity to earn higher wages unless the economy produced the consumer goods to buy with these higher wages? But how were these goods to be produced unless Soviet workers raised their productivity? It was therefore never very likely that N E P - i.e. balanced economic growth based on a peasant market economy steered by the state which controlled its commanding heights - would prove a lasting strategy. For a regime committed to socialism the political arguments against it were in any case overwhelming. Would it not put the small forces committed to this new society at the mercy of petty commodity production and petty enterprise which would regenerate the capitalism just overthrown? And yet, what made the Bolshevik Party hesitate was the prospective cost of the alternative. It meant industrialisation by force: a second revolution, but this time not rising from below but imposed by state power from above. Stalin, who presided over the ensuing iron age of the US SR, was an autocrat of exceptional, some might say unique, ferocity, ruthlessness and lack of scruple. Few men have manipulated terror on a more universal scale. There is no doubt that under some other leader of the Bolshevik Party the sufferings of the peoples of the USSR would have been less, the number of victims smaller. Nevertheless, any policy of rapid moderni­ zation in the U SSR, under the circumstances of the time, was bound to be ruthless and, because imposed against the bulk of the people and imposing serious sacrifices on them, to some extent coercive. And the centralised command economy which conducted this drive through its 'plans' was, equally inevitably, closer to a military operation than to an economic enterprise.

On the other hand, like military enterprises which

have genuine popular moral legitimacy, the breakneck industrialisation of the first Five-Year Plans

( 1929-41) generated support by the very 'blood,

toil, tears and sweat' it imposed on the people. As Churchill knew, sacrifice itself can motivate. Difficult though it may be to believe, even

'Real Socialism'

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the Stalinist system, which once again turned peasants into serfs attached to the land and made important parts of the economy dependent on a prison labour force of between four and thirteen millions (the Gulags) (Van der Linden, 1993) almost certainly enjoyed substantial support, though clearly not among the peasantry (Fitzpatrick, 1994). The 'planned economy' of the Five-Year Plans which took the place of NEP in 1928 was necessarily a crude instrument - far cruder than the sophisticated calculations of the Gosplan's pioneer economists of the 1920s, which were in tum far cruder than the planning instruments available to governments and large corporations in the later twentieth century. Essentially its business was to create new industries rather than to run them, and it chose to give immediate priority to the basic heavy industries and energy-production which were the foundation of any large industrial economy: coal, iron and steel, electricity, oil, etc. The USSR's exceptional wealth in suitable raw materials made this choice both logical and convenient. As in a war economy - and the Soviet planned economy was a kind of war economy - targets for production can, and indeed often must, be set without considering cost and cost-effectiveness, the test being whether they can be met and when. As in all such life-or-death efforts, the most effective method of fulfilling targets and meeting deadlines is giving urgent orders which produce all-out rushes. Crisis is its form of management. The Soviet economy settled down as a set of routines broken by frequent, almost institutionalized 'shock efforts' in response to orders from above. Nikita Krushchev was later desperately to look for a way of making the system work in some other way than as a response to 'shouting' (Khruschev, 1990, p. 18). Stalin, earlier, had ex­ ploited 'storming' by deliberately setting unrealistic targets which encour­ aged superhuman efforts. Moreover, the targets once set had to be understood, and carried out down to the remotest outpost of production in inner Asia - by administra­ tors, managers, technicians and workers who, at least in the first genera­ tion, were inexperienced, ill-educated and used to wooden ploughs rather than machines. (The cartoonist David Low, visiting the USSR in the early 1930s, drew a sketch of a collective farm-girl 'absent-mindedly trying to milk a tractor'.) This eliminated the last elements of sophistica­ tion, except at the very top which, for that very reason, carried the responsibility of an increasingly total centralization. As Napoleon and his chief-of-staff had once had to compensate for the technical deficiencies of his marshals, essentially untrained fighting officers promoted from the ranks, so all decisions were increasingly concentrated at the apex of the Soviet system. Gosplan's overcentralization compensated for the shortage

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The Golden Age

of managers. The drawback of this procedure was an enormous bureaucra­ tisation of the economic apparatus as well as of all other parts of the system.• So long as the economy remained at the semi-subsistence level and had merely to lay the foundation for modern industry, this rough-and-ready system, developed mainly in the 1930s, worked. It even developed its own flexibility, in an equally crude manner. Setting one lot of targets did not necessarily get into the immediate way of setting other targets, as it would in the sophisticated labyrinth of a modern economy. In fact, for a backward and primitive country isolated from foreign help, command industrialization, with all its waste and inefficiencies, worked impressively. It turned the USSR into a major industrial economy in a few years and one capable, as Tsarist Russia had not been, of surviving and winning the war against Germany in spite of the temporary loss of areas containing a third of her population and, in many industries, half the industrial plant. One must add that in few other regimes could or would the people have borne the unparalleled sacrifices of this war effort (see Milward 1979, pp. 92-97), or, indeed, those of the 1 930s. Yet, if the system kept the consumption of the population at rock-bottom - in 1 940 the economy produced only a little over one pair of footwear in all for each inhabitant of the USSR - it guaranteed them that social minimum. It gave them work, food, clothes and housing at controlled (i.e. subsidized) prices and rents, pensions, health care and a rough equality until the system of rewards by special privileges for the 'nomenklatura' got out of hand after Stalin's death. Much more generously, it gave education. The transforma­ tion of a largely illiterate country into the modern USSR was, by any standards, a towering achievement. And for millions from the villages to whom, even in the harshest of times, Soviet development meant the opening of new horizons, the escape from darkness and ignorance to the city, light and progress, not to mention personal advancement and careers, the case for the new society was entirely convincing. In any case, they knew no other. However, this success story did not include agriculture and those who lived by it, for industrialization rested on the backs of an exploited peasantry. There is very little to be said in favour of the Soviets' peasant and agricultural policy except perhaps that the peasants were not the only ones to carry the burden of 'socialist primitive accumulation' (the phrase 'If sufficiently clear instructions are to be issued for every major product group and for every producing unit, and in the absence of multi-level planning, then the centre cannot but be saddled with a colossal burden of work' (Dyker, 1985, p. 9). •

'Real Socialism'

383

of a follower of Trotsky who favoured it)• as has been claimed. The workers also carried part of the burden of generating resources for investing in the future. The peasants - the majority of the population - were not only legally and politically inferior in status, at least until the (entirely inoperative) 1936 Constitution; they were not only taxed more highly and received inferior security, but the basic agricultural policy that replaced NEP, namely compulsory collectivisation

in cooperative or state farms, was and

remained disastrous. Its immediate effect was to lower grain output and almost halve livestock, thus producing a major famine in 1932-33. Collec­ tivisation led to a drop in the already low productivity of Russian farming, which did not regain the NEP level until 1940 or, allowing for the further disasters of the Second World War, 1950 (Tuma, 1965, p. 102). The massive mechanizations which tried to compensate for this fall was also, and has remained, massively inefficient. After a promising post­ war period when Soviet agriculture even produced a modest surplus of grain for export, though the US S R never even looked like becoming a major exporter as Tsarist Russia had been, Soviet farming ceased to be able to feed the population. From the early 1970s on it relied, sometimes to the extent of a quarter of its needs, on the world grain market. But for the slight relaxation of the collective system, which allowed peasants to produce for the market from small private plots - they covered about 4 per cent of the farmed area in 1938 - the Soviet consumer would have eaten little but black bread. In short, the USSR exchanged an inefficient peasant agriculture for an inefficient collective agriculture at vast cost. As so often, this reflected the social and political conditions of Soviet Russia, rather than the inherent nature of the Bolshevik project. Cooper­ ation and collectivisation, combined in varying degrees with private cultivation - or even, as in the Israeli

kibbuzim,

more communist than

anything in the USSR - can be successful, while pure peasant farming has often been better at extracting subsidies from governments than profits from the soil.t However, in the USSR there is no doubt at all that the agrarian policy was a failure. And one only too often copied, at •

In Marx's terms, 'primitive accumulation' by expropriation and pillage was

necessary to enable capitalism to acquire the original capital which subsequently undertook its own endogenous accumulation. t Thus in the first half of the 1980s, Hungary, with a largely collectivised farming, exported more agricultural products than France from an agricultural area little more than a quarter of the French, and about twice as much (in value) as Poland did from an agricultural

area

almost three times the size of the Hungarian. Polish farming, like

French, was not collective. (FAO Production, 1986, FAO Trade, vol. 40, 1986.)

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least initially, by subsequent socialist regimes. The other aspect of Soviet development for which very little can be said is the enormous and overblown bureaucratization which a centralized command government engendered, and with which even Stalin was unable to cope. Indeed, it has been seriously suggested that the Great Terror of the later 1 930s was Stalin's desperate method to 'overcome the bureaucratic maze and its skilful dodging of most government controls or injunctions' (Lewin, 1991, p. 17), or at least to prevent it from taking over as an ossified ruling class, as was eventually to happen under Brezhnev. Every attempt to make the administration more flexible and efficient merely swelled it and made it more indispensable. In the last years of the 1930s it grew at two-and-a-half times the rate of employment in general. As war approached, there was more than one administrator for every two blue-collar workers (Lewin, 1991). Under Stalin the top layer of these leading cadres were, as has been said, 'uniquely powerful slaves, always on the brink of catastrophe. Their power and privileges were shadowed by a constant memento mori.' After Stalin, or rather after the last of the 'great bosses', Nikita Khrushchev, was removed in 1964, there was nothing in the system to prevent stagnation. The third drawback of the system, and the one which in the end sank it, was its inflexibility. It was geared to constant growth in the output of products whose character and quality had been predetermined, but it contained no built-in mechanism for varying either quantity (except upward) or quality, or for innovation. In fact, it did not know what to do about inventions, and did not use them in the civilian economy, as distinct from the military-industrial complex. • As for the consumers, they were provided for neither by a market, which would have indicated their preferences, nor by any bias in their favour within the economic or, as we shall see, the political system. On the contrary, the system's original bias towards maximum growth of capital goods was reproduced by the planning machine. The most that one might claim is that, as the economy grew, it provided more consumer goods even while industrial structure kept on favouring capital goods. Even so, the system of distribu­ tion was so bad, and, above all, the system of. organizing services so non­ existent, that the rising standard of living in the USSR - and improve­ ment from the 1 940s to the 1970s was very striking - could function effectively only with the help of, or by means of, an extensive 'second' or • 'As little as one-third of all inventions find an application in the economy and even in these cases their diffusion is rare' (Vemikov, 1989, p. 7). The data appear to refer to 1986.

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'black' economy, which grew rapidly, particularly from the end of the

1960s. Since unofficial economies by definition escape from official documentation, we can only guess at its size - but in the late 1970s it was estimated that the Soviet urban population spent about twenty billion roubles on private consumer, medical and legal services, plus about another seven billions in 'tips' to ensure service (Alexeev,

1990). This

would at the time have been a sum comparable to the total of imports of the country. In short, the Soviet system was designed to industrialize a very backward and undeveloped country as rapidly as possible, on the assump­ tion that its people would be content with a standard of living guarantee­ ing a social minimum and a standard of material living somewhat above subsistence - how much depended on what trickled down from the general growth of an economy geared to further industrialization. Ineffi­ cient and wasteful though it was, it achieved these objects. In

1913 the Tsarist Empire, with 9.4 per cent of the world's population, produced 6 per cent of the world's total of 'national incomes' and 3.6 per cent of its industrial output. In 1986 the US S R, with less than 6 per cent of the global population produced 14 per cent of the globe's 'national income' and 14.6 per cent of its industrial output. (But it produced only a slightly higher share of the world's agricultural output.) (Bolotin, 1 987, pp. 14852.) Russia had been transformed into a major industrial power, and indeed its status as a superpower, maintained for almost half a century, rested on this success. However, and contrary to the expectations of the communists, the engine of Soviet economic development was so con­ structed as to slow down rather than speed up when, after the vehicle had advanced a certain distance, the driver stepped on the accelerator. Its dynamism contained the mechanism of its own exhaustion. This was the system which, after

1944, became the model for the economies under

which a third of the human race lived. However, the Soviet revolution also developed a very special political system. The European popular movements of the Left, including the Marxist labour and socialist movements to which the Bolshevik party belonged, drew on two political traditions: electoral, and sometimes even direct democracy, and the centralized action-oriented revolutionary efforts inherited from the Jacobin phase of the French Revolution. The mass labour and socialist movements which emerged almost everywhere in Europe at the end of the nineteenth century, whether as parties, labour unions, cooperatives or a combination of all these, were strongly demo­ cratic both in their internal structure and their political aspirations. In fact, where constitutions based on a wide franchise did not yet exist, they

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were the chief forces pressing for them and, unlike the anarchists , the Marxists were fundamentally committed to

political action.

The political

system of the U S SR, which was also later transferred to the socialist world, broke sharply with the democratic side of socialist movements, though maintaining an increasingly academic commitment to it in theory.• It even moved far beyond the Jacobin heritage, which, whatever its commitment to revolutionary rigour and ruthless action, did not favour individual dictatorship. In short, as the Soviet economy was a command economy, so Soviet politics was command politics. This evolution reflected partly the history of the Bolshevik Party, pardy the crises and urgent priorities of the young Soviet regime and pardy the peculiarities of the drunkard cobbler's ex-seminarist son from Georgia who became the autocrat of the U S S R under the self-chosen political name 'the man of steel', namely J.V. Stalin ( 1 879-1953). Lenin's model of the 'Vanguard Party', a uniquely efficient disciplined cadre of professional revolutionaries, geared to carrying out the tasks assigned to them by a central leadership, was potentially authoritarian, as numerous other equally revolutionary Russian Marxists had pointed out from the start. What was to stop 'substitutism' of the party for the masses it claimed to lead? Of its (elected) committees for the members, or rather the regular congresses expressing their views? Of the actual operational leadership for the central committee, and eventually by the (in theory elected) unique leader who in practice replaced all of these? The danger, as it turned out, was no less real because Lenin neither wanted to nor was in a position to be a dictator, or because the Bolshevik Party, like all organizations of the ideological Left, behaved much less like a military staff and much more like an endless debating society. It became more immediate after the October Revolution, as the Bolsheviks turned from a body of a few thousand illegals into a

mass

party of hundreds of

thousands, eventually of millions of professional mobilizers, administra­ tors, executives and controllers, who swamped the 'Old Bolsheviks' and other pre- 1 91 7 socialists who had joined them, such as Leon Trotsky. They shared none of the old political culture of the Left. All they knew was that the party was right and that decisions made by superior authority must be carried out if the revolution was to be saved.

• Thus the authoritarian centralism so characteristic of communist parties retained the official name of 'democratic centralism', and the 1936 Soviet Constitution is, on paper, a typical democratic constitution, with as much room for multiparty elections as,

say, the American constitution. Nor was this pure window-dressing, since much

of it was drafted by Nikolai Bukharin, who,

as

an old pre-1917 Marxist revolutionary,

undoubtedly believed that this type of constitution suited a socialist society.

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Whatever the pre-revolutionary attitude of the Bolsheviks to democracy in and outside the party, to free speech, civil liberties and toleration, the circumstances of the years 1917-2 1 imposed an increasingly authoritarian mode of government on (and within) a party committed to any action that was (or seemed) necessary to maintain the fragile and struggling Soviet power. It had not actually begun as a one-party government, nor one rejecting opposition, but it won the Civil War as a single-party dictatorship buttressed by a powerful security apparatus, and using terror against counter-revolutionaries. Equally to the point, the party itself abandoned internal democracy, as the collective discussion of alternative policies was banned (in 192 1). The 'democratic centralism' which gov­ erned it in theory became mere centralism. It ceased to operate by its own party constitution. The annual meetings of party congresses became less regular, until under Stalin they became unpredictable and occasional. The NEP years relaxed the non-political atmosphere, but not the feeling that the party was a beleaguered minority which might have history on its side, but was working against the grain of the Russian masses and the Russian present. The decision to launch the industrial revolution from above, automatically committed the system to imposing authority, perhaps even more ruthlessly than in the Civil War years, because its machinery for exercising power continuously was now much greater. It was then that the last elements of a separation of powers, the modest even if diminishing room for manoeuvre of the Soviet government as distinct from the party, came to an end. The single political leadership of the party now concentrated absolute power in its hands, subordinating all else. It was at this point that the system became an autocracy under Stalin, and one seeking to impose total control over all aspects of its citizens' lives and thoughts, all their existence being, so far as possible, subordi­ nated to the achievement of the system's objectives, as defined and specified by the supreme authority. This was certainly not envisaged by Marx and Engels, nor did it develop in the second (Marxist) International and most of its parties. Thus Karl Liebknecht, who, with Rosa Luxem­ burg, became the leader of the German communists and was assassinated with her in 1919 by reactionary officers, did not even claim to be a Marxist, though he was the son of a founder of the German Social­ democratic Party. The Austro-Marxists, though, as their name suggests, committed to Marx, made no bones about going their own various ways, and even when a man was branded an official heretic, as Eduard Bernstein was for his 'revisionism', it was taken for granted that he was a legitimate social-democrat. Indeed, he continued as an official editor of

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the works of Marx and Engels. The idea that a socialist state should force every citizen to think the same, let alone to endow its leaders collectively with something like papal infallibility (that any single person should exercise this function was unthinkable), would not have crossed the mind of any leading socialist before 1917. One might at most claim that Marxist socialism was for its adherents a passionate personal commitment, a system of hope and belief, which had some characteristics of a secular religion (though not more than the ideology of non-socialist crusading groups) and, perhaps more to the point, that, once it became a mass movement, subtle theory inevitably became at best a catechism; at worst, a symbol of identity and loyalty, like a flag, which must be saluted. Such mass movements, as intelligent central European socialists had long noted, also tended to admire, even to worship, leaders, though it must be said that the well-known tendency to argument and rivalry within Left-wing parties would usually keep this under some control. The construction of the Lenin mausoleum on the Red Square, where the preserved body of the great leader would for ever be visible to the faithful, did not derive from anything in even the Russian revolutionary tradition, but was an obvious attempt to mobilize the appeal of Christian saints and relics to a backward peasant people for the benefit of the Soviet regime. One might also claim that in the Bolshevik Party constructed by Lenin, orthodoxy and intolerance were to some extent implanted not as values in themselves but for pragmatic reasons. Like a good general - and Lenin was fundamentally a planner of action - he did not want arguments in the ranks which would prevent practical effectiveness. Moreover, like other practical geniuses, he was convinced that he knew best, and had little time for other opinions. In theory, he was an orthodox, even a fundamentalist, Marxist because it was clear to him that any monkeying with the text of a theory whose essence was revolution was likely to encourage compromisers and reform­ ists. In practice, he unhesitatingly modified Marx's views and added to them freely, always defending his literal loyalty to the master. Since, for most of the years before 1917, he led, and represented an embattled minority on the Russian Left, and even within Russian social democracy, he acquired a reputation for intolerance of dissent, but he had as little hesitation in welcoming his opponents, once the situation had changed, as he had in denouncing them, and, even after October, he never relied on his authority within the party, but invariably on argument. Nor, as we have seen, did his positions ever make their way unchallenged. Had he lived, Lenin would no doubt have gone on denouncing opponents, and, as in the civil war, his pragmatic intolerance would know no limits. Yet

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there is no evidence that he envisaged, or would even have tolerated, the sort of secular version of a universal and compulsory state-cum-private religion which developed after his death. Stalin may not have founded it consciously. He may merely have gone with what he saw as the main­ stream of a backw!lJ'd peasant Russia and its autocratic and orthodox tradition. But it is unlikely that, without him, it would have developed, and certain that it would not have been imposed on, or copied by other socialist regimes. Yet one thing must be said. The possibility of dictatorship is implicit in any regime based on a single, irremovable party. In a party organized on the centralized hierarchical basis of Lenin's Bolsheviks, it becomes a probability. And irremovability was merely another name for the total conviction of the Bolsheviks that the Revolution must not be reversed, and that its fate was in their hands and in nobody else's. Bolsheviks argued that a bourgeois regime might safely envisage the defeat of a Conservative administration and the succession of a Liberal, since this would not change the bourgeois character of society, but it would and could not tolerate a communist regime, for the same reason that a communist one could not tolerate being overthrown by any force that would restore the old order. Revolutionaries, including revolutionary socialists, are not democrats in the electoral sense, however sincerely convinced of acting in the interests of 'the people'. Nevertheless, even if the assumption that the party was a political monopoly with a 'leading role' made a democratic Soviet regime as unlikely as a democratic Catholic Church, it did not imply personal dictatorship. It was Joseph Stalin who turned communist political systems into non-hereditary monarchies. • In many ways Stalin, tiny,t cautious, insecure, cruel, nocturnal and endlessly suspicious, seems a figure out of Suetonius'

Lives of the Caesars

rather than out of modem politics. Outwardly unimpressive and indeed forgettable, 'a grey blur' as a contemporary observer called him in 1917 (Sukhanov), he conciliated and manoeuvred where he had to, until he reached the top; but, of course, his very considerable gifts had got him •

The similarity with monarchy is indicated by the tendency of some such states

actually to move in the direction of hereditary succession, a development which would have seemed absurdly unthinkable to esrlier socialists and communists. North Korea and Romania were two cases in point. t The present writer, who saw Stalin's embalmed body in the Red Square mausoleum before it was removed in 1957 can remember the shock of seeing a man so tiny and yet so all-powerful. Significantly, all films and photographa concealed the fact that he was only 5 ft 3 ins tall.

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close to the top even before the revolution. He was a member of the first government after revolutionary government as Commissar for nationali­ ties. When he finally became the unchallenged leader of the party and

(in

effect) of the state, he lacked the palpable sense of personal destiny, the charisma and self-confidence which made Hider the founder and accepted master of his party and kept his entourage loyal to him without coercion. Stalin ruled his party, as everything else within reach of his personal power, by terror and fear. In turning himself into something like a secular Tsar, defender of the secular Orthodox faith, the body of whose founder, transformed into a secular saint, awaited the pilgrims outside the Kremlin, Stalin showed a sound sense of public relations. For a collection of peasant and animal­ herding peoples mentally living in the Western equivalent of the eleventh century, this was almost certainly the most effective way of establishing the legitimacy of the new regime, just as the simple, unqualified, dogmatic catechisms to which he reduced 'Marxism-Leninism' were ideal for introducing ideas to the first generation of literates. • Nor

can

his terror

simply be seen as the assertion of a tyrant's unlimited personal power. There is no doubt that he enjoyed that power, the fear that he inspired, the ability to give life or death, just as there is no doubt that he was quite indifferent to the material rewards that someone in his position could command. Yet, whatever his personal psychological kinks, Stalin's terror was, in theory, as rationally instrumental a tactic as was his caution where he lacked control. Both, in fact, were based on the principle of avoiding risks, which, in turn, reflected that very lack of confidence in his ability to assess situations ('to make a Marxist analysis', in the Bolshevik jargon) which had distinguished Lenin. His terrifying career makes no sense except as a stubborn, unbroken, pursuit of that utopian aim of a commu­ nist society to whose reassertion he devoted the last of his publications, a few months before his death (Stalin, 1952) Power in the Soviet Union was all that the Bolsheviks had gained by the October Revolution. Power was the only tool they could wield to change society. This was beset by constant, and in one way or another, constantly renewed, difficulties. (This is the meaning of Stalin's otherwise absurd thesis that the class struggle would become more intense decades after 'the proletariat had taken power'.) Only the determination to use power consistently and ruthlessly to eliminate all possible obstacles to the process could guarantee eventual success. •

And not only these. The 1 939 Short History of the Soviet Communist Party,

whatever its lies and intellectual limitations, was pedadogically a masterly text.

'Real Socialism'

391

Three things drove a policy based on this assumption towards a murderous absurdity. First, Stalin's belief that in the last analysis only he knew the way forward and was sufficiendy determined to pursue it. Plenty of politicians and generals have this sense of indispensability, but only those with absolute power are in a position to compel others to share this belief. Thus the great purges of the 1930s which, unlike earlier forms of terror, were directed against the party itself and especially its leadership, began after many hardened Bolsheviks, including those who had supported him against the various oppositions of the 1920s and genuinely backed the Geat Leap Forward of Collectivisation and Five Year Plan, found the ruthless cruelties of the period and the sacrifices it imposed, more than they would willingly accept. No doubt many of them remembered Lenin's refusal to back Stalin as his successor because of his excessive brutality. The seventeenth Congress of the CPSU(b) revealed a substan­ tial opposition to him. Whether it actually constituted a threat to his power we shall never know, for between 1934 and 1939 four or five million party members and officials were arested on political grounds, four or five hundred thousand of them were executed without trial, and the next (eighteenth) Party Congress which met in the spring of 1939, contained a bare thirty-seven survivors of the 1 827 delegates who had been present at the seventeenth in 1934 (Kerblay, 1983, p. 245). What gave this terror an unprecedented inhumanity was that it recog­ nized no conventional or other limits. It was not so much the belief that a great end justifies all the means necessary to achieve it (though it is possible that this was Mao Tse-tung's belief), or even the belief that the sacrifices imposed on the present generation, however large, are as nothing to the benefits which will be reaped by the endless generations of the future. It was the application of the principle of total war to all times. Leninism, perhaps because of the powerful strain of voluntarism which made other Marxists distrust Lenin

as

a 'Blanquist' or 'Jacobin', thought

essentially in military terms, as his own admiration for Oausewitz would indicate, even if the entire vocabulary of Bolshevik politics did not bear witness to it. 'Who whom?' was Lenin's basic maxim: the struggle as a zero-sum game in which the winner took, the loser lost, all. As we know, even the liberal states waged both world wars in this spirit, and recognized absolutely no limit on the suffering they were prepared to impose on the the population of 'the enemy', and, in the First World War, even on their own armed forces. Indeed, even the victimisation of entire blocks of people, defined on

a priori

grounds, became part of warfare: such as the

internment during the Second World War of all US citizens of Japanese

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origins or of all resident Germans and Austrians in Britain on the grounds that they might contain some potential agents of the enemy. This was part of that relapse of nineteenth-century civil progress into a renaissance of barbarism, which runs like a dark thread through this book. Fortunately, in constitutional and peferably democratic states under the rule of law and with a free press, there are some countervailing forces. In systems of absolute power there are none, even though eventu­ ally conventions of power-limitation may develop, if only for the sake of survival and because the use of total power may be self-defeating. Paranoia is its logical end-product. After Stalin's death a tacit understand­ ing among his successors decided to put an end to the era of blood, although (until the Gorbachev era) it was left to dissidents within and scholars or publicists abroad to estimate the full human cost of the Stalin decades. Henceforth Soviet politicians died in their beds, and sometimes at an advanced age. As the Gulags emptied in the late 1950s, the USSR remained a society which treated its citizens badly by Western standards, but it ceased to be a society which imprisoned and killed its citizens on a uniquely massive scale. Indeed, by the 1980s it had a distinctly smaller proportion of its inhabitants in jail than the U S A (268 prisoners per 100,000 population against 426 per 100,000 in the USA) (Walker 1991). Moreover, in the 1960s and 1970s the USSR actually became a society in which the ordinary citizen probably ran a smaller risk of being deliberately killed by crime, civil conflict or the state than a substantial number of other countries in Asia, Africa and the Americas. Nevertheless, it re­ mained a police state, an authoritarian society and, by any realistic standards, an unfree one. Only officially authorized or permitted informa­ tion was available to the citizen - any other kind remained at least technically punishable by law until Gorbachev's policy of glasnost ('open­ ness') - and freedom of travel and settlement depended on official permission, an increasingly nominal restriction within the USSR, but a very real one where frontiers had to be crossed even into another friendly 'socialist' country. In all these respects the U S S R remained distinctly inferior to Tsarist Russia. Moreover, even though for most everyday purposes the rule of law operated, the powers of administrative, i.e. arbitrary, imprisonment or internal exile remained. It will probably never be possible to calculate the human cost of Russia's iron decades adequately, since even such official statistics of execution and Gulag populations as exist or might become available cannot cover all the losses, and estimates vary enormously depending on the assumption made by the estimators. 'By a sinister paradox' it has

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393

been said, 'we are better informed as to losses to Soviet livestock in this period than about the number of the regime's opponents who were exterminated' (Kerblay, 1983, p. 26). The suppression of the 1937 census alone introduces almost insuperable obstacles. Still, whatever assumptions are made,• the number of direct and indirect victims must be measured in eight rather than seven digits. In these circumstances it does not much matter whether we opt for a 'conservative' estimate nearer to ten than to twenty millions or a larger figure: none can be anything but shameful and beyond palliation, let alone justification. I add, without comment, that the total population of the U S S R in 1937 was said to have been 164 millions, or 16.7 millions less than the demographic forecasts of the Second Five-Year Plan ( 1933-38). Brutal and dictatorial though it was, the Soviet system was not 'totalitarian', a term which became popular among critics of communism after the Second World War, having been invented in the 1920s by Italian fascism to describe its objects. Hitherto it had been used almost exclusively to criticize both it and German National Socialism. It stood for an all-embracing centralized system which not only imposed total physical control over its population but, by means of its monopoly of propaganda and education, actually succeeded in getting its people to internalize its values. George Orwell's 1984 (published in 1948) gave this Western image of the totalitarian society its most powerful form: a society of brainwashed masses under the watchful eye of 'Big Brother', from which only the occasional lonely individual dissented. This is certainly what Stalin would have wanted to achieve, though it would have outraged Lenin and other Old Bolsheviks, not to mention Marx. Insofar as it aimed at the virtual deification of the leader (what was later shyly euphemized as 'the cult of personality'), or at least at establishing him as a compendium of virtues, it had some success, which Orwell satirized. Paradoxically, this owed little to Stalin's absolute power. The communist militants outside the 'socialist' countries who wept genuine tears as they learned of his death in 1953 - and many did - were voluntary converts to the movement they believed him to have symbolized and inspired. Unlike most foreigners, all Russians knew well enough how much suffering had been, and still was, their lot. Yet in some sense by virtue merely of being a strong and legitimate ruler of the Russian lands and a modernizer of these lands, he represented something of themselves: most recently as their leader in a war which was, for Great Russians at least, a genuinely national struggle. • For the uncertainties of such procedures see Kosinski, 1987, pp. 151-52.

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Yet, in every other respect, the system was not 'totalitarian', a fact which throws considerable doubt on the usefulness of the term. It did not exercise effective 'thought control', let alone ensure 'thought conversion', but in fact depoliticized the citizenry to an astonishing degree. The official doctrines of Marxism-Leninism left the bulk of the population virtually untouched, since it had no apparent relevance to them, unless they were interested in a career in which such esoteric knowledge was expected. After forty years of education in a country dedicated to Marxism, passers-by on Marx Square in Budapest were asked who Karl Marx was. They were told: He was a Soviet philosopher; Engels was his friend. Well, what else can I say? He died at an old age. (Another voice): Of course, a politician. And he was, you know, he was· what's his name's Lenin's, Lenin, Lenin's works - well he translated them into Hungarian (Garton Ash, 1990, p. 261). For the majority of Soviet citizens most public statements about politics and ideology coming from on high were probably not consciously ab­ sorbed at all, unless they bore directly on their everyday problems which they rarely did. Only the intellectuals were forced to take them seriously in a society built on and around an ideology that claimed to be rational and 'scientific'. Yet, paradoxically, the very fact that such systems needed intellectuals, and gave those who did not publicly dissent from it substantial privileges and advantages, created a social space outside the state's control. Only terror as ruthless as Stalin's could completely silence the unofficial intellect. In the U S S R it re-emerged as soon as the ice of fear began to thaw - The Thaw ( 1954) was the title of an influential roman a these by Ilya Ehrenburg ( 1 89 1-1967), a talented survivor in the 1950s. In the 1960s and 1970s dissent, both in the uncertainly tolerated form of communist reformers and in the form of total intellec­ tual, political and cultural dissidence, dominated the Soviet scene, though officially the country remained 'monolithic' - a favourite Bolshevik term. This was to become evident in the 1980s. -

II The communist states which came into being after the Second World War, i.e. all except the US SR, were controlled by communist parties formed or shaped in the Soviet, i.e. Stalinist, mould. This was true even

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to some extent of the Chinese Communist Party, which had established real autonomy from Moscow in the 1930s under Mao Tse-tung. It was, perhaps, less true of later recruits to the 'socialist camp' from the Third World - Fidel Castro's Cuba, and various more shortlived African, Asian and Latin American regimes which arose in the 1970s, and which also tended to assimilate themselves officially to the established Soviet pattern. In all of them we find one-party political systems with highly centralized authority structures; officially promulgated cultural and intel­ lectual truth determined by political authority; central state-planned economies; even, the most obvious relic of the Stalinist heritage, strongly profiled supreme leaders. Indeed, in the states directly occupied by the Soviet army, including the Soviet security services, local governments were compelled to follow the Soviet example, for instance by organizing show trials and purges of local communists on the Stalin model, a matter for which the native communist parties showed no spontaneous enthusi­ asm. In Poland and East Germany they even managed to avoid these caricatures of the judicial process altogether, and no leading communist was killed or handed over to the Soviet security services, although, in the aftermath of the break with Tito prominent local leaders in Bulgaria (Traicho Kostov) and Hungary (Laszlo Rajk) were executed and in Stalin's last year a particularly implausible mass trial of leading Czech communists, with a markedly anti-semitic tinge, decimated the old leader­ ship of the local party. It may or may not have had some connection with the increasingly paranoiac behaviour of Stalin himself as he deterio­ rated both physically and mentally and planned to eliminate even his most loyal supporters The new regimes of the 1940s, though in Europe all were made possible by the victory of the Red Army, were only in four cases imposed exclusively by the force of that army: in Poland; the occupied part of Germany; Romania (where the local communist movement consisted at best of a few hundred people, most of them not ethnic Romanians); and, in substance, Hungary. In Yugoslavia and Albania it was very much home-grown, in Czechoslovakia the communist party's 40 per cent of the vote in 1947 almost certainly reflected genuine strength at the time, and in Bulgaria communist influence was reinforced by the Russophile senti­ ment so universal in that country. Communist power in China, Korea and former French Indochina - or rather, after the Cold War division, in the northern parts of those countries - owed nothing to Soviet arms, though after 1949 the smaller communist regimes benefited, for a while, from Chinese support. The subsequent additions to the 'socialist camp', starting with Cuba, had made their own way there, although struggling

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guerrilla liberation movements in Africa could count on serious support from the Soviet bloc. Yet, even in the states where communist power was imposed only by the Red Army, the new regime initially enjoyed a temporary legitimacy and, for a time, some genuine support. As we have seen (chapter 5), the idea of building a new world on what was so visibly the total ruin of the old, inspired many of the young and the intellectuals. However unpopular party and government, the very energy and determination which both brought to the task of post-war reconstruction commanded a broad, if reluctant, assent. Indeed, the success of the new regimes in this task was hard to deny. In the more backward agrarian states, as we have seen, the communist commitment to industrialization, that is, to progress and modernity, re-echoed far beyond the party's ranks. Who could doubt that countries like Bulgaria or Yugoslavia were advancing far more rapidly than had seemed likely, or even possible before the war? Only where a primitive and ruthless USSR had occupied and forcibly absorbed less backward regions, or, at any rate, regions with developed cities, as in the areas transferred in 1939-40, and in the Soviet zone of Germany (after 1954 the German Democratic Republic), which continued for some time after 1945 to be pillaged by the U S S R for its own reconstruction, did the balance look entirely negative. Politically, the communist states, home-grown or imposed, began by forming a single bloc under the leadership of the USSR, which, on grounds of anti-Western solidarity, was supported even by the communist regime which took full control of China in 1949, though Moscow's influence over the Chinese Communist Party had been tenuous ever since Mao Tse-tung became its unchallengeable leader in the middle 1930s. Mao went his own way amid professions of loyalty to the USSR, and Stalin, as a realist, was careful not to strain his relations with the effectively independent giant eastern brother-party. When in the later 1950s Nikita Khrushchev did strain them the result was an acrimonious breach, as China challenged Soviet leadership of the international commu­ nist movement, though not very successfully. Stalin's attitude to the states and communist parties in the parts of Europe occupied by the Soviet armies was less conciliatory, partly because his armies were still present in Eastern Europe, but also because he thought he could rely on the genuine local communist loyalty to Moscow, and to himself personally. He was almost certainly surprised in 1948 when the Yugoslav communist leadership, so loyalist that Belgrade had been made the headquarters of the reconstructed Cold War Communist International (the 'Communist Information Bureau' or Cominform) only a few months earlier, pushed

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their resistance to Soviet directives to the point of an open breach, and when Moscow's appeal to the loyalty of good communists over the head of Tito met with next to no serious response in Yugoslavia. Characteristi­ cally his reaction was to extend purges and show-trials to the remaining satellite communist leaderships. Nevertheless, the Yugoslav secession left the rest of the communist movement unaffected. The political crumbling of the Soviet bloc began with Stalin's death in 1953, but especially with the official attacks on the Stalinist era in general and, more cautiously, on Stalin himself, at the Twentieth Congress of the CPSU in 1956. Although aimed at a highly restricted domestic Soviet audience - foreign communists were excluded from Khrushchev's secret speech - the news soon got out that the Soviet monolith had split. The effects within the Soviet-dominated region of Europe was immediate. Within a few months a new, reforming communist leadership in Poland was peacefully accepted by Moscow (probably with the help of advice from the Chinese), and a revolution broke out in Hungary. Here the new government under another communist reformer, Imre Nagy, announced the end of one-party rule, which the Soviets might conceivably have tolerated - opinions among them were divided but also the withdrawal of Hungary from the Warsaw Pact and its future neutrality, which they would not tolerate. The revolution was suppressed by the Russian army in November 1956. That this major crisis within the Soviet bloc was not exploited by the Western alliance (except for purposes of propaganda) demonstrated the stability of East-West relations. Both sides tacitly accepted the boundaries of each other's zones of influence, and during the 1950s and 1960s no indigenous revolutionary changes appeared on the globe to disturb this balance, except in Cuba. • In regimes where politics was so obviously in control, no sharp line between political and economic developments can be drawn. Thus the governments of Poland and Hungary could not but make economic concessions to peoples who had so clearly demonstrated their lack of enthusiasm for communism. In Poland agriculture was de-collectivized, though this did not make it notably more efficient, and, more to the point, the political force of a working class, much strengthened by the • The revolutions of the 1950s in the Middle East, Egypt in 1952, and Iraq in 1958, contrary to Western fears, did not change the balance, in spite of providing

much scope for USSR diplomatic success, chiefly because the local regimes elimi­ nated their own communists ruthlessly, where they were influential, as in Syria and Iraq.

398

The Golden Age

rush into heavy industrialization, was henceforth tacitly acknowledged. After all, it was an industrial movement in Poznan which had initiated the events of 1956. From then until the triumph of Solidarity at the end of the 1980s, Polish politics and economics were dominated by the confrontation of irresistible mass, the regime, and immovable object, the working class, which, initially without organization, was eventually organ­ ized into a classical labour movement, allied as usual with intellectuals, and eventually formed a political movement, just as Marx had predicted. Only the ideology of this movement, as Marxists had to note with melancholy, was not anti-capitalist but anti-socialist. Typically these confrontations were about the periodic attempts of Polish governments to cut down the heavy subsidies on basic living-costs by raising prices. These then led to strikes, followed typically (after a crisis in the government) by retreat. In Hungary the leadership imposed by the Soviets after the defeat of the 1956 revolution was more genuinely reformist and effective. It set out under Janos Kadar (1912-89) systematically (and possibly with tacit support from influential quarters in the U S S R) to liberalize the regime, conciliate the opposition and, in effect, to achieve the objectives of 1956 within the limits of what the U S S R would regard as acceptable. In this it was notably successful until the 1980s. This was not the case in Czechoslovakia, politically inert since the ruthless purges of the early 1950s, but cautiously and tentatively begin­ ning to de-Stalinize. For two reasons this process snowballed in the second half of the 1960s. The Slovaks (including the Slovak component of the CP), never entirely at ease in the bi-national state, provided backing for potential opposition in the party. It is no accident that the man elected to the general secetaryship in a party coup in 1968 was a Slovak, Alexander Dubcek. However, quite separately, pressure to reform the economy, and intro­ duce some rationality and flexibility into the Soviet-type command system, became increasingly hard to resist in the 1960s. As we shall see, it was by then felt throughout the communist block. Economic decentraliza­ tion, which was not in itself politically explosive, became so when combined with the demand for intellectual and, even more, for political liberalization. In Czechoslovakia this demand was all the stronger, not only because Stalinism had been particularly harsh and long-lasting, but also because so many of its communists (especially intellectuals, sprung from a party with genuine mass support both before and after the Nazi occupation) were profoundly shocked by the contrast between the commu­ nist hopes they still retained and the reality of the regime. As so often in Nazi-occupied Europe, where the party became the heart of the resistance

'Real Socialism'

399

movement, it attracted young idealists whose commitment at such a time was a guarantee of selflessness. What, other than hope and possible torture and death, could someone expect who, like a friend of the present writer, joined the party in Prague in 1941? As always - as was indeed inevitable, given the structure of communist states - reform came from above, i.e. from within the party. The 'Prague Spring' of 1968, preceded and accompanied by politie

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