Development, Part 4a
The Nationalisation of Land
If “Land to
the tiller” is a revolutionary slogan that will motivate our allies the
peasantry and the petty-bourgeoisie, then what about: “Nationalise the land”?
These
things are not the same. The petty-bourgeois republic is not the same as Karl
Marx’s dream (see the main linked text, below) of “National centralization of the means of production”, which Marx
here associates with the ultimate moves in the transition to communism (i.e.
the “withering away of the state”).
In the attached short, 2-page letter to Mr
Applegarth, Marx writes:
"The future will decide that the land cannot be owned but
nationally. To give up the soil to the hands of associated rural laborers would
be to surrender all society to one exclusive class of producers. The
nationalization of land will work a complete change in the relations between
labor and capital and finally do away altogether with capitalist production,
whether industrial or rural. Only then the class distinctions and privileges
will disappear together with the economical basis from which they originate and
society will be transformed into an association of 'producers'. To live upon
other people’s labor will become a thing of the past. There will no longer
exist a government nor a state distinct from society itself."
In the
alliance of worker and peasant that must be made for the purposes of
overthrowing the rule of the big bourgeoisie, the demand of the peasants is for
ownership of land.
Yet Marx,
already, in 1869, is clear in his mind that the distribution of land to the
peasants makes a situation that “is
farther off the nationalization of land than… landlordism” and “converts the tiller himself into the most
decided enemy of all social progress, and above all, of the nationalization of
the land”.
Such
problems arose in the Soviet Union after the revolution, following which
“collectivisation” took place by force.
In China
things were done differently. There, the peasant class was given land and
nursed for generations, and the peasant class is still the majority class in
China, although hundreds of millions have been drawn off the land and into the
cities to create what is now by far the largest national working proletariat
that the world has ever seen.
What Marx
calls in this letter “appliance of modern
agricultural improvements”, and which he thought were excluded from use by
peasant farmers, were redesigned and manufactured in China at a suitable scale
for peasant use (e.g. the Chinese walking tractor). Even with such mechanical
implements, peasant progress was slow, as it can only be slow. Yet the
transformation of China has been as relentless as it has been systematic.
Illustration (Poster): “As
a result of state-farm and collective-farm construction the USSR became the
country of the most powerful agriculture in the world.” (1931)
Second Illustration: Chinese walking tractor, designed for peasant
family farming.
- The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Abolition of Landed
Property, 1869, Marx.
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