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Neo-Socialism: A Sketch
[9251 words excluding notes, bibliography and abstract.; 11403 in total]
This paper suggests we conceive of socialism as a normative ideal that is multiply realizable
at the institutional level as opposed to being tied to specific policies like state ownership and
restriction of markets. To highlight the revisionary nature of this conception, I suggest we
call it neo-socialism. I begin with the most well known neo-socialist theory, G. A. Cohen’s
Why Not Socialism? On Cohen's view the debate between socialists and left-liberals
concerns whether “express reciprocity”, whereby citizens produce and exchange with each
other’s needs directly in mind, is a necessary feature of an ideal society. Having shown that
Cohen’s own justification for the socialist position fails, I argue for it by means of an
immanent critique of left-liberalism. Drawing on Margaret Gilbert’s argument that joint
action entails special rights and responsibilities, I rework Cohen’s camping trip example to
produce a prima facie case for thinking that citizens have an obligation to produce and
exchange with each other's needs in mind. I then refine the argument, concluding that
participants in large-scale economic cooperation must treat express reciprocity as the default
mode of deliberation, and that this allows us to explain, justify and revise the traditional
socialist policy platform.
Introduction
In the last few years socialism has enjoyed something of a renaissance in Britain and
America, with figures like Jeremy Corbyn and Bernie Sanders taking centre stage and
magazines like Jacobin growing in influence. At the turn of the millennium that would have
seemed unthinkable, and it is worth reflecting on why that is. It seems fair to say that the
realization of socialism understood as a policy program restricting markets and private
property became less and less likely as the twentieth century went on.1 For one thing, the
power of organized labour to shape or curtail markets and to limit the growth of private
property holdings diminished in various ways and for various reasons. For another, state
ownership became associated with distinctive forms of inequality and inefficiency caused by
rent-seeking, patronage networks and calamitous attempts at central planning. If the wheel
of political fortune has brought socialism back into favour, or at least into consideration, it is
not because it has changed but rather because its rivals have come to seem less attractive.
1
See Dunn, The Politics of Socialism: An Essay in Political Theory.
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But if the socialist revival is to amount to more than an expression of protest, it will have to
reckon with the objections just mentioned. The challenge is therefore to provide a theory
that captures classic socialist concerns while avoiding naivety concerning state ownership
and nostalgia for a lost era of large-scale working-class movements.
This paper suggests one way of meeting that challenge. The strategy is to treat socialism as a
normative ideal that is multiply realizable at the policy level. This emphasis on the normative
would have been anathema to many past socialists, for whom ideal theory appeared either
epiphenomenal where social transformation is concerned, given the truth of historical
materialism, or simply otiose, given that socialist economic policies were superior with
respect to so many values—efficiency, equity, democracy, community—that they were
obviously in the interests of the growing working class, who would therefore fight for them
without any need for normative theory.2 But this repudiation of the normative no longer
seems plausible. Whether or not the materialist theory of history holds true over the longue
durée, the fact remains that in the here and now we still need to act, and therefore to assess
possible courses of action.3 The thought that this assessment would simply be obvious,
especially to an ever-strengthening proletariat, was belied over the course of the twentieth
century as the costs of socialist policies became clearer and the social movements that were
supposed to support them began to fracture. In the context of today’s socialist revival,
normative theory promises to serve three functions. The first is to clarify what is at stake in
the relevant policy trade-offs: given that collective ownership has certain obvious costs, for
2 See Cohen, If You're An Egalitarian, How Come You're So Rich?, ch. 6, and Wright, How to be an Anticapitalist, ch.
2.
3 I take historical materialism to be a theory concerning historical change rather than a theory of metaethics. As
such it does not rule out the possibility of reasoning about better or worse courses of action; it only implies that
such reasoning will not be the primary explanatory factor in any change between epochs.
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instance, what exactly are its benefits supposed to be? The second is to spur revision of the
traditional socialist policy program: ought socialists to support collective ownership at all?
The third is to generate an ideal around which a new socialist movement could coalesce in
the way that neoliberalism arguably coalesced around Hayek’s vision of a spontaneous social
order. None of this is to say that ideals can change the world by themselves, or that they are
more important than power struggles; it is only to insist that they can play a part.
Treating socialism as a normative ideal might also be thought wrong-headed on a conceptual
level, however: if socialism is equated with particular economic policies, as it often is, then
talk of a pre-institutional ideal of socialism will make no more sense than talk of a preinstitutional ideal of quantitative easing. As it happens, a normative approach to socialism is
hardly unprecedented: it represents a return to the “ethical socialism” of T. H. Green and R.
H. Tawney.4 That said, to highlight the revisionary nature, both politically and conceptually,
of this conception, as well as its ambition of providing a counterpoint to contemporary
neoliberalism, I suggest we distinguish between “traditional socialism” and “neo-socialism”,
reserving the latter name for normative theories. A neo-socialist theory claims that the
institutions and policies traditionally equated with socialism only count as socialist by virtue
of their relationship with a normative ideal that both justifies and explains them. Structurally
speaking, a theory of this kind always has the potential to revise our sense of what counts as
socialist at the policy level. This is the great advantage of the neo-socialist approach,
especially in the present situation. For by conceiving of specific institutions and policies as
merely instrumental, and therefore contingent, with respect to a normative ideal, it insulates
4
See, e.g., Tawney, The Acquisitive Society. It arguably also bears a relation to the “utopian socialism” of Henri de
Saint-Simon, Charles Fourier, Robert Owen, John Ruskin and William Morris, although it is important to avoid
eliding “normative” and “ideal” with “utopian”.
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socialism from criticisms of specific policies like state ownership while allowing it to adapt to
changing circumstances and to changing theories of institutional design. The question is
whether it is in fact possible to specify an ideal that is both pre-institutional and distinctively
socialist, and whether such an ideal will be justified.
This paper begins with a brief exposition and analysis of the most well known neo-socialist
theory of recent times, namely that presented by G. A. Cohen in Why Not Socialism?5 Cohen
takes traditional socialist policies to be merely instrumental with respect to an ideal that
consists in the realization of three normative principles. Unfortunately his account falls short
in two respects: he backs away from the iconoclastic implications of his neo-socialism vis-àvis traditional socialism and he fails to justify the normative ideal itself as against the leftliberal alternative. What he does leave us with, however, is the useful suggestion that the
debate between socialists and left-liberals concerns whether “express reciprocity”, whereby
citizens produce and exchange with each other’s needs directly in mind, is a necessary feature
of an ideal society—the socialist answer being yes, the left-liberal answer being no. In the
second section I argue for the socialist position on reciprocity by means of an immanent
critique of left-liberalism that departs from the premise that a society is a cooperative
venture for mutual advantage. Drawing on Margaret Gilbert’s argument that joint action
entails special rights and responsibilities, I rework Cohen’s camping trip example in order to
show that participation in a cooperative venture aimed at mutual advantage entails an
obligation to produce and exchange with other participants’ needs in mind. In the third
section I refine the argument in response to an objection that the argument will only work
for small-scale cooperative ventures, concluding that in large-scale economic cooperation the
5
Cohen, Why Not Socialism?, hereafter WNS.
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obligation is simply to treat express reciprocity as the default mode of deliberation regarding
production and exchange. In the fourth section I then suggest one way in which the neosocialist theory thus sketched allows us to explain, justify and revise the traditional socialist
policy platform.
1. Cohen’s Neo-Socialism
G. A. Cohen’s 2009 essay Why Not Socialism? is only a sketch, and it certainly does not
provide an impregnable doctrine. But the value of political philosophy can lie in opening up
new ways of thinking, and WNS is unquestionably valuable in this respect. Its most
important contribution, in my view, consists in its overall approach to the challenge of
theorizing socialism. For Cohen, socialism is a normative ideal—and he takes this to imply
that it would be a confusion to equate it with specific policies like equality of income and
work hours, as we might be tempted to if we took, say, kibbutzim as paradigms of socialism.
The socialist ideal is prior to and independent of all policies, such that the relation between
the two can only ever be contingent. Structurally speaking, Cohen’s theory is therefore neosocialist in the sense outlined in the introduction. The thought is that the policies often
equated with socialism only count as such in virtue of their relationship to an ideal that lies
upstream from them. Given this structure, the theory has the potential to revise the
traditional understanding of which policies socialists ought to pursue. Viewed in light of this
potential, however, WNS has two major flaws. The first is that it lapses back into traditional
socialism. The second is that it fails to justify the ideal itself.6
6 One might immediately object that it is unfair to focus on WNS, which is only supposed to be a sketch, as
opposed to Cohen’s more theoretically sophisticated work. The first thing to say is that this is not a paper in
“Cohen Studies”—the primary goal is to provide a new account of socialism rather than a full account of
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The question for neo-socialists is whether it is really possible to specify an ideal that is
distinctively socialist without making essential reference to institutions and policies. The
fundamental claim of WNS is that an ideal society would jointly realize three normative
principles, inflections of the revolutionary triad of liberty, equality and fraternity. Leftliberalism also pays fealty to some version of that triad, so we might wonder what is
distinctively socialist about the ideal.7 After all, the particular principle of equality that Cohen
favours—one that directs us to correct for all disadvantages for which an agent cannot
reasonably be held responsibly, including inborn disadvantages, so that differences in
outcome reflect nothing but differences of choice—has been espoused by various leftliberals under the label of “luck-egalitarianism”. His preferred principle of liberty,
meanwhile—one that directs us to ensure that “people have a right to make personal
choices, even if the result is inequality and/or instrumental treatment of people”—has
frequently been rejected by socialists.8 The most plausible candidate for a distinctively socialist
contribution to Cohen’s overall ideal is his gloss on fraternity or solidarity, which he calls the
principle of community. This principle directs us to care for and about one another, and to
care that we care for and about one another. Cohen thinks this finds expression in two forms
of motivation.9 The first consists in being motivated to limit any inequalities that threaten to
Cohen’s views. The second thing to say is that when we do think about Cohen’s oeuvre more generally, we find
that “most of [Cohen’s] ideas are forged in the midst of polemic: they are premises or conclusions of immanent
arguments.” See Nicholas Vrousalis, The Political Philosophy of G. A. Cohen: Back to Socialist Basics, 4. No matter
how sketchy it is, WNS is in fact the best statement of Cohen’s view of socialism, which is not to deny that it
can be usefully supplemented by his other work.
7 This distinction between socialism and left-liberalism does not imply that there is no such thing as liberal
socialism (which could then plausibly be labeled as a form of left-liberalism). The point is really to isolate what
it is that distinguishes a socialist theory from a neighbouring non-socialist theory, so strictly speaking “leftliberal” is just a useful shorthand for “non-socialist liberal theory”.
8 WNS, 47. Socialists have often rejected the “negative liberty” supported by Cohen in favour of some form of
“positive liberty”. See Berlin, "Two Concepts of Liberty."
9 This sounds psychologistic, but presumably we could rephrase it in terms of sensitivity to particular kinds of
reasons.
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“cut us off from our common life”, even if they would otherwise be permitted by the
principle of equality.10 Once again, it seems to me that left-liberals could accept this: Rawls,
for instance, speaks of the need to assure the fair value of political liberties and the need to
distribute the social bases of self-respect.11 The second way in which communal caring is
expressed consists in being motivated to engage in “communal reciprocity”, whereby “I
serve you not because of what I can get in return by doing so but because you need or want
my service, and you, for the same reason, serve me”.12 Cohen contrasts such “express
reciprocity”, whereby we produce and exchange with each other’s needs in mind, with
“implicit reciprocity”, whereby we serve one another indirectly, via background institutions.
This distinction seems to provide a clear ground for distinguishing between the socialist ideal
and the left-liberal ideal: socialism requires reciprocity to be express, whereas left-liberalism
is content with its being implicit.13
Neo-socialism promises to provide a pre-institutional ideal that explains, justifies and revises
the policy program traditionally associated with socialism. This program calls for the
restriction of markets and the collectivization of the means of production. It might therefore
be said to focus on primary economic life, in which goods are produced and exchanged, as
10
Cohen is not particularly clear about this, but reconstructing the position presented in WNS, 34-38, the idea
would seem to be as follows: (a) if I care about you, then the fact that you are destitute gives me a reason to
help you (means permitting) regardless of whether your destitution is the product of your own choices; and (b)
if I care that we care for and about one another, that gives me a reason to help you into a position from which
you can express your care for me. For an alternative reading see Vrousalis, "Jazz Bands, Camping Trips and
Decommodification: GA Cohen on Community."
11 Rawls, A Theory of Justice., 224-227, 62, 440-446
12 WNS, 39
13 If some who consider themselves left-liberals turn out to be socialists by this criterion, so be it. Historically
speaking there is good reason to associate an emphasis on express reciprocity with socialism—see, e.g., Marx’s
“Notes On James Mill”.
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opposed to secondary economic life, in which they are subsequently redistributed.14 We will
come back to this distinction in the fourth section, but for present purposes the point is that
Cohen’s theory seems well suited to explain the traditional socialist platform. The claim
would be that a policy program regarding primary economic life is both explained and
justified by a normative thesis regarding primary economic life. And that normative thesis
would then have the potential to revise the traditional program.
In spite of this structure, Cohen’s account turns out to be extremely traditional: he ends
WNS with an appeal for non-market institutions, speaking of the need to find the “real
meaning” of collective ownership and declaring that “the market is intrinsically repugnant”.15
This is surprising, since on the neo-socialist view there ought to be no entailment between
normative principles and institutional forms. There seems to be no compelling reason to
deny that it is at least possible for individuals within actually existing institutional structures to
produce and exchange with each other’s needs in mind. They might use the pricing function
of markets, for instances, to get a sense of social needs, making sure to voluntarily
redistribute any unequal winnings. In fact Cohen himself introduces such a possibility when
he speaks of officials who engage in maximizing market trades on behalf of charities.16 It is
therefore hard to see why Cohen should be convinced that the principle of community rules
out markets. It seems that he has simply stepped back from the iconoclastic implications of
his view.17
14
Primary and secondary economic life are of course deeply intertwined in reality, since redistribution affects
what is produced and exchanged and what is produced and exchanged affects what is redistributed. See Marx,
Grundrisse, 88-100.
15 WNS, 78, 75
16 WNS, 61-62
17 This aspect of Cohen’s theory has caused some commentators to accuse Cohen of a “bait and switch”
strategy. See, e.g., Krause, "Beyond Capitalism?”
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A more charitable reading appears at first to be available. On this interpretation, Cohen’s
point is not that it is impossible to realize community under market institutions, but just that it
is unlikely.18 Once we set aside his hyperbole regarding the intrinsic repugnance of markets, we
arrive at the more modest claim that “market exchange … tends against the value of
community.”19 This is an empirical generalization regarding the effects of markets, rather
than a claim about their intrinsic nature. Although it does leave Cohen open to the charge of
armchair sociology, in its strongest form it would simply amount to the uncontroversial
claim that market institutions encourage people to “give as little service as they can in
exchange for as much service as they can get”—to buy low and to sell high, in other
words—and then the claim that this is inimical to community.20
But why exactly is buying low and selling high antithetical to community? Clearly someone
who tries to give as little service as she can for as much service as she can get is not engaged
in express reciprocity, whereby we produce and exchange with each other’s needs directly in
mind. But why think that express reciprocity is necessary for community—or, to put it
another way, that implicit reciprocity is antithetical to community? Recall that Cohen defined
community as the principle that directs us to care for and about one another, and to care that
we care for and about one another. Is it really not possible to express this care through
implicit reciprocity, for example by endorsing and upholding just background institutions at
the secondary level of economic life regardless of whether we buy low and sell high?21
18
One piece of evidence in favour of taking this reading as definitive is Cohen’s suggestion that a given
principle can enjoy “a modest measure of realization” whenever some people act in accordance with it. See
WNS, 65
19 WNS, 75
20 WNS, 42
21 See Arneson, "Liberalism, Capitalism, and “Socialist” Principles" and Hodgson, "Community Beyond the
Liberal State."
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Adapting an example from John Searle, we could imagine a group of business-school
students with an earnest desire to benefit humanity and the sincere belief that the best way
to do that is to earn as much money as possible, even if that means acting selfishly, and then
to periodically redistribute their winnings, whether through the state or through private
donations on the Andrew Carnegie model.22 Suppose further that on graduation day these
students make a compact to act accordingly. This would be what Searle calls “a higher level
of cooperation to the effect that there should be no lower level cooperation”—implicit
reciprocity, in other words. Would this not satisfy the principle of community as Cohen
frames it? Viewed exclusively at the lower level, the graduates’ actions would certainly seem
selfish, but it might be thought equally obvious that recognition of the higher-level compact
would change our assessment: the actions that fall under the compact seem to manifest the
students’ concern for and about their fellow humans, while the compact itself seems to
manifest their concern that they care for and about them. What then is missing?
Cohen gives a somewhat Kantian response, claiming that buying low and selling high entails
the “moral shabbiness” of “treating … people as mere means” and therefore “horrible ways
of seeing people”.23 Express reciprocity, by contrast, is “required for human relationships to
take a desirable form.”24 Now Cohen is a value pluralist who believes that “the normative
requirements we recognize present themselves in competitive array: they cannot be satisfied
all the time, nor do we have a method for systematically combining them.”25 He would not
therefore be committed to the Kantian conclusion that treating people as mere means is
22
In some ways this hypothetical arrangement is similar to the scheme that Cohen discusses on pages 63-65 of
WNS, which is derived from Carens, Equality, Moral Incentives, and the Market: An Essay in Utopian Politico-economic
Theory. See also Steiner, "Greed and Fear."
23 WNS, 40, 47, 62
24 WNS, 39
25 Cohen, Rescuing Justice and Equality., 4
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never permitted, consequences be damned. His point would just be that a state of affairs in
which reciprocity is only implicit will be in one way worse than a state of affairs in which it is
express, since it involves treating people as mere means.26 The trouble is that it is not in fact
clear that our putative business-school graduates do treat others as mere means. Certainly in
their day-to-day economic activities they treat others as means to making a profit, but that
does not mean they treat them as mere means. Quite the contrary: they also treat them as
ends-in-themselves, which is why they devote their careers to serving them. So Cohen’s
attack on implicit reciprocity does not seem justified.27
Earlier we saw that on Cohen’s view the socialist ideal enjoins express reciprocity, whereas
the left-liberal ideal is content with implicit reciprocity. The advantage of this way of carving
up the territory is that it offers a way of explaining, justifying and revising the traditional
socialist policy platform. Restrictions on markets and private ownership of the means of
production, for instance, could be explained and justified as attempts to ensure that citizens
produce and exchange with each other’s needs directly in mind—but if other policies turned
out to be more conducive to that end, so much the better. With respect to these ambitions
the failings of WNS ought now to be clear. Cohen does concede that traditional socialism is
flawed, both in terms of efficiency and in terms of liberty.28 But his discussion of other
forms of socialism founders on his belief that buying low and selling high necessarily involves
26 Cohen, On the Currency of Egalitarian Justice, and Other Essays in Political Philosophy., 231, referencing Parfit,
“Equality and Priority.”
27 Cohen might respond that while the graduates do treat people in general as ends-in-themselves, they fall short
of treating each and every individual as such. Suppose they become loan sharks in some legal way, such that
their way of benefiting humanity in general involves bankrupting particular individuals. Are those individuals
really being treated as ends-in-themselves? The answer, I think, is yes—in some respects, they are. The fact that
in this particular instance they stand to lose more than they gain from the operations of the redistributive
scheme does not mean that they are not members of a class at whose benefit the scheme is aimed. Thanks to
Selim Berker for pressing me to address this objection.
28 WNS, 60-61, 75-76
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treating others as mere means, so that institutions that encourage us to buy low and sell high
do in fact turn out to be “intrinsically repugnant” on his view—not because they produce
mere instrumentalism in every single case, as it originally seemed, but rather because they
systematically encourage such behaviour in general.29 As he puts it at the end of WNS,
“Every market, even a socialist market, is a system of predation.”30 From a political
perspective, then, Cohen ends up backing away from the iconoclastic potential of neosocialism. And from a philosophical perspective his argument for doing so seems weak.
Cohen’s account may be fatally flawed, but it nevertheless opens up a path for neo-socialism.
If we preserve the idea that the crucial difference between the socialist ideal and its leftliberal rival concerns modes of reciprocity, the task becomes to justify the socialist position
on reciprocity while taking seriously the possibility that this justification will entail revising
the traditional policy platform. If we can execute those tasks, we will find ourselves with a
theory fit for the present. This is the challenge I will take up in the rest of this paper. Like
Cohen, my goal will not be to give an exhaustive account, but rather to provide a sketch that
opens up a new way of thinking. I will also follow Cohen in assuming a dialectical situation
in which the opponent is a left-liberal who believes that implicit or “wide” reciprocity is all
that is required of citizens in an ideal society with respect to economic life. Where I will
depart from Cohen is in argumentative strategy. For whereas Cohen’s approach leaves no
room for distinguishing what we owe to our fellow citizens and what we owe to humans as
such, I want to argue that the way to justify the socialist emphasis on express reciprocity is to
think about the distinctive obligations that arise from joint action for the sake of mutual
provision. This in turn allows us to mount an immanent critique of the left-liberal position.
29
30
WNS, 78
WNS, 82 (my italics)
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2. Joint Action and the Camping Trip
At the start of A Theory of Justice, John Rawls invites us to assume that a society is a
“cooperative venture for mutual advantage”.31 His principles of justice are then his answer to
a problem made salient by that picture of society, namely how the benefits and burdens of
cooperation are to be distributed. What I now want to argue is that participation in a
cooperative venture for mutual advantage also entails the responsibility to produce and
exchange with other’s needs in mind, so that those who seek to get as much as they can for
as little outlay as possible are violating their obligations. If this is right, then a socialist
conclusion can be drawn from a left-liberal premise.
The critical move is to see that a cooperative venture for mutual advantage is a form of joint
action—in providing for one another via a division of labour, we are acting together. As
Margaret Gilbert points out, this brings with it distinctive rights and responsibilities.32 The
example with which Gilbert begins her analysis is two people going for a walk together.
What distinguishes going for a walk with someone from simply walking alongside each other
by coincidence is that it involves a form of partnership. (This is why we typically try to
disrupt an unintended pattern of walking in step with someone else as soon as we notice it,
thereby rejecting the implication of association.33) This partnership brings with it a kind of
normativity, as Gilbert brings out with the following example. Suppose James and Paula are
out on a walk and this is common knowledge between them. James is a naturally faster
A Theory of Justice., 4. Cohen also makes the passing remark that “a society is a network of mutual
provision”, although he does not use this to argue for an analogy between camping trips and societies. See
WNS, 45
32 See Gilbert, On Social Facts and A Theory of Political Obligation: Membership, Commitment, and the Bonds of Society
33 Gilbert, A Theory of Political Obligation, 103
31Rawls,
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walker and races on ahead. Paula calls after him, demanding that he slow down and rebuking
him for going too fast. “James and Paula,” Gilbert writes, “will both understand that she has
the standing to demand that he act in a manner appropriate to their joint activity, and to
rebuke him should he act in a manner inappropriate to it.”34 Someone observing the
situation from a park bench would not have this standing. This particular form of
answerability is internal to the joint activity, and a function of it. It implies that groups acting
around a common aim have a constitutive normative structure entailing distinctive rights and
obligations. We could say that membership of such a group entails an obligation to play one’s
part in the joint activity that constitutes the group. And we can voice this obligation—
whether in demands or in rebukes—by speaking in the name of a plural subject: Hey, we’re on
a walk!
Complex questions arise from these foundations, such as in what sense, if any, that plural
subject really exists; how we should understand the form of intentionality at issue in joint
action; and whether the relevant form of answerability is a function of joint action alone or
joint action plus some facts about mutual answerability more generally. Nothing I have said
so far commits me to Gilbert’s own (highly controversial) positions within those debates.35
What I am committed to is the thought that participation in joint action entails distinctive
rights and responsibilities and therefore produces special kinds of reason.
This does not imply that these reasons are overriding. Suppose James and Paula are out to rob
a bank together, and the plan is for Paula to point the gun while James empties the safe. My
34
Ibid., 104
For a survey of some of the issues, see Miller, "Review of A Theory of Political Obligation by Margaret Gilbert"
and Arruda, "Review of Joint Commitment: How We Make the Social World by Margaret Gilbert."
35
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claim is that James has special standing to demand of Paula that she play her part, and vice
versa. But it may also be true that others have standing to demand of them that they do not
play their parts, whether as a function of co-participation in some other form of joint action
or simply as a function of their status as moral agents. These latter demands may outweigh
the former, so that all things considered neither James nor Paula have sufficient reason to
carry out their allotted roles. But this does not mean that there is no form of answerability
internal to the joint action. Paula may be right, that is, to drop the gun and wait for the
police to arrive—but she surely owes James some kind of explanation for doing so.36 The
rights and responsibilities internal to joint action can be outweighed, but they cannot be
altogether eliminated.
There might also be cases in which our obligations deriving from joint action are simply coextensive with our obligations deriving from other sources. If the only way that either James
or Paula can rescue a drowning child is by acting together, for instance, they would have a
moral obligation to play their part regardless of any considerations internal to the nature of
joint action. Cases like these might be relatively common, but they do not refute the thesis
that joint action issues in distinctive rights and responsibilities.
With this on the table we can now turn to the argument concerning express and implicit
reciprocity. Understood as a cooperative venture for mutual advantage, a society is a
particular form of joint action in which we provide for one another via a division of labour.
36 Unless it so happens that the robbery was undertaken on the understanding that Paula could drop out
whenever she felt like it. See Gilbert, A Theory of Political Obligation : Membership, Commitment, and the Bonds of
Society., 141-144
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And this brings with it distinctive rights and responsibilities. We can see this if we recast an
example from WNS along Gilbert-inspired lines.
To make the case for the socialist principles that constitute his ideal, Cohen invites us to
imagine a context in which their realization seems both feasible and desirable, namely a
camping trip. He then suggests that their realization at the national or global level would be
similarly attractive “to all people of good will” so long as it were feasible.37 Many consider
this to be the signature feature of WNS, but in my view it is simply a propaedeutic designed
to facilitate our consideration of the desirability of socialist principles without interference
from doubts concerning desirability.38 Argumentatively speaking, the real question is whether
Cohen is right to think his principles desirable for society at large, and in this respect the
camping trip example is strictly speaking irrelevant. For my purposes, by contrast, the
example is argumentatively useful. Camping trips involve simple structures of joint action for
the sake of mutual provision. As such, they permit us to uncover the normative structure of
this kind of joint action.
To take part in a camping trip is to head out as a member of a group organized for a
particular purpose. Let us assume, with Cohen, that the idea is for each of us to have a good
time doing the things that he or she likes best, whether together or apart, with no hierarchy
between us.39 If Gilbert is right, each member of the trip will have standing to demand of the
37
WNS, 51
This rhetorical strategy invites the obvious complaint that our intuitions regarding camping trips are
themselves dependent on tacit presuppositions regarding that specific institutional context. See Ronzoni, "Life
Is Not a Camping Trip - on the Desirability of Cohenite Socialism" and Heath, "On the Scalability of
Cooperative Structures." What is unclear, however, is that this constitutes an objection to Cohen’s ideal as
opposed to the rhetoric he uses to move us towards it. The complication is that Cohen does not really offer any
arguments for his normative position. He simply invites us to share his intuitions.
39 WNS, 3
38
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others that they play their parts accordingly. What are the parts of this joint activity? It seems
plausible to suppose that they will involve creating the background condition for individual
enjoyment. If no one fetches wood, cooks dinner, washes the dishes or puts up the tents,
there will come a point where this failure makes it impossible to realize the goods for the
sake of which the trip was undertaken in the first place. After a night without food or
shelter, for instance, the fishers might not want to go fishing and the hikers might not want
to go hiking. Given the goal of the trip, each member would therefore have standing to
demand of the others that they play their parts in a division of labour aimed at creating those
background conditions.
How is this labour to be divided? The utopian solution would be for everyone to chip in
according to their talents and desires. Those who enjoy making fires and are skilled at it will
make the fires, those who enjoy putting up tents and are skilled at it will put up the tents,
and so on. But clearly enjoyment and talent can come apart: it might be that the person
whose talents are optimally deployed in putting up tents would rather make fires, for
instance. A fair distribution of tasks would give everyone a roughly similar opportunity to
enjoy themselves. This would involve some combination of allocating people to tasks where
they can best serve the collective and sharing pleasurable and burdensome tasks equitably.
At this point institutions would have to come into the picture, one might think, to
coordinate action and prevent free-riding by means of sanctions and rewards, both formal
and informal. This seems right as a matter of fact: camping trips do tend to involve a
division of labour enforced by a mixture of explicit rules (e.g. a rota system) and implicit
social pressure (including the standing possibility of refusing further cooperation with free-
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riders or defectors).40 But from a justificatory perspective those institutions are downstream
from the norms that they exist to institutionalize. If everyone responded perfectly to
normative reasons by themselves, there wouldn’t be any need for (extrinsic) sanctions and
rewards. It is therefore reasonable to ask how trip participants ought to organize their
labours in the absence of mediating institutions.
If we accept the stipulation that there is to be no hierarchy, and hence no manager to assign
people to roles, each individual would have to decide for herself how best to contribute in
light of the group’s needs and in light of others’ preferences regarding work. Every member
of the trip would therefore have standing to make two demands of every other member: (i)
that they each think seriously about what a fair and efficient division of labour aimed at
creating the background conditions for enjoyment would be; and (ii) that they each play their
part in the division of labour as they conceive it, thereby producing with each other’s needs
in mind. If an individual fell short in either respect, any member of the trip would have
standing to rebuke them in the name of the plural subject: We’re in this together, you know.
If this is right, then the reason that camping trip participants ought to produce with each
other’s needs in mind is that a camping trip is a form of joint activity involving mutual
provision. A joint activity aimed at the realization of certain goods brings with it distinctive
obligations, and in the case of a camping trip this includes obligations having to do with
mutual provision. In this context the problem with seeking to get as much as we can for as
little outlay as possible is not that it manifests undesirable attitudes towards our fellow
40
See Heath, “On the Scalability of Cooperative Structures.”
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humans, as Cohen would have it, but that it prevents the trip from achieving the goods for
the sake of which it was constituted. It makes the trip worse as a trip.
Can we transfer this line of argument to society at large? Obviously life is not a camping
trip.41 But the Rawlsian premise that society is a cooperative venture for mutual advantage
suggests that societies and camping trips have an analogous structure to this extent at least:
they are both forms of joint action in which we provide for one another via a division of
labour. And if the argument just given is correct, then participants in such joint action have
the standing to demand of one another that each think seriously about what mutual
provision amounts to and what a fair and efficient division of labour aimed at it would be,
and that each play their part within the division of labour as they conceive it. In short, it
looks as though qua citizens we ought to produce with each other’s needs in mind. And that
would seem to entail express reciprocity. If an argument of this general form can hold in the
case of society, we would be able to draw a socialist conclusion from a left-liberal premise
plus a premise regarding the normative structure of joint action. But the question is whether
the difference in scale between camping trips and societies renders this transposition crude
or illegitimate.
3. The Scale of Joint Action
The fact that the argument from joint action requires abstracting away from the difference in
scale is not in itself an objection, since all models make simplifying assumptions. A map that
showed every single topographical detail would not be a map at all. Simplifications have the
41
See Ronzoni, "Life Is Not a Camping Trip - on the Desirability of Cohenite Socialism."
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benefit of focusing attention on what remains in the picture; the concern is just whether the
benefit exceeds the costs. The answer will depend on our purposes. A map that is useful for
hiking will require more detail than a map that is useful for driving, even though both could
justifiably be called veridical. And even a non-veridical map—that is, one whose
representations are distortions—might be useful for some purposes: the map of the London
Underground is notoriously misleading vis-à-vis actual geography, for instance, but it is
arguably more useful for travellers than an accurate representation would be. The question,
then, is whether and in what sense scale actually matters for the argument from joint action.
Scale might seem to present problems for my argument in three distinct but related ways.
The first is that as the group grows bigger, it will become harder to see what the demand to
produce and exchange with each other’s needs in mind actually amounts to, practically
speaking. At some point we will lack the information and the processing power to calculate
what the optimal deployment of our talents would be. The second is that scale is likely to
affect how much weight we give to that demand in any case. For recall that on my picture
the responsibilities issuing from joint action are not absolute, but must be weighed against
reasons deriving from one’s other responsibilities and, perhaps, one’s own interests. The
smaller the group, we might think, the more likely we are to heed the demand to play our
part in the relevant division of labour. Failure to do so may bring more palpable costs, such
as opprobrium from others, than it would in the context of a larger group with a high degree
of anonymity. Conversely, the benefits to each actor of a well functioning scheme of
cooperation may be more visible on a smaller scale than a larger scale, while increased
feelings of solidarity may in any case affect what is taken as one’s own when making
calculations regarding one’s self-interest. The third point is related to the second. For it
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seems obvious that large-scale cooperation requires coercive institutions to prevent freeriding and to enforce rules of the road. A picture of large-scale cooperation that does not
make reference to this fact might therefore be thought deeply misleading.
None of these objections touches an argument of the form sketched above. The claim is that
if society is a cooperative venture for mutual advantage then just in virtue of that fact
citizens ought to make a good faith effort to produce and exchange in light of a conception
of how their work would fit within a division of labour aimed at serving the interests of their
fellow citizens. The fact that this leaves a lot open to interpretation from a practical
perspective is not in itself an objection to the argument. Nor is the claim that joint action
issues in distinctive reasons affected by the fact that those reasons are likely to be accorded
different weights in different circumstances, however important that fact may be in
practice.42 Finally, while there is no doubt that in the real world large-scale cooperation
requires coercive institutions, it is not clear that this affects the argument either. For as we
have already seen, real-life camping trips also have to enforce good behaviour through
complicated systems of sanctions and rewards. The reason we abstracted from that fact in
the last section was that argumentatively speaking the relevant institutions are downstream
from the norms that they exist to institutionalize—if they exist to enforce good behaviour,
there is a prior question as to what such behaviour would consist in. And it is precisely in
order to answer that question that the argument from joint action comes in. The spectre of
coercive perfectionism certainly does hover in the background whenever one speaks of a
demand for citizens to deploy their talents optimally within a division of labour aimed at the
42
It does not seem to me that the weight we accord to such reasons always varies in lock-step with scale in any
case. In cases of emergency (natural disasters, wars and so on) we seem perfectly capable of prioritizing reasons
issuing from our roles in large-scale cooperation over our other reasons.
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good life, not least given the history of socialist regimes.43 But it seems perfectly possible to
hold liberty lexically prior to the argument from joint action, so that the demand is not for
citizens to stick to the station and duties imposed upon them from above, but rather for
them to assign themselves to their posts.44
In short, joint action seems to entail distinctive rights and responsibilities irrespective of its
scale: no matter how large it becomes, each participant still has standing to demand that the
others play their parts. Where scale might still matter argumentatively, however, is with
respect to the nature of the action itself, and hence what it means to play one’s part in that
action. For it might be that small-scale and large-scale mutual provision are different enough
that we should understand them as different kinds of joint action that issue in different kinds
of normative demands. To put it another way, we have seen that participating in joint action
brings with it a directed obligation (vis-à-vis one’s fellow participants) to play one’s part in
that action. In the case of a walk, this might involve, for instance, being present to one’s
partner, and therefore not striding ahead by oneself, playing video games on one’s phone
and so on.45 In the case of mutual provision via a division of labour, it will involve working
to provide for one’s fellows. But the question is whether working to provide for one’s
fellows entails different things at different scales.
On first sight it would seem to entail what Cohen calls express reciprocity, that is, producing
with each other’s needs directly in mind—not because noble motivation is necessary “for
human relationships to take a desirable form”, as if the locus of value were a good will, but
43
For a justification of coercion in related circumstances, see Stanczyk, "Productive Justice."
In this respect my approach is similar to that given in chapter 5 of Cohen, Rescuing Justice and Equality.
45 Obviously one could imagine walks organized on different lines.
44
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rather because structures of deliberation have practical effects.46 Imagine a farmer’s market
where I am a farmer and you are a customer. I have a peach that looks fine to you, but
which I know to be mealy. (Suppose I know this because if one peach in the batch is mealy,
the rest are.) If I am acting with your needs in mind, I will not sell it to you; if I am acting as
a self-interested maximizer, by contrast, I will sell it to you unless I believe there will be
repercussions. If we iterate such deliberations enough times across a whole society, and with
a sufficiently capacious sense of what could count as a mealy peach—that is, as something
that will harm the customer however easily it will sell—then it looks as though a society of
self-interested maximizers will not provide for our needs optimally. This will be the case
even if these maximizers engage in post-hoc redistribution of income, since reciprocity at
that level would come too late to remedy the effects of a system in which production and
exchange is not aligned with needs. We can see this by imagining that the harm in question is
a form of pollution. Suppose I am an inventor. I know that the gadget I am offering you will
release toxins in your home, but I also know that you are unaware of this and that you will
find the product attractive in terms of price and overt features. You buy the product and ten
years later develop cancer. Even if I made sure to redistribute some (or even all) of my
winnings, I can hardly be said to have been providing for you optimally.47
Unfortunately this intuitive case for the priority of express reciprocity runs counter to
standard economic thinking since Mandeville and Smith. The standard view is that express
reciprocity is both unnecessary and unhelpful. It is unnecessary because a farmer who sells
mealy peaches will not last long at market, and if an inventor whose gadgets release toxins
46
WNS, 39
Note that the fact that I am not providing for you optimally does not entail that I am treating you as a mere
means. See note 24 above.
47
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over the medium term will last longer, we can solve the problem by imposing regulations. It
is unhelpful, meanwhile, because it is inefficient: over the long run, self-interested
maximizers will produce more and better goods than those who aim to benefit others
directly, so long as markets are free and fair. All of this is familiar, but for present purposes
the point is that it bears on the rights and responsibilities attendant on membership in a
scheme for mutual provision. As in sport, one might think, so with the economy: sometimes
the best way to serve the other person is to compete with them. It seems plausible to
suppose that you have the standing to demand of your tennis partner that she direct her
efforts towards beating you rather than conceiving of each shot as an opportunity for
collaboration; absent special circumstances, if she goes easy on you then you have grounds
for complaint. But if express reciprocity gets in the way of mutual provision, then by the
terms of my Gilbert-inspired analysis citizens would have standing to demand of one
another that they do not try to produce with each other’s needs in mind. The normative
demands internal to the joint action of mutual provision within a large-scale society with free
and fair markets would simply be at odds with those internal to mutual provision within a
small-scale camping trip.
The problem with this argument is that in the real world markets are rarely free and fair.
They are typically characterized by barriers to entry, asymmetry of information, hidden
externalities and so on. Even if we make the utopian assumption that regulation could in
principle solve these problems, it is worth noticing that regulations will have actuality only to
the degree that they are followed. Given the limits of real-time enforcement, full compliance
would require that citizens act within the rules by themselves. And given the limits of
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legislation—which can never address every possible case, not least because situations
change—full compliance would also require that citizens act within the spirit of the rules.48
Imagine you are in charge of a power plant and you learn that it is producing a new form of
pollution uncaptured by existing definitions of pollution in the law. Let us suppose that you
think, and are right to think, that in such circumstances you could not be prosecuted for
continuing to behave as a self-interested maximizer. You may have a moral obligation vis-àvis your fellow humans not to act in this way, but it seems plausible that you also have a
distinct obligation to your fellow citizens as well. As fellow members of a scheme of mutual
provision, they would have standing to demand that you produce and exchange with their
needs in mind.
If this is right then even within a large-scale society express reciprocity must be prior to
implicit reciprocity from a normative perspective. We can illustrate this notion of normative
priority by returning to the tennis analogy: in the vast majority of cases it is perfectly
legitimate, and in fact expected, to throw oneself into beating one’s opponent; but if she falls
to the ground clutching her knee just as one is lining up a devastating smash then one ought
to rush to her aid rather than claiming the point. When the red lights go off, as it were, one
reverts to the mode of deliberation characteristic of friendship. In such cases we can say that
friendship is prior to rivalry in the order of reasons: competition is undertaken in a spirit of
friendship and it is therefore implicitly regulated by it. The neo-socialist position on
reciprocity has a similar structure. In certain circumstances it is true that a citizen can best
serve his or her fellow citizens by trying to get as much as possible for as little outlay as
48
See Shiffrin, "Incentives, Motives, and Talents."
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possible. This might even hold most of the time, depending on the extent of market and
regulatory failure. But given that a change in circumstances might lead to a misalignment
between incentives and social needs, as a form of mutual provision implicit reciprocity is not
“robust”.49 A commitment to it should therefore only ever be provisional. Good citizens
would have to monitor the system to see whether it is fulfilling its function. They would also
have to monitor themselves to guard against the possibility of self-deception. And this
monitoring of implicit reciprocity would have to take express reciprocity as the default for
good citizenship—that to which we should return in cases of uncertainty.50 That is what the
left-liberal ideal is missing.
4. Revisionary Implications
On the view I have been suggesting, if citizens act and interact so as to provide for one
another’s needs, they will ipso facto realize the socialist ideal. The ideal therefore addresses
us as citizens rather than as members of a particular class, and it allows us to be flexible
about institutional forms rather than dogmatic. That might raise suspicions as to whether
neo-socialism counts as socialism at all. After all, Tony Blair is also associated with rhetoric
about the changing class basis of socialism and flexibility regarding institutional forms, and
in hindsight that seemed simply to be a way of persuading socialists to be (at most) leftliberals.51 Something similar might seem to be true of my theory: in conceding the possibility
that implicit reciprocity, and therefore maximizing behaviour, will play a large role in a largescale society, even if it will be normatively secondary, it might look as though the baby has
49
See Pettit, The Robust Demands of the Good: Ethics with Attachment, Virtue, and Respect.
On the notion of monitoring, see Railton, "Alienation, Consequentialism, and the Demands of Morality."
51 See Blair, "Socialism, Fabian Society."
50
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been thrown out along with the bathwater. From one perspective an objection of this kind
might seem uninteresting—the important question would be whether the view is justified,
not whether it counts as socialist by the standards of existing usage. But for the purposes of
my project it is important, because my goal is to suggest a new ideal to those who are
attracted to socialism in the traditional sense but aware of its failings. This new ideal ought to
be open to challenging the judgements of traditional socialism, but at the same time it also
has to offer an account that explains why those judgements are appealing in the first place.
At a normative level the differences between left-liberalism and socialism as I have
construed it are certainly slighter than they would be on Cohen’s construal. But they are
nevertheless real and important. Having a plan that involves deliberately leaving certain
matters unplanned is importantly different from having no plan at all, because the former
involves a constitutive norm whereby the efficacy of not planning is continually up for
question.52 Something similar is true in the present case. There may be a range of cases in
which socialism and left-liberalism may call for the same action, so that for any given state of
affairs the difference between them will only be counterfactual, in the sense that it would
only become actual if the facts were to change in certain respects.53 But life is such that this
actualization will be relatively frequent—it will occur, as we have already seen, in cases of
market and regulatory failure, where one can no longer plausibly claim that aiming to get as
much service for as little outlay as possible is the best way of serving the interests of one’s
cooperative partners. It will also occur, perhaps even more importantly, in our decisions
regarding what to produce. For the most wide-reaching effect of holding express reciprocity
prior to implicit reciprocity would be to shape career choices. The demand is for each citizen
52
53
See Shapiro, Legality, chapter 5
See Pettit, The Robust Demands of the Good: Ethics with Attachment, Virtue, and Respect.
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to make a good faith effort to think about how their talents could best be deployed within a
wider division of labour aimed at the good life. If citizens took this demand seriously, it
seems likely that what is produced would itself change—to pick an easy example, there
might be fewer financial instruments in the world, and more goods of other kinds. Once we
see this it becomes clear that a theory (like left-liberalism) that focuses primarily on
secondary economic life is missing something desperately important: if production is
misdirected, redistribution always will come too late.
There is therefore a genuine difference between the neo-socialist ideal and left-liberalism at
the normative level. What is more, it looks as though the ideal can in fact speak to classic
socialist concerns while nevertheless suggesting sympathetic revisions. For although neosocialism is not at base an institutional doctrine, unlike traditional socialism, institutions are
crucial to its realization. At bottom the neo-socialist ideal is of free and equal citizens
cooperating in primary economic life for the sake of mutual advantage. It therefore has to do
with action in the first instance. But once we relax the constraint of ideal theory and step out
into the real world, we see that different institutions will incentivize us or even constrain us
to deliberate in different ways, and therefore institutionalize different norms. The
contribution of the ideal to practical politics is not to settle institutional questions once and
for all, but rather to focus attention on the question of how different institutional structures
affect modes of deliberation with respect to production and exchange—to make this salient
as a dimension along which institutions can vary, just as they can vary with respect to
efficiency and other values.54
54
For a similar strategy, see XYZ
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Suppose it turns out, as a matter of empirical fact, that market institutions do encourage us
to forget about others’ needs in our deliberations, perhaps because they encourage us to act
on a heuristic of buying low and selling high.55 That might give us a reason for preferring
non-market models of production. Our judgement might depend on the degree to which
express reciprocity is likely to be important to the activity in question. Compare baking and
dentistry, for example. If your local baker does not produce with your needs in mind, the
results may not be catastrophic. If your dentist does not, you may feel the difference. If a
nationalized health service would make this kind of deliberation less likely then that would
be one argument in its favour. Of course that argument could be outweighed by other
factors, such as efficiency or flexibility. Or it might be that empirically speaking collective
ownership does not in fact promote the right kind of deliberation. It might be that some
other form of institutional design turns out to be better suited to this task—candidates
would include stakeholder systems, cooperative structures, social entrepreneurship schemes
and so on. The ideal therefore allows socialists to be open-minded about institutional forms
without losing their identity.56
To give a concrete example of what I mean, let us consider a case involving a cooperative. In
November 2015, the American hiking cooperative REI made the decision to shut its doors
on Black Friday, both online and offline, thereby denying itself revenue from the nowtraditional post-Thanksgiving shopping spree of American consumers. This is how Jerry
Stritzke, REI’s president and CEO, explained the decision: “As a member-owned co-op, our
definition of success goes beyond money. We believe that a life lived outdoors is a life well
55
On heuristics, see John Levi Martin, Social Structures, 18-20
See Wright, Envisioning Real Utopias. Of course, cooperative socialism has a long history of its own. See Cole,
A Century of Cooperation.
56
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lived and we aspire to be stewards of our great outdoors. We think that Black Friday has
gotten out of hand and so we are choosing to invest in helping people get outside with loved
ones this holiday season, over spending it in the aisles.”57 His claim, in other words, is that
REI’s institutional structure fosters a mode of deliberation in which corporate
representatives make decisions based on their sense of the role that REI can play securing
the good life for Americans.58 That role can only ever be partial, since it is merely one role
within a wider division of labour. It is also necessarily fragile and uncertain, partly because it
depends on the work that others are doing, and partly because it demands continual
reinterpretation. For instance, it could be argued that given the likely behaviour of other
retailers, the outdoorsy cause would be best served by encouraging Americans to spend their
Black Friday budgets on hiking boots rather than other consumer goods. The necessity of
interpretation means that the threat of self-deception is inescapable, but then that is true of
many judgements in human life.59 For present purposes the point is that such interpretation
is only called for because of an institutional structure that fosters workplace deliberation in
terms of the function of one’s work within a wider division of labour aimed at the good life,
and that in this case the structure in question is cooperative rather than collective. By the
terms of my neo-socialist argument, it follows that such a structure ought to be welcomed by
socialists even if it entails private ownership and market participation.60
The REI example might be thought telling in another way, however, insofar as one surmises
that the cooperative’s 3.5 million members are likely to come from a relatively affluent
57
http://newsroom.rei.com/news/corporate/rei-closing-its-doors-on-black-friday-invites-nation-tooptoutside.htm
58 This fostering takes place via the need to provide an annual “stewardship report” – see
http://www.rei.com/stewardship/report.html
59 See Taylor, “Interpretation and the Sciences of Man.”
60 For more on contemporary cooperatives, see Palmer, Palmer Worker Cooperative Study.
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demographic. This suggests a second way in which neo-socialism can speak to classic
socialist concerns. The ideal of citizens deliberating about how to produce and exchange for
each other’s benefit presumes that they have the capacity to do so. It therefore enjoins us to
consider the distribution of opportunities to deliberate in the relevant way, and this in turn
raises the traditional socialist question of access to the means of production. This might give
us a reason to favour capital redistribution or a universal basic income that is distinct from
(even if complementary with) the reasons that flow from left-liberal reflections on the justice
and legitimacy of a coercive state.61 Redistribution would be considered as a means of giving
everyone the opportunity to fulfil their obligations as members of society. In a political
context where the language of “makers and takers” seems to have been turned against the
poorest in society, this reframing represent a contribution in and of itself.
Conclusion
In the introduction I said that my aim was to provide an account of socialism that avoids
naivety concerning state ownership and nostalgia for a lost era of large-scale working-class
movements while nevertheless capturing classic socialist concerns. My plan was to follow
Cohen in pursuing what I called a neo-socialist strategy, which argues for a normative ideal
that is focused on primary economic life but does not entail particular policies. Cohen’s
execution of that strategy fails, but what I took from him is the thought that the socialist
ideal differs from the left-liberal ideal with respect to its conception of reciprocity in primary
economic life. Cohen claims that express reciprocity is necessary for community, and hence
that left-liberalism, in failing to promote express reciprocity, ipso facto falls short with
61
For examples of such schemes, see, e.g., Blasi, Freeman and Kruse, The Citizen's Share: Putting Ownership Back
Into Democracy and Van Parijs, "Basic Income: A Simple and Powerful Idea for the Twenty-first Century."
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respect to community. My argument is more nuanced. The ideal is certainly of citizens
producing and exchanging with each other’s needs in mind, but this does not necessarily
imply doing so directly. All that is required is for citizens to maintain express reciprocity as the
default mode of deliberation in primary economic life, that to which we return in cases of
sufficient uncertainty. This sounds trivial at first, but once we consider the role of career
choice in shaping what is actually produced in a society, and hence its functioning as a
cooperative scheme for mutual advantage, we see that the demand cuts into contemporary
practice quite sharply. What is more, it has implications for institutional design, both with
respect to production and with respect to distribution. Although I have only provided a
sketch of neo-socialism, then, I hope to have demonstrated its political and theoretical
promise.
The elephant in the room is that the argument that I offered in favour of this ideal was by no
means self-standing. I proceeded by means of an immanent critique of left-liberalism, taking
for granted the Rawlsian premise that a society is a cooperative scheme for mutual
advantage. This is not simply an immanent critique, in that I do believe the premise can be
justified. But the fact remains that no such justification has been given here, and further
work is therefore called for.
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