Goal Of Socialists Is Socialism, Not Prosperity OpEd – Eurasia Review
By William L. Anderson*
About 40 years ago, economist Bruce Yandle went to Washington to work for the Council on Wage and Price Stability, ready to apply his knowledge of economics and educate his fellow workers. After all, he reminisces, one eye-rolling, head-scratching decision after another was coming from government regulators that surely someone versed in economics could expose as stupid, wasteful, and downright ridiculous.
At some point, Yandle realized that the lay of the regulatory land looked quite different in Washington than it did in Clemson, South Carolina, where he was on the faculty at Clemson University. Regulators and the representatives of the enterprises they regulated were not looking to create an atmosphere in which the government tried to find the optimal set of regulatory policies that both minimized regulatory costs and allowed for the maximum removal of whatever externalities were created.
No, as Yandle writes:
instead of assuming that regulators really intended to minimize costs but somehow proceeded to make crazy mistakes, I began to assume that they were not trying to minimize costs at all at least not the costs I had been concerned with. They were trying to minimize their costs, just as most sensible people do.
The more he examined the situation, the more he realized that all of the various actors in the system were acting in their own perceived self-interests regulators, politicians, and those being regulated and the combination of their interests created perverse outcomes. The big picture view that those on the outside of the situation might have is irrelevant to what actually happens, and understandably so.
Far from the stated goals of the regulators and those involved in the process that regulation was pursued in order to promote a lofty public interest the real purpose of the regulatory apparatus is the promotion of the regulatory apparatus. The system exists to preserve and protect itself.
As I observe (and participate in) a few discussions on Facebook and elsewhere about socialism, I have come to a few conclusions about the nature of the arguments and the reasons why socialists remain socialists even as we see the utter failure of socialist economies throughout history. Maybe the meme that appears once in a while If socialists understood economics, they wouldnt be socialists might be true, but I doubt it. As I see it, the purpose of establishing socialism is to further promote socialism, not improve the lot of a society and certainly not to promote prosperity.
First, and most important, the minds of socialists work differently than do the minds of economists that see an economy as a mix of factors of production, prices, final goods, markets, and entrepreneurs that drive the whole route. Those of us who are economists are fascinated by this process because we see human ingenuity, the coordination of the goals of numerous people, and, when the system works, a higher standard of living for most people.
Socialists, however, dont see what we see. Instead, they see chaos and unequal outcomes. Not everyone benefits, right? In some situations, someone may lose a job or a way of doing things becomes obsolete. In the end, some people wont be helped at all, at least not directly, and in the mind of someone that has an organic view of society, the fact that certain entrepreneurial actions taken by some individuals have created goods that meet the needs of others is irrelevant. Society should be providing those goods for free! People should not have to pay for what they need!
Are you a surgeon who had done well financially because you have performed medical miracles for people who desperately needed your services? You have exploited sick people! Are you like Martha Stewart, who became wealthy in part by showing people how to make holiday celebrations better? What about the poor? They dont have nice houses!
When I first started writing about economics nearly 40 years ago, I was like Bruce Yandle, believing that all that was needed to convince socialists to stop being socialists was a well-reasoned economic argument. You know, explain that entrepreneurs dont earn profits by exploiting workers, but rather entrepreneurs make workers better off by directing resources to their highest-valued uses. You know, explain how a price system really does result in morally-just outcomes because, in the end, it directs resources toward fulfilling the needs of consumers. And so on.
I still believe the arguments, and over the years have come to understand them even better than I did when I wrote my first article for The Freeman in 1981. (Its funny how Economics in One Lesson continues to become increasingly relevant to my thinking each time I read it.) However, I believe that the end of all of this activity is or should be the improvement of life for people in a way that is not predatory and brings about voluntary cooperation among economic actors. In other words, economic activity is a means to an end, and the end is free people gaining in wealth and standards of living.
A socialist does not and will not see things this way. The end of socialism is not a higher living standard or even making life better for the poor, as much as a socialist will talk about the well-being of poor people. No, the end of socialism is socialism, or to better put it, the ideal of socialism. Once socialism is established, as it was in Venezuela or in the former USSR or Cuba, the social ideal had been met no matter what the actual outcome might be.
But what about the problems that inevitably occur in a socialist economy? Are not socialists shaken by the economic meltdown in Venezuela? The answer is a clear NO. For example, The Nation, which has supported various communist movements for generations, takes the position that Venezuela suffers from not enough socialism:
If socialism is understood as a system in which workers and communities (rather than bureaucrats, politicians, and well-connected entrepreneurs) exercise effective democratic control over economic and political decision-making, it would appear that Venezuela is suffering not from too much socialism, but from too little. Who can deny that Venezuela would be much better off if the hundreds of billions of dollars reportedly diverted through corruption were instead in the hands of organized communities?
The author assumes, of course, that socialism can be separated from the state, which shows either dishonesty or naivety, or perhaps both. After all, the author continues by claiming that the vast system of price controls the government has laid down over Venezuelas economy has had little economic effect and certainly has not been harmful, just as the author assumes that because most businesses in Venezuela officially are privately-owned, the government has little economic control over their operations. (As we know, the government there has seized businesses, arrested store owners for raising prices in the face of blizzards of paper money, and made ridiculous claims about conspiracies to overthrow the government.)
The one thing the author does not suggest is the government backing off its policies and its socialist ideology. To do so, obviously, would mean that socialism had failed and no socialist is going to ever embrace the idea that socialism could fail.
Perhaps the best example of this is Robert Heilbroners famous 1989 New Yorker article, The Triumph of Capitalism, written even before the Berlin Wall went down, along with the communist governments of Eastern Europe and the USSR. He followed this a year later with After Communism, also in the New Yorker. In his first article, the Marxist Heilbroner wrote:
The Soviet Union, China & Eastern Europe have given us the clearest possible proof that capitalism organizes the material affairs of humankind more satisfactorily than socialism: that however inequitably or irresponsibly the marketplace may distribute goods, it does so better than the queues of a planned economy the great question now seems how rapid will be the transformation of socialism into capitalism, & not the other way around, as things looked only half a century ago.
Yet, it is clear, especially after the second article, that Heilbroner was not advocating the establishment of free markets, but rather saw the collapse of the communist system as little more than a strategic pause of the Long March to Socialism. To reach that Utopia, wrote Heilbroner, socialists needed to turn to environmentalism to deliver the goods. (That most of the socialist countries also were ecological disasters did not penetrate Heilbroners mind, and that should not surprise anyone. To Heilbroner, the end of socialism was not a better way to produce and equally distribute goods; no, the end of socialism was socialism.)
In other words, even after seeing the socialist system that economists like he, John Kenneth Galbraith, and Paul Samuelson praised for a generation melt down right in front of him, Heilbroner could not bring himself to admit that maybe socialists needed to turn in their membership cards and promote capitalism. No, Heilbroner decided that socialists simply needed new strategies to find ways to have state (read that, social) control of resources and economic outcomes. Interestingly, he wrote these words even after acknowledging that Ludwig von Mises and F.A. Hayek were correct in their assessment of socialisms economic calculation problem, but even that admission did not bring Heilbroner to the logical end of his analysis: total rejection of the socialist system.
Like the Fonzie character from Happy Days that never could admit being wrong on an issue, Heilbroner and others like him could not concede that socialism in any form still would run aground, be it in providing medical care, establishing strict environmental policies, or the establishment of a vast welfare state. The central problem facing socialism economic calculation does not disappear just because a government does not directly own factors of production and engage in five-year economic plans.
This hardly means that economists like me should stop writing about the failures of socialism or stop explaining how a private property order and a free price system work. First, one never can be too educated in economic analysis and neither can anyone in public life. Socialists may not be able to abandon their faith, but others who might like to hear well-reasoned arguments might not be willing to join the Church of Socialism in the first place.
Second, there is nothing wrong in speaking the truth and just because socialists and their followers are averse to truth does not mean we give up saying what we know to be true. Just because socialists refuse to believe that socialism fails even when the evidence points otherwise does not mean they have the moral and intellectual high ground.
About the author: *Bill Anderson is professor of economics at Frostburg State University in Frostburg, Maryland. Contact: email, facebook.
Source: This article was published at MISES Institute.
The Mises Institute, founded in 1982, teaches the scholarship of Austrian economics, freedom, and peace. The liberal intellectual tradition of Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) and Murray N. Rothbard (1926-1995) guides us. Accordingly, the Mises Institute seeks a profound and radical shift in the intellectual climate: away from statism and toward a private property order. The Mises Institute encourages critical historical research, and stands against political correctness.
More:
Goal Of Socialists Is Socialism, Not Prosperity OpEd - Eurasia Review
- Venezuelan immigrant warns of rise of socialism in US - Fox News - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- In New York and Britain, Socialism Is on the March - WSJ - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Socialism Requires Work That Is Meaningful, Mutual, and Free - Jacobin - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Democratic socialism is thriving in New York. This is good. | Opinion - USA Today - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- The Tenth Commandment and the rise of socialism - Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Is the Democratic party headed for a civil war over socialism? - CNN - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Why the rights attack on socialism is a failure - Daily Kos - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Trump's Oil Price-Gouging Probe Is 'Socialism' He Accused Kamala Harris Of, Peter Schiff Says - Yahoo - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Opinion | Socialism is back in vogue. Wait for reality to set in. - The Washington Post - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- LARRY KUDLOW: Antisemitism is the root of Mamdani socialism, and its destroying New York City - Fox Business - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- The rise of socialism in the modern United States - www.lvivherald.com - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- VOTE: Will socialism help or hurt the Democratic Party in November's elections? - The National News Desk - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Tiffany: Wisconsin Must Be a Firewall Against Socialism - MacIver Institute - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Democratic socialism is thriving in New York. This is good. | Opinion - Yahoo - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Behind the apparent rise of democratic socialism and what it could mean for U.S. politics - CBS News - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Joy Behar defends democratic socialism, claims Social Security and first responders prove it works - Yahoo - June 28th, 2026 [June 28th, 2026]
- Opinion - My family lived through socialism. Most Democrats are frighteningly wrong about it. - Yahoo - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Everyone is talking about sewer socialism again. You can blame (or credit) Zohran Mamdani - Deseret News - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Greg Gutfeld: Why is socialism still a thing? - Fox News - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Democratic Socialism in the District of Columbia - heartland.org - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Democrats are the party of socialism now - Washington Examiner - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- How socialism built the reddest states in the West - High Country News - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- Welcome to swag socialism: New Yorkers waited hours in line for Mamdani's affordable World Cup jerseys - Business Insider - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- How the Rise of Socialism is fueling Chevron's California Exodus - Fox News - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- There Is A New Flavor Of Socialism Amongst Young People - News Radio 1200 WOAI - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- Maurice Brown thinks Syracuse is ready for democratic socialism - City & State New York - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Nothing says socialism like a $27 Tax the Rich T-shirt from AOC! - New York Post - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Are We On The Cusp Of Moving From Capitalism To Socialism? - China Academy - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Gen Z fuels surge in democratic socialism in the US - Yahoo - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Preface to the book: The Ukraine War and the Fight for Socialism: The Case of Bogdan Syrotiuk - World Socialist Web Site - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Nothing Says Socialism Like AOC's 'Tax-the-Rich' Shirt - RealClearMarkets - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- The spectre of gen Z socialism is haunting the world according to the Economist | Normon Solomon - The Guardian - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- John Ivison: The disturbingly powerful allure of Avi Lewiss gen Z socialism - National Post - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Antisemitism is the socialism of fools (Opinion) - Boulder Daily Camera - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Gen-Z socialism, from Zohran to Zack and beyond - The Economist - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Lao leader: China is the leading banner for socialism and the Global South - Friends of Socialist China - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- The Rise of Socialism: Business owners turn on ultra-progressive California town - Fox News - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Magnifica Humanitas and Anglican Christian Socialism: We Have Been Here Before - The Living Church - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Democratic Socialism Is Infiltrating the Heartland - heartland.org - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- What is the economic system that will save Libya, market capitalism or state socialism? - Oz Arab Media - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Gen-Z socialism rises on cost-of-living anger and AI anxiety - BizNews - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Hannah Einbinder on Genre Swapping, Socialism and the Importance of Collaboration - polyesterzine.com - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Socialism isnt a system that works: Hugo Gurdon - Washington Examiner - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Two railways, two systems: HS2 and the case for socialism - Friends of Socialist China - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Socialism Is Slow to Mature: The Twenty-First Newsletter (2026) - Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Where is the empathy for victims of socialism and communism? - The Spectator Australia - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Beware The Alternatives To Capitalism And Socialism OpEd - Eurasia Review - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Vote to save America from socialism - The Wilson Times - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Siege Socialism: Trumps War On Cuba And The Return Of The Monroe Doctrine OpEd - Eurasia Review - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- The Rise of Socialism and Javier Milei's Success - AM 870 The ANSWER - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Two railways, two systems: HS2 and the case for socialism - Morning Star | The Peoples Daily - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- How Trumps Silicon Valley socialism netted the US $40bn - The Telegraph - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- We Need to Explain to Students Why Free Markets Trump Socialism - Long Island Life & Politics - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- The backslide of Chicago-style socialism - The Last Ward | Austin Berg - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- The Future Socialism Is Possible and Necessary: The Twentieth Newsletter (2026) - Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Socialism is being left behind in Europe - The Economist - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Analysis of Three Communist Ideological Trends: Eurocommunism, Jajumo, and Latin American Socialism - Ratopati - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Opinion: The rise of socialism in America - Gainesville Times - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Dont give up on NYC, Ken Griffin expose the idiocy of Mamdanis socialism - New York Post - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- The Trump regime, oligarchy, and the fight for socialism - World Socialist Web Site - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- Failure According to Whom? Rewriting the Metrics of Socialism - Orinoco Tribune - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- "490 thousand pensioners live a more difficult life than under socialism", Berisha: We will cut the Gordian knot - Vox News Albania - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- An Orgy of Socialism! John Fetterman Tells Jesse Watters Everything Thats Wrong With The Democratic Party - Yahoo - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Rep. Gimnez issues warning on rise of socialism - Fox News - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Join the May Day Online Rally! For socialism! Against war, genocide and fascism! - World Socialist Web Site - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- So, What the Hell Is Communism and Socialism, Really? - LA Progressive - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Only socialism can save Minnesotas Boundary Waters - Liberation News - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Sergey Brin joins the fight against socialism better late than never - New York Post - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Xi Jinping says that China and Laos should take a strategic perspective on the future and destiny of socialism - Friends of Socialist China - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe: This is the socialism you said you were voting against - MS NOW - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Justice Department Indicts Southern Poverty Law Center And Fascist Congressman Aims to Ban Advocates of Socialism, Communism, or Islamic... - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- The struggle for national liberation and socialism are indivisible - Morning Star | The Peoples Daily - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Hasan Piker Interview on Livestreaming, Socialism, and the Future of Politics - i-D.co - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Opinion: The real threat isn't socialism. It's authoritarianism - Gainesville Times - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- What do Artemis II and socialism have in common? | Jackson Star and Herald - Ripley and Ravenswood - WV News - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Cal Thomas | What do Artemis II and socialism have in common? - The Cumberland Times-News - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- The herd of elephants in the room - International Socialism - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Cal Thomas | What do Artemis II and socialism have in common? - The Tribune-Democrat - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- The last years of Karl Marx: global perspectives and revolutionary potentials - International Socialism - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Is socialism or capitalism better for WNC? I beg to differ - Mountain Xpress - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]