Publication | Closed Access
The Economic Basis of Deliberative Democracy
249
Citations
36
References
1989
Year
Ownership TheoryClassical SociologyPolitical BehaviorLiberal DemocracyEconomic InstitutionsSocial SciencesDemocracyEconomic BasisCapitalism StudiesPolitical EconomyDeliberative PoliticsEconomicsRational SocietyMarxismSocial OwnershipEconomic StructuresSociologyBusinessSocial FoundationsDeliberative DemocracySocial RationalityPolitical ScienceSocialism
There are two principal philosophical conceptions of socialism, corresponding to two interpretations of the notion of a rational society. The first conception corresponds to an instrumental view of social rationality. Captured by the image of socialism as “one big workshop,” the instrumental view holds that social ownership of the means of production is rational because it promotes the optimal development of the productive forces. Social ownership is optimal because it eliminates the costs of coordination imposed by the conduct of economic activities in formally independent enterprises, and, more generally, overcomes fetters on development that result from the control of resources by individuals whose particular interests (in profit) imperfectly correspond to a general interest in productive advance.
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