Welfare for people in need always contains profound contradictions. Under capitalism, the welfare state reinforces exploitation and discrimination, yet working people have fought for welfare, which protects against the worst excesses of capitalism. Given the important benefits that welfare can provide, we need to consider the components of a post-capitalist welfare system, one that actually meets the needs of working people.
A post-capitalist welfare system puts into practice the values of love, care, solidarity, and cooperation. Such principles are incompatible with the values of racial capitalism. So, we work for a post-capitalist alternative. We trace the emphasis on love as a source of revolutionary motivation to key works by Karl Marx, Che Guevara, leaders of Back Lives Matter, and others trying to move beyond racial capitalism. A transformed welfare system depends on communities whose collective values nurture care and well-being.
Communal institutions that provide welfare services are key. We analyze the eventual failures of historical utopian communities and also some strengths and limitations of communal institutions that have implemented welfare systems in “actually existing” socialist countries. A transformation of values depends on a bottom-up aspiration, not imposed by a state apparatus.
We examine three examples of communal governance linked to development of post-capitalist welfare systems: the Rojava revolution in northern Syria, the Bolivarian revolutionary process in Venezuela, and Cooperation Jackson in Mississippi. These examples provide illuminating details about the contrasting theoretical underpinnings, practical implementation of community-based institutions and governance, strengths, and limitations of these approaches, and concrete details of welfare systems that move beyond racial capitalism and the capitalist welfare state. These examples all include the creation of “solidarity economies” linked to community-based welfare systems that foster mutual aid and reject the inherently exploitative characteristics of racial capitalism.
Local assemblies become the most direct means of confronting the capitalist state, usually at the level of the municipality. A transitional platform for post-capitalist welfare includes four key components: democratic control over public funds, community-based cooperatives and mutual aid, expanded access to housing, and promotion of community well-being.
Within our communities today, existing institutions and organizations provide spaces relatively free from capitalist values. Institutions and organizations that emphasize justice and resistance often provide mutual aid that forms the basis of a post-capitalist welfare system. We explain what mutual aid actually entails, demonstrating the fundamental concepts and goals associated with it and what type of mutual aid these institutions and organizations can implement. Focusing on housing, health, and income maintenance, we analyze important examples of mutual aid and cooperative organizations that now provide these services. Such organizations allow those who use and support the services to exert influence over their management. Improved access to housing in Cooperation Jackson and similar efforts involving community land trusts, as well as cooperative housing schemes in Britain, show achievements fostered in post-capitalist systems. Community-based health initiatives in multiple countries and social contexts show the feasibility and advantages of providing such services outside of public or private insurance programs.
A post-capitalist welfare system is community-based and controlled by the community rather than the state. Communities establish welfare institutions based on mutual aid and cooperatives to help build a society rooted in love, care, solidarity, and dignity. As the creators of Cooperation Jackson advise, now is the time for “building the future in the present.”
Contents
Moving Beyond the Welfare State of Racial Capitalism
Humanity and Love
Community and Solidarity
Institutionalizing Collective Values Communal Control and Participatory Democracy, With Examples
Rojava
Venezuela
Cooperation Jackson and Other Solidarity Economies
From Here to There
From the Old, New Seeds are Sown
Institutions of Justice and Resistance: Mutual Aid
A Post-Capitalist Welfare System
Housing as a Cooperative Opportunity
Community Health Care and Prevention
Income Maintenance
Looking to the Future
The Authors