I bring this up because I was just remembering my lecturer last year (dyed to the core red, I might add) was trying to promote to us the Marxist idea of the state as simply a tool of the bourgeoisie, an "executive for ordering the affairs of the bourgeoisie" or something like that.
I was sceptical about the idea at the time (more receptive to the Kaustkyite idea that the state could be used by the left through the universalization of the franchise)... but I did fall short of believing in pluralist ideas.
I think a useful way of seeing the state is to think of it in terms of the Marxist concept of a class; that being a group that with interests determined by their mode of production, and their position in the relations of production. If you think about it... the state is a class in itself. It's "property" is its revenue base and it's mode of production is the means by which it gains revenue. It is not simply a hollow shell for another class to fill... it has its own interests that it pursues in competition with other states. If it supports the bourgeoisie more than beggars, this is because the bourgeoisie creates more revenue and employs more taxpayers than beggars.
This is supported by the fact that the modern state wasn't innovated by business... but by European Monarchs wishing to improve their ability to raise revenue, and to increase the effectiveness of their armies. The modern-state was thus created in a competitive process between states, and had little to do with the bourgeoisie (to begin with)... whether they benefitted from the state or not.
I'm not sure as whether or not the state is best seen as analogous to a class... or to a firm. Probably the latter is more applicable.
Discuss...
I was sceptical about the idea at the time (more receptive to the Kaustkyite idea that the state could be used by the left through the universalization of the franchise)... but I did fall short of believing in pluralist ideas.
I think a useful way of seeing the state is to think of it in terms of the Marxist concept of a class; that being a group that with interests determined by their mode of production, and their position in the relations of production. If you think about it... the state is a class in itself. It's "property" is its revenue base and it's mode of production is the means by which it gains revenue. It is not simply a hollow shell for another class to fill... it has its own interests that it pursues in competition with other states. If it supports the bourgeoisie more than beggars, this is because the bourgeoisie creates more revenue and employs more taxpayers than beggars.
This is supported by the fact that the modern state wasn't innovated by business... but by European Monarchs wishing to improve their ability to raise revenue, and to increase the effectiveness of their armies. The modern-state was thus created in a competitive process between states, and had little to do with the bourgeoisie (to begin with)... whether they benefitted from the state or not.
I'm not sure as whether or not the state is best seen as analogous to a class... or to a firm. Probably the latter is more applicable.
Discuss...
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