The Non-Capitalist Way of Development
- 1 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Review of Radical Political Economics
- Vol. 19 (1) , 22-46
- https://doi.org/10.1177/048661348701900102
Abstract
The "non-capitalist way of development" (NCWD) is proposed by development theorists from socialist bloc countries as a political economy alternative to capitalist and populist development strategies. NCWD (the theory and strategy and its proponents) offers a conception of development that goes beyond the prevailing socioeconomic determinism to include politics and class struggle as part of the development process in those least developed Third World countries where the "revolutionary democrats" hold state power. The NCWD strategy argues that if this leadership is "vigorously" supported by the parties of the working classes and by the socialist countries, it can bring about a non-capitalist transformation of the socioeconomic formation, as a result of which the objective and/or subjective conditions for a socialist revolution would be prepared. I find the NCWD strategy more radical than its rivals with respect to its treatment of such issues as imperialism, internal politics and socioeconomic transformation. However, it suffers from a number of misconceptions, particularly about the nature of the impact of imperialism on the Third World, the class structure and conflict in these societies, the nature of the state in the post-national democratic revolutions, and the program it proposes for socioeconomic transformations. This paper exposes the conceptual framework of NCWD, examines its historical roots, critically evaluates its pros and cons and offers speculation for its reformulation.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Late Marx and the Russian "Periphery of Capitalism"Monthly Review, 1983
- Introduction to the Sociology of “Developing Societies”Published by Springer Nature ,1982
- Prospects and problems of the transition from agrarianism to socialism: The case of Angola, Guinea-Bissau and MozambiqueWorld Development, 1981
- Iraqi and Syrian socialism: An economic appraisalWorld Development, 1981
- Socialism and development: Editors' introductionWorld Development, 1981
- The Burmese way to ‘socialism’World Development, 1981
- Tanzania: The Non-Marxist Path to Socialism?Monthly Review, 1981
- The Revolution of People's Power: Notes on Mozambique, 1979Monthly Review, 1980
- Politics in Command: A Case Study of the People's Democratic Republic of YemenMonthly Review, 1976
- The Liberation of AngolaMonthly Review, 1976