Chapter 3: Stalin’s Pluralism: How Anti-Dogmatism Serves Tyranny
-
Published:2020
Till Düppe, Sarah Joly-Simard, 2020. "Stalin’s Pluralism: How Anti-Dogmatism Serves Tyranny", Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology: Including a Symposium on Economists and Authoritarian Regimes in the 20th Century, Luca Fiorito, Scott Scheall, Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak
Download citation file:
Abstract
When Stalin, in 1936, declared socialism achieved in the Soviet Union, he opened the door for the codification of the political economy of socialism beyond Marx’s political economy of capitalism. Indeed, at the same time as he executed the tyrannical policies he is known for, he led a series of private conversations with economists about a textbook on the political economy of socialism that spanned nearly 20 years. In these conversations, Stalin repeatedly argued for an open debate and against dogmatism. Most notably, he accepted the existence of the so-called law of value in socialism, which appears to subject the state to scientific authority. Reconstructing these conversations, we show that his claim to a pluralist scientific debate helped paper over his tyranny, first by diverting attention from the real issues, second by establishing his personal authority as an intellectual, and third by creating conflicts that would exclude his opponents.
