Contextualizing Vested Interests in Soviet and Post-Soviet Economic History
Abstract
This paper applies Veblen’s concept of vested interests to the analysis of Soviet and post-Soviet history to explain the crucial role vested interests played in thwarting the democratic promise of socialism in post-1930 USSR and preventing the construction of social-democratic market in post-Soviet transition.In the 1920s, Soviet socialist market economists envisioned the coexistence of multiform and multilevel structures of productive property, intended to prevent any development of vested interests typical of Western capitalism.
Stalin’s 1929 turn to totalitarianism and tyrannical command planning brought back the phenomenon of worker alienation and created conditions favorable to the re-emergence of vested interests, now in the form of a second economy rife with theft of public resources by enterprise directors and corrupt state bureaucrats. These vested interests obstructed all later attempts to democratize the command economy in the USSR.
During neoliberal transition, vested interests substantially increased their economic and political power through corrupt privatization of former state assets. Most became business tycoons who captured almost all non-Baltic states of former USSR and took advantage of neoliberal globalization’s enormous potential for profiteering through tax evasion and money-laundering. Small wonder vested interests have blocked all attempts to construct social-democratic market in post-Soviet space. The failed promise of Russia’s state capitalism serves as case in point.
Vested interests of business can be divested of economic power through instituting participatory democracy in business enterprise, and then establishing adequate citizens’ control over business. Educating and organizing the public to demand effective economic democracy must become the top priority.