As a result of not just capitalist propaganda but the real failures of both forms of twentieth-century “real socialism,” a skepticism has grown about socialism’s future. Wouldn’t taking democratic control over a complex economy eventually boomerang into crisis, collapse into inefficiency, or harden into authoritarianism? To shake the grip of capitalist realism, what we need is to recover an alternative.
Karl Marx spent enough of his life clashing with fanciful utopian socialists that he warned against “writing recipes for the cookshops of the future.” But today it is no longer enough to argue that an alternative to capitalism is politically desirable. We must also argue that it is technically possible.
This doesn’t require pretending that there is a single, settled model of socialism waiting to be implemented. It does require confronting a set of unavoidable questions that any credible alternative must answer. Could a socialist economy use prices, profits, and competition to coordinate complex production without reproducing domination or significant inequality? What incentives encourage efficiency and innovation in an economy of democratically governed firms? How can productivity growth be sustained so that living standards continue to rise, shortages are avoided, and technological change does not produce mass insecurity? And what role must the state play in stabilizing the macroeconomy, guiding investment, and enforcing democratic priorities without suffocating initiative?
In a version of socialism that could plausibly be realized in our lifetimes, large areas of social life would be outside the logic of commodification. Health care, education, transportation, energy, and telecommunication are not consumer goods but social infrastructures on which participation in modern life depends. Organizing them through profit-seeking intermediaries that ration by price rather than need introduces predictable distortions. The result is a system that undermines both equality and efficiency. Decades of comparative experience suggest that public provision in these sectors can deliver better outcomes at lower social cost, precisely because it aligns provision with social need rather than purchasing power.
Beyond these domains lies the broader economy of goods and services, where coordination problems are more varied and where markets remain important. In the market sector of an economy composed of democratically governed firms, price signals would still convey information about supply and demand, helping to coordinate production and consumption. But the surplus generated by economic activity would be controlled by those who produce it, and investment would be allocated through public financial institutions rather than by capitalists. In this way, markets can function as tools of coordination without reproducing the power relations of capitalism.
In this socialist framework, productive enterprises in the commodity-producing sector are controlled by their workers rather than by external shareholders or private capitalists. Governance rights attach to participation, rather than to a financial stake. Membership in a firm resembles membership in a political community: it confers voice, imposes obligations, and cannot be traded like a commodity.
This shift in governance requires a corresponding shift in how investment is organized. Any feasible socialism must avoid soft budget constraints and allow inefficient firms to fail while more productive ones expand.
But workers in democratic firms should not be expected to supply capital themselves or to tie their personal savings to the fortunes of a single workplace.
Leaving investment decisions at the level of individual firms would generate systemic distortions that would destroy a socialist system. Disparities in capital intensity would encourage workers to cluster in capital-rich sectors, while labor-intensive production and the public sector were left understaffed. Organizing ownership and investment as a social function rather than a firm-level one is therefore essential.
Public banks serve this role by holding productive assets in common and allocating capital on behalf of society as a whole. In this way, firms operate with real autonomy while remaining stewards rather than owners of social wealth, and the state is able to use a vast array of macroeconomic tools to influence the direction of development.
One additional mechanism is essential if such an economy is to remain both efficient and egalitarian over time: the creation of minimum wages, differentiated by occupation, to shape development itself. Rather than allowing labor markets to sort worker-managers purely through localized bargaining power or sectoral rents, benchmark wages establish a floor that reflects collective priorities about dignity, skill, and social contribution.
Firms and sectors that rely on low pay and labor discipline are pressured to innovate, reorganize, or contract, while those that raise productivity through new techniques, training, and technological improvement are rewarded through increased dividends. In this way, the economy is directed along a “high road” of development that rewards innovation rather than sweating out labor.
Of course, the point of increasing productivity in a socialist economy is not growth for its own sake but the expansion of leisure, security, and time outside production.
A socialism that merely redistributes income without changing how time is organized would fall short of its promise. But a socialism that combines redistribution with social ownership, democratically guided investment, and wage structures that reward efficiency can translate a dynamic economy into shorter hours, longer lives, and greater freedom over how those lives are lived.
None of this vision promises an end to political conflict, or even to some types of inequality. Differences in skill, effort, and social valuation would persist, and some degree of income differentiation would remain. What is eliminated is the translation of those differences into persistent inequalities of power.
I’ve been trying to deliberately undersell this vision of socialism, in part to make it seem more realistic. But the implications of such a society are enormous. In many parts of the world, it would be the first society since the Neolithic Revolution not divided into a class of producers and a class of exploiters.
That, I would argue to my socialist friends critical of market socialism, is a lofty enough task for one generation.
But, of course, this is a sketch of just one model of organization for a postcapitalist society — or, as Marx might less generously call it, one untested recipe for a future cookshop. But I strongly believe the exercise is worth pursuing. In its reluctance to engage with questions of economic design, the Left has ceded ground to those who insist there is no alternative to capitalism.
Providing such an account of postcapitalist economics does not foreclose experimentation and debate. On the contrary, it opens them. A realistic picture of what a socialist future could look like, and how we might get there, allows movements to situate immediate demands within a longer-term project.
In a sense, the technical challenge to socialism is inseparable from the political one. A Left that cannot describe how a democratic economy might operate will struggle to sustain confidence when faced with inevitable resistance. We need a third choice between (1) just administering the capitalist state or (2) just protesting its failings.
