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How do socialist democracy differ from other kinds of popular democratic systems
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The simple answer is thatdemocratic socialists believe in ademocracy, while communistforms of government are notdemocracies. “Democratic socialists believe in elections, the First Amendment — [they] want ordinary people to have more power in a more democratic system,” Kazin says
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Socialism is an economic system based on social ownership and operation of the means of production, whereas social democracy is a policy regime and political disposition favoring greater regulation, public provision of public goods, and support for labor rights. The two are fundamentally different concepts; comparing the them is comparing apples to oranges.
Modern social democracy doesn’t have anything to say about the questions of resource ownership and allocation mechanism employed in the economy, and like liberalism and conservatism, it accepts the fundamental elements of capitalism (private property, factor markets and wage labor). The difference between social democracy and modern liberalism and conservatism is a matter of degree: social democracy favors more robust social policies to achieve greater social equality.
On the other hand, socialism is an alternative system to capitalism, and socialists view capitalism as being the root cause of society’s current economic and social issues. Socialism is based on social ownership of the means of producing wealth so that the entire population benefits from the net product produced by productive property and any productivity gains arising from automation. Socialism often, but not always, implies the end of capital and factor markets and the integration of socially-owned enterprises into a single interlinked network that utilizes some form of economic planning to allocate resources within said network. Socialists advocate socialism not only because they believe socialism will lead to greater equality and freedom, but because they believe capitalism is fundamentally flawed and a socialist system will be superior in performance and productivity.
Socialism is an economic system based on social ownership and operation of the means of production, whereas social democracy is a policy regime and political disposition favoring greater regulation, public provision of public goods, and support for labor rights. The two are fundamentally different concepts; comparing the them is comparing apples to oranges.
Modern social democracy doesn’t have anything to say about the questions of resource ownership and allocation mechanism employed in the economy, and like liberalism and conservatism, it accepts the fundamental elements of capitalism (private property, factor markets and wage labor). The difference between social democracy and modern liberalism and conservatism is a matter of degree: social democracy favors more robust social policies to achieve greater social equality.
On the other hand, socialism is an alternative system to capitalism, and socialists view capitalism as being the root cause of society’s current economic and social issues. Socialism is based on social ownership of the means of producing wealth so that the entire population benefits from the net product produced by productive property and any productivity gains arising from automation. Socialism often, but not always, implies the end of capital and factor markets and the integration of socially-owned enterprises into a single interlinked network that utilizes some form of economic planning to allocate resources within said network. Socialists advocate socialism not only because they believe socialism will lead to greater equality and freedom, but because they believe capitalism is fundamentally flawed and a socialist system will be superior in performance and productivity.
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