Instrumental Marxism

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Instrumental Marxism, or elite model, is a pseudoscientific theory which reasons that policy makers in government and positions of power tend to “share a common business or class background, and that their decisions will reflect their business or class interests.”[1] It tends to view the state and law as ultimately an instrument or tool for individuals of the economically dominant class to use for their own purposes, particularly maintaining economic exploitation while winning ideological assent to their hegemony. This view is contrasted with structural Marxism, which views the class background of policymakers, etc. as purely incidental to the "bourgeois" nature of the modern state, which is seen instead as a result of the position of the state and law in the objective structure of capitalist society, and their objective (i.e. consciousness-independent) function of reproducing the relations of production and private property, regardless of the class background of the individuals involved in the administration thereof.[2] For example, whereas for instrumentalist Marxists the formal equality of contract law in capitalist societies is a kind of ideological shell or mystification used by the elite to conceal the real kernel of exploitation, for structural Marxists that formal legal equality is itself the real normative basis for properly capitalist exploitation, whether or not elites understand it as such: it allows labor-power to be traded at its real exchange-value (though not the value of its product), thus making regularity and rational allocation in labor markets possible.[3]

In the framework of the structure and agency debate in sociology, instrumental Marxism is an agent-centered view, emphasizing the decisions of policymakers, where the relevant agents are either individual elites, a section of the ruling class, or the class as a whole; whereas structural Marxism, as its name suggests, is a structural view, in which individuals are no more than the bearers of certain objective structural relations.

See also

References

  1. Goldstein, Joshua S. 2004. International Relations. Canadian Edition. Ed. Whitworth, Sandra. Toronto: Pearson Education. Page 147.
  2. Poulantzas, Nicos. "The Problem of the Capitalist State." New Left Review I/58, November–December 1969.
  3. Poulantzas, Nicos. "Marxist Examination of the Contemporary State and Law and the Question of the 'Alternative'." The Poulantzas Reader: Marxism, Law and the State. Ed. James Martin. Verso: London, 2008. Print.