By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, June 27, 2025
The Democrats of New York City have
nominated a professing socialist, Zohran Mamdani, as
their mayoral candidate.
I wonder: Does “socialism” still mean anything?
People are interested in socialism. The light
little book I wrote on socialism more than a decade
ago has been by far the best-selling of any of my books, and I am amused from
time to time to see advertisements for the Portuguese version of it that was
apparently well-received in Brazil. (Parents often buy the book as a graduation
present for college-bound students, and many of them ask me to write some
version of “Don’t believe everything those commies at Brown tell you next
year!” in signed copies.) I shouldn’t be surprised by that, given that people
are also very interested in such exotic nonsense as astrology and veganism, but
socialism does seem like one of those things we should all have gotten over
before now.
There are very few socialist countries left in the world,
and those that remain tend to be basket cases such as North Korea and Cuba.
India is constitutionally socialist, but that is strictly parchment socialism.
It probably would not be accurate to describe the so-called People’s Republic
of China as socialist, but it would be fair to say that it is a country in
which the single-party police state that runs the place is led by men who take
socialism seriously, who think of themselves as socialists and their project as
a socialist project.
Socialism is a word with some heft on both the left and
the right. Just as Republicans started calling themselves “populists” and
“nationalists” and whatnot when they decided that they were sick of standing
with Paul Ryan and preferred kneeling before Donald Trump (“a
matter of taste,” as the secretary general of NATO might put it), some
Democrats call themselves “socialists” and join organizations such as the
Democratic Socialists of America as a way of saying, “I hate Republicans more
than Chuck Schumer does.” Republicans sometimes use “socialist” roughly the
same way (to distinguish the more left-wing kind of Democrat from the more
centrist kind), but lately they just use it to mean “hated un-person,” and
surely you’ve all heard a local barstool numbskull (such as the president of these
United States of America) call Michael Bloomberg or Mitt Romney a “socialist”
or a “Marxist” or something like that.
However it is misused today, “socialism” is a word with a
meaning and a history, and I am just silly enough to continue to believe that
these things still matter a little bit.
New York has more socialism than most U.S. cities, and
you’ll find it most prominent in the areas that are most dysfunctional: public
housing, public schools, and public transit—which could be described with equal
accuracy as collective housing, collective schools, and collective transit.
(You can tell a lot about someone’s political assumptions by his reaction to
the word public—does he think public library and National Public Radio,
or public toilet?) These are socialistic enterprises (and I do not use the word
to mean evil) in that they substitute a centrally planned and
politically controlled system of providing economic goods for a market system.
Replacing markets with central planning is what socialism is—which is not the
same as a welfare state.
For example, Zohran Mamdani likes
the idea of government-owned grocery stores. We
already have a system (flawed, but pretty good) for subsidizing food costs for
poor people, which we call, for outmoded historical reasons, “food stamps.” (I
am old enough to have seen actual physical food stamps, which my mother would
drive miles out of her way to use at a grocery store where she hoped she would
not be seen by anybody who knew her.) Food stamps work reasonably well (reasonably
well, I write; I can tell you all about hillbilly
wampum) because they do not do much to disturb markets—they only subsidize
purchases in those markets by injecting money into them.
(Food stamps are money, albeit a restricted form of
currency we give to people we do not trust with cash because we as a society
have democratically decided that they are too stupid and irresponsible to be
trusted with their own purchasing decisions; if that description distresses you
in spite of its being entirely and inarguably accurate, you might consider
asking yourself why your feelings are thus aroused.)
Shoveling extra money into a market can produce
serious distortions, as it has with housing prices and college tuition, both of
which are higher than they should be thanks to the fact that we subsidize
purchases with artificially cheap credit. But the food market is very large and
food benefits are relatively small (something on the order of 4.5 percent of
annual food expenditures), so we have not seen much market distortion as a
result, beyond the existence of grocery stores in poor places (ranging from big
cities to rural Appalachia) that stock few or no goods ineligible for
subsidized purchases and that probably would not be viable as businesses
without those benefits or at a lower level of subsidy.
Socialism attempts to get around the market distortion
problem by subjecting economic activity to political regimentation: by having
state-owned farms, state-owned factories, state-owned food distribution
networks, or, in the case of Mamdani’s idiotic idea, state-owned retailers. The
substitution of central planning for market prices always fails in the same way
and for the same reason, which has to do with epistemic limitations familiar
enough to anybody who has dipped his nose into any of the relevant bits of the more
than a century’s worth of economic literature on the subject, including
progressives such as Ezra Klein who seem to have
just discovered it about 13 minutes ago and still have not managed to digest it.
Socialists such as Mamdani are always careful to
underline the democratic part of democratic socialism, which, as in the
case of various “democratic republics” of this and “people’s republics” of
that, only serves to remind us where the socialists have had their most
significant problems in the past. And while there are few socialist countries
left, there are really no democratic socialist countries at all. (You
could just about make a case for South Africa.) Democracy, like capitalism, is
predicated on letting people choose for themselves what they want, and, given a
democratic choice, socialism usually isn’t it.
There was a time, decades ago, when one might have argued
that Sweden or Denmark, or even the United Kingdom, offered an example of
democratic socialism, but all of those countries embarked on courses of
market-oriented liberal reform—precisely because they are democratic, and the demos
was not satisfied with the results of socialism: regimentation, stagnation,
rationing, etc. Not every country is going to be Switzerland or Singapore or
the United States, and socialist enterprises endure in such forms as the
National Health Service in the United Kingdom. Many American progressives still
dream of socialized health care, which they are sure will be an enormous
improvement on our current model of half-socialized health care. But while it
might come as a shock to some of our progressive friends, national monopoly
systems such as those of the U.K. and Canada are quite rare globally, and they
are not what you will find in most of Europe—including in such supposed
progressive utopias as Sweden and Denmark, which far from being socialist
exemplars are two very market-oriented countries that still outrank the United
States on the Heritage Foundation’s (insert the necessary Trump-era asterisk
there) index
of economic freedom. It isn’t only health care, of course: State-owned oil
companies are still a thing.
But when some supposed democratic socialist tells you
that what he really wants is Denmark, ask him if he is talking about 55
percent marginal income tax rates on families with relatively modest incomes—because
that is how Denmark does it.
If by “socialist” Zohran Mamdani means “to the left of
Andrew Cuomo, and more uncompromising,” then that is not a great place to be,
and it has its own problems. If he is serious about trying to supplant
Gristedes with a state-run enterprise, then he is a hall of fame fool in a city
that really cannot afford another one.
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