When economic models become political philosophies they fail. Economics should be about a scientific and pragmatic search for the best way to manage an economy. Therefore socialism and capitalism are not comparable; socialism is closer to a religion than an economic philosophy as it seeks to control many aspects of society.
Very good point, capitalism is an economic system, while socialism is a political system. You also point out something that proponents of socialism never mention: in order for the socialist agenda of one group of society to succeed it has to be enforced upon everyone. This is one of the biggest gripes I have with it.
It should also be remembered that the free market is an artificial construct and open competition can only exist with intervention and active regulation from governments. I don’t see how pure capitalism or pure socialism could ever work.
The debate is really about what type of state intervention/interference should take place in the market and what it’s objectives should be.
Any form of intervention in a free market is based on a subjective view of a few people. Therefore, every intervention distorts competition. Pure free market capitalism does not allow intervention.
I also disagree that the free market is an artificial construct. Quite the opposite, it is the most natural form of economic exchange, i.e. people exchange products free from any coercion or enforcement as they wish to. As soon as you add regulations or other interventions the system becomes man made or artificial.
Do you have examples of where capitalism (without state intervention, subsidies and protection of capitalists) has worked economically?
Germany after WWII is as close as the world has seen to true free market capitalism in the last 150 years, even if it wasn't a conscious choice. The new government was way to busy with what a government is actually meant to do: national defense, policing, road infrastructure, etc, and therefore didn't intervene in the free market. This resulted in the most successful economic period Germany has ever seen, until a few years later state intervention was reintroduced, immediately causing negative economic results.
http://mises.org/daily/3635
For about 200 years after independence in 1776 the USA had miniscule state intervention. There were almost no taxes on individuals or corporations and the size of government was kept to a minimum. Over those 200 years the biggest economic boom took place because the state didn't intervene.
Corruption will always destroy capitalism or communism.
As soon as you introduce politicians, it's the kiss of death.
Exactly! However, in true free-market capitalism, where the state is prohibited from intervening in the economy, there would be no bribing of politicians for economic benefits.
Nowhere near as long as the queues in the depression of the 30s in America.
The great depression was not the result of a failure of free market capitalism. It was the result of state intervention in the 20s through a massive increase in the money supply, and further intervention in the 30s through state spending, price/wage fixing, etc.
Generally the communist/socialist countries of eastern europe did a very good job in providing basic food to everyone. It was luxury goods that were in short suppy.
No, they did not do even remotely a good job at providing basic food. Have you ever talked to East Germans, Hungarians or Bulgarians that "lived" under communism/socialism? I have met many and I saw it first hand in East Germany after the Berlin wall came down. The diets of these people were far from adequate.
As regards Cuba, their main problem was the United States embargo and trade sanctions. Cuba has a fine record in health and education.If Ireland had similiar sanctions imposed we would be in a very sorry state....only cars from the 50s and no inward investment or indeed export markets for most of our produce.
The US embargo is only partially to blame, and incidentally the embargo is a form of state intervention, not free market capitalism. The world is a big place, but yet Cuba has failed to create any meaningful productive sector, despite its low wages.
Also, to set the record straight, Cuba does not have a good modern health service. What it has is universal access to a poor service. It is a perfect example of what Churchill was referring to in this quote: "The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings; the inherent virtue of socialism is the equal sharing of miseries."
To the original question, socialism has never succeeded. Socialism is also regularly being reinvented. At first it was the confiscation of all means of economic production, but this miserably failed. It seems that socialists realised this, so they then moved onto confiscating the profit of economic production. Worryingly, they are now calling for confiscation/nationalization again. Let's hope this doesn't happen.
What socialists are also misrepresenting is that the current economic crisis is proof that free market capitalism has failed. The economic system we live with, does not even remotely resemble free market capitalism, but rather is more adequately called interventionism. State intervention is the main cause of all economic crises, and the last thing we now need is more of the interventions.