Political philosophies are directly examined in UPSC GS1: "Political philosophies like communism, capitalism, socialism and their forms and effect on the society." The ideological conflicts of the 20th century — capitalism vs. communism, liberal democracy vs. fascism — shaped the world order that India inherited at Independence. Understanding these philosophies contextualises India's own choice of a socialist, democratic, secular republic and the economic path Nehru charted.


1. Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic and social system based on private ownership of the means of production, free markets, wage labour, and profit motive.

Origins and Classical Capitalism

  • Mercantilism (16th–18th century): precursor system emphasising state regulation of trade, colonial extraction, and bullion accumulation.
  • Adam SmithThe Wealth of Nations (published 9 March 1776): the foundational text of classical capitalism. Smith argued that individuals pursuing self-interest are guided by an "invisible hand" to promote the public good. He championed laissez-faire (free market without government interference), division of labour, and opposed mercantilist monopolies.
  • David Ricardo: developed the theory of comparative advantage — nations should specialise in what they produce most efficiently. Foundation of free trade theory.
  • The Industrial Revolution (mid-18th century onwards) accelerated capitalism: factory system, wage labour, and capital accumulation became dominant.

Later Developments

Phase Key Features Key Thinkers
Classical capitalism Free market, laissez-faire, minimal state Adam Smith, David Ricardo
Monopoly capitalism (late 19th century) Cartels, trusts, finance capital domination Hilferding, Lenin
Keynesian capitalism (post-1930s) State intervention to manage demand; deficit spending during recession J.M. Keynes
Welfare capitalism (post-WWII) Mixed economy; state provides social services alongside private sector Beveridge, Attlee
Neoliberalism (1980s onwards) Deregulation, privatisation, free trade, globalisation Hayek, Friedman; Thatcher, Reagan
Crony capitalism Private profits dependent on political connections

J.M. KeynesThe General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936): argued that market economies can get stuck in low-demand equilibria; governments must increase spending during recessions to stimulate aggregate demand. This became the basis for post-WWII economic management in Western democracies.

Criticism of capitalism: Marx's exploitation theory (surplus value extracted from labour); Thomas Piketty (Capital in the Twenty-First Century, 2013) argued that return on capital exceeds economic growth, causing structural wealth inequality.


2. Communism

Communism is a political and economic ideology aiming for a classless, stateless society in which the means of production are commonly owned.

Marxist Foundations

Karl Marx (1818–1883) and Friedrich Engels (1820–1895) developed scientific socialism:

  • The Communist Manifesto (published February 1848): "The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles." Called on workers to unite and overthrow the bourgeoisie (owners of capital).
  • Das Kapital (Volume I, 1867): systematic analysis of capitalism — surplus value theory (workers are paid less than the value they produce; the difference is appropriated by capitalists as profit).
  • Historical materialism: history is driven by material (economic) forces and class conflict, not ideas.
  • Stages of history: primitive communism → slavery → feudalism → capitalism → socialism → communism (final classless stage).

Leninism and the Bolshevik Revolution

Vladimir Lenin modified Marxism for Russia's conditions:

  • Vanguard party theory: a disciplined communist party must lead the proletariat (as workers cannot develop revolutionary consciousness on their own).
  • Imperialism: the Highest Stage of Capitalism (1916): capitalism exports exploitation to colonies; colonies are the weakest link.
  • October Revolution 1917: Bolsheviks seized power; world's first communist state established.

Stalinism

  • Five-Year Plans: rapid forced industrialisation; USSR became an industrial power by 1940s.
  • Collectivisation: forced merger of peasant farms into collective farms (kolkhozy); caused the 1932–33 Ukrainian famine.
  • Gulags: vast system of forced labour camps; political repression.

Maoism

  • Mao Zedong adapted Marxism-Leninism for agrarian China: peasant-based revolution (not urban proletariat).
  • Long March (1934–35); People's Republic of China proclaimed 1949.
  • Cultural Revolution (1966–76): radical attempt to purge capitalist and traditional elements; caused massive social disruption.

Collapse of Soviet Communism

  • 1989: Fall of Berlin Wall; Eastern European communist regimes collapsed.
  • 1991: Dissolution of USSR; Russian Federation and 14 other states emerged.
  • Remaining communist states: China (market socialism), Cuba, Vietnam, North Korea — each with significant variations from orthodox Marxism.
  • Communism in India: CPI (Communist Party of India, founded 1920) and CPI(M) (Marxist, 1964 split); governed West Bengal (1977–2011), Kerala periodically.

3. Socialism

Socialism advocates social (collective or state) ownership of the means of production and distribution according to contribution or need. It exists on a spectrum from democratic reform to revolutionary transformation.

Major Strands

Utopian Socialism (early 19th century): Robert Owen (New Lanark cooperative communities), Henri de Saint-Simon, Charles Fourier — imagined ideal cooperative communities without scientific class analysis.

Scientific Socialism: Marx and Engels called their approach "scientific" to distinguish it from utopian idealism.

Fabian Socialism (UK): The Fabian Society (founded 1884) — Sidney Webb, Beatrice Webb, George Bernard Shaw — advocated gradual, parliamentary reform rather than revolution. Their ideas shaped the British Labour Party's post-1945 welfare state.

Democratic Socialism: Socialism achieved through democratic elections and maintained within democratic institutions. The Scandinavian model (Sweden, Norway, Denmark) — high taxes (50%+ of GDP), universal welfare state, strong unions, mixed economy — is the most successful real-world example.

Social Democracy: Similar to democratic socialism but explicitly accepts the market economy; aims to redistribute through taxation and welfare rather than nationalise production.

Socialism in India

  • Avadi Resolution (1955): Indian National Congress adopted the goal of a "socialistic pattern of society" — key Nehru-era commitment.
  • Nehruvian socialism: Mixed economy with state control of commanding heights (heavy industry, infrastructure, banking); Five-Year Plans; Industrial Policy Resolution 1956 (public sector predominance).
  • 42nd Constitutional Amendment (1976): Added "socialist" to the Preamble during Indira Gandhi's Emergency. Supreme Court in 2024 upheld this inclusion.
  • India's socialism is democratic socialism — not Soviet-style state socialism; private sector continues alongside public sector.

Key distinction — Socialism vs Communism: In socialism, the state or collective owns means of production; private ownership is regulated but not abolished; democracy is retained. In communism, private property is abolished; a transitional "dictatorship of the proletariat" governs before the state withers away; democratic institutions are typically suppressed.


4. Fascism

Fascism is a far-right, authoritarian, ultranationalist political ideology that emerged in early 20th century Europe, characterised by dictatorial power, suppression of opposition, and forced regimentation of society and the economy.

Origins and Italian Fascism

  • Post-WWI Italy: resentment over "mutilated victory" (Italy gained less than expected at Versailles), economic crisis, fear of communist revolution among elites.
  • Benito Mussolini founded the Fasci di Combattimento on 23 March 1919 in Milan — about 100 ex-soldiers, nationalists and former socialists. The movement adopted the Roman fasces (bundle of rods) as its symbol.
  • March on Rome: Mussolini's Blackshirts marched on Rome on 28 October 1922; King Victor Emmanuel III appointed Mussolini Prime Minister on 30 October 1922, fearing civil war.
  • Mussolini established a corporate state: economy organised into producer corporations bringing together workers and employers under state control; neither full capitalism nor communism.

Core Features of Fascism

Feature Description
Ultra-nationalism Nation as supreme organism; ethnic or cultural identity above individual rights
Single-party state Opposition parties banned; cult of the leader (Il Duce, Fuhrer)
Anti-communism Violently opposed to Marxism; protected capitalist property rights
Anti-liberalism Rejected parliamentary democracy, individual rights, Enlightenment rationalism
Militarism Glorification of war and violence as regenerative; expansionism
Corporatism State coordinates capital and labour; private property preserved but state-directed
Mass mobilisation Propaganda, rallies, youth organisations, control of media

Nazism — Extreme Racial Fascism

Adolf Hitler's National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP) added racial nationalism to fascism:

  • Aryan supremacy ideology; antisemitism as central doctrine.
  • Holocaust: systematic genocide of 6 million Jews and millions of others (Roma, disabled, LGBTQ+, political opponents).
  • Lebensraum (living space): justification for eastern European territorial conquest.

Other Fascist Regimes

  • Francisco Franco's Spain (Falangism, 1939–1975): clerical-fascist, Catholic conservative.

Fascism vs Communism

Both are totalitarian, but differ fundamentally:

Dimension Fascism Communism
Economic base Preserves private property; corporatist state direction Abolishes private ownership of means of production
Class position Serves capitalist class, suppresses labour Claims to represent working class
Nationalism Extreme, ethnic/racial nationalism Proletarian internationalism
Historical direction Revanchist; returns to mythic past Progressive; aims for future classless society
Key adversary Communists, liberals, Jews (in Nazism) Bourgeoisie, imperialists

Neo-fascism and far-right today: Resurgence of far-right nationalist parties in Europe and elsewhere — fuelled by economic dislocation, immigration anxiety, and social media polarisation.


5. The Welfare State

The welfare state is a system of government-managed social protection, providing citizens with basic economic security regardless of market outcomes.

Beveridge Report (1942)

William BeveridgeSocial Insurance and Allied Services (November 1942): identified five giants on the road to reconstruction: Want, Disease, Ignorance, Squalor, and Idleness. Proposed:

  • Comprehensive National Insurance — contributions in exchange for unemployment, sickness, and old-age benefits.
  • "Cradle to grave" social security: protection at every life stage.
  • National Health Service (NHS): free healthcare funded by taxation; launched 5 July 1948.

The Beveridge Report became the blueprint for Britain's post-war welfare state — the paradigmatic example globally.

Scandinavian Social Democracy

  • Sweden, Norway, Denmark: highest-tax, highest-welfare model; universal benefits (not means-tested); strong unions; gender equality; high social mobility.
  • Funded by high income taxes (50–60% of GDP in government revenue) and maintained by broadly egalitarian culture and high trust institutions.

Challenges to the Welfare State

  • Fiscal sustainability: ageing populations, rising healthcare costs.
  • Globalisation: capital mobility pressures states to reduce corporate taxes; "race to the bottom."
  • Dependency critique (Hayek, Friedman): welfare creates disincentives to work and entrepreneurship.

India's Welfare Approach

India has moved toward a rights-based welfare model:

  • MGNREGS (2005): legal right to 100 days of employment.
  • National Food Security Act (2013): subsidised food grains as legal entitlement.
  • Ayushman Bharat – PM-JAY: health insurance cover for poor families.
  • PM-KISAN, PMJDY: targeted income and financial inclusion support.

Comparison Table: Key Political Philosophies

Dimension Capitalism Socialism Communism Fascism
Private property Protected; central Regulated; partial ownership Abolished Protected; state-directed
Role of state Minimal (classical); interventionist (Keynesian) Significant redistribution Total (transitional dictatorship) Total; single party
Political system Liberal democracy Democratic pluralism Single-party; classless state (theory) Single-party authoritarian
Economic system Free market Mixed/planned with markets Centrally planned Corporatist; state-directed capitalism
Class position Bourgeoisie Workers and middle class Proletariat Cross-class (ultranationalist)
Key thinkers Adam Smith, Keynes, Hayek Webb, Bernstein, Nehru Marx, Engels, Lenin, Mao Mussolini, Hitler
Historical examples USA, UK, Western Europe Sweden, Norway, India (mixed) USSR, Maoist China, Cuba Mussolini's Italy, Nazi Germany, Franco's Spain

Exam Strategy

For Prelims: Know exact dates — Wealth of Nations (1776), Communist Manifesto (1848), Das Kapital (1867), Avadi Resolution (1955), 42nd Amendment (1976), Fasci di Combattimento (1919), March on Rome (1922). Distinguish Fabian socialism from utopian and scientific socialism.

For Mains GS1: UPSC asks comparative questions — "How did political philosophies shape 20th century societies?" Structure answers with: definition → key thinkers → historical application → effect on society → legacy.

Common Mains themes:

  • India's choice of "socialist" path — Nehru's democratic socialism vs Soviet communism.
  • Why fascism emerged in Europe's democracies (not authoritarian states) — economic crisis + institutional weakness + extremist mobilisation.
  • The welfare state as a synthesis — capitalism + socialist redistribution — as response to both communism and fascism.
  • Keynesianism vs neoliberalism — ongoing debate about state's role in economy (directly relevant to GS3 too).

Mnemonic for Fascism's features: UNCLE-M — Ultra-nationalism, Nationalism as supremacy, Cult of leader, Liberalism rejected, Expansionism/militarism, Mass mobilisation.


Previous Year Questions

Prelims

  • The concept of the "invisible hand" is associated with which of the following economists? (Adam Smith)
  • With reference to the "Communist Manifesto," consider the following: Which year was it published? (1848)
  • "Fabian Society" was associated with which political philosophy — gradual, reformist socialism.
  • The term "surplus value" is associated with: (Karl Marx — exploitation theory)
  • Which Amendment to the Indian Constitution added the word "socialist" to the Preamble? (42nd Amendment, 1976)
  • The "Beveridge Report" of 1942 laid the foundation for which concept? (Welfare state / "cradle to grave" social security)

Mains

  • GS1 2017: "The political philosophies of communism and socialism shaped 20th century history in distinctive ways. Compare and contrast their impacts on societies and states." (15 marks)
  • GS1 2016: "Discuss the factors that led to the rise of fascism in Europe in the inter-war period. How did it differ from communism?" (15 marks)
  • GS1 2015: "What was the impact of the Keynesian revolution on economic policy in the 20th century?" (10 marks)
  • GS2 (Polity): "The word 'socialist' was added to the Preamble by the 42nd Amendment. What does socialism mean in the Indian constitutional context?" (10 marks)
  • Essay: "Capitalism's crisis is socialism's opportunity" — evaluate in the context of 20th century history.