Real World Economics: Understanding socialism in all its forms

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Edward Lotterman

The off-year elections are over.

After winning two key governorships and many other races, Democrats are happier than Republicans. And pundits are ascribing a lot of economic meaning to the outcome.

In New York City, Zohran Mamdani, a self-proclaimed “democratic socialist,” will be the new mayor. This led President Donald Trump to say that New Yorkers must “choose between communism and common sense.”

That is more nonsense than common sense. Mamdani is no communist, despite what Trump thinks that means.

But what then exactly is a “democratic socialist” — a mantle also claimed by this year’s Minneapolis mayoral also-ran Omar Fateh, several members of that city’s city council, along with several U.S. senators and members of Congress?

More broadly, what distinguishes a communist from a socialist from a democratic socialist? And with some on the left as willing to sling epithets as some conservatives, are Trump and some of his MAGA followers really “fascists”?

There are so many pitfalls in such categorizing that I, myself, in teaching economics and giving public talks since 1981, have always avoided using such terms by themselves. The problem is that they are loaded with unintended implications, which, taken alone, mean so many different things to different people that they are virtually worthless in discussions of institutions and policies in the public square.

Others, however, continue to use them. If you wish to understand both uses and pitfalls of categorizing such economic and political “isms,” or ideologies, start with brief definitions:

“Communism” is an economic system in which government both owns all productive property and makes all decisions about how resources, including labor, are allocated. Individuals and families may have personal “possessions” but not anything that might be used in a business. Real-world communist regimes often have had a “cult of personality” centered on a general allegiance to a be-all, end-all, know-all charismatic, dictatorial leader like Joseph Stalin, Mao Tse Tung, Fidel Castro or Kim Il Sung, but there are exceptions. Note that “fascist” regimes, such as in Germany, Italy and Spain during World War II, also operated under much the same personality structure.

“Capitalism” is an economic system characterized by private ownership of productive or business property. Resources are allocated by free markets in which self-interest fosters competition. Government is limited to defense, public order and administration of a legal system setting minimal rules within which markets in goods and services operate.

“Libertarianism” is a political philosophy advocating strict (or extreme) capitalism, with very minimal state intervention in markets or the private lives of citizens, and privatization of common goods regardless of any real economic or market incentive or fairness of allocation.

“Socialism” is an economic system in which government owns and operates all important or large-scale industries and infrastructure — “the commanding heights of the economy.” Key resource allocation decisions are made by central planning. Households may have small businesses involving skilled trades or individual shops limited by regulation.

“Fascism” is more difficult to define economically but generally means mass political movements that emphasize extreme nationalism, militarism, and the supremacy of the nation over the individual. As with communism, they often involve government ownership of key infrastructure or industry, and regulation of markets, but not as a defining characteristic. Fascist regimes often have had key charismatic and autocratic leaders such as Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini or Francisco Franco, as noted above.

Which brings us to “democratic socialism,” as espoused by Mamdani, Fateh and others who still identify as Democrats in the general sense if not for politically pragmatic reasons. Here, we have an economic and political philosophy that supports political democracy as practiced in the U.S., and some form of socially owned and oriented resources. Ownership of industry is not important, but having extensive policies to reduce poverty,  racial, gender or other discrimination, and to redistribute income from richer to poorer households are. In some cases, government involvement in markets is suggested, such as Mamdani’s proposed city-owned grocery stores that would compete with private ones in selected neighborhoods.

Making such definitions and categorizing real world governments and economies is difficult. Many readers will find something lacking in one or the other of the definitions above. Many will find them incorrect in some way, but elaborating creates increasingly numerous exceptions to definitions. Are Social Security, SNAP and Medicare forms of socialism? What about the federal government taking ownership stakes in U.S. Steel and Intel? Is MAGA a cult of personality? And so on.

Note that differences inherently appear on more than one axis. How resources are allocated is key, but so is political governance. One school of communist thought argues that cultural and social factors — rather than just control of capital — must be included. Some economists, including myself, who generally favor letting market forces determine resource-use decisions, also think that differences in institutions and culture play roles in determining why some economies meet the needs and wants of their human members more efficiently than others. One can go on in finding such apparent anomalies.

These “ism” terms are often used as epithets. Using them frequently clouds rather than clarifies policy discussions. That is why, in teaching and giving talks, I have never used them alone. Using them invites poor argumentation. Someone will argue, “Socialism means A, B, C, D and E. Candidate One advocates B. Therefore that candidate is a socialist and necessarily wants to introduce A, C, D and E. This is the failure that Trump makes in demagoguing Mamdani’s social positions.

It gets even worse. Capitalism means A, L, M, N, O and Z. Candidate Two advocates M and N and therefore also wants extreme fringe positions A and Z. No!

Money-making private enterprises can, do and should exist with some form of public incentivization. Thinking that government should act to ensure broad access to health care for all does not mean one wants complete abolition of all private practice of medicine. Advocating use of emissions taxes or tradeable permits rather than mandating specific pollution control technologies does not mean that one wants to rape the earth. Establishment of government-fostered systems for health, disability and old age benefits does not mean one wants to abolish private property.

Moreover, there are no hard and fast rules linking particular categories of governance to economic systems. Yes, real world communist and fascist regimes had brutal dictators. But Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea had vibrant market economies under one-person rule even though decades passed before they became democracies.

Socialist Norway essentially outlawed private medical care. The post-war socialist government of the Netherlands nationalized the “commanding height” of public transportation down to the level of an inter-village transit system owned by the father of a friend of mine, even though it was only seven small buses. Yet no one can argue that either nation was not a democracy. Ditto for socialist Sweden and the United Kingdom under Labour governments that nationalized railroads, steel, mining, shipbuilding and electricity generation without becoming anti-democratic.

The military government of Brazil, from 1964-1981, was a brutal dictatorship for many years. It also oversaw an economic miracle expansion in iron ore, steel, petroleum, petrochemicals and hydroelectric power, all under government ownership and stemming from central planning. Yet private-sector auto, truck and tractor manufacturing, housing construction and soybean farming burgeoned.

Yes, there was government-directed and subsidized credit for offices and low-income residential construction even as political prisoners were being tortured with repeated rape and with electrical shocks to genitals. The government was military and authoritarian, but there was no cult of personality. Six charisma-free, largely faceless generals succeeded each other quietly with nary one speech to an enthralled crowd.

China under Mao was as complete a communist economy and dictatorship as one could imagine. The state controlled all aspects of people’s public and private lives leading to the near complete neutralization of the individual. Now, contemporary China bursts with private, profit-seeking businesses producing on a prodigious scale and developing world-class new technology at a breakneck pace. Yet governance in China remains firmly in the grip of the Chinese Communist Party with even less of a pro-democracy movement than in the early years of Vladimir Putin’s regime in Russia.

Many Republicans raged at Franklin Roosevelt’s socialistic ventures like Social Security or hydroelectric dams coupled with government-directed economic development on the Tennessee and Columbia rivers and elsewhere. Legislation establishing the Securities and Exchange Commission to regulate practices in financial markets or the National Labor Relations Act that legitimized the organizing of labor unions were deemed socialistic even as democracy was strong.

Many in the Trump administration and some on the Supreme Court now would dial back some government economic roles. Trump Is demanding stakes in private companies like Intel and decreeing all sorts of economic measures. ICE is practicing Soviet-style roundups of immigrants and dissidents. Yet, so far at least, we live in a democracy with a mixed-market economy.

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Two socio-political thinkers, Max Weber and Frances Fukuyama, both now discredited by many, have authored insights on political and economic issues that may be worth revisiting. But that is the subject of another column.

St. Paul economist and writer Edward Lotterman can be reached at stpaul@edlotterman.com.

Vikings picks: ‘Experts’ evenly split on Sunday’s game vs. Ravens

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Pioneer Press staffers who cover the Vikings take a stab at predicting Sunday’s outcome against the Baltimore Ravens at the Bank:

DANE MIZUTANI

Ravens 27, Vikings 24: Lamar Jackson almost never loses to the NFC. He boasts an incredible 24-3 record against the conference in his career. His singular skill set will be a little bit too much for the Vikings this weekend.

JACE FREDERICK

Ravens 24, Vikings 17: Which of these two teams do you truly believe is “back” after a rough start? Probably safer to side with the MVP quarterback.

JOHN SHIPLEY

Vikings 31, Ravens 30: There is a narrative out there that says Lamar Jackson and the Ravens are still an AFC power. They’re 3-5. The Vikings are chuffed after a solid win at Detroit, but both teams are fighting for relevance, and reality is about to set in for one.

CHARLEY WALTERS

Vikings 24, Ravens 21: The Vikings were supposed to lose in Detroit last week, and they won. They’re supposed to lose in Minneapolis this week, too, but J.J. McCarthy shows what heart can do.

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Nolan Finley: Reagan ad reminder of what we’re missing

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The best thing about the Canadians’ use of a Ronald Reagan video to taunt President Donald Trump’s trade policies is that it exposes the 54% of today’s Americans who weren’t alive during the Reagan presidency to what a real conservative sounds like.

I was in another room when I first heard the commercial featuring Reagan’s voice coming from the television. I rushed to answer the siren’s song, pulling me back to a better time and place.

Listening to President Reagan make the case for free trade evoked a wave of warm nostalgia. I don’t care if his words were rearranged by the Canadians or even if Reagan’s record on trade didn’t always match his rhetoric. It was still wistful to hear a president espouse policy grounded in the clear principles of free markets, free minds and free men that once defined the conservative movement.

Reagan spoke of those convictions with reason and the confidence that sticking to them would benefit all Americans. Hearing Reagan’s voice and seeing him sitting at his desk in an everyman’s flannel shirt reminded me of how much we’re missing that sort of steadiness and strength in politics.

It prompted me to search the Internet for more of his speeches and think about how base our political discourse has become in the years since he left the White House.

Reagan employed self-deprecation over self-aggrandizement to endear himself to his listeners. His jabs at his opponents were wrapped in humor, rather than crude insults and name-calling. He let his accomplishments speak for themselves, rather than engaging in incessant braggadocio. There was no meanness about him.

In 1980, when Reagan became the first president to campaign on the promise to “Make America Great Again,” it was taken as a rallying cry for Americans to unite to pull the nation out of its malaise. Today, those same words are a battle cry to separate Americans.

Reagan didn’t spend his eight years in office blaming his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, for the mess he inherited. During the campaign, the harshest words he leveled at Carter were, “There you go again.” Reagan understood that to be respected, a president must behave respectfully. He exuded decency and dignity, even when under attack.

The anti-tariffs ad from the Canadians was designed to push Trump’s button. And he went off as expected, announcing a new round of tariffs on our neighbor and, in the process, giving lie to his claim that his levies are a response to an economic and fentanyl emergency. They aren’t. They’re a cudgel to punish his enemies and reward those who grovel at his feet.

Vindictiveness is not a conservative virtue. Neither is building monuments to your own ego. Real conservatives have accepted the mantle of conserving the nation’s founding principles and institutions. Today’s conservatives-in-name-only tear them down to enable their shortcuts around the rulebook.

The lineage of Ronald Reagan’s conservative philosophy, with its firm belief in constrained government, stretches back to James Madison and Thomas Jefferson. They wouldn’t recognize the brand of conservatism being practiced today.

A YouGov poll from earlier this year found 57% of Americans believe the Reagan era was the country’s best in terms of quality of life.

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That’s what happens when a nation chooses principled leaders instead of bullies and buffoons.

Nolan Finley is editorial page editor of the Detroit News.

Readers and writers: Enjoy these ghosts brought to you by Minnesota novelists

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It’s dark at 5 p.m. now that we’re done with daylight saving, so it’s a good time to read two novels by Minnesotans that feature ghosts, one who won’t stop talking and one who is fading away. These are so worthy of your TBA pile.

(Book Fluent)

“The Butcher and the Liar”: by S.L. Woeppel (Books Fluent, $21.99)

Marina would often ask me why she had to die. She never expected me to have an answer. She just liked to talk. But I probably should have told her right away, right after it happened. It would have explained why it was me she was forced to stay with — another question she often asked… she still didn’t know I washed her blood from a cooler in the Missouri River. — from “The Butcher and the Liar”

S.L. Woeppel (Book Fluent)

Daisy Belton is 9 when she discovers her father, a butcher and serial killer, cutting up the body of his latest victim. He isn’t surprised to see Daisy and makes her his accomplice by “going fishing” to flush the woman’s remains into the river. Her name is Marina and her spirit will be with Daisy for years, a reminder that Daisy has kept her father’s secret and her part in the crime.

This genre-jumping, involving novel is part magical realism, part psychological thriller, part romance and part coming-of-age for a girl who has seen too much. Like her father, adult Daisy is both a butcher and a liar.

The story begins in 2015 when 35-year-old Daisy returns to her hometown of Hellene, Neb., to watch the last auction at a cattle market where she and her friend Caleb Garcia spent hours as kids sitting on the catwalk and listening to the auctioneer. The narrative moves between Daisy’s childhood and 2015 when she owns her own butcher shop in partnership with Miles, who is like a brother to her.

In the childhood chapters, Daisy has a cold relationship with her father after she learns his secrets, but she lets him show her how to be a butcher. Somehow, Woeppel makes these scenes almost lyrical as Daisy is shown how to use the knives and put on chainmail gloves so she doesn’t cut herself while stripping meat from the bones.

In the chapters of Daisy as an adult, she is still having conversations with the dead Marina, who is sometimes Daisy’s conscience, sometimes her adviser on relationships. Daisy’s efforts to find Marina’s family in Croatia are touching and successful.

A constant presence is Caleb, even after he and Daisy haven’t seen one another for years. He knows she has a secret about why she never is in a committed relationship but doesn’t press for details.

Although this bare outline of the novel seems grim, it is laced with humor and a tenderness for the characters, who show us how guilt and childhood trauma can shape an adult’s life.

Woeppel grew up in Nebraska a few blocks from a cattle market. Her debut novel “Flipping the Birdie,” a superhero romance, won the $5,000 BookLife fiction prize presented by BookLife and Publishers Weekly.

“The Butcher and the Liar” is an independently published novel (which we used to call self-published), and it shows how far this form of publishing has come in the past few decades. It is getting great reviews from publications such as Kirkus Reviews, which called it “haunting and inventive.”

“Come Back, I Love You (A Ghost Story)”: by Kathleen Novak (Regal House Publishing, $19.95)

Minnesota author Kathleen Novak launches her new novel “Come Back, I Love You” on Nov. 12, 2025, at Magers & Quinn, Minneapolis. (Regal House Publishing)

That’s when I notice Bo is standing where he should have been sitting and Franny Hale is hovering in the spot I just left. She is so vague this time, ill-defined and transparent. And her transparency has color, like sky after rain, a pale and golden pink. Bo is transfixed by her. — from “Come Back, I Love You”

The ghost in Kathleen Novak’s new novel is gentle and quiet, but she wants something from Floria, who has moved into a 100-year-old little cottage on an “ancient lake” that seems to be Lake Superior. The narrator, whose name is not Floria, tells us little about herself except that she was married, lived for a while in a high-ceilinged apartment, and wanted a life of quiet. She keeps the paintings on the cottage walls that she learns were done by Franny Hale, the woman who lived there almost her entire life. Later, she finds sketches hidden in a catalog of a man who visited Franny while her husband was away at war.

Floria makes friends with her elderly, lively neighbor Mavis and her dog. The women bond over their love of the lake in all its moods. Floria (a name she’s taken from the lead character in the opera “Tosca”) tells Maeve about how Franny’s pictures are sometimes tilted and there are other manifestations of her presence. Does Franny want Floria to do something? Franny appears only a few times, getting more wispy each time. She seems happy when Floria plants a garden with the help of Bo, a long-legged, smart handyman who does repairs on the cottage.

Floria’s first summer in the cottage is glorious as she and Mavis watch activity on the lake and marvel over their good luck at living in such a place. But things turn when Mavis is hospitalized and moved to a nursing facility. Floria brings her flowers and fresh berries, but it is never the same. And Bo, with whom Floria has hoped to have a relationship, leaves for a year to live in the South.

So the title of this story, told by Floria in a no-nonsense voice, could have many meanings. Who should come back? Who is loved? Is it Mavis? Bo? Franny the ghost? Floria’s big Italian family about whom she often thinks? The lake?

It’s all of them, and the interesting part is that their intertwined stories do not end. Floria continues living in her beloved cottage, waiting for the next chapter in her life on the lake. We don’t know what happens to the other characters.

Novak is a poet and Minnesota Book Award finalist for “Do Not Find Me.” Its companion is “The Autobiography of Corrine Bernard.” Her historical novel “Steel” won the Northeastern Minnesota Book Award for best fiction of 2022.

She will launch “Come Back, I Love You” at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.

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