
“Socialism without public ownership is nothing but a fantastic apology.”
The Daily Herald, 1956.
1950s
Property (1935)
Context: In three ways unemployment would be reduced. First... by greater equalization of purchasing power and consequent stimulus in the form of effective demand. Second, by utilizing the national credit and socialized industries for the creation of new industries and the extension of existing ones.... Social ownership and operation of the basic industries, and especially socialized banking and credit, would greatly facilitate the task of shifting the masses of unemployed into productive channels. Third, if necessary, by shortening working hours and dividing the available work among all the people.
“Socialism without public ownership is nothing but a fantastic apology.”
The Daily Herald, 1956.
1950s
1990s, Speech to the Council for National Policy (1997)
“Finance and industry must be socialized somehow.”
If we refuse to do it from the bottom we shall have to do it from the top, and doing it from the top means the emergence of many Prussias — with wars upon wars.
Henry Gantt cited in: Leon Pratt Alford (1934) Henry Laurence Gantt, leader in industry. p. 265. Highlighted section quoted in: Henry Mintzberg (1994) The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning. p. 169.
The Labour Party in Perspective (Left Book Club, 1937), p. 15.
1930s
“The basic point-of-view is that science is a social process.”
Source: Talking Science: Language, Learning, and Values. 1990, p. xi
Source: Mind, Self, and Society. 1934, p. 1
“A basic contradiction between socialism and the market economy does not exist.”
As quoted in Daily report: People's Republic of China, Editions 240-249 (1993), p. 30
Interview, Time, 4 November 1985.
Variant: There are no fundamental contradictions between a socialist system and a market economy.