Vol 9No 2–3

Fall 2025
  • Bhaskar Sunkara
  • Mike Beggs
  • Ben Burgis

The Plans That Failed

Soviet-style planning delivered rapid industrial growth but collapsed under chronic shortages, bad incentives, and political sclerosis. Even partial market reforms, like Hungary’s New Economic Mechanism, could not overcome the system’s structural flaws. Socialism’s future lies in marrying democratic control and social ownership with the allocative power of markets.

  • Carlo V. Fiorio
  • Simon Mohun
  • Roberto Veneziani

Social Democracy and the Class Struggle

According to many on the Left, the set of feasible income distributions within a capitalist economy is tightly constrained by capitalists’ control over investment. Our empirical analysis of the postwar US economy raises significant doubts about this view. Class struggle and the power resources of the working class can affect the long-run distribution of incomes between classes.

  • Aziz Z. Huq

The Courts and American Capitalism

A functional analysis of the Supreme Court as a node within a larger project of hegemonic preservation, this essay clarifies the nature of judicial power and recalibrates the terms of the court reform debate by bringing it into conversation with a longer tradition of left theory.

  • Nivedita Majumdar

Writing the Climate Crisis

This essay examines how cultural theory displaces capitalism in its accounts of the climate crisis. Contrasting Amitav Ghosh’s Gun Island with Matt Haig’s The Life Impossible, I argue that their differing approaches reveal what much cultural analysis leaves unexamined: the structural ties between ecological breakdown and global capital.

  • Steve Fraser

The New Popular Front

The ascendancy of the authoritarian right has generated a counterreaction on the part of the Left to restore the Popular Front that once confronted fascism. Although often led by the socialist left, the Popular Front was the vanguard of the movement to democratize capitalism rather than abolish it. Is recreating such a front the only or best way to confront the threat of fascism today?

  • Donatella Della Porta

What’s Wrong With the German Left?

Far from intervening responsibly against the Israeli genocide, the German left has fallen in with the German state in suppressing dissent and backing Israel. This cannot be attributed to historical memory or political miscalculation. Its gross participation in ginning up moral panic around spurious accusations of antisemitism is rather an extraordinary abdication of its moral duty.

  • Tom Devenny

From Momentum to Your Party

The rightward slide of the Labour Party under the leadership of Keir Starmer is one of the most remarkable developments of the past few years. His tight grip on power and his excision of several key left-wing members have raised questions about the future of the Left both inside and outside the organization. In this context, the sudden announcement of a new political party by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana provides an opportunity to take stock of the British left, not just today but in the recent past. Catalyst interviewed Tom Devenny, an official in the British trade union movement and a former member of Momentum.

  • Matt T. Huber
  • Fred Stafford
  • Leigh Phillips

The Left Has Always Fought for Abundance

The Left once promised plenty for all. Now liberals call for abundance while socialists hesitate and environmentalists shudder. The NGO-industrial complex these liberals target is indeed a fetter on production that must be broken, but so is the profitability demanded by capital. Socialism needs abundance, and abundance also needs socialism.

Review

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Culture Can’t Explain the Arab Revolts

Violence and Representation in the Arab Uprising shows how the Arab revolts empowered democratic citizenship. But a focus on vibrant cultural creativity is no substitute for concrete analysis of political agency and economic structure.