Debunking Classic Socialist Paper on Quality of Life.
  I’ve seen  the 1985 Cereseto Waitzkin paper  frequently over the years but this bilge got dropped on me here twice  in one day. It claims the physical quality of life was better in  socialist countries than capitalist. Prima facie absurd, as we have all  seen pictures of grey socialist countries and their unsmiling denizens  in the previous previous decade’s clothing, and we are all aware the  hundreds of news stories of those who hazarded death to escape them,  while there were only a handful of defectors risking nothing going vice  versa.
  The partial-multivariate  analysis in the study doesn’t include the US and in fact excises the  data from all capitalist countries more successful than  upper-middle-income, e.g., Trinidad and Tobago, with the spurious  rationale that you can only judge capitalism vs. socialism by comparing  countries with the exact same levels of economic development in 1983  (appendix A). I had been debunking this paper by pointing out   pretending the West doesn't exist in order to make a case for socialism  is dirty pool. Or that they count Soviet Bloc Western countries with  heavy capitalist infrastructure as socialist offering no credit where  credit was due. Or that the USSR had been around 60 years and Israel and  Singapore had achieved more despite being so much younger. Or that even  with all the partisan slant, the scores were still pretty similar.
  It  was already a very discreditable study, but my recent encounters made  me take a closer look. Cereseto and Waitzkin count all these utterly  destitute countries as capitalist when they had socialist and Marxist  totalitarian leaders. Somalia was under Marxist–Leninist military  dictatorship from Major Gen. Barre, Zaire was run by anti-capitalist  military dictator Mobutu, Mali had totalitarian Gen. Moussa Traoré’s  Marx-inspired democratic centralism, Colonel Jean-Baptiste Bagaza was  Burundi’s African socialist dictator, Upper Volta endured the Marxist  Sankara, who changed the name to Burkina Faso, Julius Nyerere ruled  Tanzania under African socialism which he called Ujamaa, Touré was the  African socialist leader of Guinea, Benin’s leader for 19 years was a  Marxist–Leninist named Kérékou, Gaafar Nimeiry was head of the Sudanese  Socialist Union, Senegal had socialist Abdou Diouf in charge in 1983,  and Central African Republic and Sierra Leone was run by democratic  socialists. That’s only the lowest income group and some countries’  Wikipedia pages did not have an immediately discernible 1983 polity.
  The  Cereseto and Waitzkin paper has been used as evidence of socialist  superiority dozens of times in my own long experience on Reddit, has  been cited hundreds of times on JSTOR and NCBI, and it’s a total fraud.
  reddit.com |