Vale Bruce MacFarlane
Written by: Central Committee, CPA (M-L) on 24 December 2022
Australian Marxist economist Bruce Macfarlane (born 1936) passed away on Sunday December 11 in Christchurch, NZ, aged 86.
Bruce was an outstanding example of an academic who used Marxist political economy to critique contemporary capitalist society.
In his youth he was given his first Marxist text, Socialism: Utopian and Scientific by his father, a member of the Communist Party of Australia.
Bruce opposed the US War of Aggression Against Vietnam and had his first arrest at a demonstration in Canberra against the visit by pro-Hitler dictator of South Vietnam Air Vice-Marshall Ky in January 1967. Protests against US imperialism saw Bruce arrested on several other occasions. He was an early supporter in Australia of the South Vietnamese National Liberation Front, arguing its case in the University of NSW student paper Tharunka in August 1965. He became organising secretary of the Vietnam Moratorium Committee in the ACT.
Bruce graduated from the University of Sydney, and worked at Cambridge University with Joan Robinson and Maurice Dobb. He held a number of posts at various Australian universities.
Despite his grounding in Marxist theory, MacFarlane turned his energies to advocacy of reform, rather than of revolution. In 1968, he published Economic Policy in Australia, The Case for Reform, directed against control of the economy by US corporations. It used Marxist economic theories, but not Marxist or Leninist political and ideological teachings. Yet he targeted the main enemy of the working class and its allies, arming them with knowledge of its crimes here and overseas. His extraordinarily prolific writings on contemporary imperialism were always concise, useful and insightful.
In 1970, he co-authored The Chinese Road to Socialism with colleague Ted Wheelwright, a sympathetic account of the developing struggle against the capitalist roaders at the start of the Great Proletarian Socialist Revolution.
Bruce contributed to a number of progressive journals including that of the Society for the Study of Labour History, the Journal of Contemporary Asia, and the Journal of Australian Political Economy.
We have said that Bruce did not embrace our understanding of Marxism-Leninism. But neither was he disdainful of the work done by Communist activists. He did not stand in their way, was never sectarian in his dealings with others and continued to explain and oppose capitalism, giving ammunition to the revolutionary movement until his final days. As a socialist, he supported Australian anti-imperialist independence and sovereignty.
There are intellectuals who have a pretend commitment to the cause of the working class, and intellectuals who remain attached to it throughout their lifetime. Bruce belonged to the latter category.
Bruce MacFarlane hated capitalism and opposed US imperialism all his life. In doing so he always served the working class and its allies.
Print Version - new window Email article
-----
Go back
Articles
| TRUMP’S WAR ON IRAN WILL HURT AUSTRALIAN AGRICULTURE |
| The Ever-Increasing Foreign Ownership of Australian Agriculture |
| Reflections on the movement to oppose the war against Iran |
| Learn from the revolutionary spirit of Comrade Zheng Huilu |
| Workers' struggles in Australia intensify - make the rich pay |
| ICOR Statement: The U.S.’s Murderous Oil Embargo Against Cuba |
| Zionism: regional expansion in pursuit of a Greater Israel |
| Book Review: If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies: The Case Against Superintelligent AI by Eliezer Yudkowsky and Nate Soares |
| Solidarity with the Revolutionary Socialists in Turkey |
| Anti-War Protestors Invade Premier Malinauskas' Electoral Office |
| The significance of Diego Garcia for the US |
| International Working Women’s Day spotlights dangerous women on opposite sides |
| No matter how much poison they try to feed us, people’s culture rises like fresh water from a spring |
| Cyprus - Occupation Sustains Empire: Stand Against All Colonizers and Foreign Militaries |
| Picketing the International Women’s Day breakfast |
| Adelaide rally demands “Hands Off Iran!” |
| Women Still Hold Up Half the Sky |
| Iran: the enemy of my enemy is not necessarily my friend |
| KPMG corporate off-shoring: more than meets the eye |
| Union elections - an opportunity for workers to have their say |
-----
