When Varga introduced the theory, orthodox Stalinist economists attacked it as incompatible with the doctrine that state planning was a feature only of socialism, and that "under capitalism anarchy of production reigns." Critics of the theory (e.g.,
Ernest Mandel and
Leo Kofler) claimed that: • the theory wrongly implied that the state could somehow
overrule inter-capitalist
competition, the laws of motion of capitalism and market forces generally, supposedly cancelling out the operation of the
law of value. • the theory lacked any sophisticated account of the
class basis of the
state, and the real linkages between governments and elites. It postulated a monolithic structure of
domination which in reality did not exist in that way. • the theory failed to explain the rise of
neo-liberal ideology in the business class, which claims precisely that an important social goal should be a
reduction of the state's influence in the economy. However, neoliberalism does not oppose making states subservient to the aims of large corporations, in what is known as
government-granted monopoly. • the theory failed to show clearly what the difference was between a
socialist state and a
bourgeois state, except that in a socialist state, the Communist Party (or, rather, its central committee) played the leading political role. In that case, the
class-content of the state itself was defined purely in terms of the policy of the ruling political party (or its central committee). == See also ==