Question:

Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.

This confusion concerns nothing less than the concept of socialism itself. It may mean, and is often used to describe, merely the ideals of social justice, greater equality and security which are the ultimate aims of socialism. But it means also the particular method by which most socialists hope to attain these ends and which many competent people regard as the only methods by which they can be fully and quickly attained. In this sense socialism means the abolition of private enterprise, of private ownership of the means of production, and the creation of a system of "planned economy" in which the entrepreneur working for profit is replaced by a central planning body. There are many people who call themselves socialists although they care only about the first, who fervently believe in those ultimate aims of socialism but neither care nor understand how they can be achieved, and who are merely certain they must be achieved, whatever the cost. But to nearly all those to whom socialism is not merely a hope but an object of practical politics, the characteristic methods of modern socialism are as essential as the ends themselves. Most people, on the other hand, who value the ultimate ends of socialism no less than the socialists, refuse to support socialism because of the dangers to other values they see in the methods proposed by the socialists. The dispute about socialism has thus become largely a dispute about means and not about ends-although the question whether the different ends of socialism can be simultaneously achieved is also involved. This would be enough to create confusion. And the confusion has been further increased by the common practice of denying that those who repudiate the means value the ends. But this is not all. The situation is still more complicated by the fact that the same means, the "economic planning" which is the prime instrument for socialist reform, can be used for many other purposes. We must centrally direct economic activity if we want to make the distribution of income conform to current ideas of social justice. "Planning", therefore, is wanted by all those who demand that "production for use" be substituted for production for profit. But such planning is no less indispensable if the distribution of incomes is to be regulated in a way which to us appears to be the opposite of just. Whether we should wish that more of the good things of this world should go to some racial elite, the Nordic men, or the members of a party or an aristocracy, the methods which we shall have to employ are the same as those which could ensure an equalitarian distribution. It may, perhaps, seem unfair to use the term socialism to describe its methods rather than its aims, to use for a particular method a term which for many people stand for an ultimate ideal. It is probably preferable to describe the methods which can be used for a great variety of ends as collectivism and to regard socialism as a species of that genus. Yet, although to most socialists only one species of collectivism will represent true socialism, it must always be remembered that socialism is a species of collectivism and that therefore everything which is true for collectivism as such must apply to socialism. Nearly all the points which are disputed between socialists and liberals concerns the methods common to all forms of collectivism and not the particular ends for which the socialists want to use them; and all the consequences with which we shall be concerned in this book follow from the methods of collectivism irrespective of the ends for which they are used. It must also not be forgotten that socialism is not only by far the most important species of collectivism or "planning"; but that it is socialism which has persuaded liberal-minded people to submit once more to that regimentation of economic life which they had overthrown because, in the words of Adam Smith, it puts governments in a position where "to support themselves they are obliged to be oppressive and tyrannical".



Amongst the options below, the one that best captures the ideology being advocated by the author is:

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The author backs socialism's goals but resists forced central planning; match that combination to the ideology name.
Updated On: Jul 13, 2026
  • Fascism
  • Democratic socialism
  • Marxism
  • Fabian socialism
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The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

This question asks which named ideology best matches the position the passage's author actually holds. The author accepts socialism's stated aims, justice, equality, security, but strongly objects to the classic collectivist method of full central planning and warns it risks turning into an "oppressive and tyrannical" government. This combination, sharing socialism's goals while resisting its most coercive, revolutionary methods, is the definition of democratic socialism, which pursues social and economic reform through gradual, democratic means rather than forced central control.

  1. Fascism: Fascism centres on an authoritarian, nationalist state controlling both economy and society by force. The author explicitly warns against this kind of concentrated, oppressive power, so fascism is the opposite of what the author supports.
  2. Democratic socialism: This matches. It keeps socialism's goals of fairness and equality but seeks them without the totalising, forced collectivisation the author criticizes, working instead through democratic and gradual means.
  3. Marxism: Marxism calls for full abolition of private ownership of the means of production and revolutionary central control, which is exactly the method the passage treats with suspicion, not endorsement.
  4. Fabian socialism: Fabian socialism does favour gradual reform, which is close in spirit, but it still leans heavily on state planning and nationalisation as the main tool, closer to the collectivist method the author is wary of than the passage's cautious, means-skeptical tone suggests.

The passage's author supports socialism's ends while resisting its coercive planned-economy methods, which is the hallmark of democratic socialism, so this option is correct.

Let's summarize:

  • The author accepts socialism's aims but distrusts its usual collectivist methods.
  • Fascism and Marxism both rely on the kind of concentrated central control the passage warns against.
  • Democratic socialism best matches an ideology that keeps the goals while softening the coercive method.

So the correct answer is democratic socialism.

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