Economic
and social system in which all (or nearly all) property and resources are
collectively owned by a classless society and not by individual citizens. Based
on the 1848 publication 'Communist Manifesto' by two German political
philosophers, Karl Marx (1818-1883) and his close associate Friedrich Engels
(1820-1895), it envisaged common ownership of all land and capital and
withering away of the coercive power of the state. In such a society, social
relations were to be regulated on the fairest of all principles: from each
according to his ability, to each according to his needs. Differences between
manual and intellectual labor and between rural and urban life were to
disappear, opening up the way for unlimited development of human potential. In
view of the above, there has never been a truly communist state although the
Soviet Union of the past and China, Cuba, and North Korea of today stake their
claims. See also Marxism and Socialism.