As a Trotzkyst, I would point out two things. 1) I find that the likes of Lenin and Luxemburg tended to reduce issues of social transformation to the economy much less that Bernstein, who thought it possible to enact a transition to socialism through economic parliamentary reforms without a political (and violent) counterattack from the bourgeoisie. 2) I think that it's no coincidence that social democracies are (or were) an institutional reality in the Global North only.
As a Trotzkyst, I would point out two things. 1) I find that the likes of Lenin and Luxemburg tended to reduce issues of social transformation to the economy much less that Bernstein, who thought it possible to enact a transition to socialism through economic parliamentary reforms without a political (and violent) counterattack from the bourgeoisie. 2) I think that it's no coincidence that social democracies are (or were) an institutional reality in the Global North only.