Significant Paragraphs from Progress
and Poverty
by Henry George
with An Appreciation by John
Dewey
Harry Gunnison Brown's
Preface
Contents
An Appreciation of
Henry George: John Dewey
Selections from Progress and Poverty:
1. The Problem
2. Poverty Not
Due to Over-Population
3. Land Rent Grows as
Community Develops
4. Land Speculation Causes Reduced Wages
5. The Basic Cause of Poverty
6. The Remedy
7. Simplicity of Method of Introducing Remedy
8. Why a Land-Value Tax is bettter than an Equal Tax
on All Property
9. Alleged Difficulty of Distinguishing Land from
Improvements
10. Effect of Remedy upon Wealth Production
11. Effect of Remedy upon the Sharing of Wealth
12. Effect of Remedy upon Various Economic Classes
13. Effect of Remedy upon Social Ideals
14. Liberty, and Equality of Opportunity
15. The Cross of a New Crusade
Appendix: Opinions of Some Leading American
Economists
"Significant Paragraphs" is an
abridgement, intended for use in college survey
courses. This version cross-references the material
omitted from SP, via links that are right-justified.
Occasionally, paragraphs are abridged; links below
will take you to the unabridged version. After you've
read Significant Paragraphs, you may want to explore
the omitted material; much of it is very inspiring,
and must have been difficult for Brown to omit!
If you are going to print it out, you might prefer
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|
Harry Gunnison Brown's Preface to Brown's abridgement
("Significant Paragraphs")
of Henry George's book, Progress and
Poverty
Probably no other writer has ever made the study of
economics so interesting to so many readers as has Henry
George. And now, when more and more economists of national
and international reputation are coming to endorse the main
idea for which Henry George stood, it is almost
preposterous, as well as unfair to students of economics,
that they should be assigned no reading on this idea other
than the inadequate account of it and the superficial'
adverse criticism which are all that some of the most
widely used current texts in economics — and even in
public finance — contain.
But there has been a real difficulty even for
instructors most anxious that their students should have
the case for bare-land-value taxation fairly presented to
them. The complete Progress and Poverty from which
these selections are made would take more time than most
teachers might wish to devote to a single topic in
economics, whatever its importance.
The paragraphs here printed have been selected so as to
present in brief compass the essentials of Henry George's
argument in his own eloquent and inimitable style. Only
such slight textual changes have been made as seemed
necessary to preserve continuity. In almost any course in
economics can be found space for the few assignments
necessary to cover these selected paragraphs, and any class
can be asked to meet the trifling incident expense. Thus
might be given a new zest and renewed enthusiasm to the
students whose sometimes waning interest in the categories
and laws of economics is a recurrent discouragement to
their instructors.
It is hoped, too, that many who are not in school or
college, but who should know and really desire to know
something of the economic philosophy of Henry George, will
spare for that purpose the very few hours necessary to read
this little book.
Harry Gunnison Brown,
University of Missouri,
Columbia, Mo
1. The Problem |
source: Introductory: The Problem,
pages 3-9 |
Could a Franklin or a Priestley have
seen, in a vision of the future, the steamship taking
the place of the sailing vessel, the railroad train
of the wagon, the reaping machine of the scythe, the
threshing machine of the flail;
- could he have heard the throb of the engines
that in obedience to human will, and for the
satisfaction of human desire, exert a power
greater than that of all the men and all the
beasts of burden of the earth combined;
- could he have seen the forest tree
transformed into finished lumber — into
doors, sashes, blinds, boxes or barrels, with
hardly the touch of a human hand; the great
workshops where boots and shoes are turned out by
the case with less labor than the old-fashioned
cobbler could have put on a sole; the factories
where, under the eye of a girl, cotton becomes
cloth faster than hundreds of stalwart weavers
could have turned it out with their
hand-looms;
- could he have seen steam hammers shaping
mammoth shafts and mighty anchors, and delicate
machinery making tiny watches; the diamond drill
cutting through the heart of the rocks, and coal
oil sparing the whale;
- could he have realized the enormous saving of
labor resulting from improved facilities of
exchange and communication — sheep killed
in Australia eaten fresh in England and the order
given by the London banker in the afternoon
executed in San Francisco in the morning of the
same day;
- could he have conceived of the
hundred thousand improvements which these only
suggest, what would he have inferred as to the
social condition of mankind?
It would not have seemed like an
inference; further than the vision went it would have
seemed as though he saw; and his heart would have
leaped and his nerves would have thrilled, as one who
from a height beholds just ahead of the
thirst-stricken caravan the living gleam of rustling
woods and the glint of laughing waters. Plainly, in
the sight of the imagination,
- he would have beheld these new forces elevating
society from its very foundations, lifting the very
poorest above the possibility of want, exempting
the very lowest from anxiety for the material needs
of life;
- he would have seen these slaves of the lamp of
knowledge taking on themselves the traditional
curse, these muscles of iron and sinews of steel
making the poorest laborer's life a holiday, in
which every high quality and noble impulse could
have scope to grow.
And out of these bounteous material
conditions he would have seen arising, as necessary
sequences, moral conditions realizing the golden age
of which mankind always dreamed.
- Youth no longer stunted and starved;
- age no longer harried by avarice;
- the child at play with the tiger;
- the man with the muck-rake drinking in the
glory of the stars!
- Foul things fled, fierce things tame;
- discord turned to harmony!
For how could there be greed where all
had enough? How could the vice, the crime, the
ignorance, the brutality, that spring from poverty
and the fear of poverty, exist where poverty had
vanished? Who should crouch where all were freemen;
who oppress where all were peers?
More or less vague or clear, these
have been the hopes, these the dreams born of the
improvements which give this wonderful century its
preeminence. They have sunk so deeply into the
popular mind as to radically change the currents of
thought, to recast creeds and displace the most
fundamental conceptions. The haunting visions of
higher possibilities have not merely gathered
splendor and vividness, but their direction has
changed — instead of seeing behind the faint
tinges of an expiring sunset, all the glory of the
daybreak has decked the skies before.
It is true that disappointment has
followed disappointment, and that discovery upon
discovery, and invention after invention, have
neither lessened the toil of those who most need
respite, nor brought plenty to the poor. But there
have been so many things to which it seemed this
failure could be laid, that up to our time the new
faith has hardly weakened. We have better appreciated
the difficulties to be overcome; but not the less
trusted that the tendency of the times was to
overcome them.
Now, however, we are coming into
collision with facts which there can be no mistaking.
From all parts of the civilized world come
complaints
- of industrial depression;
- of labor condemned to involuntary
idleness;
- of capital massed and wasting;
- of pecuniary distress among business
men;
- of want and suffering and anxiety among the
working classes.
All the dull, deadening pain, all the
keen, maddening anguish, that to great masses of men
are involved in the words "hard times," have
afflicted the world. This state of things,
common to communities differing so widely in
situation, in political institutions, in fiscal and
financial systems, in density of population and in
social organization can hardly be accounted for by
local causes.
- There is distress where large standing armies
are maintained, but there is also distress where
the standing armies are nominal;
- there is distress where protective tariffs
stupidly and wastefully hamper trade, but there
is also distress where trade is nearly free;
- there is distress where autocratic government
yet prevails, but there is also distress where
political power is wholly in the hands of the
people;
- in countries where paper is money, and
- in countries where gold and silver are the
only currency.
Evidently, beneath all such things as
these, we must infer a common cause.
That there is a common cause, and that
it is either what we call material progress or
something closely connected with material progress,
becomes more than an inference when it is noted that
the phenomena we class together and speak of as
industrial depression are but intensifications of
phenomena which always accompany material progress,
and which show themselves more clearly and strongly
as material progress goes on.
It has always been to the newer
countries — that is, to the countries where
material progress is yet in its earlier stages
— that laborers have emigrated in search of
higher wages, and capital has flowed in search of
higher interest. It is in the older countries —
that is to say, the countries where material progress
has reached later stages — that widespread
destitution is found in the midst of the greatest
abundance. Go into a new community where Anglo-Saxon
vigor is just beginning the race of progress;
- where the machinery of production and
exchange is yet rude and inefficient;
- where the increment of wealth is not yet
great enough to enable any class to live in ease
and luxury;
- where the best house is but a cabin of logs
or a cloth and paper shanty, and the richest man
is forced to daily work —
and though you will find an absence of
wealth and all its concomitants, you will find no
beggars. There is no luxury, but there is no
destitution. No one makes an easy living, nor a very
good living; but every one can make a living, and no one able and
willing to work is oppressed by the fear of want.
But just as such a community
realizes the conditions which all civilized
communities are striving for, and advances in the
scale of material progress — just as closer
settlement and a more intimate connection with the
rest of the world, and greater utilization of
labor-saving machinery, make possible greater
economies in production and exchange, and wealth in
consequence increases, not merely in the aggregate,
but in proportion to population — so does
poverty take a darker aspect. Some get an
infinitely better and easier living, but others find
it hard to get a living at all. The "tramp" comes
with the locomotive, and almshouses and prisons are
as surely the marks of "material progress" as are
costly dwellings, rich warehouses, and magnificent
churches. Upon streets lighted with gas and patrolled
by uniformed policemen, beggars wait for the
passer-by, and in the shadow of college, and library,
and museum, are gathering the more hideous Huns and
fiercer Vandals of whom Macaulay prophesied.
This fact — the great fact that
poverty and all its concomitants show themselves in
communities just as they develop into the conditions
towards which material progress tends — proves
that the social difficulties existing wherever a
certain stage of progress has been reached, do not
arise from local circumstances, but are, in some way
or another, engendered by progress itself.
And, unpleasant as it may be to admit
it, it is at last becoming evident that the
enormous increase in productive power which has
marked the present century and is still going on with
accelerating ratio, has no tendency to extirpate
poverty or to lighten the burdens of those compelled
to toil. It simply widens the gulf between
Dives
and Lazarus, and makes the struggle for existence
more intense. The march of invention has clothed
mankind with powers of which a century ago the
boldest imagination could not have dreamed. But
- in factories where labor-saving machinery has
reached its most wonderful development, little
children are at work;
- wherever the new forces are anything like
fully utilized, large classes are maintained by
charity or live on the verge of recourse to
it;
- amid the greatest accumulations of wealth,
men die of starvation, and puny infants suckle
dry breasts;
- while everywhere the greed of gain, the
worship of wealth, shows the force of the fear of
want.
The promised land flies before us like
the mirage. The fruits of the tree of knowledge turn
as we grasp them to apples of Sodom that crumble at
the touch.
It is true that wealth has been
greatly increased, and that the average of comfort,
leisure, and refinement has been raised; but these
gains are not general. In them the
lowest class do not share. I do not mean that the
condition of the lowest class has nowhere nor in
anything been improved; but that there is nowhere any
improvement which can be credited to increased
productive power. I mean that the tendency of what
we call material progress is in no wise to improve
the condition of the lowest class in the essentials
of healthy, happy human life. Nay, more, that it
is to still further depress the condition of the
lowest class. The new forces, elevating in their
nature though they be, do not act upon the social
fabric from underneath, as was for a long time hoped
and believed, but strike it at a point intermediate
between top and bottom. It is as though an
immense wedge were being forced, not underneath
society, but through society. Those who are above the
point of separation are elevated, but those who are
below are crushed down.
This depressing effect is not
generally realized, for it is not apparent where
there has long existed a class just able to live.
Where the lowest class barely lives, as has been the
case for a long time in many parts of Europe, it is
impossible for it to get any lower, for the next
lowest step is out of existence, and no tendency to
further depression can readily show itself. But in
the progress of new settlements to the conditions of
older communities it may clearly be seen that
material progress does not merely fail to relieve
poverty — it actually produces it.
|
[omitted material, p
9-10]
|
source: The Problem,
p. 10 |
This
association of poverty with progress is the great
enigma of our times.
- It is the central fact from which spring
industrial, social, and political difficulties
that perplex the world, and with which
statesmanship and philanthropy and education
grapple in vain.
- From it come the clouds that overhang the
future of the most progressive and self-reliant
nations.
- It is the riddle which the Sphinx of Fate
puts to our civilization, and which not to answer
is to be destroyed.
So long as all the increased wealth
which modern progress brings goes but to build up
great fortunes, to increase luxury and make sharper
the contrast between the House of Have and the House
of Want, progress is not real and cannot be
permanent. The reaction must come. The tower
leans from its foundations, and every new story but
hastens the final catastrophe. To educate men who
must be condemned to poverty, is but to make them
restive; to base on a state of most glaring social
inequality political institutions under which men are
theoretically equal, is to stand a pyramid on its
apex.
All-important as this question is,
pressing itself from every quarter painfully upon
attention, it has not yet received a solution which
accounts for all the facts and points to any clear
and simple remedy.
|
[omitted material, p10-11]
|
source: p. 11-12 |
It must be within the province of political
economy to solve it. For political economy is
not a set of dogmas. It is the explanation of a
certain set of facts. It is the science which, in
the sequence of certain phenomena, seeks to trace
mutual relations and to identify cause and effect,
just as the physical sciences seek to do in other
sets of phenomena. It lays its foundations upon
firm ground. The premises from which it makes
its deductions are truths which have the highest
sanction; axioms which we all recognize; upon which
we safely base the reasoning and actions of
every-day life, and which may be reduced to the
metaphysical expression of the physical law that
motion seeks the line of least resistance —
viz., that men seek to
gratify their desires with the least
exertion.
|
[omitted material, p.12]
|
page 12 [*] |
I propose in the following pages to attempt to
solve by the methods of political economy the great
problem I have outlined. I propose to seek the law
which associates poverty with progress, and increases
want with advancing wealth. Properly
commenced and carefully pursued, such an investigation
must yield a conclusion that will stand every test, and
as truth, will correlate with all other truth. For in
the sequence of phenomena there is no accident. Every
effect has a cause, and every fact implies a preceding
fact. |
[*omitted material p.12-13]
|
source: page 13 |
I propose in this inquiry to take nothing for
granted. I propose to beg no question, to shrink
from no conclusion, but to follow truth wherever it may
lead. |
[*p. 13]
|
[*Book I: Wages and Capital, pages 3-88]
Chapter 1: The current doctrine of wages—its
insufficiency
Chapter 2: The meaning of the terms
Chapter 3: Wages not drawn from capital, but
produced by the labor
Chapter 4: The maintenance of laborers not drawn
from capital
Chapter 5: The real functions of capital]
|
2. Poverty Not Due to
Over-Population |
[*Book II: Population
and Subsistence:
Chapter 1: The Malthusian theory, its genesis and
support (pages 81-102) Chapter 2: Inferences from facts (pages
103-129) Book II,
Chapter 3: Inferences from Analogy,
pages 129-134]
|
Book II, Chapter 3: Inferences
from Analogy, pages
134-137 |
That vegetable and animal life tends to press against
the limits of space does not prove the same tendency
in human life. Granted that man is only a more
highly developed animal; that the ring-tailed monkey
is a distant relative who has gradually developed
acrobatic tendencies, and the humpbacked whale a
far-off connection who in early life took to the sea
— granted that back of these he is kin to the
vegetable, and is still subject to the same laws as
plants, fishes, birds, and beasts. Yet there is
still this difference between man and all other
animals — he is the only animal whose desires
increase as they are fed; the only animal that is
never satisfied. The wants of every other living
thing are uniform and fixed. The ox of today aspires
to no more than did the ox when man first yoked him.
The sea gull of the English Channel, who poises
himself above the swift steamer, wants no better food
or lodging than the gulls who circled round as the
keels of Caesar's galleys first grated on a British
beach. Of all that nature offers them, be it ever so
abundant, all living things save man can take, and
care for, only enough to supply wants which are
definite and fixed. The only use they can make of
additional supplies or additional opportunities is to
multiply.
But not so with man. No sooner are his animal
wants satisfied than new wants arise. Food he
wants first, as does the beast; shelter next, as does
the beast; and these given, his reproductive
instincts assert their sway, as do those of the
beast. But here man and beast part company. The beast
never goes further; the man has but set his feet on
the first step of an infinite progression — a
progression upon which the beast never enters; a
progression away from and above the beast. The
demand for quantity once satisfied, he seeks
quality. The very desires that he has in common
with the beast become extended, refined, exalted.
- It is not merely hunger, but taste, that seeks
gratification in food;
- in clothes, he seeks not merely comfort, but
adornment;
- the rude shelter becomes a house;
- the undiscriminating sexual attraction begins
to transmute itself into subtle influences,
and
- the hard and common stock of animal life to
blossom and to bloom into shapes of delicate
beauty.
As power to gratify his wants increases, so does
aspiration grow.
- Held down to lower levels of desire, Lucullus
will sup with Lucullus; twelve boars turn on spits
that Antony's mouthful of meat may be done to a
turn; every kingdom of Nature be ransacked to add
to Cleopatra's charms, and marble colonnades and
hanging gardens and pyramids that rival the hills
arise.
- Passing into higher forms of desire, that which
slumbered in the plant and fitfully stirred in the
beast, awakes in the man. The eyes of the mind are
opened, and he longs to know. He braves the
scorching heat of the desert and the icy blasts of
the polar sea, but not for food; he watches all
night, but it is to trace the circling of the
eternal stars. He adds toil to toil, to gratify a
hunger no animal has felt; to assuage a thirst no
beast can know.
Out upon nature, in upon himself, back through the
mists that shroud the past, forward into the darkness
that overhangs the future, turns the restless desire
that arises when the animal wants slumber in
satisfaction. Beneath things, he seeks the law; he
would know how the globe was forged and the stars
were hung, and trace to their origins the springs of
life. And, then, as the man develops his nobler
nature, there arises the desire higher yet —
the passion of passions, the hope of hopes —
the desire that he, even he, may somehow aid in
making life better and brighter, in destroying want
and sin, sorrow and shame. He masters and curbs the
animal; he turns his back upon the feast and
renounces the place of power; he leaves it to others
to accumulate wealth, to gratify pleasant tastes, to
bask themselves in the warm sunshine of the brief
day. He works for those he never saw and never can
see; for a fame, or maybe but for a scant Justice,
that can only come long after the clods have rattled
upon his coffin lid. He toils in the advance, where
it is cold, and there is little cheer from men, and
the stones are sharp and the brambles thick. Amid the
scoffs of the present and the sneers that stab like
knives, he builds for the future; he cuts the trail
that progressive humanity may hereafter broaden into
a highroad. Into higher, grander spheres desire
mounts and beckons, and a star that rises in the east
leads him on. Lo! the pulses of the man throb with
the yearnings of the god — he would aid in the
process of the suns!
Is not the gulf too wide for the analogy to
span? Give more food, open fuller conditions of life,
and the vegetable or animal can but multiply; the man
will develop. In the one the expansive force can
but extend existence in new numbers; in the other, it
will inevitably tend to extend existence in higher
forms and wider powers.* Man is an animal; but he is
an animal plus something else. He is the mythic
earth-tree, whose roots are in the ground, but whose
topmost branches may blossom in the heavens!
|
* Many contemporary
economists while agreeing that population does not
necessarily tend to become too dense for the
greatest per capita prosperity, would nevertheless
argue that it may do so, and in certain times and
countries has done so. Population, they would
say, does not automatically and without human
prevision adjust itself to available space and
available natural resources; but it may be made so
to adjust itself, for the very reason that human
beings differ from non-humans in such ways as Henry
George here indicates. H. G. B.
|
[*Book II, Chapter 3:
Inferences from Analogy, pages 137-139] Book II, Chapter 4: Disproof of the Malthusian
Theory, pages 140-150
|
source: Book II, Chapter 4:
Disproof of the Malthusian Theory, p. 150. |
Look simply at the facts. Can anything be clearer
than that the cause of the poverty which festers in
the centers of civilization is not in the weakness
of the productive forces? In countries where
poverty is deepest, the forces of production are
evidently strong enough, if fully employed, to
provide for the lowest not merely comfort but
luxury.
It is this very fact -- that want appears where
productive power is greatest and the production of
wealth is largest -- that constitutes the enigma
which perplexes the civilized world, and which we are
trying to unravel. Evidently the Malthusian theory,
which attributes want to the decrease of productive
power, will not explain it. That theory is utterly
inconsistent with all the facts. It is
really a gratuitous attribution to the laws of God of
results which, even from this examination, we may
infer really spring from the mal-adjustments
of men.
|
[*Book II, Chapter 4: Disproof of the Malthusian
Theory, p. 150]
|
|
3. Land Rent Grows as Community
Develops |
Book III:
The Laws of Distribution: Chapter 1: The Inquiry
Narrowed
to the laws of distribution— the necessary
relation of these laws, pages
153-162
|
Book III: The Laws of
Distribution:
Chapter 1: The Inquiry Narrowed to the laws of
distribution, p. 162 |
Land, Labor, and Capital are the factors of
production, The term Land includes all natural
opportunities or forces; the term Labor, all human
exertion; and the term Capital, all wealth used to
produce more wealth. In returns to these three factors
is the whole produce distributed. That part which goes
to land owners as payment for the use of natural
opportunities is called Rent;that part which
constitutes the reward of human exertion is called
Wages; andthat part which constitutes the return for
the use of capital is called Interest. These terms
mutually exclude each other.The income of any
individual may be made up from any one, two, or all
three of these sources; but in the effort to discover
the laws of distribution we must keep them
separate. |
|
p. 163 |
There must be land before labor can be exerted, and
labor must be exerted before capital can be
produced. Capital is a result of labor, and is used
by labor to assist it in further production. Labor
is the active and initial force, and labor is
therefore the employer of capital. Labor can be
exerted only upon land, and it is from land that
the matter which it transmutes into wealth must be
drawn. Land therefore is the
condition precedent, the field and material of
labor. The natural order is land, labor,
capital.
|
[*p.164]
Book III: The
Laws of Distribution:
Chapter 2: Rent and the law of
rent p. 165-172
Chapter 3: Of Interest and the Cause of Interest p.
173-188
Chapter 4: Of spurious capital and of profits often
mistaken for interest p. 189-194
Chapter 5: The Law of interest p. 195-203
Chapter 6: Wages and the law of wages p.
204-217
Chapter 7: Correlation and co-ordination of these
laws p. 218-220
Chapter 8: The statics of the problem thus
explained p. 221-224
Book IV: Effect of
Material Progress upon the Distribution of
Wealth Chapter 1: The dynamics of the problem yet to
seek p.227-229
Chapter 2: Effect of increase of population upon
the distribution of wealth p.230-243
Chapter 2: Effect of increase of
population upon the distribution of wealth p.
234-235
|
Increasing population increases rent* without
reference to the natural qualities of land, for the
increased powers of co-operation and exchange which
come with increased population are equivalent to
— nay, I think we can say without metaphor,
that they give — an increased capacity to
land.
*Elsewhere, Henry George explains, "I, of course,
use 'rent' in its economic, not in its common
sense, meaning by it what is commonly called
ground-rent."
I do not mean to say merely that, like an improvement
in the methods or tools of production, the increased
power which comes with increased population gives to
the same labor an increased result, which is
equivalent to an increase in the natural powers of
land; but that it brings out a superior power in
labor, which is localized on land; and which thus
inheres in the land as much as any qualities of soil,
climate, mineral deposit, or natural situation, and
passes, as they do, with the possession of the land.
|
|
Chapter 2: Effect of increase of
population upon the distribution of wealth p.
235-235 |
Here, let us imagine, is an unbounded
savannah, stretching off in unbroken sameness of
grass and flower, tree and rill, till the traveler
tires of the monotony. Along comes the wagon of the
first immigrant. Where to settle he cannot tell
— every acre seems as good as every other acre.
As to wood, as to water, as to fertility, as to
situation, there is absolutely no choice, and he is
perplexed by the embarrassment of richness. Tired out
with the search for one place that is better than
another, he stops — somewhere, anywhere —
and starts to make himself a home. The soil is virgin
and rich, game is abundant, the streams flash with
the finest trout. Nature is at her very best. He has
what, were he in a populous district, would make him
rich; but he is very poor. To say nothing of the
mental craving, which would lead him to welcome the
sorriest stranger, he labors under all the material
disadvantages of solitude. He can get no temporary
assistance for any work that requires a greater union
of strength than that afforded by his own family, or
by such help as he can permanently keep. Though he
has cattle, he cannot often have fresh meat, for to
get a beefsteak he must kill a bullock. He must be
his own blacksmith, wagonmaker, carpenter, and
cobbler — in short, a "jack of all trades and
master of none." He cannot have his children
schooled, for, to do so, he must himself pay and
maintain a teacher. Such things as he cannot produce
himself, he must buy in quantities and keep on hand,
or else go without, for he cannot be constantly
leaving his work and making a long journey to the
verge of civilization; and when forced to do so, the
getting of a vial of medicine or the replacement of a
broken auger may cost him the labor of himself and
horses for days. Under such circumstances, though
nature is prolific, the man is poor. It is an easy
matter for him to get enough to eat; but beyond this,
his labor will suffice to satisfy only the simplest
wants in the rudest way.
Soon there comes another immigrant. Although every
quarter section* of the boundless plain is as good as
every other quarter section, he is not beset by any
embarrassment as to where to settle. Though the land
is the same, there is one place that is clearly
better for him than any other place, and that is
where there is already a settler and he may have a
neighbor. He settles by the side of the first comer,
whose condition is at once greatly improved, and to
whom many things are now possible that were before
impossible, for two men may help each other to do
things that one man could never do.
*The public prairie lands of the
United States were surveyed into sections of one
mile square, and a quarter section (160 acres) was
the usual government allotment to a settler under
the Homestead Act.
Another immigrant comes, and, guided by the
same attraction, settles where there are already two.
Another, and another, until around our first comer
there are a score of neighbors. Labor has now an
effectiveness which, in the solitary state, it could
not approach. If heavy work is to be done, the
settlers have a logrolling, and together accomplish
in a day what singly would require years. When one
kills a bullock, the others take part of it,
returning when they kill, and thus they have fresh
meat all the time. Together they hire a schoolmaster,
and the children of each are taught for a fractional
part of what similar teaching would have cost the
first settler. It becomes a comparatively easy matter
to send to the nearest town, for some one is always
going. But there is less need for such journeys. A
blacksmith and a wheelwright soon set up shops, and
our settler can have his tools repaired for a small
part of the labor it formerly cost him. A store is
opened and he can get what he wants as he wants it; a
postoffice, soon added, gives him regular
communication with the rest of the world. Then come a
cobbler, a carpenter, a harness maker, a doctor; and
a little church soon arises. Satisfactions become
possible that in the solitary state were impossible.
There are gratifications for the social and the
intellectual nature — for that part of the man
that rises above the animal. The power of sympathy,
the sense of companionship, the emulation of
comparison and contrast, open a wider, and fuller,
and more varied life. In rejoicing, there are others
to rejoice; in sorrow, the mourners do not mourn
alone. There are husking bees, and apple parings, and
quilting parties. Though the ballroom be unplastered
and the orchestra but a fiddle, the notes of the
magician are yet in the strain, and Cupid dances with
the dancers. At the wedding, there are others to
admire and enjoy; in the house of death, there are
watchers; by the open grave, stands human sympathy to
sustain the mourners. Occasionally, comes a
straggling lecturer to open up glimpses of the world
of science, of literature, or of art; in election
times, come stump speakers, and the citizen rises to
a sense of dignity and power, as the cause of empires
is tried before him in the struggle of John Doe and
Richard Roe for his support and vote. And, by and by,
comes the circus, talked of months before, and
opening to children whose horizon has been the
prairie, all the realms of the imagination —
princes and princesses of fairy tale, mailclad
crusaders and turbaned Moors, Cinderella's fairy
coach, and the giants of nursery lore; lions such as
crouched before Daniel, or in circling Roman
amphitheater tore the saints of God; ostriches who
recall the sandy deserts; camels such as stood around
when the wicked brethren raised Joseph from the well
and sold him into bondage; elephants such as crossed
the Alps with Hannibal, or felt the sword of the
Maccabees; and glorious music that thrills and builds
in the chambers of the mind as rose the sunny dome of
Kubla Khan.
Go to our settler now, and say to him: "You have
so many fruit trees which you planted; so much
fencing, such a well, a barn, a house — in
short, you have by your labor added so much value to
this farm. Your land itself is not quite so good. You
have been cropping it, and by and by it will need
manure. I will give you the full value of all your
improvements if you will give it to me, and go again
with your family beyond the verge of settlement." He
would laugh at you. His land yields no more wheat or
potatoes than before, but it does yield far more of
all the necessaries and comforts of life. His labor
upon it will bring no heavier crops, and, we will
suppose, no more valuable crops, but it will bring
far more of all the other things for which men work.
The presence of other settlers — the increase
of population — has added to the
productiveness, in these things, of labor bestowed
upon it, and this added productiveness gives it a
superiority over land of equal natural quality where
there are as yet no settlers. If no land remains to
be taken up, except such as is as far removed from
population as was our settler's land when he first
went upon it, the value or rent of this land will be
measured by the whole of this added capability. If,
however, as we have supposed, there is a continuous
stretch of equal land, over which population is now
spreading, it will not be necessary for the new
settler to go into the wilderness, as did the first.
He will settle just beyond the other settlers, and
will get the advantage of proximity to them. The
value or rent of our settler's land will thus depend
on the advantage which it has, from being at the
center of population, over that on the verge. In the
one case, the margin of production will remain as
before; in the other, the margin of production will
be raised.
Population still continues to increase, and as it
increases so do the economies which its increase
permits, and which in effect add to the
productiveness of the land. Our first settler's land,
being the center of population, the store, the
blacksmith's forge, the wheelwright's shop, are set
up on it, or on its margin, where soon arises a
village, which rapidly grows into a town, the center
of exchanges for the people of the whole district.
With no greater agricultural productiveness than it
had at first, this land now begins to develop a
productiveness of a higher kind. To labor expended in
raising corn, or wheat, or potatoes, it will yield no
more of those things than at first; but to labor
expended in the subdivided branches of production
which require proximity to other producers, and,
especially, to labor expended in that final part of
production, which consists in distribution, it will
yield much larger returns. The wheatgrower may go
further on, and find land on which his labor will
produce as much wheat, and nearly as much wealth; but
the artisan, the manufacturer, the storekeeper, the
professional man, find that their labor expended
here, at the center of exchanges, will yield them
much more than if expended even at a little distance
away from it; and this excess of productiveness for
such purposes the landowner can claim just as he
could an excess in its wheat-producing power. And so
our settler is able to sell in building lots a few of
his acres for prices which it would not bring for
wheatgrowing if its fertility had been multiplied
many times. With the proceeds, he builds himself a
fine house, and furnishes it handsomely. That is to
say, to reduce the transaction to its lowest terms,
the people who wish to use the land build and furnish
the house for him, on condition that he will let them
avail themselves of the superior productiveness which
the increase of population has given the land.
Population still keeps on increasing, giving
greater and greater utility to the land, and more and
more wealth to its owner. The town has grown into a
city — a St. Louis, a Chicago or a San
Francisco — and still it grows. Production is
here carried on upon a great scale, with the best
machinery and the most favorable facilities; the
division of labor becomes extremely minute,
wonderfully multiplying efficiency; exchanges are of
such volume and rapidity that they are made with the
minimum of friction and loss. Here is the heart, the
brain, of the vast social organism that has grown up
from the germ of the first settlement; here has
developed one of the great ganglia of the human
world. Hither run all roads, hither set all currents,
through all the vast regions round about. Here, if
you have anything to sell, is the market; here, if
you have anything to buy, is the largest and the
choicest stock. Here intellectual activity is
gathered into a focus, and here springs that stimulus
which is born of the collision of mind with mind.
Here are the great libraries, the storehouses and
granaries of knowledge, the learned professors, the
famous specialists. Here are museums and art
galleries, collections of philosophical apparatus,
and all things rare, and valuable, and best of their
kind. Here come great actors, and orators, and
singers, from all over the world. Here, in short, is
a center of human life, in all its varied
manifestations. So enormous are the advantages
which this land now offers for the application of
labor, that instead of one man — with a span of
horses scratching over acres, you may count in places
thousands of workers to the acre, working tier on
tier, on floors raised one above the other, five,
six, seven and eight stories from the ground, while
underneath the surface of the earth engines are
throbbing with pulsations that exert the force of
thousands of horses.
All these advantages attach to the land; it is
on this land and no other that they can be utilized,
for here is the center of population — the
focus of exchanges, the market place and workshop of
the highest forms of industry. The productive
powers which density of population has attached to
this land are equivalent to the multiplication of its
original fertility by the hundredfold and the
thousandfold. And rent, which measures the difference
between this added productiveness and that of the
least productive land in use, has increased
accordingly. Our settler, or whoever has succeeded to
his right to the land, is now a millionaire. Like
another Rip Van Winkle,
he may have lain down and slept; still he is rich
— not from anything he has done, but from the
increase of population. There are lots from which for
every foot of frontage the owner may draw more than
an average mechanic can earn; there are lots that
will sell for more than would suffice to pave them
with gold coin. In the principal streets are towering
buildings, of granite, marble, iron, and plate glass,
finished in the most expensive style, replete with
every convenience. Yet they are not worth as much as
the land upon which they rest — the same land,
in nothing changed, which when our first settler came
upon it had no value at all.
That this is the way in which the increase of
population powerfully acts in increasing rent,
whoever, in a progressive country, will look around
him, may see for himself. The process is going on
under his eyes. The increasing difference in the
productiveness of the land in use, which causes an
increasing rise in rent, results not so much from the
necessities of increased population compelling the
resort to inferior land, as from the increased
productiveness which increased population gives to
the lands already in use. The most valuable lands
on the globe, the lands which yield the highest rent,
are not lands of surpassing natural fertility, but
lands to which a surpassing utility has been given by
the increase of population.
And where value seems to arise from superior
natural qualities, such as deep water and good
anchorage, rich deposits of coal and iron, or heavy
timber, observation also shows that these superior
qualities are brought out, rendered tangible, by
population. The coal and iron fields of
Pennsylvania, that today [1879] are worth enormous
sums, were fifty years ago valueless. What is the
efficient cause of the difference? Simply the
difference in population. The coal and iron beds of
Wyoming and Montana, which today are valueless, will,
in fifty years from now, be worth millions on
millions, simply because, in the meantime, population
will have greatly increased.
It is a well-provisioned ship, this on which we
sail through space. If the bread and beef above decks
seem to grow scarce, we but open a hatch and there is
a new supply, of which before we never dreamed.
And very great command over the
services of others comes to those who as the hatches
are opened are permitted to say, "This is
mine!"
|
p. 243
Book IV: Chapter 3: Effect of
improvements in the arts upon the distribution of
wealth p. 244-254 Chapter 4: Effect of the expectation raised by
material progress p.255-262
|
4. Land Speculation Causes Reduced
Wages |
Book __ Chapter 4, Effect of the Expectation Raised
by Material Progress, p. 255
|
p 255-256 |
There is a cause, not yet adverted to, which must
be taken into consideration fully to explain the
influence of material progress upon the distribution
of wealth.
That cause is the confident expectation of the
future enhancement of land values, which arises in
all progressive countries from the steady increase of
rent, and which leads to speculation, or the holding
of land for a higher price than it would then
otherwise bring.
We have hitherto assumed, as is generally assumed
in elucidations of the theory of rent, that the
actual margin of cultivation always coincides with
what may be termed the necessary margin of
cultivation — that is to say, we have assumed
that cultivation extends to less productive points
only as it becomes necessary from the fact that
natural opportunities are at the more productive
points fully utilized.
This, probably, is the case in stationary or very
slowly progressing communities, but in rapidly
progressing communities, where the swift and steady
increase of rent gives confidence to calculations of
further increase, it is not the case. In such
communities, the confident expectation of increased
prices produces, to a greater or less extent, the
effects of a combination among landholders, and tends
to the withholding of land from use, in expectation
of higher prices, thus forcing the margin of
cultivation farther than required by the necessities
of production.
|
p. 256
|
p. 256-7 |
In communities like the United States, where the
user of land generally prefers, if he can, to own it,
and where there is a great extent of land to overrun,
this cause operated with enormous power.
The immense area over which the population of the
United States is scattered shows this. The man who
sets out from the Eastern Seaboard in search of the
margin of cultivation, where he may obtain land
without paying rent, must, like the man who swam the
river to get a drink, pass for long distances through
half-tilled farms, and traverse vast areas of virgin
soil, before he reaches the point where land can be
had free of rent i.e., by homestead entry or
pre-emption. He (and, with him, the margin of
cultivation) is forced so much farther than he
otherwise need have gone, by the speculation which is
holding these unused lands in expectation of
increased value in the future. And when he settles,
he will, in his turn, take up, if he can, more land
than he can use, in the belief that it will soon
become valuable; and so those who follow him are
again forced farther on than the necessities of
production require, carrying the margin of
cultivation to still less productive, because still
more remote points.
|
p. 257
|
p. 257 |
If the land of superior quality as to location
were always fully used before land of inferior
quality were resorted to, no vacant lots would be
left as a city extended, nor would we find miserable
shanties in the midst of costly buildings. These
lots, some of them extremely valuable, are withheld
from use, or from the full use to which they might be
put, because their owners, not being able or not
wishing to improve them, prefer, in expectation of
the advance of land values, to hold them for a higher
rate than could now be obtained from those willing to
improve them. And, in consequence of this land being
withheld from use, or from the full use of which it
is capable, the margin of the city is pushed away so
much farther from the center.
But when we reach the limits of the growing city
— the actual margin of building, which
corresponds to the margin of cultivation in
agriculture — we shall not find the land
purchasable at its value for agricultural purposes,
as it would be were rent determined simply by present
requirements; but we shall find that for a long
distance beyond the city, land bears a speculative
value, based upon the belief that it will be required
in the future for urban purposes, and that to reach
the point at which land can be purchased at a price
not based upon urban rent, we must go very far beyond
the actual margin of urban use.
|
257-8 timberland in Marin County
|
p. 258 |
That mineral land, when reduced to private
ownership, is frequently withheld from use while poorer
deposits are worked, is well known, and in new states
it is common to find individuals who are called "land
poor" -- that is, who remain poor, sometimes almost to
deprivation, because they insist on holding land, which
they themselves cannot use, at prices at which no one
else can profitably use it. |
p. 258-9
|
p. 259 |
Whether we formulate it as an extension of the
margin of production, or as a carrying of the rent line
beyond the margin of production, the influence of
speculation in land in increasing rent is a great fact
which cannot be ignored in any complete theory of the
distribution of wealth in progressive countries. It is
the force, evolved by material progress, which tends
constantly to increase rent in a greater ratio than
progress increases production, and thus constantly
tends, as material progress goes on and productive
power increases, to reduce wages, not merely
relatively, but absolutely. |
p. 259-60
|
p. 260: |
The cause which limits speculation in commodities,
the tendency of increasing price to draw forth
additional supplies, cannot limit the speculative
advance in land values, as land is a fixed quantity,
which human agency can neither increase nor diminish;
but there is nevertheless a limit to the price of land,
in the minimum required by labor and capital as the
condition of engaging in production. If it were
possible continuously to reduce wages until zero were
reached, it would be possible continuously to increase
rent until it swallowed up the whole produce. But as
wages cannot be permanently reduced below the point at
which laborers will consent to work and reproduce, nor
interest below the point at which capital will be
devoted to production, there is a limit which restrains
the speculative advance of rent. Hence speculation
cannot have the same scope to advance rent in countries
where wages and interest are already near the minimum,
as in countries where they are considerably above
it. |
|
5. The Basic Cause of Poverty |
Book V: The Problem Solved
Chapter 1: The primary cause of
recurring paroxysms of industrial depression
p.263-282
|
Chapter 2: the persistence of poverty amid
advancing wealth p. 282 |
The great problem, of which these recurring
seasons of industrial depression are but peculiar
manifestations, is now, I think, fully solved, and
the social phenomena which all over the civilized
world appall the philanthropist and perplex the
statesman, which hang with clouds the future of the
most advanced races, and suggest doubts of the
reality and ultimate goal of what we have fondly
called progress, are now explained.
The reason why, in spite of the
increase of productive power, wages constantly tend
to a minimum which will give but a bare living, is
that, with increase in productive power, rent tends
to even greater increase, thus producing a constant
tendency to the forcing down of wages.
|
p. 282-3
|
p. 283: |
Land being necessary to labor, and
being reduced to private ownership, every increase in
the productive power of labor but increases rent --
the price that labor must pay for the opportunity to
utilize its powers; and thus all the advantages
gained by the march of progress go to the owners of
land, and wages do not increase.*
*Whatever be the fact as to wages, the reader
will, of course, recognize that higher money
wages which merely balance higher living costs,
are not to be reckoned as real wage increases.
H.G.B
|
p. 283-287
|
p. 287-8 abbreviated |
The simple theory which I have outlined (if
indeed it can be called a theory which is but the
recognition of the most obvious relations) explains
this conjunction of poverty with wealth, of low
wages with high productive power, of degradation
amid enlightenment, of virtual slavery in political
liberty.
- It harmonizes, as results flowing from a
general and inexorable law, facts otherwise most
perplexing, and exhibits the sequence and
relation between phenomena that without reference
to it are diverse and contradictory.
- It explains why improvements which increase
the productive power of labor and capital
increase the reward of neither.
- It explains what is commonly called the
conflict between labor and capital, while proving
the real harmony of interest between them.
- It cuts the last inch of ground from under
the fallacies of protection, while showing why
free trade fails to benefit permanently the
working classes.
- It explains why want increases with
abundance, and wealth tends to greater and
greater aggregations.
- It explains the vice and misery which show
themselves amid dense population, without
attributing to the laws of the All-Wise and
All-Beneficent defects which belong only to the
shortsighted and selfish enactments of men.
|
p. 288-293
|
p.293-296 |
The truth is self-evident. Put to any
one capable of consecutive thought this question:
"Suppose there should arise from the
English Channel or the German Ocean a no man's land
on which common labor to an unlimited amount should
be able to make thirty shillings a day and which
should remain unappropriated and of free access, like
the commons which once comprised so large a part of
English soil. What would be the effect upon wages in
England?"
He would at once tell you that common
wages throughout England must soon increase to thirty
shillings a day.
And in response to another question,
"What would be the effect on rents?" he would at a
moment's reflection say that rents must necessarily
fall; and if he thought out the next step he would
tell you that all this would happen without any very
large part of English labor being diverted to the new
natural opportunities, or the forms and direction of
industry being much changed; only that kind of
production being abandoned which now yields to labor
and to landlord together less than labor could secure
on the new opportunities. The great rise in wages
would be at the expense of rent.
Take now the same man or another --
some hardheaded business man, who has no theories,
but knows how to make money. Say to him: "Here is a
little village; in ten years it will be a great city
-- in ten years the railroad will have taken the
place of the stage coach, the electric light of the
candle; it will abound with all the machinery and
improvements that so enormously multiply the
effective power of labor. Will, in ten years,
interest be any higher?"
He will tell you, "No!"
"Will the wages of common labor be any
higher; will it be easier for a man who has nothing
but his labor to make an independent living?"
He will tell you, "No; the wages of
common labor will not be any higher; on the contrary,
all the chances are that they will be lower; it will
not be easier for the mere laborer to make an
independent living; the chances are that it will be
harder."
"What, then, will be higher?"
"Rent; the value of land. Go, get
yourself a piece of ground, and hold possession."
And if, under such circumstances, you
take his advice, you need do nothing more. You may
sit down and smoke your pipe; you may lie around like
the lazzaroni of Naples or the leperos of Mexico; you
may go up in a balloon, or down a hole in the ground;
and without doing one stroke of work, without adding
one iota to the wealth of the community, in ten years
you will be rich! In the new city you may have a
luxurious mansion; but among its public buildings
will be an almshouse.
In all our long investigation we have
been advancing to this simple truth: That as land is
necessary to the exertion of labor in the production
of wealth, to command the land which is necessary to
labor, is to command all the fruits of labor save
enough to enable labor to exist. We have been
advancing as through an enemy's country, in which
every step must be secured, every position fortified,
and every bypath explored; for this simple truth, in
its application to social and political problems, is
hid from the great masses of men partly by its very
simplicity, and in greater part by widespread
fallacies and erroneous habits of thought which lead
them to look in every direction but the right one for
an explanation of the evils which oppress and
threaten the civilized world. And back of these
elaborate fallacies and misleading theories is an
active, energetic power, a power that in every
country, be its political forms what they may, writes
laws and molds thought -- the power of a vast and
dominant pecuniary interest.
But so simple and so clear is this
truth, that to see it fully once is always to
recognize it. There are pictures which, though looked
at again and again, present only a confused labyrinth
of lines or scroll work -- a landscape, trees, or
something of the kind -- until once the attention is
called to the fact that these things make up a face
or a figure. This relation, once recognized, is
always afterward clear.*
*Hence the expression, current among adherents of
Henry George's proposal: "Do you see the cat?"
It is so in this case. In the light of this truth
all social facts group themselves in an orderly
relation, and the most diverse phenomena are seen to
spring from one great principle. It is not in the
relations of capital and labor; it is not in the
pressure of population against subsistence, that an
explanation of the unequal development of our
civilization is to be found. The great cause of
inequality in the distribution of wealth is
inequality in the ownership of land. The ownership of
land is the great fundamental fact which ultimately
determines the social, the political, and
consequently the intellectual and moral condition of
a people. And it must be so. For land is the
habitation of man, the storehouse upon which he must
draw for all his needs, the material to which his
labor must be applied for the supply of all his
desires; for even the products of the sea cannot be
taken, the light of the sun enjoyed, or any of the
forces of nature utilized, without the use of land or
its products. On the land we are born, from it we
live, to it we return again -- children of the soil
as truly as is the blade of grass or the flower of
the field. Take away from man all that belongs to
land, and he is but a disembodied spirit. Material
progress cannot rid us of our dependence upon land;
it can but add to the power of producing wealth from
land; and hence, when land is monopolized, it might
go on to infinity without increasing wages or
improving the condition of those who have but their
labor. It can but add to the value of land and the
power which its possession gives. Everywhere, in all
times, among all peoples, the possession of land is
the base of aristocracy, the foundation of great
fortunes, the source of power. As said the Brahmins,
ages ago—
"To whomsoever the soil at any time belongs,
to him belong the fruits of it. White parasols
and elephants mad with pride are the flowers of a
grant of land."
|
|
6. The Remedy |
Book 6 The Remedy: Chapter 1:
Insufficiency of Remedies Currently Advocated
p.299-327
Chapter 2: The True Remedy p. 328
|
source:
Book VI: The Remedy — Chapter 2: The True
Remedy page 328 |
Poverty deepens as wealth increases, and wages are
forced down while productive power grows, because
land, which is the source of all wealth and the field
of all labor, is monopolized. To extirpate poverty,
to make wages what justice commands they should be,
the full earnings of the laborer, we must therefore
substitute for the individual ownership of land a
common ownership.*
*By the phrase "common ownership" of
land, Henry George did not mean that land should be
held in common or by the State, nor did he propose
to interfere with the existing system of land
tenures. (See Sections 7 and 12, post.) As in this
condensation much of George's argument necessarily
has been omitted, the following extracts from his
later work "Protection or Free Trade," chapter
XXVI, are appended to make his position clear to
the present reader.
"No one would sow a crop, or build a house, or
open a mine, or plant an orchard, or cut a drain,
so long as any one else could come in and turn
him out of the land in which or on which such
improvement must be fixed. Thus is it absolutely
necessary to the proper use and improvement of
land that society should secure to the user and
improver safe possession. ... We can leave land
now being used in the secure possession of those
using it. ... on condition that those who hold
land shall pay to the community a ... rent based
on the value of the privilege the individual
receives from the community in being accorded the
exclusive use of this much of the common
property, and which should have no reference to
any improvement he has made in or on it, or to
any profit due to the use of his labor and
capital. In this way all would be placed on an
equality in regard to the use and enjoyment of
those natural elements which are clearly the
common heritage."
|
p.328-330
Book VII Justice of the Remedy
Chapter 1: Injustice of private property in land
p.333-6
|
p.336 (paragraph abridged) |
This right of ownership that springs from labor
excludes the possibility of any other right of
ownership. If a man be rightfully entitled to the
produce of his labor, then no one can be rightfully
entitled to the ownership of anything which is not the
produce of his labor, or the labor of some one else
from whom the right has passed to him. For the right to
the produce of labor cannot be enjoyed without the
right to the free use of the opportunities offered by
nature, and to admit the right of property in these is
to deny the right of property in the produce of labor.
When nonproducers can claim as rent a portion of the
wealth created by producers, the right of the producers
to the fruits of their labor is to that extent
denied. |
p.336-7
|
p337-8 |
A house and the lot on which it stands are alike
property, as being the subject of ownership, and are
alike classed by the lawyers as real estate. Yet in
nature and relations they differ widely.
- The one is produced by human labor, and belongs
to the class in political economy styled
wealth.
- The other is a part of nature, and belongs to
the class in political economy styled land.
The essential character of the one class of things
is that they embody labor, are brought into being by
human exertion, their existence or nonexistence,
their increase or diminution, depending on man. The
essential character of the other class of things is
that they do not embody labor, and exist irrespective
of human exertion and irrespective of man; they are
the field or environment in which man finds himself;
the storehouse from which his needs must be supplied,
the raw material upon which and the forces with which
alone his labor can act.
The moment this distinction is realized, that
moment is it seen that the sanction which natural
justice gives to one species of property is denied to
the other.
|
p.338-41
|
p.341-2 |
For as labor cannot produce without the use of
land, the denial of the equal right to the use of land
is necessarily the denial of the right of labor to its
own produce. If one man can command the land upon which
others must labor, he can appropriate the produce of
their labor as the price of his permission to labor.
The fundamental law of nature, that her enjoyment by
man shall be consequent upon his exertion, is thus
violated. The one receives without producing; the
others produce without receiving. The one is unjustly
enriched; the others are robbed. |
342-347
p.347 Chapter 2: The enslavement of
laborers the ultimate result of private property in
land
|
p.347-8 |
Place one hundred men on an island from which
there is no escape, and whether you make one of these
men the absolute owner of the other ninety-nine, or
the absolute owner of the soil of the island, will
make no difference either to him or to them. In the
one case, as the other, the one will be the absolute
master of the ninety-nine — his power extending
even to life and death, for simply to refuse them
permission to live upon the island would be to force
them into the sea.
Upon a larger scale, and through more complex
relations, the same cause must operate in the same
way and to the same end — the ultimate result,
the enslavement of laborers, becoming apparent just
as the pressure increases which compels them to live
on and from land which is treated as the exclusive
property of others.
|
p. xxx-343
|
source: Book 7: Justice of the Remedy, Chapter 1:
The injustice of private property in land p.343-4 |
Yet, it will be said: As every man has a right to
the use and enjoyment of nature, the man who is using
land must be permitted the exclusive right to its use
in order that he may get the full benefit of his
labor. But there is no difficulty in determining
where the individual right ends and the common right
begins. A delicate and exact test is supplied by
value, and with its aid there is no difficulty, no
matter how dense population may become, in
determining and securing the exact rights of each,
the equal rights of all.
The value of land, as we have seen, is the price
of monopoly. It is not the absolute, but the
relative, capability of land that determines its
value. No matter what may be its intrinsic qualities
land that is no better than other land which may be
had for the using can have no value. And the value of
land always measures the difference between it and
the best land that may be had for the using. Thus,
the value of land expresses in exact and tangible
form the right of the community in land held by an
individual; and rent expresses the exact amount which
the individual should pay to the community to satisfy
the equal rights of all other members of the
community.
Thus, if we concede to priority of possession the
undisturbed use of land, taxing rent into the public
treasury for the benefit of the community, we
reconcile the fixity of tenure which is necessary for
improvement with a full and complete recognition of
the equal rights of all to the use of land.
|
344-365
Chapter 3: Claim of landowners to compensation
|
p. 365-6 |
Consider what rent is. It does not arise
spontaneously from land; it is due to nothing that
the land owners have done. It represents a value
created by the whole community.
Let the land holders have, if you please, all that
the possession of the land would give them in the
absence of the rest of the community. But rent, the
creation of the whole community, necessarily belongs
to the whole community.*
* To the view of the extreme
conservative that due consideration for the claims
of rent receivers negatives the adoption of such a
policy, it may be replied that society as such is
under no obligation to maintain an unchanged policy
through out all future time. Public policies are
constantly changing in such ways as to disappoint
the expectations of persons who have invested on
the supposition that policies would not change and
to affect the value of their property. Tarriffs are
raised, and lowered. The brewing of spirituous
liquors is at one time permitted and at another
time outlawed. Prices of monopolized services are
first left to be fixed by the monopolist and are
then regulated. Taxes are increased on some goods
and decreased on others. In some communities taxes
have already been made higher on land values than
on improvements. Purchasers of land have no right
to insist that society may not, even by gradual
steps, discriminate in taxation against land rent,
which is an income socially produced. (Henry George
himself elsewhere said -- Century Magazine, July,
1890 -- that "we cannot get to the Single Tax at
one leap, but only by gradual steps.") We must
presume that land owners, like other persons, buy
their property with no guarantee that public policy
will never change. The conservative insistence that
society, which makes frequent changes of policy in
other matters, is under a binding implied pledge
and obligation never to move, even by successive
steps, towards the eventual taking of the economic
rent of land by taxation, seems preposterous. H. G.
B.
|
p.365
|
Source: Book 3: Claim of Landowners to
Compensation |
|
7. Simplicity of Method of Introducing
Remedy |
Application of the Remedy: How Equal Rights
May be Asserted
p. 404-5
|
It is an axiom of statesmanship, which the
successful founders of tyranny have understood and
acted upon that great changes can best be brought
about under old forms. We, who would free men,
should heed the same truth. It is the natural
method. When nature would make a higher type, she
takes a lower one and develops it. This, also, is
the law of social growth. Let us work by it. With
the current we may glide fast and far. Against it,
it is hard pulling and slow progress. |
p. 405
|
p. 405 |
By making use of this existing machinery, we
may, without jar or shock, assert the common
right to land by appropriating rent by taxation.
We already take some rent in taxation. We have
only to make some changes in our modes of
taxation to take it all.*
*Rent in the economic sense is
not, as those unfamiliar with economic
terminology may assume, the whole amount paid
for the use of real estate. It is only that
part of such amount which is paid for the use
of the bare land or site employed, exclusive of
the payment for the use of any buildings or
other improvements on it. H. G. B.
|
p. 405-6
|
p. 406-7 |
In form, the ownership of land would remain
just as now. No owner of land need be
dispossessed, and no restriction need be placed
upon the amount of land any one could hold. For,
rent being taken by the State in taxes, land, no
matter in whose name it stood, or in what parcels
it was held, would be really common property, and
every member of the community would participate
in the advantages of its ownership.
Now, insomuch as the taxation of rent, or land
values, must necessarily be increased just as we
abolish other taxes, we may put the proposition
into practical form by proposing --
to abolish all
taxation save that upon land
values.
As we have seen, the value of land is at the
beginning of society nothing, but as society
develops by the increase of population and the
advance of the arts, it becomes greater and
greater. In every civilized country, even the
newest, the value of the land taken as a whole is
sufficient to bear the entire expenses of
government. In the better developed countries it
is much more than sufficient. Hence it will not
be enough merely to place all taxes upon the
value of land. It will be necessary, where rent
exceeds the present governmental revenues,
commensurately to increase the amount demanded in
taxation, and to continue this increase as
society progresses and rent advances. But this is
so natural and easy a matter, that it may be
considered as involved, or at least understood,
in the proposition to put all taxes on the value
of land. That is the first step upon which the
practical struggle must be made. When the hare is
once caught and killed, cooking him will follow
as a matter of course. When the common right to
land is so far appreciated that all taxes are
abolished save those which fall upon rent, there
is no danger of much more than is necessary to
induce them to collect the public revenues being
left to individual landholders.
|
407
|
407 |
Wherever the idea of concentrating all
taxation upon land values finds lodgment
sufficient to induce consideration, it invariably
makes way, but there are few of the classes most
to be benefited by it, who at first, or even for
a long time afterward, see its full significance
and power.
- It is difficult for workingmen to get over
the idea that there is a real antagonism
between capital and labor.
- It is difficult for small farmers and
homestead owners to get over the idea that to
put all taxes on the value of land would be
unduly to tax them.
- It is difficult for both classes to get
over the idea that to exempt capital from
taxation would be to make the rich richer, and
the poor poorer.
These ideas spring from confused thought. But
behind ignorance and prejudice there is a
powerful interest, which has hitherto dominated
literature, education, and opinion. A great wrong
always dies hard, and the great wrong which in
every civilized country condemns the masses of
men to poverty and want, will not die without a
bitter struggle.
|
407
|
8. Why a Land-Value Tax is Better than
an Equal Tax on All Property |
408-420
|
Book VIII: Application of the Remedy —
Chapter 3: The proposition tried by the canons of
taxation p.420-1 |
The ground upon which the equal taxation of
all species of property is commonly insisted upon
is that it is equally protected by the state. The
basis of this idea is evidently that the
enjoyment of property is made possible by the
state -- that there is a value created and
maintained by the community, which is justly
called upon to meet community expenses. Now, of
what values is this true? Only of the value of
land. This is a value that does not arise until a
community is formed, and that, unlike other
values, grows with the growth of the community.
It exists only as the community exists. Scatter
again the largest community, and land, now so
valuable, would have no value at all. With every
increase of population the value of land rises;
with every decrease it falls. This is true of
nothing else save of things which, like the
ownership of land, are in their nature
monopolies.
The tax upon land values is, therefore, the
most just and equal of all taxes.
- It falls only upon those who receive from
society a peculiar and valuable benefit, and
upon them in proportion to the benefit they
receive.
- It is the taking by the community, for the
use of the community, of that value which is
the creation of the community.
- It is the application of the common
property to common uses.
When all rent is taken by taxation for the
needs of the community, then will the equality
ordained by Nature be attained. No citizen will
have an advantage over any other citizen save as
is given by his industry, skill, and
intelligence; and each will obtain what he fairly
earns. Then, but not till then, will labor get
its full reward, and capital its natural
return.
|
p.421
|
9 Alleged Difficulty of Distinguishing
Land From Improvements |
Chapter 4, p 422-424
|
Book VIII: Application of the Remedy —
Chapter 4: Indorsements and Objections p.
424-425 |
The only objection to the tax on rent or land
values which is to be met with in standard
politico-economic works is one which concedes its
advantages — for it is, that from the
difficulty of separation, we might, in taxing the
rent of land, tax something else. McCulloch, for
instance, declares taxes on the rent of land to
be impolitic and unjust because the return
received for the natural and inherent powers of
the soil cannot be clearly distinguished from the
return received from improvements and
meliorations, which might thus be discouraged.
Macaulay somewhere says that if the admission of
the attraction of gravitation were inimical to
any considerable pecuniary interest, there would
not be wanting arguments against gravitation
— a truth of which this objection is an
illustration. For admitting that it is impossible
invariably to separate the value of land from the
value of improvements, is this necessity of
continuing to tax some improvements any reason
why we should continue to tax all improvements?
If it discourage production to tax values which
labor and capital have intimately combined with
that of land, how much greater discouragement is
involved in taxing not only these, but all the
clearly distinguishable values which labor and
capital create?
But, as a matter of fact, the value of land
can always be readily distinguished from the
value of improvements.
- In countries like the United States there
is much valuable land that has never been
improved; and in many of the States the value
of the land and the value of improvements are
habitually estimated separately by the
assessors, though afterward reunited under the
term real estate.
- Nor where ground has been occupied from
immemorial times, is there any difficulty in
getting at the value of the bare land, for
frequently the land is owned by one person and
the buildings by another, and when a fire
occurs and improvements are destroyed, a clear
and definite value remains in the land.
- In the oldest country in the world no
difficulty whatever can attend the separation,
if all that be attempted is to separate the
value of the clearly distinguishable
improvements, made within a moderate period,
from the value of the land, should they be
destroyed.
This, manifestly, is all that justice or
policy requires. Absolute accuracy is impossible
in any system, and to attempt to separate all
that the human race has done from what nature
originally provided would be as absurd as
impracticable. A swamp drained or a hill terraced
by the Romans constitutes now as much a part of
the natural advantages of the British Isles as
though the work had been done by earthquake or
glacier. The fact that after a certain lapse of
time the value of such permanent improvements
would be considered as having lapsed into that of
the land, and would be taxed accordingly, could
have no deterrent effect on such improvements,
for such works are frequently undertaken upon
leases for years. The fact is, that each
generation builds and improves for itself, and
not for the remote future. And the further fact
is, that each generation is heir, not only to the
natural powers of the earth, but to all that
remains of the work of past generations.
|
p.425-429
|
source:
Part VIII: Application of the Remedy, Chapter 4:
Indorsements and Objections |
|
10 Effect of Remedy Upon Wealth
Production |
|
The elder Mirabeau, we are told, ranked the
proposition of Quesnay, to substitute one single
tax on rent (the impôt unique) for
all other taxes, as a discovery equal in utility
to the invention of writing or the substitution
of the use of money for barter.
To whosoever will think over the matter, this
saying will appear an evidence of penetration
rather than of extravagance. The advantages which
would be gained by substituting for the numerous
taxes by which the public revenues are now
raised, a single tax levied upon the value of
land, will appear more and more important the
more they are considered.
- This is the secret which would transform
the little village into the great city.*
- With all the burdens removed which now
oppress industry and hamper exchange, the
production of wealth would go on with a
rapidity now undreamed of.
- This, in its turn, would lead to an
increase in the value of land -- a new surplus
which society might take for general
purposes.
- And released from the difficulties which
attend the collection of revenue in a way that
begets corruption and renders legislation the
tool of special interests, society could assume
functions which the increasing complexity of
life makes it desirable to assume, but which
the prospect of political demoralization under
the present system now leads thoughtful men to
shrink from.
*At the beginning of
Book IX of the complete Progress &
Poverty, Henry George quotes from Themistocles:
"I cannot play upon any stringed instrument,
but I can tell you how of a little village to
make a great and glorious city."
Consider the effect upon the production of
wealth.
To abolish the taxation which, acting and
reacting, now hampers every wheel of exchange and
presses upon every form of industry, would be
like removing an immense weight from a powerful
spring. Imbued with fresh energy, production
would start into new life, and trade would
receive a stimulus which would be felt to the
remotest arteries. The present method of taxation
operates upon exchange like artificial deserts
and mountains;
- it costs more to get goods through a custom
house than it does to carry them around the
world.
- It operates upon energy, and industry, and
skill, and thrift, like a fine upon those
qualities.
- If I have worked harder and built myself a
good house while you have been contented to
live in a hovel, the taxgatherer now comes
annually to make me pay a penalty for my energy
and industry, by taxing me more than you.
- If I have saved while you wasted, I am
mulct, while you are exempt.
- If a man build a ship we make him pay for
his temerity, as though he had done an injury
to the state;
- if a railroad be opened, down comes the tax
collector upon it, as though it were a public
nuisance;
- if a manufactory be erected we levy upon it
an annual sum which would go far toward making
a handsome profit.
- We say we want capital, but if any one
accumulate it, or bring it among us, we charge
him for it as though we were giving him a
privilege.
- We punish with a tax the man who covers
barren fields with ripening grain,
- we fine him who puts up machinery, and him
who drains a swamp.
How heavily these taxes burden production only
those realize who have attempted to follow our
system of taxation through its ramifications,
for, as I have before said, the heaviest part of
taxation is that which falls in increased
prices.
|
|
To abolish these taxes would be to lift the
whole enormous weight of taxation from productive
industry. The needle of the seamstress and the
great manufactory; the cart horse and the
locomotive; the fishing boat and the steamship;
the farmer's plow and the merchant's stock, would
be alike untaxed. All would be free to make or to
save, to buy or to sell, unfined by taxes,
unannoyed by the taxgatherer. Instead of saying
to the producer, as it does now, "The more you
add to the general wealth the more shall you be
taxed!" the state would say to the producer, "Be
as industrious, as thrifty, as enterprising as
you choose, you shall have your full reward! You
shall not be fined for making two blades of grass
grow where one grew before; you shall not be
taxed for adding to the aggregate wealth."
And will not the community gain by thus
refusing to kill the goose that lays the golden
eggs; by thus refraining from muzzling the ox
that treadeth out the corn; by thus leaving to
industry, and thrift, and skill, their natural
reward, full and unimpaired? For there is to the
community also a natural reward. The law of
society is, each for all, as well as all for
each. No one can keep to himself the good he may
do, any more than he can keep the bad. Every
productive enterprise, besides its return to
those who undertake it, yields collateral
advantages to others. If a man plant a fruit
tree, his gain is that he gathers the fruit in
its time and season. But in addition to his gain,
there is a gain to the whole community. Others
than the owner are benefited by the increased
supply of fruit; the birds which it shelters fly
far and wide; the rain which it helps to attract
falls not alone on his field; and, even to the
eye which rests upon it from a distance, it
brings a sense of beauty. And so with everything
else. The building of a house, a factory, a ship,
or a railroad, benefits others besides those who
get the direct profits.
|
|
Well may the community leave to the individual
producer all that prompts him to exertion; well
may it let the laborer have the full reward of
his labor, and the capitalist the full return of
his capital. For the more that labor and capital
produce, the greater grows the common wealth in
which all may share. And in the value or rent of
land is this general gain expressed in a definite
and concrete form. Here is a fund which the state
may take while leaving to labor and capital their
full reward. With increased activity of
production this would commensurately
increase.
And to shift the burden of taxation from
production and exchange to the value or rent of
land would not merely be to give new stimulus to
the production of wealth; it would be to open new
opportunities. For under this system no one would
care to hold land unless to use it, and land now
withheld from use would everywhere be thrown open
to improvement.
The selling price of land would fall; land
speculation would receive its death blow; land
monopolization would no longer pay.* Millions and
millions of acres from which settlers are now
shut out by high prices would be abandoned by
their present owners or sold to settlers upon
nominal terms. And this not merely on the
frontiers, but within what are now considered
well settled districts.
* The fact that a tax on the
rental value of land cannot be shifted by
landowners to tenants, though recognized by all
competent economists, is sometimes a stumbling
block to persons untrained in economics. The
reason such a tax cannot be shifted is that it
cannot limit the supply of land. Landowners are
presumably, before the tax is laid, charging
all the rent they can get. There is nothing in
a tax on the rental value of land to make
tenants willing to pay more or to make land
more difficult to hire. On the contrary, more
land will be on the market, because of such a
tax, rather than less, since the tax puts a
heavy penalty on holding land out of use and
unimproved for mere speculation. The
competition of former vacant land speculators
to get their land used will make land cheaper
to rent rather than more expensive. And since
only the net rent remaining after the tax is
subtracted is capitalized into salable value,
land will be very much cheaper to buy.
H.G.B.
|
|
And it must be remembered that this would
apply, not merely to agricultural land, but to
all land. Mineral land would be thrown open to
use, just as agricultural land; and in the heart
of a city no one could afford to keep land from
its most profitable use, or on the outskirts to
demand more for it than the use to which it could
at the time be put would warrant. Everywhere that
land had attained a value, taxation, instead of
operating, as now, as a fine upon improvement,
would operate to force improvement. Whoever
planted an orchard, or sowed a field, or built a
house, or erected a manufactory, no matter how
costly, would have no more to pay in taxes than
if he kept so much land idle.
- The monopolist of agricultural land would
be taxed as much as though his land were
covered with houses and barns, with crops and
with stock.
- The owner of a vacant city lot would have
to pay as much for the privilege of keeping
other people off of it until he wanted to use
it, as his neighbor who has a fine house upon
his lot.
- It would cost as much to keep a row of
tumble-down shanties upon valuable land as
though it were covered with a grand hotel or a
pile of great warehouses filled with costly
goods.
Thus, the bonus that wherever labor is most
productive must now be paid before labor can be
exerted would disappear.
- The farmer would not have to pay out half
his means, or mortgage his labor for years, in
order to obtain land to cultivate;
- the builder of a city homestead would not
have to lay out as much for a small lot as for
the house he puts upon it*;
- the company that proposed to erect a
manufactory would not have to expend a great
part of its capital for a site.
- And what would be paid from year to year to
the state would be in lieu of all the taxes now
levied upon improvements, machinery, and stock.
*Many persons, and among them
some professional economists, have never
succeeded in getting a thorough comprehension
of this point. Thus, the editor has heard the
objection advanced that the greater cheapness
of land is no advantage to the poor man who
is trying to save enough from his earnings to
buy a piece of land; for, it is said, the
higher taxes on the land after it is
acquired, offset the lower purchase price.
What such objectors do not see is that even
if the lower price of land does no more than
balance the higher tax on it, (and this
overlooks, for one thing, the discouragement
to speculation in land), the reduction or
removal of other taxes is all clear gain. It
is easier to save in proportion as earnings
and commodities are relieved of taxation. It
is easier to buy land, because its selling
price is lower, if the land is taxed. And
although the land, after its purchase,
continues to be taxed, not only can this tax
be fully paid out of the annual interest on
the saving in the purchase price, but also
there is to be reckoned the saving in taxes
on buildings and other improvements and in
whatever other taxes are thus rendered
unnecessary. H.G.B.
Consider the effect of such a change upon the
labor market. Competition would no longer be
one-sided, as now. Instead of laborers competing
with each other for employment, and in their
competition cutting down wages to the point of
bare subsistence, employers would everywhere be
competing for laborers, and wages would rise to
the fair earnings of labor. For into the labor
market would have entered the greatest of all
competitors for the employment of labor, a
competitor whose demand cannot be satisfied until
want is satisfied -- the demand of labor itself.
The employers of labor would not have merely to
bid against other employers, all feeling the
stimulus of greater trade and increased profits,
but against the ability of laborers to become
their own employers upon the natural
opportunities freely opened to them by the tax
which prevented monopolization.
With natural opportunities thus free to
labor;
- with capital and improvements exempt from
tax, and exchange released from restrictions,
the spectacle of willing men unable to turn
their labor into the things they are suffering
for would become impossible;
- the recurring paroxysms which paralyze
industry would cease;
- every wheel of production would be set in
motion;
- demand would keep pace with supply, and
supply with demand;
- trade would increase in every direction,
and wealth augment on every hand.
|
source:
Part IX: Effects of the Remedy— Chapter 1: Of
the Effect Upon the Production of Wealth |
|
11. Effect of Remedy Upon the Sharing
of Wealth |
But great as they thus appear, the advantages
of a transference of all public burdens to a tax
upon the value of land cannot be fully
appreciated until we consider the effect upon the
distribution of wealth.
Tracing out the cause of the unequal
distribution of wealth which appears in all
civilized countries, with a constant tendency to
greater and greater inequality as material
progress goes on, we have found it in the fact
that, as civilization advances, the ownership of
land, now in private hands, gives a greater and
greater power of appropriating the wealth
produced by labor and capital.
Thus, to relieve labor and capital from all
taxation, direct and indirect, and to throw the
burden upon rent, would be, as far as it went, to
counteract this tendency to inequality, and, if
it went so far as to take in taxation the whole
of rent, the cause of inequality would be totally
destroyed. Rent, instead of causing inequality,
as now, would then promote equality. Labor and
capital would then receive the whole produce,
minus that portion taken by the state in the
taxation of land values, which, being applied to
public purposes, would be equally distributed in
public benefits.
That is to say, the wealth produced in every
community would be divided into two portions.
- One part would be distributed in wages and
interest between individual producers,
according to the part each had taken in the
work of production;
- the other part would go to the community as
a whole, to be distributed in public benefits
to all its members.
In this all would share equally -- the weak
with the strong, young children and decrepit old
men, the maimed, the halt, and the blind, as well
as the vigorous. And justly so -- for while one
part represents the result of individual effort
in production, the other represents the increased
power with which the community as a whole aids
the individual.
Thus, as material progress tends to increase
rent, were rent taken by the community for common
purposes the very cause which now tends to
produce inequality as material progress goes on
would then tend to produce greater and greater
equality.
|
|
Who can say to what infinite powers the
wealth-producing capacity of labor may not be
raised by social adjustments which will give to the
producers of wealth their fair proportion of its
advantages and enjoyments! With present processes
the gain would be simply incalculable, but just as
wages are high, so do the invention and utilization
of improved processes and machinery go on with
greater rapidity and ease. |
|
But I shall not deny, and do not wish to lose
sight of the fact, that while thus preventing waste
and thus adding to the efficiency of labor, the
equalization in the distribution of wealth that
would result from the simple plan of taxation that
I propose, must lessen the intensity with which
wealth is pursued. It seems to me that in a
condition of society in which no one need fear
poverty, no one would desire great wealth -- at
least, no one would take the trouble to strive and
to strain for it as men do now. For, certainly, the
spectacle of men who have only a few years to live,
slaving away their time for the sake of dying rich,
is in itself so unnatural and absurd, that in a
state of society where the abolition of the fear of
want had dissipated the envious admiration with
which the masses of men now regard the possession
of great riches, whoever would toil to acquire more
than he cared to use would be looked upon as we
would now look on a man who would thatch his head
with half a dozen hats. |
|
And though this incentive to production be
withdrawn, can we not spare it? Whatever may have
been its office in an earlier stage of
development, it is not needed now. The dangers
that menace our civilization do not come from the
weakness of the springs of production. What it
suffers from, and what, if a remedy be not
applied, it must die from, is unequal
distribution!
Nor would the removal of this incentive,
regarded only from the standpoint of production,
be an unmixed loss. For, that the aggregate of
production is greatly reduced by the greed with
which riches are pursued, is one of the most
obtrusive facts of modern society. While, were
this insane desire to get rich at any cost
lessened, mental activities now devoted to
scraping together riches would be translated into
far higher spheres of usefulness.
|
source:
Part IX — Effects of the Remedy: Chapter 2
— Of the Effect Upon Distribution and Thence
Upon Production |
|
12. Effect of Remedy Upon Various
Economic Classes |
When it is first proposed to put all taxes upon
the value of land, all landholders are likely to
take the alarm, and there will not be wanting
appeals to the fears of small farm and homestead
owners, who will be told that this is a proposition
to rob them of their hard-earned property. But a
moment's reflection will show that this proposition
should commend itself to all whose interests as
landholders do not largely exceed their interests
as laborers or capitalists, or both. And further
consideration will show that though the large
landholders may lose relatively, yet even in their
case there will be an absolute gain. For, the
increase in production will be so great that labor
and capital will gain very much more than will be
lost to private landownership, while in these
gains, and in the greater ones involved in a more
healthy social condition, the whole community,
including the landowners themselves, will
share. |
|
Take, now, the case of the homestead owner
— the mechanic, storekeeper, or
professional man who has secured himself a
house and lot, where he lives, and which he
contemplates with satisfaction as a place from
which his family cannot be ejected in case of
his death. He will not be injured; on the
contrary, he will be the gainer. The selling
value of his lot will diminish —
theoretically it will entirely disappear. But
its usefulness to him will not disappear. It
will serve his purpose as well as ever. While,
as the value of all other lots will diminish or
disappear in the same ratio, he retains the
same security of always having a lot that he
had before. That is to say, he is a loser only
as the man who has bought himself a pair of
boots may be said to be a loser by a subsequent
fall in the price of boots. His boots will be
just as useful to him, and the next pair of
boots he can get cheaper. So, to the homestead
owner, his lot will be as useful, and should he
look forward to getting a larger lot, or having
his children, as they grow up, get homesteads
of their own, he will, even in the matter of
lots, be the gainer. And in the present, other
things considered, he will be much the gainer.
For though he will have more taxes to pay upon
his land, he will be released from taxes upon
his house and improvements, upon his furniture
and personal property, upon all that he and his
family eat, drink and wear, while his earnings
will be largely increased by the rise of wages,
the constant employment, and the increased
briskness of trade. His only loss will be, if
he wants to sell his lot without getting
another, and this will be a small loss compared
with the great gain.
And so with the farmer. I speak not now of
the farmers who never touch the handles of a
plow, but of the working farmers who constitute
such a large class in the United States —
men who own small farms, which they cultivate
with the aid of their boys, and perhaps some
hired help, and who in Europe would be called
peasant proprietors. Paradoxical as it may
appear to these men until they understand the
full bearings of the proposition, of all
classes above that of the mere laborer they
have most to gain by placing all taxes upon the
value of land. That they do not now get as good
a living as their hard work ought to give them,
they generally feel, though they may not be
able to trace the cause. The fact is that
taxation, as now levied, falls on them with
peculiar severity. They are taxed on all their
improvements — houses, barns, fences,
crops, stock. The personal property which they
have cannot be as readily concealed or
undervalued as can the more valuable kinds
which are concentrated in the cities. They are
not only taxed on personal property and
improvements, which the owners of unused land
escape, but their land is generally taxed at a
higher rate than land held on speculation,
simply because it is improved. But further than
this, all taxes imposed on commodities, and
especially the taxes which, like our protective
duties, are imposed with a view of raising the
prices of commodities, fall on the farmer
without mitigation.
|
|
The farmer would be a great gainer by the
substitution of a single tax upon the value of
land for all these taxes, for the taxation of
land values would fall with greatest weight,
not upon the agricultural districts, where land
values are comparatively small, but upon the
towns and cities where land values are high;
whereas taxes upon personal property and
improvements fall as heavily in the country as
in the city. And in sparsely settled districts
there would be hardly any taxes at all for the
farmer to pay. For taxes, being levied upon the
value of the bare land, would fall as heavily
upon unimproved as upon improved land. Acre for
acre, the improved and cultivated farm, with
its buildings, fences, orchard, crops, and
stock, could be taxed no more than unused land
of equal quality. The result would be that
speculative values would be kept down, and that
cultivated and improved farms would have no
taxes to pay until the country around them had
been well settled. In fact, paradoxical as it
may at first seem to them, the effect of
putting all taxation upon the value of land
would be to relieve the harder working farmers
of all taxation.*
*Let us remember that
fertility elements put into the soil -- or
maintained through constant renewal -- are in
the economic sense, capital rather than land,
and under Henry George's plan would not be
taxed. The farmer who builds up, or
maintains, the fertility of his land, would
not have to pay any higher tax than if he
kept it in run-down condition and with no
buildings, orchards or other improvements on
it. H.G.B
But the great gain of the working farmer
can be seen only when the effect upon the
distribution of population is considered. The
destruction of speculative land values would
tend to diffuse population where it is too
dense and to concentrate it where it is too
sparse; to substitute for the tenement house,
homes surrounded by gardens, and fully to
settle agricultural districts before people
were driven far from neighbors to look for
land. The people of the cities would thus get
more of the pure air and sunshine of the
country, the people of the country more of
the economies and social life of the city.
If, as is doubtless the case, the application
of machinery tends to large fields,
agricultural population will assume the
primitive form and cluster in villages. The
life of the average farmer is now
unnecessarily dreary. He is not only
compelled to work early and late, but he is
cut off by the sparseness of population from
the conveniences, and amusements, the
educational facilities, and the social and
intellectual opportunities that come with the
closer contact of man with man. He would be
far better off in all these respects, and his
labor would be far more productive, if he and
those around him held no more land than they
wanted to use. While his children, as they
grew up, would neither be so impelled to seek
the excitement of a city nor would they be
driven so far away to seek farms of their
own. Their means of living would be in their
own hands, and at home.
In short, the working farmer is both a
laborer and a capitalist, as well as a
landowner, and it is by his labor and capital
that his living is made. His loss would be
nominal; his gain would be real and great. In
varying degrees is this true of all
landholders. Many landholders are laborers of
one sort or another. This measure would make
no one poorer but such as could be made a
great deal poorer without being really hurt.
It would cut down great fortunes, but it
would impoverish no one.
Wealth would not only be enormously
increased; it would be equally distributed. I
do not mean that each individual would get
the same amount of wealth. That would not be
equal distribution, so long as different
individuals have different powers and
different desires. But I mean that wealth
would be distributed in accordance with the
degree in which the industry, skill,
knowledge, or prudence of each contributed to
the common stock. The great cause which
concentrates wealth in the hands of those who
do not produce, and takes it from the hands
of those who do, would be gone. The
inequalities that continued to exist would be
those of nature, not the artificial
inequalities produced by the denial of
natural law. The nonproducer would no longer
roll in luxury while the producer got but the
barest necessities of animal existence.
|
Source: Chapter 3: Of the Effect Upon
Individuals and Classes |
|
13 Effect of Remedy Upon Social
Ideals |
|
From whence springs this lust for gain, to
gratify which men tread everything pure and noble
under their feet; to which they sacrifice all the
higher possibilities of life; which converts
civility into a hollow pretense, patriotism into
a sham, and religion into hypocrisy; which makes
so much of civilized existence an Ishmaelitish
warfare, of which the weapons are cunning and
fraud?
Does it not spring from the existence of want?
Carlyle somewhere says that poverty is the hell
of which the modern Englishman is most afraid.
And he is right. Poverty is the openmouthed,
relentless hell which yawns beneath civilized
society. And it is hell enough. The Vedas declare
no truer thing than when the wise crow Bushanda
tells the eagle-bearer of Vishnu that the keenest
pain is in poverty. For poverty is not merely
deprivation; it means shame, degradation; the
searing of the most sensitive parts of our moral
and mental nature as with hot irons; the denial
of the strongest impulses and the sweetest
affections; the wrenching of the most vital
nerves. You love your wife, you love your
children; but would it not be easier to see them
die than to see them reduced to the pinch of want
in which large classes in every highly civilized
community live? The strongest of animal passions
is that with which we cling to life, but it is an
everyday occurrence in civilized societies for
men to put poison to their mouths or pistols to
their heads from fear of poverty, and for one who
does this there are probably a hundred who have
the desire, but are restrained by instinctive
shrinking, by religious considerations, or by
family ties.
From this hell of poverty, it is but natural
that men should make every effort to escape. With
the impulse to self-preservation and
self-gratification combine nobler feelings, and
love as well as fear urges in the struggle. Many
a man does a mean thing, a dishonest thing, a
greedy and grasping and unjust thing, in the
effort to place above want, or the fear of want,
mother or wife or children.
And out of this condition of things arises a
public opinion which enlists, as an impelling
power in the struggle to grasp and to keep, one
of the strongest perhaps with many men the very
strongest springs of human action. The desire for
approbation, the feeling that urges us to win the
respect, admiration, or sympathy of our fellows,
is instinctive and universal. Distorted sometimes
into the most abnormal manifestations, it may yet
be everywhere perceived. It is potent with the
veriest savage, as with the most highly
cultivated member of the most polished society;
it shows itself with the first gleam of
intelligence, and persists to the last breath. It
triumphs over the love of ease, over the sense of
pain, over the dread of death. It dictates the
most trivial and the most important actions.
|
|
Now, men admire what they desire. How sweet to
the storm-stricken seems the safe harbor; food to
the hungry, drink to the thirsty, warmth to the
shivering, rest to the weary, power to the weak,
knowledge to him in whom the intellectual
yearnings of the soul have been aroused. And thus
the sting of want and the fear of want make men
admire above all things the possession of riches,
and to become wealthy is to become respected, and
admired, and influential. Get money -- honestly,
if you can, but at any rate get money! This is
the lesson that society is daily and hourly
dinning in the ears of its members. Men
instinctively admire virtue and truth, but the
sting of want and the fear of want make them even
more strongly admire the rich and sympathize with
the fortunate. It is well to be honest and just,
and men will commend it; but he who by fraud and
injustice gets him a million dollars will have
more respect, and admiration, and influence, more
eye service and lip service, if not heart
service, than he who refuses it. The one may have
his reward in the future; he may know that his
name is writ in the Book of Life, and that for
him is the white robe and the palm branch of the
victor against temptation; but the other has his
reward in the present.
* His name is writ in the list of "our
substantial citizens";
* he has the courtship of men and the flattery of
women;
* the best pew in the church and the personal
regard of the eloquent clergyman who in the name
of Christ preaches the Gospel of Dives, and tones
down into a meaningless flower of Eastern speech
the stern metaphor of the camel and the needle's
eye.
* He may be a patron of arts, a Mæcenas to
men of letters;
* may profit by the converse of the intelligent,
and
* be polished by the attrition of the
refined.
* His alms may feed the poor, and help the
struggling, and bring sunshine into desolate
places;
* and noble public institutions commemorate,
after he is gone, his name and his fame.
* It is not in the guise of a hideous monster,
with horns and tail, that Satan tempts the
children of men, but as an angel of light. His
promises are not alone of the kingdoms of the
world, but of mental and moral principalities and
powers. He appeals not only to the animal
appetites, but to the cravings that stir in man
because he is more than an animal.
|
|
Give labor a free field and its full earnings;
take for the benefit of the whole community that
fund which the growth of the community creates,
and want and the fear of want would be gone. The
springs of production would be set free, and the
enormous increase of wealth would give the
poorest ample comfort. Men would no more worry
about finding employment than they worry about
finding air to breathe; they need have no more
care about physical necessities than do the
lilies of the field. The progress of science, the
march of invention, the diffusion of knowledge,
would bring their benefits to all.
With this abolition of want and the fear of
want, the admiration of riches would decay, and
men would seek the respect and approbation of
their fellows in other modes than by the
acquisition and display of wealth. In this way
there would be brought to the management of
public affairs, and the administration of common
funds, the skill, the attention, the fidelity,
and integrity that can now be secured only for
private interests.
|
|
Shortsighted is the philosophy which counts
on selfishness as the master motive of human
action. It is blind to facts of which the world
is full. It sees not the present, and reads not
the past aright. If you would move men to
action, to what shall you appeal? Not to their
pockets, but to their patriotism; not to
selfishness, but to sympathy. Self-interest is,
as it were, a mechanical force -- potent, it is
true; capable of large and wide results. But
there is in human nature what may be likened to
a chemical force; which melts and fuses and
overwhelms; to which nothing seems impossible.
"All that a man hath will he give for his life"
-- that is self-interest. But in loyalty to
higher impulses men will give even life.
* It is not selfishness that enriches the
annals of every people with heroes and
saints.
* It is not selfishness that on every page of
the world's history bursts out in sudden
splendor of noble deeds or sheds the soft
radiance of benignant lives.
* It was not selfishness that turned Gautama's
back to his royal home or bade the Maid of
Orleans lift the sword from the altar; that
held the Three Hundred in the Pass of
Thermopylæ or gathered into Winkelried's
bosom the sheaf of spears; that chained Vincent
de Paul to the bench of the galley, or brought
little starving children, during the Indian
famine, tottering to the relief stations with
yet weaker starvelings in their arms.
Call it religion, patriotism, sympathy, the
enthusiasm for humanity, or the love of God --
give it what name you will; there is yet a
force which overcomes and drives out
selfishness; a force which is the electricity
of the moral universe; a force beside which all
others are weak. Everywhere that men have lived
it has shown its power, and today, as ever, the
world is full of it. To be pitied is the man
who has never seen and never felt it. Look
around! among common men and women, amid the
care and the struggle of daily life, in the jar
of the noisy street and amid the squalor where
want hides -- every here and there is the
darkness lighted with the tremulous play of its
lambent flames. He who has not seen it has
walked with shut eyes. He who looks may see, as
says Plutarch, that "the soul has a principle
of kindness in itself, and is born to love, as
well as to perceive, think, or remember."
|
|
The will within us is the ultimate fact of
consciousness. Yet how little have the best of
us, in acquirements, in position, even in
character, that may be credited entirely to
ourselves; how much to the influences that have
molded us.
Who is there, wise, learned, discreet, or
strong, who might not, were he to trace the inner
history of his life, turn, like the Stoic
Emperor, to give thanks to the gods, that by this
one and that one, and here and there, good
examples have been set him, noble thoughts have
reached him, and happy opportunities opened
before him.
|
|
To remove want and the fear of want, to give
to all classes leisure, and comfort, and
independence, the decencies and refinements of
life, the opportunities of mental and moral
development, would be like turning water into a
desert. The sterile waste would clothe itself
with verdure, and the barren places where life
seemed banned would ere long be dappled with the
shade of trees and musical with the song of
birds. Talents now hidden, virtues unsuspected,
would come forth to make human life richer,
fuller, happier, nobler. For
* in these round men who are stuck into
three-cornered holes, and three-cornered men who
are jammed into round holes;
* in these men who are wasting their energies in
the scramble to be rich;
* in these who in factories are turned into
machines, or are chained by necessity to bench or
plow;
* in these children who are growing up in
squalor, and vice, and ignorance, are powers of
the highest order, talents the most splendid.
They need but the opportunity to bring them
forth.
Consider the possibilities of a state of
society that gave that opportunity to all. Let
imagination fill out the picture; its colors
grow too bright for words to paint.
-
Consider the moral elevation, the
intellectual activity, the social life.
-
Consider how by a thousand actions and
interactions the members of every community
are linked together, and how in the present
condition of things even the fortunate few
who stand upon the apex of the social
pyramid must suffer, though they know it
not, from the want, ignorance, and
degradation that are underneath.
|
source:
Chapter 4: Of the Changes that Would ... |
|
14 Liberty, and Equality of
Opportunity |
p.544
|
p.544
|
The truth to which we were led in the
politico-economic branch of our inquiry is as
clearly apparent in the rise and fall of nations
and the growth and decay of civilizations, and it
accords with those deep-seated recognitions of
relation and sequence that we denominate moral
perceptions. Thus are given to our conclusions
the greatest certitude and highest sanction.
This truth involves both a menace and a
promise. It shows that the evils arising from the
unjust and unequal distribution of wealth, which
are becoming more and more apparent as modern
civilization goes on, are not incidents of
progress, but tendencies which must bring
progress to a halt; that they will not cure
themselves, but, on the contrary, must, unless
their cause is removed, grow greater and greater,
until they sweep us back into barbarism by the
road every previous civilization has trod. But it
also shows that these evils are not imposed by
natural laws; that they spring solely from social
maladjustments which ignore natural laws, and
that in removing their cause we shall be giving
an enormous impetus to progress.
The poverty which in the midst of abundance
pinches and embrutes men, and all the manifold
evils which flow from it, spring from a denial of
justice. In permitting the monopolization of the
opportunities which nature freely offers to all,
we have ignored the fundamental law of justice
— for, so far as we can see, when we view
things upon a large scale, justice seems to be
the supreme law of the universe. But by sweeping
away this injustice and asserting the rights of
all men to natural opportunities, we shall
conform ourselves to the law — we shall
remove the great cause of unnatural inequality in
the distribution of wealth and power; we shall
abolish poverty; tame the ruthless passions of
greed; dry up the springs of vice and misery;
light in dark places the lamp of knowledge; give
new vigor to invention and a fresh impulse to
discovery; substitute political strength for
political weakness; and make tyranny and anarchy
impossible.
The reform I have proposed accords with all
that is politically, socially, or morally
desirable. It has the qualities of a true reform,
for it will make all other reforms easier. What
is it but the carrying out in letter and spirit
of the truth enunciated in the Declaration of
Independence — the "self-evident" truth
that is the heart and soul of the Declaration
—"That all men are created equal; that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain
inalienable rights; that among these are life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!"
These rights are denied when the equal right
to land — on which and by which men alone
can live — is denied. Equality of political
rights will not compensate for the denial of the
equal right to the bounty of nature. Political
liberty, when the equal right to land is denied,
becomes, as population increases and invention
goes on, merely the liberty to compete for
employment at starvation wages. This is the truth
that we have ignored. And so
- there come beggars in our streets and
tramps on our roads; and
- poverty enslaves men who we boast are
political sovereigns; and
- want breeds ignorance that our schools
cannot enlighten; and
- citizens vote as their masters dictate;
and
- the demagogue usurps the part of the
statesman; and
- gold weighs in the scales of justice;
and
- in high places sit those who do not pay to
civic virtue even the compliment of hypocrisy;
and
- the pillars of the republic that we thought
so strong already bend under an increasing
strain.
We honor Liberty in name and in form. We set
up her statues and sound her praises. But we have
not fully trusted her. And with our growth so
grow her demands. She will have no half
service!
Liberty! it is a word to conjure with, not to
vex the ear in empty boastings. For Liberty means
Justice, and Justice is the natural law —
the law of health and symmetry and strength, of
fraternity and co-operation.
They who look upon Liberty as having
accomplished her mission when she has abolished
hereditary privileges and given men the ballot,
who think of her as having no further relations
to the everyday affairs of life, have not seen
her real grandeur — to them the poets who
have sung of her must seem rhapsodists, and her
martyrs fools! As the sun is the lord of life, as
well as of light; as his beams not merely pierce
the clouds, but support all growth, supply all
motion, and call forth from what would otherwise
be a cold and inert mass all the infinite
diversities of being and beauty, so is liberty to
mankind. It is not for an abstraction that men
have toiled and died; that in every age the
witnesses of Liberty have stood forth, and the
martyrs of Liberty have suffered.
We speak of Liberty as one thing, and of
virtue, wealth, knowledge, invention, national
strength, and national independence as other
things. But, of all these, Liberty is the source,
the mother, the necessary condition. She is to
virtue what light is to color; to wealth what
sunshine is to grain; to knowledge what eyes are
to sight. She is the genius of invention, the
brawn of national strength, the spirit of
national independence. Where Liberty rises, there
virtue grows, wealth increases, knowledge
expands, invention multiplies human powers, and
in strength and spirit the freer nation rises
among her neighbors as Saul amid his brethren
— taller and fairer. Where Liberty sinks,
there virtue fades, wealth diminishes, knowledge
is forgotten, invention ceases, and empires once
mighty in arms and arts become a helpless prey to
freer barbarians!
Only in broken gleams and partial light has
the sun of Liberty yet beamed among men, but all
progress hath she called forth.
- Liberty came to a race of slaves crouching
under Egyptian whips, and led them forth from
the House of Bondage. She hardened them in the
desert and made of them a race of conquerors.
The free spirit of the Mosaic law took their
thinkers up to heights where they beheld the
unity of God, and inspired their poets with
strains that yet phrase the highest exaltations
of thought.
- Liberty dawned on the Phoenician coast, and
ships passed the Pillars of Hercules to plow
the unknown sea.
- She shed a partial light on Greece, and
marble grew to shapes of ideal beauty, words
became the instruments of subtlest thought, and
against the scanty militia of free cities the
countless hosts of the Great King broke like
surges against a rock.
- She cast her beams on the four-acre farms
of Italian husbandmen, and born of her strength
a power came forth that conquered the world.
They glinted from shields of German warriors,
and Augustus wept his legions.
- Out of the night that followed her eclipse,
her slanting rays fell again on free cities,
and a lost learning revived, modern
civilization began, a new world was unveiled;
and as Liberty grew, so grew art, wealth,
power, knowledge, and refinement. In the
history of every nation we may read the same
truth.
- It was the strength born of Magna Charta
that won Crecy and Agincourt.
- It was the revival of Liberty from the
despotism of the Tudors that glorified the
Elizabethan age. It was the spirit that brought
a crowned tyrant to the block that planted here
the seed of a mighty tree.
- It was the energy of ancient freedom that,
the moment it had gained unity, made Spain the
mightiest power of the world, only to fall to
the lowest depth of weakness when tyranny
succeeded liberty.
- See, in France, all intellectual vigor
dying under the tyranny of the Seventeenth
Century to revive in splendor as Liberty awoke
in the Eighteenth, and on the enfranchisement
of French peasants in the Great Revolution,
basing the wonderful strength that has in our
time defied defeat.
Shall we not trust her?
In our time, as in times before, creep on the
insidious forces that, producing inequality,
destroy Liberty. On the horizon the clouds begin
to lower. Liberty calls to us again. We must
follow her further; we must trust her fully.
Either we must wholly accept her or she will not
stay. It is not enough that men should vote; it
is not enough that they should be theoretically
equal before the law. They must have liberty to
avail themselves of the opportunities and means
of life; they must stand on equal terms with
reference to the bounty of nature. Either this,
or Liberty withdraws her light! Either this, or
darkness comes on, and the very forces that
progress has evolved turn to powers that work
destruction. This is the universal law. This is
the lesson of the centuries. Unless its
foundations be laid in justice the social
structure cannot stand.
Our primary social adjustment is a denial of
justice. In allowing one man to own the land on
which and from which other men must live, we have
made them his bondsmen in a degree which
increases as material progress goes on. This is
the subtile alchemy that in ways they do not
realize is extracting from the masses in every
civilized country the fruits of their weary toil;
that is instituting a harder and more hopeless
slavery in place of that which has been
destroyed; that is bringing political despotism
out of political freedom, and must soon transmute
democratic institutions into anarchy.
It is this that turns the blessings of
material progress into a curse. It is this that
crowds human beings into noisome cellars and
squalid tenement houses; that fills prisons and
brothels; that goads men with want and consumes
them with greed; that robs women of the grace and
beauty of perfect womanhood; that takes from
little children the joy and innocence of life's
morning.
Civilization so based cannot continue. The
eternal laws of the universe forbid it. Ruins of
dead empires testify, and the witness that is in
every soul answers, that it cannot be. It is
something grander than Benevolence, something
more august than Charity — it is Justice
herself that demands of us to right this wrong.
Justice that will not be denied; that cannot be
put off — Justice that with the scales
carries the sword. Shall we ward the stroke with
liturgies and prayers? Shall we avert the decrees
of immutable law by raising churches when hungry
infants moan and weary mothers weep?
Though it may take the language of prayer, it
is blasphemy that attributes to the inscrutable
decrees of Providence the suffering and
brutishness that come of poverty; that turns with
folded hands to the All-Father and lays on Him
the responsibility for the want and crime of our
great cities. We degrade the Everlasting. We
slander the Just One. A merciful man would have
better ordered the world; a just man would crush
with his foot such an ulcerous ant-hill! It is
not the Almighty, but we who are responsible for
the vice and misery that fester amid our
civilization. The Creator showers upon us his
gifts — more than enough for all. But like
swine scrambling for food, we tread them in the
mire — tread them in the mire, while we
tear and rend each other!
In the very centers of our civilization today
are want and suffering enough to make sick at
heart whoever does not close his eyes and steel
his nerves. Dare we turn to the Creator and ask
Him to relieve it? Supposing the prayer were
heard, and at the behest with which the universe
sprang into being there should glow in the sun a
greater power; new virtue fill the air; fresh
vigor the soil; that for every blade of grass
that now grows two should spring up, and the seed
that now increases fiftyfold should increase a
hundredfold! Would poverty be abated or want
relieved? Manifestly no! Whatever benefit would
accrue would be but temporary. The new powers
streaming through the material universe could be
utilized only through land.
|
p.550
|
p.550 |
This is not merely a deduction of political
economy; it is a fact of experience. We know it
because we have seen it. Within our own times,
under our very eyes, that Power which is above all,
and in all, and through all; that Power of which
the whole universe is but the manifestation; that
Power which maketh all things, and without which is
not anything made that is made, has increased the
bounty which men may enjoy, as truly as though the
fertility of nature had been increased. Into the
mind of one came the thought that harnessed steam
for the service of mankind. To the inner ear of
another was whispered the secret that compels the
lightning to bear a message round the globe. In
every direction have the laws of matter been
revealed; in every department of industry have
arisen arms of iron and fingers of steel, whose
effect upon the production of wealth has been
precisely the same as an increase in the fertility
of nature. What has been the result? Simply that
landowners get all the gain. |
p.551
|
Can it be that the gifts of the Creator may be
thus misappropriated with impunity? Is it a light
thing that labor should be robbed of its earnings
while greed rolls in wealth — that the many
should want while the few are surfeited? Turn to
history, and on every page may be read the lesson
that such wrong never goes unpunished; that the
Nemesis that follows injustice never falters nor
sleeps! Look around today. Can this state of
things continue? May we even say, "After us the
deluge!" Nay; the pillars of the State are
trembling even now, and the very foundations of
society begin to quiver with pent-up forces that
glow underneath. The struggle that must either
revivify, or convulse in ruin, is near at hand,
if it be not already begun.
The fiat has gone forth! With steam and
electricity, and the new powers born of progress,
forces have entered the world that will either
compel us to a higher plane or overwhelm us, as
nation after nation, as civilization after
civilization, have been overwhelmed before. It is
the delusion which precedes destruction that sees
in the popular unrest with which the civilized
world is feverishly pulsing only the passing
effect of ephemeral causes. Between democratic
ideas and the aristocratic adjustments of society
there is an irreconcilable conflict. Here in the
United States, as there in Europe, it may be seen
arising.
- We cannot go on permitting men to vote and
forcing them to tramp.
- We cannot go on educating boys and girls in
our public schools and then refusing them the
right to earn an honest living.
- We cannot go on prating of the inalienable
rights of man and then denying the inalienable
right to the bounty of the Creator.
Even now, in old bottles the new wine begins
to ferment, and elemental forces gather for the
strife!
But if, while there is yet time, we turn to
Justice and obey her, if we trust Liberty and
follow her, the dangers that now threaten must
disappear, the forces that now menace will turn
to agencies of elevation. Think of the powers now
wasted; of the infinite fields of knowledge yet
to be explored; of the possibilities of which the
wondrous inventions of this century give us but a
hint.
- With want destroyed;
- with greed changed to noble passions;
- with the fraternity that is born of
equality taking the place of the jealousy and
fear that now array men against each
other;
- with mental power loosed by conditions that
give to the humblest comfort and leisure;
and
- who shall measure the heights to which our
civilization may soar?
Words fail the thought! It is the Golden Age
of which poets have sung and high-raised seers
have told in metaphor! It is the glorious vision
which has always haunted man with gleams of
fitful splendor. It is what he saw whose eyes at
Patmos were closed in a trance. It is the
culmination of Christianity — the City of
God on earth, with its walls of jasper and its
gates of pearl! It is the reign of the Prince of
Peace!
|
source:
Part X: The Law of Human Progress — Chapter
5: The Central Truth |
|
15 The Cross of a New
Crusade |
My task is done.
Yet the thought still mounts. The problems we
have been considering lead into a problem higher
and deeper still. Behind the problems of social
life lies the problem of individual life. I have
found it impossible to think of the one without
thinking of the other, and so, I imagine, will it
be with those who, reading this book, go with me
in thought; for, whatever be its fate, it will be
read by some who in their heart of hearts have
taken the cross of a new crusade. This thought
will come to them without my suggestion; but we
are surer that we see a star when we know that
others also see it.
|
p. 555
|
p.555 |
The truth that I have tried to make clear will
not find easy acceptance. If that could be, it
would have been accepted long ago. If that could
be, it would never have been obscured. But it
will find friends — those who will toil for
it; suffer for it; if need be, die for it. This
is the power of Truth.
Will it at length prevail? Ultimately, yes.
But in our own times, or in times of which any
memory of us remains, who shall say?
For the man who, seeing the want and misery,
the ignorance and brutishness caused by unjust
social institutions, sets himself, in so far as
he has strength, to right them, there is
disappointment and bitterness. So it has been
of old time. So is it even now. But the
bitterest thought — and it sometimes
comes to the best and bravest — is that
of the hopelessness of the effort, the futility
of the sacrifice. To how few of those who sow
the seed is it given to see it grow, or even
with certainty to know that it will grow.
Let us not disguise it. Over and over again
has the standard of Truth and Justice been
raised in this world. Over and over again has
it been trampled down — oftentimes in
blood. If they are weak forces that are opposed
to Truth, how should Error so long prevail? If
Justice has but to raise her head to have
Injustice flee before her, how should the wail
of the oppressed so long go up?
But for those who see Truth and would follow
her; for those who recognize Justice and would
stand for her, success is not the only thing.
Success! Why, Falsehood has often that to give;
and Injustice often has that to give. Must not
Truth and Justice have something to give that
is their own by proper right — theirs in
essence, and not by accident?
That they have, and that here and now, every
one who has felt their exaltation knows. But
sometimes the clouds sweep down. It is sad, sad
reading, the lives of the men who would have
done something for their fellows. To Socrates
they gave the hemlock; Gracchus they killed
with sticks and stones; and One, greatest and
purest of all, they crucified. And in penury
and want, in neglect and contempt, destitute
even of the sympathy that would have been so
sweet, how many in every country have closed
their eyes? This we see.
But do we see it all?
|
p.557
|
I have in this inquiry followed the course of
my own thought. When, in mind, I set out on it I
had no theory to support, no conclusions to prove.
Only, when I first realized the squalid misery of a
great city, it appalled and tormented me, and would
not let me rest, for thinking of what caused it and
how it could be cured. |
p.557-559
|
Political Economy has been called the dismal
science, and as currently taught, is hopeless and
despairing. But this, as we have seen, is solely
because she has been degraded and shackled; her
truths dislocated; her harmonies ignored; the
word she would utter gagged in her mouth, and her
protest against wrong turned into an indorsement
of injustice. Freed, as I have tried to free her
— in her own proper symmetry, Political
Economy is radiant with hope.
For properly understood, the laws which govern
the production and distribution of wealth show
that the want and injustice of the present social
state are not necessary; but that, on the
contrary, a social state is possible in which
poverty would be unknown, and all the better
qualities and higher powers of human nature would
have opportunity for full development.
And, further than this,
- when we see that social development is
governed neither by a Special Providence nor by
a merciless fate, but by law, at once
unchangeable and beneficent; when we see that
human will is the great factor, and that taking
men in the aggregate, their condition is as
they make it;
- when we see that economic law and moral law
are essentially one, and that the truth which
the intellect grasps after toilsome effort is
but that which the moral sense reaches by a
quick intuition, a flood of light breaks in
upon the problem of individual life.
These countless millions like ourselves, who
on this earth of ours have passed and still are
passing, with their joys and sorrows, their toil
and their striving, their aspirations and their
fears, their strong perceptions of things deeper
than sense, their common feelings which form the
basis even of the most divergent creeds —
their little lives do not seem so much like
meaningless waste.
|
p.560-563
|
The scriptures of the men who have been and
gone — the Bibles, the Zend Avestas, the
Vedas, the Dhammapadas, and the Korans; the
esoteric doctrines of old philosophies, the inner
meaning of grotesque religions, the dogmatic
constitutions of Ecumenical Councils, the
preachings of Foxes, and Wesleys, and
Savonarolas, the traditions of red Indians, and
beliefs of black savages, have a heart and core
in which they agree — a something which
seems like the variously distorted apprehensions
of a primary truth. And out of the chain of
thought we have been following there seems
vaguely to rise a glimpse of what they vaguely
saw — a shadowy gleam of ultimate
relations, the endeavor to express which
inevitably falls into type and allegory.
- A garden in which are set the trees of good
and evil.
- A vineyard in which there is the Master's
work to do.
- A passage — from life behind to life
beyond.
- A trial and a struggle, of which we cannot
see the end.
Look around today.
Lo! here, now, in our civilized society, the
old allegories yet have a meaning, the old myths
are still true. Into the Valley of the Shadow of
Death yet often leads the path of duty, through
the streets of Vanity Fair walk Christian and
Faithful, and on Greatheart's armor ring the
clanging blows. Ormuzd still fights with Ahriman
— the Prince of Light with the Powers of
Darkness. He who will hear, to him the clarions
of the battle call.
How they call, and call, and call, till the
heart swells that hears them! Strong soul and
high endeavor, the world needs them now. Beauty
still lies imprisoned, and iron wheels go over
the good and true and beautiful that might spring
from human lives.
|
p. 564-5
|
source:
CONCLUSION: THE PROBLEM OF INDIVIDUAL LIFE |
|
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