A COLONIST'S PLEA FOR
LAND NATIONALIZATION
by A. J. Ogilvy, J.P.
Vice-President of the Land Nationalisation Society.
Originally Published by the Tasmanian Land Nationalisation
Society.
(about 1890)
With an Introduction by
ALFRED R. WALLACE, D.C.L. (Oxon), F.R.S.,
President of the Land Nationalisation Society,
London.
1901
THE LAND NATIONALISATION
SOCIETY,
432, WEST STRAND, LONDON, W.C.
Established in 1881 to Restore the Land to the People and
People to the Land.
Monthly Organ, LAND & LIBERTY, Id, (Published on 1st
each month).
President: ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE,
D.C.L. (Oxon), F.R.S., &c.
Vice- Presidents: HENRY BROADHURST, M.P., REV.
STOPFORD BROOKE, M.A., W. P. BYLES, ROBERT CAMERON,
M.P., REV. J. CLIFFORD, D.D.. , WILLIAM RANDAL CREMER,
M.P., E. D. GIRDLESTONE, B.A., MICHAEL FLURSCHEIM,
SIR ROBERT HEAD, Bart., MAURICE LEVY, M.P., T. LOUGH,
M.P., J. W. LOGAN, M.P., DR. T. J. MACNAMARA, M.P.,
DADABHAI KAOROJI, A. J. OGILVY, J.P., D'AacT W.
REEVE, T. P. RlTZEMA. J.P., A. C. SWINTON, MlSS HELEN
TAYLOR, CAPT. FRANKLIN THOMASSON, J.P., REV. W.
TUCKWELL, W. VOLCKMAN, J. P., T. F. WALKER, J.P.,
CHARLES WICKSTEED, GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE. REV. PHILIP
H. WICKSTEED, M.A.
Treasurer: ALEX. W. PAYNE, F.C.A., F.S.S., 70
Finsbury Pavement, E.C.
8 Elm Court, Temple, E.G.; GEORGE CROSOER.
General Secretary: JOSEPH HYDER. Assistant Secretary. H. R.
ALDRIDGE
INTRODUCTORY NOTE by Alfred E.
Wallace.
THE following paper, which the Author has kindly permitted
us to add to our series of tracts, is an interesting and
valuable contribution to the literature of Land
Nationalisation. The writer is himself a considerable
landholder in Tasmania, and it says much for his
independence of thought and freedom from prejudice that he
has arrived at conclusions which are practically identical
with ours as to the evil results of private property in
land.
Tasmania is by nature one of the most favoured countries in
the world. It possesses a delightful climate free from the
extreme heats and long droughts of Australia; its soil is
fertile, its forests are magnificent, its streams numerous
and overflowing; all the products of the temperate zone
flourish there, while for fruits of every kind it is
unsurpassed; it has excellent roads, with railroads and
navigable rivers; its population is small, and a large
proportion of the land still remains uncultivated; yet
instead of universal happiness and well-being we find the
inevitable complaint, (as with us,) of trade depressed,
capital unemployed, farming unprofitable, and labourerers
out of work!
The Author shows us clearly the cause of this state of
things, and what is still more important, he explodes one
of the commonest fallacies of our opponents that large
farms lead to better cultivation and higher production than
small farms or peasant-holdings. This part of his work is
especially valuable, because he shows, as the results of
observation and owing to the inevitable working of the law
of self-interest, that the large owner or large tenant will
often cultivate his land badly, or even leave much of it
uncultivated, because he obtains the
largest net returns by doing so. The peasant farmer,
on the other hand, working a small area by the help of his
own family finds his profit in high culture and the maximum
of production from the land. By the former system one man
gets a large profit but small proportionate produce by
employing say ten men on a large area of land; by the
latter system twice that number of men work for themselves
on the same area, produce double the amount of crops and
stock, and live, all of them, in independence, and in that
healthy enjoyment of life which a man obtains when he works
freely upon the soil and knows that the whole produce of
his labour is his own.
These points, and many others of equal interest are so well
discussed and illustrated by the Author, that I strongly
recommend the study of his paper to all who are interested
in the greatest problem of the day how to abolish pauperism
by enabling every working man to obtain some portion of his
food directly from his native soil.
A COLONIST'S PLEA FOR LAND
NATIONALISATION.
The Unearned Increment: Its
Nature.
LET us begin by taking the unearned increment in its
simplest and clearest form.
Suppose I buy Government land at £1 per acre, and
quietly holding on while roads are being pushed forward,
settlement extending and land values rising, refuse offer
after offer till the price reaches £2, when I sell
out. Of these £2, one I have acquired by direct
purchase; £1 worth of money for £1 worth of land;
but the other I have done nothing to acquire.
It is not interest on the purchase-money, for interest is
payment for the use of capital, and
comes out of the use. Who would expect interest on money
tied up in an old rag? There has been no use here.
It is not compensation for risk, for the land could not
disappear or deteriorate, and was sure to be wanted.
It may be quite right for all that, that I should have it.
That is not the point at present. The point at present is
simply to explain the term, and to show not only what it
directly means, but what it indirectly implies, for it
implies a great deal much more than most people have any
idea of.
I have neither done anything to create this increase of
value nor rendered any service in return for it. If a
sovereign were suddenly to drop into my pocket from the
sky, it would not be more completely unearned.
But it has not only been unearned. If that were all, it
would be no great matter. If, like the sovereign, it had
dropped from the sky, then, though I might be undeservedly
the richer nobody else would be the poorer. My gain would
be a clear addition to the sum total of human wealth, out
of which others besides myself would in one way or another
derive benefit; and, whether or no whatever benefits one
without injuring another is fair subject for
congratulation.
But it has not only been unearned; it has been drawn from
the earnings of others. My gain is others' loss.
If I sell goods or perform work for another, then no matter
how high I may charge for the goods or the work, I am
rendering goods for goods, service for service, earnings
for earnings. What I offer is my labour, or the fruits of
it, and as the public are free to get the same goods or
services elsewhere if my terms don't suit, or to go without
them, the fact of their accepting my terms shows that the
thing I offer is, under the circumstances, worth the
money.
But in the case of this unearned increment on land there is
no pretence of any exchange. I offer for it neither labour
nor the produce of labour. All I do is to place my hand on
a certain portion of the earth's surface, and say, "No one
shall use this without paying me for the mere permission to
use it." I am rendering no more service in return for this
extra pound, either to the purchaser or to society, than if
I had acquired exclusive title to the air, and charged
people for permission to breathe. And if, instead of
selling my land for an additional pound, I let it at a
proportionately additional rent the principle would be the
same.
The increase of value in my land has arisen from the
execution of public works and increase of population,
causing an increased demand for the land; in other words,
it has arisen from the national progress; and I, so far
from aiding in this progress have actually hindered it, by
keeping my property locked up and so forcing on intending
producers to inferior or less accessible lands; and by
holding so much land back have helped to make land so much
scarcer, and, therefore, so much dearer, and so have helped
to increase the tribute which industry has to pay to
monopoly for the mere privilege of exerting itself.
I have employed my land not as an instrument of production,
but as a means of extortion. I have bought it, not to use
but to prevent other people from using it without my
purchased leave; not to earn anything by it but to obtain
the power of demanding the earnings of others.
Suppose certain parties, knowing that a road would shortly
be made into a particular region, bought from Government
the privilege of placing bars across the road (when made)
and forbidding anybody to pass until he had paid toll; toll
not (as under the old State tolls) to pay for the
maintenance of the road, but toll for the mere permission
to pass along the road. Every one would recognise that this
toll was pure blackmail and not earnings, and the
obstructors mere parasites licensed to prey upon the
public. But where is the difference between blocking the
road and blocking the land that the roads lead to? Where is
the difference between levying blackmail on the transport
of goods and levying it on their production?
But it will be said, "It was with real earnings that I
bought the right to demand this payment."
True. But the point is that whether I bought it or stole
it, the thing I have bought or stolen is the privilege of
levying blackmail upon industry; of demanding something and
giving nothing in return; of laying my hand on the earth's
surface and saying to all and sundry, "Give me of the
produce of your labour, or be off with you; so much a year
if I choose to let it; so much in a lump sum if I prefer to
sell it." Whichever of the two forms the demand assumes it
is called by political economists "rent," and by that name
I shall henceforth call it, because that is the accepted
name, and because there is no other compact and handy term
by which to express it; but it is not to be confounded with
rent in the legal and commercial sense, which includes
interest on the cost of improvements. The rent I shall mean
is economic rent only; the price charged for the mere use
of the land as such, either without any improvements or
apart from them: I shall mean "ground rent" in short.
The fact that it was with real earnings that I bought the
land for which I charge rent does not make rent earnings. I
may invest earnings in buying a share in a pirate vessel
(as a great writer puts it), but the proceeds of piracy are
not therefore earnings.
It is the nature of the business whereby I make money, and
not the manner in which I got into it that makes the
difference between earnings and appropriation.
Earnings mean taking payment for goods or service rendered;
appropriation means taking something and giving nothing in
return; no matter whether the taking be legal or illegal,
or how I acquired the privilege of taking. Anyone can
recognise that it is one thing to charge for the fish I
caught in the sea, and quite another thing to charge for
permission to fish in the sea; one thing to charge for
produce I have raised from the land, and quite another
thing to charge for permission to raise produce from
land.
"Still I have the right to make this charge?"
I am not disputing that.
If Government, with the full consent of the governed,
issued licenses authorising to rob on the highway, the
robbers, I suppose, would be justified in acting on their
privilege; but their gains, all the same, would be
appropriation and not earnings, no matter how high they
paid for their license or how honestly they came by the
money to pay for it. And if the public, disgusted with the
system, demanded its immediate abolition, the robbers would
have a claim to compensation but their compensation would
have to be assessed, not by the amount of plunder they had
expected to make, but by the fee they had paid for their
license and the actual loss to which, in one way or
another, they had been put by the sudden abolition of a
privilege they had honestly paid for.
But it will be said, "Rent is the result of a free
contract."
Is it? The Italian peasant who agrees to pay to the brigand
on the mountain so much a year in consideration of not
being robbed makes a contract, but is it a free contract?
If he refuses to pay it the brigand will take his earnings;
if the applicant for land refuses to pay rent the landlord
will refuse to let him make any earnings. Where is the
great difference between the two cases? There is a contract
in each case, and the one is about as free as the
other.
In neither case is anything given in return for the payment
received, except permission to work unmolested in a
particular place.
"But," it will be said "in practice the rent of an estate
represents real earnings in the shape of improvements made,
as well as mere permission to use the land, and how can you
separate the two values."
Not only is it quite possible to separate them, but the
thing is often done. In London, for instance, the ground
rent and the rent for the house often belong to quite
different persons. In Ulster, again, the retiring tenant
receives the value of his improvements while the landlord
keeps the value of the land. And in America, I am told, the
land and the improvements are assessed separately and taxed
separately.
But all this has really nothing to do with the subject in
hand. My concern at present is simply to explain the nature
of the unearned increment.
Whether the value of land and the value of the improvements
can be separated or not, they are quite distinct elements,
just as in a glass of grog, the brandy is brandy and the
water water, each with its own distinctive properties and
effects, notwithstanding their indistinguishable
com-mixture; and he therefore who lets land levies
blackmail upon industry by charging for something which
represents no service at all, none the less that at the
same time he charges for something else that does represent
service.
No doubt there are many other things besides land in which
a monopoly of the article will enable the possessor to levy
something resembling blackmail; but there are points of
difference that distinguish them all from the pure and
simple appropriation of land monopoly.
The first is that none of them excludes other people from
making a living or from making earnings to any extent by
other means than the article monopolised.
If by a day's labour or by pure accident I find a diamond,
I may ask a price entirely disproportionate to the value of
my labour; but then the public need not buy my diamond
unless they like. My finding a diamond does not prevent
other people from looking for diamonds with as much chance
of finding them as I had, and, if they don't think they are
likely to find any by looking for them they can go without,
and be none the worse.
But every piece of land appropriated shuts out so many
other people from that land, and as all the land
(practically speaking) is appropriated, or in one way or
another out of reach of the masses, they are at the mercy
of the landholders, and have no choice but either to rent
it from them as tenants or work for them as labourers on
the hardest terms to which competition can drive them;
which means that the landowner has the power of
appropriating the greater part of their earnings in return
for the mere permission to them to earn anything.
Or suppose that, instead of finding a diamond, I buy tin,
and that next week the price goes up to double here there
is an additional distinction between my gains and the land
speculator's; for not only are the public under no
compulsion to buy tin (while they are to rent land), and
not only does tin represent the results of labour, and so
represent earnings (which land does not), but the magnitude
of my gain in most cases represents compensation for great
risk.
The earnings of farmers and of miners may average the same,
but the farmers' average is made up of pretty equal profits
all round, while the miners' average is made up of a few
big prizes and many blanks. And what applies to the miner
applies also to the speculator in mining products. His
occasional large profits represent compensation for great
risks, and is thus as much of the nature of insurance as of
profit.
No one would think of either mining or speculating in
mining products, unless the many blanks were compensated by
occasional large prizes. They are the necessary inducements
to engage in those callings, and therefore fair earnings
when they come. Land, however, is not a speculation in this
sense (though even if it were, its profits would still be
appropriation and not earnings for reasons already given);
it is a sure investment in the sense that it is subject to
no extraordinary risks: to no more risks, that is, than
such as are inseparable from all human enterprise, even the
safest.
The value of land, as of everything else, will oscillate
within certain limits, and even in some exceptional cases,
as in the sudden diversion of traffic, fall for an
indefinitely prolonged period; but these occasional or
exceptional perturbations are but as the advance and
recession of the waves in a flowing tide. The tide still
comes in.
In every country which has any enterprise and progress,
land values must rise. The movement may be fast or slow,
continuous or interrupted, but it is up not down.
There is not a single factor in a nation's progress that
does not add to the value of land. Every road improved and
railway laid down; every machine invented and process
perfected; every opening of new markets; every improvement
in fiscal policy, in order and good Government, in the
knowledge and skill, in the morals, manners, and even
numbers of the people, every conceivable element, in short
that adds to the productiveness of industry, adds to the
value of land, and increases the tribute which monopoly can
wring from industry; which the man who merely ewns the land
can exact from him who uses it for the mere permission to
use it.
This is why the gradual rise of land value or rent (ground
rent only, remember), is called the unearned
increment.
So far for its nature. Our next consideration will be its
magnitude.
The Unearned Increment: Its
Magnitude.
Under the system prevailing all over the civilised world
every country is appropriated by a (comparatively) few
owners.
What these owners do with the land is a matter the State
concerns itself very little about. Whether they occupy and
use it themselves, or let it to a tenant and live in
idleness on the fruits of his labour; whether they
cultivate it like a garden, making it yield abundant wealth
and maintain hundreds of families, or leave it in a state
of nature to carry sheep, excluding the whole rising tide
of population from the opportunity of developing its
boundless resources because the sheep pay them rather
better; whether they open out the mineral treasures hidden
in its depths or lock them up by demanding such exorbitant
royalties that enterprise either will not attempt the work,
or attempts and fails; whether they construct factories and
build cities upon it, or turn out the whole population and
burn down their dwellings (as in the Scottish Highlands)
because a foreign millionaire offers them a higher price
for the privilege of turning it into a wilderness to shoot
deer in than the children of the soil can give for the mere
privilege of earning a living; all these things the State
regards as matters of quite secondary consideration with
which it is not called upon to interpose, because that
would be interfering with the "sacred rights" of
property.
The one thing it does concern itself energetically about is
to establish "the sacred rights" as fast as possible and in
all directions, and ensure that every acre shall have its
blackmailer privileged to exclude everybody else from the
land he has acquired possession of, and to forbid access to
all industry except on payment of the heaviest toll which
the keenest competition can compel.
The whole country (that is the whole country worth
occupying at any given moment) being thus apportioned
amongst these privileged few, they are masters of the
situation. The first thing a man requires is room to stand
in; and there is no unappropriated room available for the
purpose. If he stands on private land he is liable to an
action for trespass. If he goes out into the street, the
policeman may order him to move on. When night comes on,
matters are worse. If he sleeps on somebody's premises he
can be apprehended for being on the premises for an
unlawful purpose. If he sleeps in the bush he may be locked
up as a vagrant without any visible means of support. The
State insists that he shall pay blackmail to somebody; not
payment for service of any sort rendered, but payment for
the mere permission to be somewhere.
Land is the basis of all industry.
All industry consists either
1. In extracting the raw materials of wealth from the
land; or
2. In working up, shifting about, or distributing these
materials, or in aiding in one way or another some of
these processes.
We shall call the one class primary and the other secondary
industries.
Farming and mining are the chief examples of the primaries.
As to the secondaries, they are legion; and not only are
all the materials these last have to operate upon drawn
from the land, but so are the tools they work with as well
as the food the workmen consume.
It is clear that the extent of the secondary industries
will be strictly limited by the primaries; that is, there
can be no more persons engaged in working up, shifting
about and distributing materials than there are materials
(extracted from the land) for them to work up, shift about
and distribute and not only is the extent of the
secondaries determined by the extent of the primaries, but
so also are the profits in the secondaries determined by
the profits in the primaries.
Materials must be extracted (or produced) from the land
before they can be put to any further use, and men will not
leave this necessary preliminary work to take to the
secondary work unless they can make as much by the new
industry as they could by the old; and they cannot hope to
make more, because if they did, the opening in the
secondary industries being strictly limited, competitors
would at once flock in and bring their profits down.
If profits in the primary industries are high, that is, if
the land yields abundantly, and no one steps in to
appropriate the fruits, profits in the secondaries will be
high too, for otherwise people would leave the secondaries
and betake themselves to the land.
If, on the other hand, profits in the primaries are low
that is, if either nature is niggardly or someone (the
landlord for instance) appropriates the fruits, profits in
the secondaries will be low too; for otherwise people would
leave the land and crowd into the secondaries till they
brought profits down. Now, if all the land is held by a
comparatively few people (as is the case), then since the
land is the basis of all industry, there will be keen
competition for it a competition becoming keener year by
year as the competitors multiply and wealth increases, the
result of which competition will be that the man of average
means and capacity will have to give the very highest price
for the land that he will consent to give, rather than go
without it, and this highest price will be determined, not
by the amount that it takes out of his pocket, but by the
amount it leaves behind.
Here, for instance, are three farms of differing fertility
estimated to yield to the customary system of farming,
£200, £300, and £400 net profit
respectively. Then, if the first of these fetches, after a
pretty close competition, £100 a year, this shows that
no bidder will give more than will leave him £100 to
himself, but that the competition of the others will not
allow him to retain more; in other words, that £100 is
the lowest he will consent to keep, and the highest he will
be allowed to keep, so that £100 a year is the average
profit of farming amongst farmers of that class and means.
But since he cannot hope to keep more than £100, it
does not matter to him what the surplus may be which he is
compelled to give up to his landlord; consequently the
other two farms will fetch respectively £200 and
£300. Of course it is the rate of profit, and not the
actual profit of which we are speaking of. The £100 is
only quoted as an example. Amongst one class of farmers the
reserve will be higher, among another lower, according to
their means and the magnitude of their operations.
This is the theory, and it corresponds exactly with the
facts; for whether a farmer settles here or there, near a
market or far-off, whether he pays £100 a year for an
indifferent farm, £150 for a better, or £200 for
a better still, he finds that except by some lucky accident
his profits as a farmer remain much the same; which shows
that his rent is determined, not by what be has to pay
away, but by what he is determined to keep; and this
amount, this rate of profit, will, for reasons already
given, determine the rate of profit in all the secondary
industries, though they have no visible connection with the
land at all.
To put it compactly, the profits of industry all around are
determined by the rent of land. That amount of profit which
the worker on the land can save from his landlord will be
all that the worker at any industry can hope to get, and it
will represent that minimum margin to which he will consent
to be beaten down rather than go without the land.
What is the minimum margin?
The applicant for the land has a certain amount of capital
(otherwise he could not be an applicant), and for this he
knows he could get interest, and he also has the capacity
to work. Consequently, the least he will determine to keep
will be what he could earn as a labourer, plus the interest
he could get on his capital. Actually (except in the case
of the poorest competitors for the smallest and worst
farms) it will be something rather more than this, for his
capital, such as it is, gives him a certain advantage in
the position. He and his competitors being none of them in
danger of immediate want, and therefore not pressed by
necessity, will have a tendency to hold back in the bidding
when it begins to run high, and to cling to something more
than the closeness of the competition might seem to demand;
and the larger his capital the greater will be his
advantage, not only because of his greater power and
stronger inclination to hold out for better terms, but also
because the men of sufficient means to require a large
farm, such as he wants, are fewer in number, and the
competition in every way less keen and forced. Hence the
smallest and worst farms are always the highest rented,
which is only another way of saying that the profits on
them are smallest.
Still, be the farms large or small, competition will always
force rents up, and therefore profits down to the smallest
return the average applicant of his class will consent to
accept rather than go without the land.
Land, as we have said, is the basis of all industry, and
agriculture is the fundamental industry.
Everyone recognises this; and in view of the hard struggle
and hand-to-mouth existence of the farmer, all sorts of
projects are proposed to ameliorate his lot.
One party advocates protection, another the lightening and
equalising of taxation, another cheapness of labour by
assisted immigration (making the labourer the scapegoat),
another pins its faith on railways, and so on.
Of these proposals some are good, some bad; but their
effects, whichever way they tend, will not, except for the
moment, affect the farmers' profit one way or the
other.
Let us suppose protection to be the true policy, and
raising the price of some particular article by a duty, say
meat, see what the result would be.
The rise of price in meat will produce two opposite
effects. It will immediately injure one class of farmers
and benefit another. Those who by reason of distance from
market, unsuitability of their land for grazing, or its
still greater suitability for something else, do not fatten
stock, notwithstanding the rise in price (and these will be
a very large number), will suffer a distinct appreciable
loss in increased household expenses and increased cost of
feeding their men, without any advantage to set off; while
those on the other hand, with land specially adapted for
grazing, who already made a profit by it will make a larger
profit still; and those on land passably suited for it, who
formerly made their profit by something else, may, perhaps,
change their system, and make their profit by grazing
instead of by those other things.
But the point is, that after the first start neither those
who gain nor those who lose will be any the better or the
worse off, for their gain or loss, because at the first
renewal of their lease they will transfer the gain or loss
to their landlords.
For so long as all the land of the country is in the hands
of a comparatively few, so that there are more farmers
wanting farms than there are farms for them to have, so
long will competition force land values up to their
maximum, and rent will mean to the farmer the utmost that
he can see his way to giving for the land rather than go
without it and let another take his place.
But for the very reason that competition is thus already at
its full stretch, it cannot be stretched any farther, and
those farmers whose narrow margin of profit is trenched on
by their increased expenses consequent on the rise in meat
will insist on having that margin restored, and they will
be able to carry their point; for they were already giving
full value for their farms, and their farms (since they
produce no more and yet cost more to work) are now worth
less, less not only to the present occupants, but to any
one else who might want to take their place; therefore, the
landlords cannot play off one against another, and so must
accept reduction.
Conversely, where the profits on land, already profitable
for grazing, have been increased by the duty, those lands
will have become just so much more valuable and will fetch
so much more rent.
So, if you made a railway to every farmer's door you would
simply make the land more valuable. Compare those districts
that have railways with those that have none. In the former
you will see a greater population: probably, more
cultivation, certainly higher rents, but no higher farm
profits; for where the carcase is there will the eagles be
gathered together; where returns are high, thither will
competitors flock. There may be no actual bidding against
each other among the applicants, but this is only because
the landlord will kindly take that trouble off their hands.
He will put up the rent as high as he thinks he can too
high at first perhaps if so his vacant farm will soon cause
him to correct his error; but whatever the process, the
result will be the same.
So, if by assisted immigration, you reduce the cost of
labour by half, or if by mechanical inventions you enable
the farmer to do with half the number of men (which would
come to much the same thing to him) you would be simply
reducing the cost of working the land, and so increasing
the return to be got out of the land, and so increasing the
value of land, and so raising rents.
One after another labour-saving appliances have been
introduced within the last 20 years; double-furrow ploughs,
reapers and binders, horse rakes, steam threshers, without
improving the condition of the farmer in the least. Never
have there been so many aids and appliances to industry as
there are now, and never has the struggle of the farmer
been more severe.
So if you lightened taxation, or even abolished it
altogether, it would make no difference to the farmer,
beyond the moment. At present some leases stipulate that
the landlord shall pay all rates; others that the tenant
shall pay them; others again that each shall pay half, but
it is all a mere adjustment of rent. The more taxes the
less rent, and vice versa.
If the farmer pays more rent it is because he has to pay
less taxes, and whether this is owing to the landlord
paying them, or to there being none to pay, makes not the
least difference to the farmer.
So if nature herself instead of the mere instruments of
production were improved; if the soil were suddenly doubled
in fertility; if the sun could be got to shine and the rain
to fall exactly when and where it was wanted; if all weeds
and plagues were abolished, it would come to the same
thing, and for the same reasons.
The Press is continually preaching that the fault of things
all lies with the farmer. He should be more industrious or
more provident, he should know something about chemistry,
he should buy the best appliances, and use the most
advanced methods. It is very good advice in its way
perhaps, but it does not touch the question in the
least.
If you passed every farmer through a technical college, if
by a network of meteorological stations and commercial
agencies you supplied him every day with a forecast of the
weather, and the state of the markets, if you supplied him
gratis with all the best machinery, if you trained him in
habits of industry and economy, foresight and skill, till
you made him as much superior to what he now is as a steam
thresher is superior to a flail, you would enormously
increase his efficiency no doubt, but you would not add one
farthing to his profits. The whole benefit would go as
before to the landlord, and for the same reasons. You would
not have eased the pressure of competition, but only have
put it into the power of every competitor to offer more.
Still, as before, rent would mean the utmost the farmer
could be forced to bid for the land rather than go without
it.
Granting that there are many things that swallow up much of
the surplus that would otherwise come to the farmer; heavy
taxes, injudicious laws, bad roads, scarce labour; all
these matter nothing (as a great writer says) so long as
behind them stands something which swallows all that is
left. So long as that something stands waiting with open
mouth, abolishing any of these only leaves so much more for
it to swallow.
Some people shrink from these conclusions saying, "it is a
hard doctrine" (as if truths could be dodged by shrinking
from them.)
Others say that the remedy is the fixing of a fair
rent.
But what is meant by a fair rent?
If Brown objects to his present rent of £100, saying
it is too high, and should be reduced to £80, and yet
Jones is standing by prepared to give £100, why should
the rent be reduced? Why should Jones be forbidden to have
what he is ready to give £100 for, in order that Brown
should have it for £80? It is fair neither to Jones
nor to the landlord whatever it may be to Brown.
What would Brown think if Jones objected to pay the 5s. for
his wheat that he had agreed to pay, saying it ought to be
reduced to 4s., when Smith is standing by ready to give
5s.?
In the open market a "fair price" has no meaning. Hudibras'
saying still holds good that "The value of a thing is just
as much as it will bring."
There is a remedy for this evil, and a very simple one, but
it is not the fixing of a fair rent.
"But," it will be said, "all farmers are not tenants. Many
own the land they occupy." True; but all that this proves
is, not that the preceding remarks are incorrect, but that
there is a certain class to whom they do not apply. For the
present we will let the exception go for what it is worth.
What I shall undertake to show by-and-bye is that it is
worth nothing.
But we shall have to present one or two other
considerations at some length before we are prepared to
deal fully with this. For the present we will let it stand
over, only remarking that in farming, tenants are the rule,
occupying owners the exception, and that the exceptions
grow steadily fewer year by year. Not only in Tasmania, but
in all the other colonies, in the United States, and
wherever, in short, land is recognised as absolute private
property, the divorce between occupation and ownership is
proceeding apace, and the very institution which was
designed to secure to the producer the full fruits of his
labour is becoming the means by which he is compelled to
surrender them to another.
The Real Sufferer.
As the landlord by virtue of his monopoly of the land holds
the applicant for it at his mercy, so the applicant once in
possession holds the labourer at his mercy.
The competition was first for possession of the land, it is
now for employment on the land. The competition is in the
one case open and direct, in the other disguised and
indirect.
Labourers do not usually underbid each other for employment
as tenants overbid each other for possession, but it comes
to much the same thing as if they did: The more numerous
the labourers in proportion to the work to be done the
lower the wages, and vice
versa.
If the landlords were to divide their land into as many
pieces of equal value as there were applicants for it, and
were to offer these pieces separately, there would be no
competition to run rents up, and the landlord would have to
take what he could get for it a merely nominal rent.
To make money by his monopoly he must keep up its character
as a monopoly; that is, he must offer his land in a single
block so to speak, and so compel competition.
And just as the landlord forces rents up by offering his
whole land for one tenant's occupation, and so setting all
to compete for the privilege of being that one, so the
occupier in his turn forces wages down by employing as few
labourers as he can, and so setting all to compete for the
privilege of being among those few.
The secret of his power over the labourer is the same as
that of his landlord over him. It is not in his capital as
is generally supposed, but in his getting possession of
more laud than he can use by his own personal labour, and
preventing other people from using it by their personal
labour, except for his profit.
The landlord makes the occupier give him his money; the
occupier makes the labourer give him his work.
In so far as the occupier can keep his wage expenditure
below the general level by doing the same work with fewer
men, or paying them less wages, he can retain the savings
to himself; but in so far as he only succeeds in keeping
down the general cost of labour, he is only keeping down
the recognised cost of working the land, and so increasing
the value of land, and so raising rent; and the result of
his efforts (as a rule), is only to keep down the general
level, for all are playing the same game, and any saving
effected by one is soon copied by all, and absorbed in a
general reduced cost of production, increasing the value of
land and raising rent.
The productiveness of any industry that is, the amount it
adds to the general wealth or to the material comforts and
enjoyments of the people is measured by the difference in
value between the thing produced and the materials used up
in producing it.
Thus, if a carpenter in a day makes a door worth £1,
using up 8s. worth of timber and nails in the process, the
result of his work has been to convert 8s. worth of rough
timber into 20s. worth of finished product, exhibiting as
the measure of its productiveness a net increase of 12s.
How this increase is distributed and applied whether, being
an independent artisan, the maker can keep it all to
himself, or whether, being a hired servant, he must be
content with his day's pay, leaving the surplus to his
employer; whether he receives his share in advance or has
to wait for it; whether he consumes it or saves it up all
these make no difference to the fact that the increase was
12s.
From which we can see that the maintenance of the labourer
forms no part of the real cost of production, but only of
his share, as distinguished from
the employer's share, of the profit.
If he is working on his own account and not for an employer
everyone sees that all he gets lor his work is profit, and
his maintenance the use (or one of the uses) to which he
puts that profit, just as an employer's maintenance is the
use (or one of the uses) to which he puts his profit.
Or if the labourer, working for an employer, chooses to
fast till his employer has realised the product and paid
him out of that product the wages agreed upon, again
everyone will see that they are not cost but profit; the
labourer's share and the employer's share being the two
parts into which the total profit is divided.
But if instead of working for himself or waiting and
fasting, he arranges to receive in advance from his
employer the value (or part of it) of that profit which he
would have made if he had been working for himself, or the
value of the wages he would have received out of the product if he had waited and fasted,
still what he receives remains essentially the same, the
profit and not the cost of the work. It is only the time
and the manner of his receiving it that is changed; still,
as before, the proposition holds good that wages (of which
maintenance forms a part) is something to be added to the
employer's profit, not set off against it, in the national
account, and that to reduce wages is not to increase the
general profits of industry but only to apportion a smaller
part of it to the labourer who is worst off and most in
need of it, and so leave a larger part for the employer,
the landlord, or some other person who is generally better
off and less in need of it.
An industry that does no more than provide bare maintenance
for a single man from day to day is to that extent a
productive industry, a gain and not a loss, though it
provide neither rent to a landlord nor profit to an
employer.
An industry that provides not only for a man but for a
family is more productive still, a greater gain still,
notwithstanding that it represents increased
consumption.
One that not only provides bare maintenance but comforts
and enjoyments as well is a still greater good, and gain to
the country, a cause for rejoicing, not regret. And yet if
labourers' maintenance and wages are, as is generally
thought, the cost and not the profit of industry, all these
earnings should be lamented as expense, and the greater the
productiveness of any such industry as we have supposed,
the greater the loss to the country. The proceeds of
labour, generally speaking, are divided amongst three
people, the labourer, the employer, and the landlord. No
one reckons the landlord's or the employer's maintenance as
part of the cost of production, and yet they persist in
reckoning the labourer's as such. Relatively, to the
employer, it may be, but absolutely, to the country, it is
not. However, this is but a side issue, of small
consequence to my main purpose, so we will pass on.
The employer always has to wait for his share till the
product is realised, while the labourer generally, and the
landlord some times, receives his in advance; and the
employer sometimes makes a miscalculation and gives more to
the landlord in rent or to the labourer in wages than a due
regard to his own profit would warrant; or the enterprise
may miscarry, and there may be no increase to divide, or to
make good what he has advanced. But such miscalculations
and failures do not affect the general proposition that,
taking industry as a whole, wages, profits, and rent, are
the three different portions into which its proceeds are
divided. And since, as we have seen, the competition for
possession of the land keeps profits down to a minimum,
either rent will be determined by wages, or wages by rent;
that is to say, the larger the share of the proceeds the
labourer gets, the less will there be left for the
landlord, and vice versa; but as the landloid owns the
land, he is master of the situation, and rent determines
wages.
But to say that rent determines wages, is to say that rent
devours wages. The labourer gets so little because the
landlord gets so much.
[NOTE. I have adopted the division into rent, wages, and
profits, instead of into rent, wages, and interest, because
though less scientifically accurate, it is suificiently
accurate for my present purpose, and enables me to keep my
subject within more manageable limits.]
Rent devours wages.
Suppose the labourer to ask for a rise and the farmer to
refuse, on the ground that he cannot afford it.
But presently something happens. A railway is made or a
mine opened in the neighbourhood, or some improved process
enables a greater yield to be obtained at the same cost,
and there is now an appreciable surplus. The labourer comes
forward again and says, "You can afford it now."
"Unfortunately, no," replies his employer. "I might have
done so, but my lease is nearly up, and these advantages
you refer to having made the land more valuable, my
landlord has notified that he means to raise the rent; and
as there certainly is a greater surplus available for rent
than there was, I must give it, for if I don't someone else
will; and so, as far as I am concerned, the surplus you
calculate upon has vanished."
In short, whenever there is an increase in the
productiveness of industry creating an additional surplus,
and the labourer stretches forth his hand for a share of
it, the landlord pushes him aside, and takes it all
himself; but as he keeps well out of sight in doing so,
using the employer as his instrument, his action is not
perceived. And as it is in the present so it has been in
the past. Inventions and discoveries have within the last
century doubled the productiveness of industry over and
over again, but the labourer has no more benefited by them
than the employer has. The increase has been enormous, but,
in the primary industries at any rate, the landlord has
taken it all.
But some will say, "The labourer's exertion is a fixed
quantity. The increased productiveness of his industry is
in no degree due to himself, but to the improved appliances
he works with, and, that being so, the person who supplies
these appliances that is, the employer has a right to the
increase.
There is enough prima facie
appearance of reason in this to have made it worth
discussing if the employer really got it, but he does not.
He gets interest, no doubt, on the additional expense he
has incurred in procuring the appliance, but he gets none
of the increase of wealth due to the increased efficiency
of labour when aided by the appliance, (once the appliance
has come into general use); that, as we have seen, goes to
increase the value of land and raise rents, and while the
employer does not gain, the labourer in most cases actually
loses; for the usual result of labour-saving inventions, in
the primary industries at any rate, is not that the
employer retains the same hands to do more work, but that
he discharges some of his men and does the old amount of
work with fewer hands.
It is the landlord, who has neither invented, nor supplied,
nor put to use the appliances, who gets the whole benefit
of them.
To see that it is rent that devours wages, look at it
another way.
Suppose the labourers demanding an increase and being
refused, were to say "Well, in six months we shall strike,
so look out; meanwhile we shall prepare for the struggle."
So they save money, subscribe funds, and organise; and at
the time appointed present themselves, provisioned and
prepared.
What would happen?
Would the farmers refuse, and so all industry cease, or
would they consent to pay more than they could afford and
go bankrupt?
Neither of these things would happen. The farmers would
simply turn to their landlords and say, 'You see how it is.
We cannot afford higher wages, and the labourers won't work
without them. Accept a reduced rent, or we throw our farms
on your hands."
What could the landlords do? Their rents are determined by
competition, and here is competition suddenly come to a
stop. They must make the best of the situation, and accept
the reduction.
And so industry would go on as before, and the farmers make
the same profit as before. All that would have happened is
that labour would have gained a march upon monopoly and the
labourer have wrested from the landlord part of the
blackmail he was accustomed to pay.
For it is the labourer from whom it is wrung. It is by
keeping down wages that the landlord thrives. The employer
is merely the instrument, who, for a consideration cut down
by competition to the lowest figure, undertakes all the
trouble, the risk, and the odium of the squeezing.
The price of labour, like the price of everything else, is
determined by supply and demand, and it is said that if
employment is scarce it is because there is not profitable
employment on the land for all. Ah! but profitable for
whom? For the labourers, for the country, or for one or two
privileged people?
Here is a farm, selected from the assessment roll of this
district as a fair sample of a so-called agricultural farm
consisting of 640 acres and rented at £150. It keeps,
I believe, at the outside, two men at work the year round;
any other applicants for employment being dismissed with
the formula, "No work for you."
Two men to a whole square mile! And this on a farm within
15 miles of the port of Hobart, and containing hardly an
acre unfit for cultivation.
All the produce that comes off this farm has to be raised
by the labour of these two men. and must realise over and
above their wages and keep and all collateral working
expenses, a surplus of rent, £150; rates and taxes,
£20; employer's profit (say), £100; total
£270; being a profit of £135 to each man. No man,
in short, is allowed the opportunity to earn a living on
this square mile of cultivable land unless he produces,
over and above the supply of his own modest wants, a net
annual surplus of £135 to hand over to somebody
else.
If employment is restricted, it is land monopoly that
restricts it.
It is not that there is not abundance of land to use,
abundance of use to put it to, and abundance of profit to
be made from it, but that the tendency of monopoly is to
keep hungry mouths off rather than to take willing hands
on. It is naturally concerned only to get as big a share as
possible to itself, and is not concerned whether other
people have a chance to get a share or not.
The occupier will not engage more men than he can
help.
But suppose his hand is forced.
Suppose the Trade Unions were to change their tactics (as
they may do any day), and instead of trying to restrict the
field of employment were to undertake to extend it. Suppose
a Trade Union of farm labourers were to say to the farmer,
"You have been accustomed to employ two men only on this
farm. Well, not a man shall take service with you unless
you undertake to engage four, and at the same wages."
Does anybody doubt that the two extra men could produce
more than they consume and use up, and so be productively
employed? And if the net surplus to hand over to the
landlord were less, why he would have to take less.
The earnings of the two extra men, reckoning their wages
and keep only, would be 100 a year, and if that left a
surplus of 20 less for the landlord, there would still be
80 to the good. For, as I have elsewhere pointed out, the
labourer's maintenance (much more his whole earnings), so
long as he replaces what he receives, is not cost of
production but profit; the labourer's share of it. If an
industry does nothing more than maintain one man
continuously it is to that extent productive.
But the landlord's position is too strong for him to stand
in much fear of such combinations as these, and the whole
tendency of affairs is to increase his power.
The landlords as a class get more, without the least
exertion, outlay, or risk, out of the labour of the
community than they could if the whole working community
were their slaves.
Proletarianism v. Slavery.
Suppose I own a sugar estate and 100 slaves, all the land
about being held in the same way by people of the same
class as myself.
It is a profitable business, but there are many expenses
and annoyances attached to it.
I must keep up my supply of slaves either by breeding or
buying them.
I must pay an overseer to keep them continually to their
work with the lash. I must keep them in a state of brutish
ignorance (to the detriment of their efficiency), for fear
they should learn their rights and their power, and become
dangerous.
I must tend them in sickness and when past work.
And the slaves have all the vices and defects that slavery
engenders; they have no self-respect or moral sense; they
lie, they steal, they are lazy, shirking work whenever they
dare; they do not care what mischief their carelessness
occasions me so long as it is not found out; their labour
is obtained by force, and given grudgingly; they have no
heart in it.
All these things worry me.
Suddenly a brilliant idea strikes me. I reflect that there
is no unoccupied land in the neighbourhood, so that if my
labourers were free they would still have to look to me for
work somehow.
So one day I announce to them that they are all free,
intimating at the same time that I will be ready to employ
as many as I may require on such terms as we may mutually
and independently agree.
What could be fairer? They are overjoyed, and falling on
their knees, bless me as their benefactor. They then go
away and have a jollification, and next day come back to me
to arrange the new terms. Most of them think they would
like to have a piece of land and work it for themselves,
and be their own masters. All they want is the few tools
they have been accustomed to use, and some seed, and these
they are ready to buy from me, undertaking to pay me with
reasonable interest when the first crop comes in, offering
the crop as security. As for their keep they can easily
earn that by working a few weeks on and off any of the
plantations, or by taking a job of clearing, fencing, or
such like. This will keep them going for the first year,
and after that they will be better able to take care of
themselves.
"But" softly, I observe, "you are going too fast. Your
proposals about the tools and seed and your maintenance are
all right enough, but the land, you must remember, belongs
to me. You cannot expect me to give you your own liberty
and my land too for nothing. That would not be reasonable,
would it?" They agree that it would not, and begin to
propose terms.
A fancies this bit of land and B that. But it soon appears
that I want this bit of land for my next year's clearing,
and that for my cows, and another is too close to my house,
and would interfere with my privacy, and another is thick
forests or swamp, and would require too long and costly
preparation for men who must have quick returns in order to
live, and in short that there is no land suitable that I
care to part with.
Still I am ready to do what I promised "to employ as
many as I may require, on such terms as we may mutually and
independently agree to." But as I have now to pay them
wages instead of getting their work for nothing, I cannot
of course employ quite so many of them. I can find work for
ninety of them, however, and with these I am prepared to
discuss terms.
At once a number volunteer their services at such wages as
their imagination has been picturing to them. I tell the
ninety whose demands are most reasonable, to stand on one
side. The remaining ten look blank, and seeing that since I
won't let them have any of the land, it is a question of
hired employment or starvation, they offer to come for a
little less than the others. I tell these now to stand
aside, and ten others to stand out instead. These look
blank now, and offer to work for less still, and so the
"mutual and voluntary" settlement of terms proceeds.
But, meanwhile, I have been making a little calculation in
my head, and have reckoned up what the cost of keeping a
slave, with his food and clothes, and a trifle over to keep
him contented, would come to, and I offer that
They won't hear of it, but as I know they can't help
themselves, I say nothing, and presently first one and then
another gives in, till I have got my ninety, and still
there are ten left out, and very blank indeed they look.
Whereupon, the terms being settled, I graciously announce
that though I don't really want any more men, still I am
willing (in my benevolence) to take the ten, too, on the
same terms, which they promptly accept, and again hail me
as their benefactor, only not quite so rapturously as
before.
So they all set to at the old work at the old place, and on
the old terms, only a little differently administered; that
is, that whereas I formerly supplied them with food,
clothes, etc., direct from my stores, I now give them a
weekly wage representing the value of those articles, which
they will henceforth have to buy for themselves.
There is a difference too in some other respects,
indicating a moral improvement in our relations.
I can no longer curse and flog them. But then I don't want
to; it's no longer necessary; the threat of dismissal is
quite as effective, even more so; and much pleasanter for
me.
I can no longer separate husband from wife, parent from
child. But then again, I don't want to. There would be no
profit in it; leaving them their wives and children has the
double advantage of making them more contented with their
lot, and giving me greater power over them, for they have
now got to keep these wives and children out of their own
earnings.
My men are now as eager to come to me to work as they
formerly were to run away from work.
I have neither to buy nor to breed them; and if any
suddenly leave me, instead of letting loose the
bloodhounds, I have merely to hold up a finger or
advertise, and I have plenty of others offering in their
place.
I am saved the expense and worry of incessant watching and
driving.
I have no sick to tend, or worn-out pensioners to maintain.
If a man falls ill, there is nothing but my good nature to
prevent my turning him off at once; the whole affair is a
purely commercial transaction; so much wages for so much
work. The patriarchal relation of slave-owner and slave is
gone, and no other has taken its place.
When the man is worn out with long service, I can turn him
out with a clear business conscience, knowing that the
State will see that he does not starve. Instead of being
forced to keep my men in brutish ignorance, I find public
schools established at other people's expense to stimulate
their intelligence and improve their minds, to my great
advantage, and their children compelled to attend these
schools.
The service I get, too, being now voluntarily rendered (or
apparently so) is much improved in quality.
In short, the arrangement pays me better in every
way.
But I gain in other ways besides pecuniary profit. I have
lost the stigma of being a slave driver, and have acquired
instead the character of a man of energy and enterprise, of
justice and benevolence. I am a "large employer of labour,"
to whom the whole country, and the labourer especially, is
greatly indebted. The people say, "See the power of
capital! These poor labourers, having no capital, could not
use the land if they had it, so this great and far-seeing
man wisely refuses to let them have it, and keeps it all
himself, but, by providing them with employment, his
capital saves them from pauperism, and enables him to build
up the wealth of the country, and his own fortune
together."
Whereas it is not my capital that does any of these things.
It is not my capital but the labourer's toil that builds up
my fortune and the wealth of the country. My capital at the
most only puts a few better instruments into his hands than
he could procure for himself.
It is not my employment that keeps him from pauperism, but
my monopoly of the land forcing him into my employment that
keeps him on the brink of it. It is not want of capital
that prevents the labourer from using the land, but my
refusing him the use of the land that prevents him from
acquiring capital. All the capital he wants (to begin with)
is an axe and a spade, which a week's earnings would buy
him; and for his maintenance during the first year, and at
any subsequent time, he could work for me or for others,
turn about, with his work on his own land. Henceforth with
every year, his capital would grow of itself, and his
independence with it; and that this is no fancy sketch,
anyone can see for himself by taking a trip to our
NorthWest Coast, (Tasmania) where he will find well-to-do
farmers who began with nothing but a spade and an axe (so
to speak) and worked their way up in the manner
described.
But now another thought strikes me. Instead of paying an
overseer to work these men for me, I will make him pay me
for the privilege of doing it.
I will let the land as it stands to him or to another, to
whomsoever will give the most for the billet.
He shall be called my tenant instead of my overseer, but
the thing he shall do for me is essentially the same, only
done by contract instead of for yearly pay.
He, not I, shall find all the capital, take all the risk,
and engage and supervise the men, paying me a lump sum,
called rent, out of the proceeds of their toil, and make
what he can for himself out of the surplus.
The competition is as keen in its way for the land, among
people of his class, as it is among the labourers for
employment, only that as they are all possessed of some
little means (else they could not compete) they are in no
danger of immediate want and can stand out for rather
better terms than the labourers who are forced by necessity
to take what terms they can get.
The minimum in each case amounts practically to a "mere
living," but the mere living they insist on is one of a
rather higher standard, than the labourer's; it means a
rather more abundant supply, and better quality of those
little comforts which are next door to necessaries. It
means, in short, a living of the kind to which people of
that class are accustomed.
For a moderate reduction in my profits then (a reduction
equal to the tenant's narrow margin of profit) I have all
the toil and worry of management taken off my hands and the
risk too, for, be the season good or bad, the rent is bound
to be forthcoming, and I can sell him up to the last rag if
he fails of the full amount, no matter for what reason, and
my rent takes precedence of all other debts.
All my capital is set free for investment elsewhere, and I
am freed from the odium of a slaveowner, notwithstanding
that the men still toil for my enrichment as when they were
my slaves, and that I get more out of them than ever.
If I wax rich while they toil from hand to mouth, and in
depressed seasons find it hard to get work at all; it is
not, to all appearance, my doing, but merely the force of
circumstances, the law of nature, the state of the labour
market; fine-sounding names that hide the ugly
reality.
If wages are forced down, it is not I who do it, it is that
greedy and merciless man, the employer (my tenant) who does
it. I am a lofty and superior being, dwelling apart and
above such sordid circumstances. I would never dream of
grinding these poor labourers, not I! I have nothing to do
with them at all, I only want my rent and get it. Like the
lilies of the field I toil not, neither do I spin, and yet
(so kind is Providence!) my daily bread (well-buttered)
comes to me of itself. Nay, people bid against each other
for the privilege of finding it for me; and no one seems to
realise that the comfortable income that falls to me like
the refreshing dew is dew indeed, but it is the dew of
sweat wrung from the labourer's toil. It is the fruit of
their labour which they ought to have; which they would
have if I did not take it from them.
Is this caricature?
Take the farm of 640 acres before referred to, rented at
£150, and keeping two labourers. Could I, the
landlord, make £150 a year net profit out of the
labour of these two men if they were my slaves, and the
tenant my hired overseer, working them under the lash? I
trow not [sic]
I should have to pay him about £150 a year as overseer
instead of getting it from him as a tenant, which makes
£300 a year leeway to make up, to begin with, I should
have to find all the capital which he now finds
(practically) for my use; to run all the risks where I now
run none; while the men, working in sullen discontent,
would not produce near as much as they do now. No, thank
you! If the lot were offered me as slaves for nothing, I
wouldn't have them at the price I get more out of them as
things are, and I give absolutely nothing in return; all
that I get is pure blackmail.
Some of these days the labourer will wake up to the facts
of the situation. If the awakening be sudden and universal
he will seize the broom and make a clean sweep, taking
small account the beetles he may tread upon, or the
crockery he may break. An awakening of this sort happened
in France, and we know what it was like. He had terrible
wrongs to avenge, and be went mad over them, and in his
madness committed great crimes; but where he swept he swept
clean; the abuses he swept away have never shown their
heads since
But there was one abuse that he did not recognise to be an
abuse, and so he left it standing to his loss.
Next time he sweeps he will clear that away too.
There is small fear of his ever going mad over it again,
for his knowledge, and the consciousness of his power are
growing year by year; and by the time that he recognises
the facts of the situation, and sees what the change is
that is wanted, he will be strong enough to say calmly,
"Let it be done;" and it will be done forthwith without
violence or wrong.
Land Monopoly not only Absorbs the Fruit
of Industry but also Hinders its Progress.
This system of allowing any one person to obtain absolute
ownership of as much land as he can get, and to use it (or
not use it) in what way he likes, not only absorbs the
fruits of industry, keeping down employers' profits and
labourers' wages, and making life, to all who have to live
by work, a struggle for existence, but it also restricts
the field of employment, locking up the greater part of our
resources from full productive use, and so hindering
progress; and it can only secure its profit by so
doing.
It is claimed in favour of the system that once the land is
appropriated to an owner, it becomes that owner's interest
to see that it is put to the most productive use; and that
rent is the test of productiveness since that form of
industry that can offer the most rent must be the most
productive.
Never was there a greater mistake. The man who can afford
to give the highest rent is not he who can make the land
produce most, but he who can secure the largest share of
the produce to himself; and he can often more easily do
this by keeping other people off the land than by engaging
them to make it produce more; for more produce generally
implies more hands to produce it, and more hands imply more
claims to a share in the produce.
If by one form of industry (say sheep) I can make the land
produce £100, of which I can keep £70 to myself,
I will evidently prefer it to another (say agriculture) by
which I could make the land produce £200, but would
have to pay away £150 to other people for their share
in the work, and this none the less that it may take many
times more land to produce the £100 than it would to
produce the £200.
Here is an estate divided into five farms, each farmer
employing two labourers the year round, and raising
£400 worth of produce apportioned as
follows:
Direct assistance in the shape of
wages to the two labourers, representing their
earnings
|
£100 |
Indirect assistance in the shape of
blacksmiths, saddlers, carriers' work, goods bought,
and services hired of all sorts equal to the earnings
of two men more
|
£100 |
Rent
|
£100 |
Profit to farmer
|
£100 |
|
£400 |
These five farms together, then produce annually
£2,000 worth of produce, and maintain 25 men with
their families, viz. one employer, two labourers, and
indirect assistants equal to two men more, to each farm;
besides the landlord, who receives £500.
If now a stockbreeder sees his way, with the help of one
man as shepherd and general assistant, to produce £800
worth of wool and fat sheep off the five farms lumped
together, he can offer £550 rent (£50 more than
the five agricultural farmers put together), and yet, after
paying £50 to his man and £50 more for such goods
and services as he may require (representing the
maintenance of another man) keep £150 for himself
(half as much more than any of the agriculturists). His
offer of course, will be accepted, and the five
agriculturists with their retainers will all have to
go.
The amount of produce raised from the land will be only
£800 instead of £2,000, and the number of men
(with their families) will be three instead of 25.
The productiveness of the land will have been reduced to
less than half, and the population to about 1/8.
But suppose the land instead of being apportioned amongst
five farmers, producing £400 and paying £100 rent
each had been divided amongst 100 cottier labourers,
producing only £50 of produce and paying £3 rent
each.
Then the land would have been producing £5,000 worth
of produce instead of £2,000, and maintaining 100 men
(with their families) instead of 25; but inasmuch as the
landlord would only have been receiving £300 rent,
this arrangement would have been even more certainly and
speedily outbid and swept away than that of the five
farmers.
"But the 100 cottier labourers could not have turned the
land to account if they had had it."
Could they not?
Here is a market garden, there an orchard. The owner in
each case, a man of means, making a handsome income by the
labour of a few men with common spades and hoes. Would the
land yield any less, or the produce be worth less if these
labourers were working it for themselves instead of for an
employer?
Could they not buy all the tools they want by merely saving
up a week or two's wages?
Could they not turn any proportion they liked of their
produce into bacon, eggs, poultry, butter, things for which
the demand is practically unlimited?
Could they not sell for less, if need were, than an
employer, and yet thrive, seeing that wages alone would
satisfy them, while an employer must make a good profit
over and above their wages? But as we have seen, the whole
surface of the earth (so to speak) is parcelled out amongst
a body of monopolists, who will not allow the labourer to
produce any thing unless he produces. a large surplus over
and above for their enrichment.
While the landlord gets all the profit (so to speak) of the
men's work the occupier gets all the credit. He is the producer. The men are merely the
tools he works with, like the spades and hoes.
Producer! He produces nothing. It is the labourers who
produce all, only, as he holds the land, he will not allow
them to produce, except for his profit.
There is not a shilling of his income but what is due to
their labour.
If he decides to apply manure they fetch and spread it; if
he keeps the ground clean and well worked it is their arms
that do it; when he sells his produce it is they who gather
and deliver it.
I count it nothing that he finds the tools; that he
arranges the work; that he keeps the accounts; that he
takes the risk. I count as nothing anything he does which
the men could do just as well for themselves, and they
could do all these things.
"Then why doesn't the labourer get the land and do
it?"
Who will sell him the three or four acres he requires for
any price within his means? Near a town the labourer would
have to pay £20 to £100 an acre; in the country
no estate owner will sell him what he wants except at an
extravagant fancy price, hardly at any price at all. Owners
do not like to cut pieces out of their estates, nor to have
small independent settlers about them. They would generally
rather sacrifice something to keep them out.
They will let the land no doubt sometimes, but not only do
they usually ask an extravagant price as rent directly a
small piece of land is asked for, greatly in excess of what
they could make off it themselves, but they offer no
security of tenure, no guarantee for improvements.
What heart will the labourer have in effecting the high
cultivation which his system demands when he may be turned
out any time at short notice? How can he plant a tree when
he has no certainty of ever gathering the fruit? How build
himself a dwelling when he knows it can never be his
home?
How can he throw his heart into his work with the shadow of
an irresistible hand ever over him ready to turn him out
and confiscate his improvements whenever self-interest,
caprice, or a change of ownership so determines?
Here is explanation enough why the labourer is not in
possession of land, but there are other reasons still which
it is not necessary here to stay to consider.
I shall be told though that the term "most productive" does
not mean producing the greatest bulk or weight or even the
greatest gross value, but the greatest net profit.
Quite true; but profit to whom? To one particular person
only, or to all engaged in it?
Take the case of a farm.
The earnings of all the blacksmiths, saddlers, importers,
carriers, etc., who assist the work, as well as of the
labourers who carry on the work are as much net profit as
the earnings of the farmer who conducts the work.
All alike represent services rendered in furthering the
work, the production of a crop; and for all alike there can
be no return from the work till the work is finished; till
the crop is gathered.
But as there would be great inconvenience if all had to
wait for their returns till the work was finished an
arrangement has been naturally fallen into by which, while
the work is divided amongst many, the control, the
responsibility and the risk are concentred in one, the
farmer, who advances to each his share by giving him what
is supposed to represent the value of his service, and
makes what he can out of the surplus.
The profit of the crop is the gross value of the crop less
the seed, manure, and other goods consumed and wear and
tear of tools; all the rest represents profits apportioned
amongst a number of people, some of whom receive their
share in advance, and others have to wait.
The profit made by the manager of the enterprise, (the
farmer,) no more represents the productiveness of the
enterprise than the salary of Mr. Manager Kayser represents
the productiveness of Mount Bisohoff. All that the farmer's
or manager's profit represents, is that share of the
produce which the competition of his class for the office
of farmer or manager compels him to be content with.
Our habit of estimating the productiveness of every
industry by the profit of one person only out of the many
concerned, viz , the employer, is about as sensible as if
we estimated the size of a building by the size of a
particular brick in it.
That industry is the most productive which converts raw
material into finished product of the greatest value and in
the shortest time, and the greater the number of people who
are engaged in it and the larger the share of the proceeds
that each can get the better; but the tendency of land
monopoly is to allow as few people as possible to take part
in the work, and to let them get as small a share of the
proceeds as possible; for in the eyes of the monopolist,
whether owner or occupier, other people and their earnings
are merely so many expenses to be kept down.
As the landlord's interest is for each to own as large a
portion of the earth's surface as possible to the exclusion
of other people so that the competition for its possession
shall be stimulated and rents forced up, so the interest of
the occupier is for each to cultivate as small a portion as
possible so that the field of employment may be restricted
and wages kept down.
If each occupier were to put to full productive use all the
land in his possession the demand for labour would run
wages up, and so, though the production ot wealth would be
enormously increased, it would be divided amongst a much
larger number of people in much larger shares, leaving less
for himself; but by shutting out say 9-10ths of his land
from full productive use and inviting employment on the,
l-10th only, the field of employment is narrowed and wages
are kept down.
It is true, as we have seen, that though he gets the profit
of this he cannot keep it, the landlord taking it from him.
Still the necessities of his position compel him to try to
get it, and in this way.
I do not say that either landlord or occupier acts in this
way of set design. Each simply acts for his own interest in
what he would call a "practical" way; that is he guides his
conduct by results, without troubling himself how the
results are brought about.
The landlord, for instance, lets his land in such sized
pieces as he finds fetch most rent (that is in large
pieces) without caring why pieces of such size fetch most
rent, and, therefore, without being conscious that the
reason is that by this means its character as a monopoly is
kept up and competition for it stimulated.
Similarily the occupier keeps most of his land under
natural pasture, and only cultivates a small part, the
best, because the larger part so used, though it yields
much less, costs nothing, and so he gets all the profit
there is, and does not see, or care to see, that it is his
keeping this larger part out of cultivation, that by
restricting the field of employment and so keeping wages
down enables him to secure to himself the fruits of the
labourer's toil on the part he does cultivate.
In Great Britain this abuse by which the rights of the many
are eacrificed for the profit of one has been carried to
such an extent that whole counties have been nearly
depopulated; and districts in the Highlands that, as Geo.
Macdonald tells us, once turned out 1,000 fighting men now
only carry a few gamekeepers.
The children of the soil have had their dwellings burnt
down before their eyes, and they themselves have been
driven forth in thousands to emigrate to distant lands, to
crowd into the already overcrowded cities, or, as in some
cases, to die on the mountains; not because they could not
pay their old accustomed rent but because a foreign
millionaire offered the landlord more for the privilege of
turning the country into a wilderness to shoot deer in than
they could give for the bare permission to live.
A system that permits such atrocities is
self-condemned.
As to Ireland, her population has within half a century
sunk from 8 millions to 4½ millions, though knowledge
and invention have within that period so increased the
productiveness of industry that it ought to have risen to
16 millions; and yet the cry is still that it is
over-populated, and her sons have to emigrate by thousands
yearly.
But to see the fruits of land monopoly in hindering
industry and keeping down population we need not go out of
our own island.
Within five miles of this is an estate that was once called
the granary of Tasmania. It is now a sheep run.
First came the absentee landlord, who, living 12,000 miles
away, cared nothing for his estate but to squeeze all he
could out of it.
Next came a worse form of landlordship still, a
landlordship of trustees, in which the very possibility of
a personal interest was destroyed, and under which the
estate fell into worse and worse condition, houses in
ruins, fences falling to decay.
Last came the kind of landlord on whom so many pin their
faith, the occupying landlord, and he swept all the farmers
off the land, and turned it into a sheepwalk.
I am not blaming him. He acted on his strict legal, and, in
one sense, equitable right. The law allowed, and we may say
encouraged him to buy the land in absolute possession to do
with it absolutely as he liked, and he naturally liked to
do with it in the way that paid him best.
It is the system, not the individual that we
denounce.
But to judge of the system by such cases as these is to get
a very inadequate idea of the evil of it. To get a true
idea of this we have to consider the cases not only of
cultivation stopped that was already in existence, but of
cultivation prevented where it has never been allowed to
come into existence at all. The holders of such lands are
only doing what everybody else does, and has a recognised
right to do, making the most for themselves out of their
capital; and their land, though land is not capital, is to
them the same thing as capital; it is what they have
exchanged so much capital tor, and from which therefore
they have a right to draw the best profit they can in the
way that seems best to them.
The wrong was in allowing them to acquire this right in
selling the people's birthright for a mess of pottage in
giving over, for the trumpery consideration of 1 an acre or
so, to any purchaser the legal power to exclude the whole
human race from as large a portion of the earth's surface
as he chooses to buy.
William Rufus was considered a cruel despot for turning all
the inhabitants out of what was afterwards called the New
Forest to make himself a hunting ground, but the landlords
in this free self-governed country could do the same thing
today with the whole of Tasmania if they liked, and call in
the officers of the law to help them to do it.
I am myself a representative of the system I denounce. I
might sell, no doubt, and so get out of it; but what good
would that do? That would be only to change one landlord
for another a landlord who at least sees and deplores the
evils of the system for one who probably does not recognise
or care about them at all. I can serve the good cause
better in a number of ways by staying in than by going out
amongst other ways, by affording one standing example of a
landlord pleading for land nationalisation and offering his
own land, or so much of it as may be wanted, as the first
to be taken for the purpose at its actual value, as may be
decided, on whatever system may be adopted.
Review of the Situation.
Let us review the situation.
Here, in the primary industries, are farmers running rents
up to the point at which they can barely make both ends
meet; temporary outsiders men who have been outbid, vainly
looking out for a farm for months, and forced to take one
at last on almost any terms; permanent outsiders, men
brought up to farming and thoroughly understanding it, but
squeezed completely out of the competition who are now
dealers, butchers, one thing today and another tomorrow,
scraping up a living as best they can.
And as profits in the secondaries are determined by profits
in the primaries, the state of affairs is the same in
these.
Here are traders, half as many again as are wanted in every
township, running each other down in prices, touting for
custom with travelling agent and flaming advertisements,
giving reckless credit in their scramble for customers, and
every now and then the weakest breaking down and falling
out of the ranks only to be succeeded by fresh aspirants
trying to force themselves into the throng, and each with
capital more or less which he is eager to invest in the
business he is trying to secure.
This in a country not a century old, containing barely six
inhabitants to the square mile, a country with resources
that its Press and public speakers are never weary of
extolling, a country containing more natural resources than
countries with ten times its population, with tens of
thousands of acres fit for cultivation and untouched, with
timber in such quantities that we pile it in heaps and burn
it to get it out of the way, with minerals in abundance,
with fish in our seas, with an equable climate, with
everything in our favour; and yet men struggle for
employment and capital bids for investment.
Surely if we saw half a dozen men in a 10-acre field
struggling for room and gasping for breath, we should think
it a strange spectacle, and wonder what it meant; and yet
it would not be a bit more strange than our own condition,
and not half so interesting.
For the production of wealth there are but three factors
required, land, labour, and capital. Strictly speaking, two
only; land and labour (= matter and force) for capital is
but the product of labour saved up and accumulated. Still
it is customary to reckon the three, so we shall continue
to do so.
Which of the three is it that is wanting to us?
Is it land? The question is absurd. The land lies all
around us crying out to be used.
Is it capital? There is not an enterprise put forth
offering good promise for which capital is not forthcoming
in abundance. Whether it be a brewery, a trusteeship
company, or a mine, the shares are snapped up at once; not
to speak of that other capital without practical limit
across the water ready to pour in at the slightest
encouragement.
Is it labour? Why, the very essence of our complaint is
that people are struggling for work to do, not work
languishing for want of people to do it.
What are chiefly the resources that we talk so much about?
Surely not the untrodden forests beyond the farthest roads;
not the minerals we suspect but have not yet located; not
the inaccessible and the undiscovered; but the resources
that lie all about us, visible to the eye and palpable to
the touch; the occupied lands with roads through them and
houses on them of which a mere fraction has been cleared,
the cleared lands of which a mere fraction is cultivated,
the cultivated lands that, tilled in the roughest fashion,
yield but a fraction of what they might be made to
yield.
It is not the want of land on the one hand, or of labour
and capital on the other that is the matter with us, but
the artificial barrier of monopoly that keeps these factors
apart.
We spend vast sums in roads and railways to open up new
land, and as fast as we open it up we sell, for a paltry
£1 an acre or so to anyone who applies, the right of
shutting it up again if he likes, with the certainty that
he will like to shut up the greater part of it.
We try to import labour and entice over capital. Labour and
capital! into a country where labour (that is people trying
to earn a living) is struggling for every opportunity to
live, and capital has burnt its fingers so often by rushing
into rash ventures that it hangs back disheartened.
Labour and capital! As if the way to ease the pressure of a
crowd was to squeeze more people into it.
Break down the barrier that confines the crowd, and let it
spread, and then if there is room for more, more will come
of itself, more both of labour and capital, only too glad
of the chance.
How can labour or capital find employment when every
national resource is in the hands of some monopolist who
has got hold of other people's shares as well as his own,
and puts the greater part of it to the mere mockery of a
use, while for the rest he either frightens enterprise away
by his extravagant demands or by forcing competition runs
his blackmail up to the uttermost the user will give, so
that newcomers, if you had them by the thousand, would not
offer more; and if they did, could only get in by
displacing others
Take any natural advantage you like to name extent of area,
mineral deposit, or commanding situation and what is not in
reasonable use already is either locked up for sheep or
barred by extravagant demands for royalties or paid-up
shares; or, if in use, is let out for the uttermost it will
fetch.
We have now reached the point at which we can take up the
objection, previously postponed, that "all farmers are not
tenants," and the implication that were they all to own the
land they occupy, objections must vanish.
But it ought to be clear by this time that if all existing
landlords were swept away and all the land in use confirmed
absolutely upon the occupiers, things would be no better
than they are now.
For the evil that weighs upon society, hindering progress,
forcing down earnings, and making life to all who have to
live by work a struggle for existence is the monopoly of
the land; and whether it is A or B who monopolises it, is
of no consequence to anybody but A and B.
Wherever one man is allowed to acquire more land than he
can use by his own labour for the purpose of preventing
other people from using it by their labour except for his
profit, that man is master of the situation, and the class
of which he is the representative has the world at its
feet. And whether the monopolist turns his monopoly to
account as an occupying owner by working the labourers for
his profit directly, or as a nonoccupier by selling to
somebody else (called a tenant) for a yearly payment
(called rent) the privilege of working them, is a
difference not worth talking about.
Indeed if the system is to go on, it is better, in some
respects at any rate, for society at large and the labourer
in particular that the owner and the occupier should be
separate persons.
For where the land is in the hands of a mere tenant he is
forced to put it to sufficiently effective use, to make it
realise enough to pay his rent over and above his own
profit, whereas, as experience shows, when he has no rent
to pay, he is often tempted to take things easily, and
working enough of the land to keep himself comfortable, put
the rest to very poor use indeed in order to save himself
trouble, expense, and risk.
This is by no means an unusual result of occupying
ownership. There are many occupying owners who have no rent
to pay, yet make no more off their farms than other men not
more competent, who have a good stiff rent to meet, and
this merely because finding themselves able to make enough
easily to keep themselves in the style they have been
accustomed to, they do not trouble themselves to earn
more.
And the easier the occupier takes matters, and the less use
he makes of his land, the less employment there is for
labour, the more wages and profits are kept down, the less
raw material is there raised for the secondary industries
to concern themselves with, the more difficult it is for
carriers, artizans, tradesmen and workers of all sorts to
get a living, and the keener the struggle for existence all
round.
No. King Log is worse than King Stork. The whole system is
a legalised robbery of the public, and what we want is not
to change the robbers but to stop the robbery.
In Ireland they are now trying to set matters right by
changing their robbers. The landlord's rent is to be
reduced bit by bit till nothing of it is left, but the
monopoly of the land is to continue. The tenant is to
become the landlord.
What difference will that make to the labourers who will
still have to compete for the privilege of working for
their employer's profit so much of the land as he
graciously allows them employment on?
What difference to the thousands who have no land nor
employment on the land, but are forced to struggle for
existence because the land is not put to its full
use?
What difference to the country whose natural resources are
still left in the absolute power of a class whose interest
it is to hold back the greater part of those resources in
order to narrow the field of employment, and so force wages
and earnings down and their own profits up.
There is but one remedy for this great wrong, the
NATIONALISATION OF THE LAND.
We in Tasmania, like our co-thinkers in other parts, have
established a society for this purpose, viz., for "the
gradual nationalisation of the land as opportunity offers
and public opinion ripens;" and my whole purpose in these
pages has been to lead up to the elucidation and advocacy
of our views, and to give notice and opportunity to all who
may wish to join our ranks.
The State, gradually resuming possession of the land on
equitable terms, is to apply the ever-increasing unearned
increment to the reduction of taxation, and the
multiplication of public benefits. The occupier is to
become a State tenant, but on a tenancy that while it
secures to the State the full value of the land from year
to year and provides for its bona fide use, yet assures the
tenant as perfect security of tenure and of the fruits of
his labour as if the land belonged to him.
The occupation of large tracts by a single person (except
for temporary use in places where it is not yet wanted for
other people) will be done away with, and the land
eventually made so accessible to all that every person,
even the humblest, shall have the opportunity, if he wishes
it, of acquiring, within accessible distance of a market,
enough land to make himself a home and for the exercise of
his own personal labour.
Our Principles and Proposals.
Our principle is that the legitimate use of the land is as
an instrument of production, not as a means of extortion,
and its possession to be permitted to secure to its
possessor the fruits of his own labour, not the fruits of
other people's.
Our aim is to break down the barrier that keeps the two
factors of production, land and labour (the matter and
force of industry) apart, and throw open to full productive
use the resources of the country; to abolish the accursed
monopoly that lives upon industry as the tick lives upon
the sheep, sucking its juices and hindering its growth, and
thrives, not by doing a hand's turn or contributing a
penny's worth for the good of society, but by getting
possession of the means of existence, and making people pay
for the permission to live; to appropriate the unearned
increment of the future to the State, taking its vast and
constantly accumulating wealth from those who do not create
it, and giving it those who do, by applying it to the
reduction of taxation and the multiplication of public
benefits; above all, though unfortunately not before all,
to give the labourer access to the land, and consequently
the choice between working for himself and working for
another, instead of, as at present, between hired
employment and starvation.
This last, which should be first, we are obliged to
postpone, because till the labourer begins to recognise his
rights, and to demand their recognition by the State it is
useless for others to more on his behalf. He must be his
own deliverer. Others may point out the way for him to go,
his must be the force to break down the barriers of vested
interest and class prejudice that bar the way.
For the present we propose four simple measures only; not
one of them representing any new or revolutionary
principle, but giving principles already recognised and
acted on a more extended application; not one of them
seeking to confiscate the wealth of any one, no matter how
improperly that wealth may have been acquired; not one of
them interfering with the course of industry but on the
contrary all together opening out a thousand fresh channels
for it to flow in.
These four proposals are:
1. That no more public land be alienated on any
consideration.
2. That the State be empowered to retake possession of any
particular land which may be required in the public
interest, giving fair compensation for the land taken, and
letting this land out in lots of limited size at a rent
subject to periodical revision at stated intervals, and the
rent raised as the value of the land (apart from its
improvement) rises, or lowered if it should chance to fall,
and to give the occupier the assurance of undisturbed
possession so long as he fulfils the simple and reasonable
conditions of his tenure (unless it should be required for
a railway or some such very special purpose) with
recognition of his right to the value of his improvements
(if the land should be taken from him) at the time of the
taking.
3. That it is the surface of the land only that is let for
productive purposes; all mineral rights being
reserved.
4. That the absorption by the state of the unearned
increment on lands which it does not retake in possession
be commenced by taxation on the unimproved value of the
land, beginning with a moderate percentage, and gradually
increasing.
This is all we propose for the present. For the future we
will be guided by circumstances.
In regard to the first proposal -- "That no more public
land be alienated" the State already exercises its power of
reserve often over large areas, as in the case of mineral
lands. We propose to apply it to all cases.
In regard to the third -- "The reservation of mineral
rights," the practice of reserving rights in letting land
is so common that nothing further need be said about
it.
In the case of minerals being discovered, the State could
either let by tender the right of working them,
compensating the occupier for loss and disturbance, or
could leave them to be worked by the occupier at a fixed
royalty, or on such terms as might seem best.
In regard to the fourth, "The taxation on unimproved
value," it has been objected that it is a class tax. Well,
there are many class taxes levied for different reasons,
generally good and sufficient; there is (or was) the
carriage tax, levied as a tax on luxuries; there is the
auctioneers' license fee, levied as an indirect way of
taxing the transfer of stock at public sales. There is the
chemists' license fee, a way (in part) of securing that the
making up of prescriptions and the dispensing of drugs be
confined to properly qualified persons; so also we propose
a tax on the unimproved value of land as a step towards the
gradual abolition of the system of blackmailing industry,
and towards the restoration to the State of what it should
never have parted with.
In regard to the second (kept till the last because it
requires most comment) the power to the State to retake
land wanted in the public interest and the re-letting of it
on the conditions sketched out; the State already has the
power to take land for railway purposes. But as there is
nothing specially sacred in the nature of a railway to make
it an exception to all other works of public utility, as it
is simply a concern of great public importance, and that is
all the justification there is for taking the land required
for it, then if we can show (as I think I may fairly claim
to have shown) that the breaking up of land monopoly and
the throwing open to use of the national resources is a
matter of more consequence than all the railways in the
world, there seems no conceivable reason why the State
should not take the land for for this purpose too.
As to the circumstances under which the land shall be
taken, the manner in which compensation shall be determined
and rent re-valued and so on, all these are questions of
detail to be well thought out and freely and thoroughly
discussed, but the discussion of which would be for many
reasons out of place in a prelininary address like this.
One thing only must be insisted on; that the taking, the
re-valuing, the letting, the recovery of rent, and every
process connected with the disposal of the land shall be
entirely removed from the control of party politics and
personal influence, and be made strict processes of the
law, guided by definite rules and administered by properly
appointed and independent courts, just as the valuation of
property, the granting of mineral leases, and the recovery
of rates and taxes are now.
"But," we are told, "you forget the land hunger. Man
naturally craves for the absolute ownership of the soil he
tills, and without it loses half the stimulus to exertion.
He wants to sit under his own vine and fig-tree."
Here are three statements rolled into one. Take the last
first.
"He wants to sit under his own vine and fig-tree."
True; and the result of your system of absolute ownership
is that 99 men out of 100 can get no vine or fig-tree to
sit under, and the hundredth finds that the vine and
fig-tree under which he sits are not his but his landlord's
who charges him heavily for the privilege, and this even
though he has planted the tree himself, and watered it with
the sweat of his toil.
Year by year, all over the civilised world, the ownership
of the land is passing out of the hands of the occupier.
One man rears the fruit, another stretches forth his hand
and takes it. The very institution which you defend as
securing to the producer the full value of his produce is
the institution that compels him to part with it.
How comes this?
Because the unearned increment, though certain, is
deferred, and falls, therefore, to him who can afford to
wait, and who accordingly lies in wait.
Sooner or later the day comes when a mortgage has to be
redeemed, or death brings the property into the market, and
then the man of large and independent means, who does not
mind getting a low rate of interest for a while in
consideration of large profits hereafter, easily out-bids
the working owner, who has to earn his living, and must
have quick returns.
Thus it is that not only is the rich non-occupying owner
fast superseding the poorer working owner, but the large
nonoccupying owners are also eating up the small ones, and
the tendency of the times is for the whole land of the
country to pass gradually into the hands of a few
enormously rich people.
We have not got into this second stage yet out here, but we
are well on into the first. And so inevitably and steadily
land is coming to belong, not to him who has the best right
to it, not to him who wants it most, not to him who will
put it to the most productive use, or even to any use at
all, but to him who can afford to give most for it for the
mere purpose of squeezing other people.
You offer the name, but you cannot confer the reality. We
withhold the name, but guarantee the reality.
For what is the land-hunger?
It is the natural craving for a permanent home, and for the
fruits of our labour; and we guarantee both these; you do
not.
The natural desire of a man is for a dwelling that he can
regard as his home for so long as he chooses to dwell in
it; for a piece of land which he can cultivate and build
upon and improve as his interest or fancy may dictate
without the fear of a notice to quit, and the certainty
that when he quits of his own accord he can realise the
full value of his improvements at the time of his
retiring.
If you say further that all these things shall be his own
you are conferring no further privilege. You are only
summing up the privileges already enumerated in a compact,
sweet-sounding phrase.
That he shall possess his home so long as he chooses to
dwell in it, his land so long as he chooses to till it,
this is the land hunger. But to want to own the land
without using it, to leave and yet retain the ownership for
the mere purpose of preventing other people from using it
except on payment, this is not the land hunger at
all.
Directly a man has lost the desire to dwell in his home and
till his land, and wants to go elsewhere and live on the
rent, he has lost the land hunger, and retains only the
ordinary desire to make money.
Therefore, when under these circumstances we require him to
give up the land, securing to him the value of his
improvements, we violate no craving of his nature; we only
take from him what he has ceased to value, the land; and
allow him the one thing he continues to value, his money,
to invest elsewhere.
Further, it is the nature and not the extent of the
occupancy that satisfies the land hunger. A home and land
enough to afford employment are all that is wanted for the
purpose.
The Irishman's poor cabin is as much his home to him, as
the Duke's palace is to him; and an acre or two satisfies
the craving to be working for one's-self as thoroughly as
1,000 acres would. Therefore so long as we leave a man land
enough to provide him full employment, much more when we
leave him enough to employ many hired servants, we may
take, at a valuation, the broad acres on which he merely
runs his flocks without jarring any legitimate
feeling.
Conclusion.
Now let us note the results of our plan to each of the
parties concerned.
1. In regard to the dispossessed landlord.
So much land is taken from him, so much money of equal
value is returned to him He is certainly no worse off than
before. He is really much better off.
Formerly his income ceased every time the land was vacant
between one tenancy and another, and disappeared altogether
every time a tenant bolted or broke. Now it is guaranteed
to him with absolute regularity.
Formerly he was constantly liable to demands from his
tenants for repairs and improvements, to which he was
compelled, to some extent at any rate, to attend. Now he is
freed from all this, his income comes to him without
deductions.
He is better off all round for his dispossession.
2. In regard to the occupier.
He holds at present on (say) a five or seven years' lease.
All his operations are bounded by this prospective limit.
No improvement or enterprise can he attempt which will not
be completely repaid with interest within that ever
narrowing period. But such a limit is fatal to the proper
development of the resources of the land. The very first
condition necessary is security of tenure; not for five or
seven years, but for so long as the occupier desires to
hold it, with assurance of full compensation for
unexhausted improvements should he decide to retire. A hand
to mouth system that farms from year to year is but a step
in advance of the practice of the savage who supplies his
wants from day to day. To get the full results from the
land you must improve it. To work the land without being
free to improve it is to work it with one hand tied. The
most valuable works, those that return the greatest results
to a given labour, are those that are most far-reaching,
but slowest in yielding their results.
To drain, to plant, to build, for example are things the
occupier must not dream of. Many a thing that he sees the
land wants, and that it seems a pity to neglect, must he
leave undone; and his interest in the land, little enough
at any time, diminishes daily, till in the last year of his
lease he is in the position of a yearly tenant, a position
proverbially unproductive and unsatisfactory for both
landlord and tenant. It is no longer his interest to
manure, to keep down weeds, to effect a hand's turn of
repairs more than is absolutely and immediately
necessary.
As the end of the lease approaches he is further paralysed
by the uncertainty whether his lease will be renewed or
not, on such terms as he can accept. He does not know often
whether to fallow or what crop to sow, or what to
undertake; and if through the landlord's asking too much or
wanting to resume possession, or for any reason he is
obliged to leave, he has to sell off everything, no matter
whether the times are favourable or not, and be at a loose
end for months looking out for another farm, wasting his
time and consuming his capital.
Finally he has to take a new untried farm, the
peculiarities of which he has to learn by gradual
experience, and has hurriedly to get together fresh stock
and implements. Never has he any abiding interest in the
land; never is it anything more to him than a temporary
residence, and an instrument out of which to squeeze as
much money as possible within a given time.
Turn to State ownership and all this is reversed. The
tenant is now in as secure possession of the land as if he
owned it (only subject to a yearly payment) without having
to find the capital to buy it.
It is practically his; his as a home to dwell in; his as an
instrument to put to fullest use; his as a trust, not as a
possession; but as a trust in which he knows he will never
be disturbed so long as he fulfils its reasonable
conditions; conditions devised for the public good, not for
the aggrandisement of an individual.
He holds a portion of the public estate to the exclusion of
other people with equal rights, and therefore he must pay
from year to year the fullest value of that privilege. As
the land rises in value through the execution of public
works and the growing prosperity of the country he will
naturally have to pay so much the more for the use of it,
but nothing the more for the improvements he may have made
on it. If from any cause it falls in value, he will have to
pay less. Whatever its value from time to time, as
ascertained by periodical valuations, he will have to pay
it
What could be more reasonable?
Moreover, the more he improves the smaller will become the
proportion which his rent bears to the total value, or
productive power, of the property; and therefore the easier
will it be to meet it, and the more the remote the chance
of his ever being being disturbed in his possession.
Formerly his hands were tied by the shortness and
uncertainty of his tenure and the absence of any claim for
improvements.
Now his hands are free; the land is practically his, though
nominally the State's. It will be less in extent no doubt;
that is, he can no longer hold large areas to the exclusion
of other people, except temporarily, in remote parts where
the land is not yet wanted for more productive use.
He can no longer hold more than he can personally use for
the mere purpose of preventing other people from using it
except for his profit; but he can hold as much aa is his
fair share and whereon his home stands, in perpetuity, and
as much more as is not wanted by other people until it is
wanted; and as the State is not likely to want it so long
as it is being put to full productive use, and will have to
pay him the full value of his improvements if it does, the
more he improves it the less likely will he be ever to be
disturbed.
Secure in his tenure, and in the fruits of his labour, the
occupier will acquire a permanent interest in his land, and
a pride in and affection for it such as he has no chance of
acquiring now, and will have every inducement man can have
to put it to the fullest use, and draw the greatest
enjoyment from it.
"But as he has still to pay rent, it seems
rent to the full value how is he better off, after all?
What difference can it make to him whether he pays his rent
to the State or to a private landlord?"
Just the difference between paying money into the bank to
your account and paying it in to another's. For by so much
the more as the State receives in rent the less it requires
in taxation.
In paying rent to a private landlord the tenant pays it
away to a stranger for the stranger's enjoyment or
enrichment, and the payer sees it no more. But in paying it
to the State he gets back with one hand what he gives with
the other; what he gives goes to the great public trustee
to be turned into public benefits of which he has the full
use and enjoyment in common with other people.
His payment to the State, in short, is not a payment away
at all, but an investment, and generally speaking, the best
investment he makes. After making every allowance for
Government mismanagement, jobbery and extravagance, there
is yet no outlay from which we receive so many and so great
returns It secures for the payer benefits which he could
not by his own resource, labour or outlay secure at all,
and without which he could secure nothing else.
What sort of a living could any man make if in addition to
his ordinary business he had to be his own policeman,
roadmaker, schoolmaster, etc.?
What we pay to the State in taxation we get back in full
measure, running over.
But the returns from State rents are far greater than the
returns from taxation; for taxation gives you those public
benefits only in return for your money, while for State
rents you get the use of a piece of land in itself worth
the money, and you have all the public benefits thrown in;
or (to put it differently) for taxation you get your money
back once only, for the State rent you get it twice
over.
At the commencement of the system there may be no immediate
gain, as far as mere money payment goes; for a great part
of what the tenant pays to the State in rent, the State
will have to transfer to the dispossessed landlord as
compensation.
It is only as the land increases in value (which it will
quickly begin to do), and the unearned increment begins to
accrue, that the State revenue will begin to expand and to
go to the reduction of taxation and multiplication of
public benefits; but, from the moment it begins to accrue,
it begins to increase, and increases at accelerating
speed.
3. In regard to the labourer.
As for the labourer's full rights, which it is the ultimate
aim of our policy to secure, that is a subject on which I
may have something to say on another occasion; but for the
present all I am concerned about is to show how the
particular initiative measures which our society proposes
will affect him. Rent, as we have seen, devours wages; and
what enables it chiefly to do so is the power the landowner
or land occupier has of restricting the field of
employment; of keeping back the greater part of the
national resources from full productive use, and compelling
the labourers to compete for the privilege of employment on
the small portion which he permits to be used.
We have but to notice how the opening up or enlargement of
one particular department of employment affects the labour
market to form some idea of the effect that would be
produced by throwing open the whole field.
The undertaking of a single line of railway sends wages up
at once perceptibly along the whole line and for some
distance on each side. The discovery of mineral deposits on
Crown land, where the labourer requires nothing but a pick
and shovel and a miner's right to find employment for
himself at once, sends them up with a rush.
Throw open all the land for cultivation and all the
minerals for development, and whether the labourer or the
capitalist takes possession, work is wanted in all
directions; the labourer either finds work for his own hand
or somebody calling out for him, and can ask any wages he
likes up the limit of the productiveness of his
labour.
If the land is thrown open to the labourer himself, as in
the case of minerals discovered on Crown land, or of
allotments for cultivation on unused land, he will not work
for an employer for less than he can make for himself; nor
even for as much, for independence is sweet, and he will
rather work for himself than for another for the same
money.
To get labour, the employer will have to offer him even
more than he can make for himself.
Some people are quite shocked at the idea of such a state
of things. They think high wages are ruin to the whole
country, not seeing that the very fact that wages are so
high is a sign that labour is highly productive and
industry prospering; not seeing either that it is
impossible for wages ever to rise so as to check the
progress of enterprise; for no employer, no matter under
what pressure, will continue to give such high wages as
will leave him without sufficient profit to maintain
himself and carry on his business. If, therefore, he
continues to give high wages, no matter how high, it can
only be because his business is so profitable that he finds
it pays him better to give those high wages rather than to
throw up or contract his business, and so business goes
on.
And if any employer can not pay the high wages going, then
if wages do not at once, of themselves so to speak, come
down to his requirements, it is clear either that his
business is less productive that those other businesses
that can and do give the wages that he cannot, or that he
is an incapable manager; in which case, since the labourer
cannot be in two places at once, it is better both for
himself and the country, that he should go to the business
or manager where he can do best, best in every sense; and
thus High Wages, like Free Trade, are a potent factor in
the work of natural selection, weeding out the weak
enterprises and incapable managers and concentrating labour
where it is most effective.
But high wages are not only a sign of progress, they are
also a factor of progress in many ways; for high wages
stimulate the invention and adoption of labour-saving
contrivances, which add to the productiveness of labour.
Where wages are low, employers do not much trouble
themselves to seek for such contrivances or even to adopt
them when placed before them.
In making the Suez canal, the earth was excavated with
common hoes and carried out in baskets on women's heads,
though steam dredges and lifts were in full use elsewhere
and this simply because labour was so cheap that it was
scarce worth while to buy machinery to save it.
So in England where wages are higher than on the Continent,
improved appliances are in fuller use: and in Australia and
America, where wages are higher still, improved appliances
(such at any rate as are suited to their circumstances) are
in fuller use still In Tasmania the scythe and the sickle
may be said to be obsolete instruments, all harvest work
being done with horse-mowers and reapers and binders; but
nearly all the hay I saw lately (1889) cut in England was
cut with the scythe.
People are so used to seeing the labourer toiling for a
mere subsistence, and never rising above his condition,
while the employer and the landlord share the produce of
his toil between them, that they have come to look upon
this as the order of Nature; they seem to think that those
who have money have a right to the labour of those who have
none; that the whole purpose of industry is to provide rent
for landlords, interest for capital, and profits for
employers, and that the wages of the labourer are an
unfortunate necessity of the position, to be minimised as
much as possible; in short, that Providence has evidently
designed and ordained that the fruits of labour shall go
not to him who produces them, but to somebody else who
permits or employs him to produce them. The idea (which you
will hear expressed any day in all directions) that wages
should be kept down or the labourer forbidden to have
access to the land because employers in such case could not
make sufficient profit, means (put in plain terms) that A,
who has little, should get less, in order that B, who has
much, should get more; a proposition too absurd to be
discussed, but which seems to be a fundamental article of
belief with almost the whole class of employers.
If the labourer will not work for an employer for wages
that will yield the employer a profit, it is clearly
because he can put his labour to better use himself, and if
so, it is but just to himself and good for society that he
should so employ himself. Indeed it is much better for
society that in such case he should work for himself rather
than for an employer, for it sets the employer's capital
free to make his own labour more effective, or his life
more comfortable.
If I have 1,000 acres and £1,000 capital, and have
hitherto employed 10 labourers on my land to produce
£500 of produce, and the land being now thrown open
for selection, the labourers can make the £500 for
themselves on half the land, this simply sets free the
other half of my land, and all my capital for other
use.
But even if the vast resources which we propose to throw
open are not thrown open to the labourer personally, but
are at once taken up by capitalist employers, still it will
require a greatly increased number of employers and amount
of capital to take them up and put them to use, and this
means a proportionate increase in the demand for labour and
consequent rise in wages.
4. In regard to society.
The throwing open of the resources of the land means a
great increase of both production and population.
The more farm produce there is raised and mineral wealth
extracted, the more commerce, manufactures, the secondary
industries of all sorts will there be; for the greater the
produce extracted from the land, the greater the number of
people must there be required to work up, shift about, and
distribute that produce.
Again, the greater number of people in the country, and the
greater the number to the square mile, the greater the
variety of their wants, and the greater the number of
trades to satisfy those wants.
Also the more the labourers within the given area, the
greater the opportunity for the division of labour, for the
acquirement of skill, and for the economy of
production.
The greater the number of people and the more they produce
the greater will be the amount of rates that can be levied
(if more rates should be wanted) and the better the roads,
the better and more numerous the schools, libraries,
hospitals, and public conveniences of all sorts, and the
greater the number of people who will benefit by
them.
In short, the advantages to society are endless.
5. In regard to Revenue.
The greater the number of people settled on the land, and
the greater the productiveness of their labour, the greater
the value of the land and the higher the rent, and the rent
will be State rent, i.e., revenue.
And though this increase of rent will be checked at first,
and even thrown back by the rise of wages (for as rent
formerly denoured wages, so wages will now devour rent)
still this increase of wages will soon reach its limit,
while the increase in population and in the productiveness
of labour will be practically without limit.
The condition of both employer and labourer will be
continuously improving, though neither profits nor wages
will increase (after the limit spoken of is reached.)
Increasing rent will swallow up increasing profits and
wages; but increasing rent will mean increasing revenue,
and increasing revenue will mean increasing public
benefits, benefiting all.
Employers and labourers will continue to gain, only not as
employers and labourers but as citizens of the State.
Tax after tax, will be knocked off as increasing State rent
swells State revenue till no taxes are left, and still the
increase will accumulate.
The farmer will have his roads put and kept in first-rate
order without paying any rates; the parent will be able to
get the best education for his children without paying any
school fees; the traveller for a sixpenny or shilling
railway ticket will be able to go from one end of the
island to the other, as his letter will go from one end of
the island to the other for a penny stamp.
Scholarships and rewards of one kind or another will, by a
sort of natural selection, pick out all the special talent
of our youth and develop it to its utmost pitch, to the
advantage of society and the enrichment of its
possessor.
Railways and telegraphs can be made in all directions,
libraries established in every township, the best medical
attendanca obtained at numerous hospitals .and dispensaries
at nominal charges. But the prospect is boundless. The
further we go the wider it opens out.
Advantages now confined to the wealthy will be available to
the humblest, and yet no one will be pauperised, because
the help that pauperises is that which takes unjustly from
one to give to another, or assumes the form of degrading
charity.
But this steady and continuous multiplication of public
benefits will no more pauperise because it is free to all,
than the rain and the sun pauperise because they are free
to all; for it represents neither robbery nor
charity. It will be the product of the natural growth of
wealth from sources to which all have an equal and just
claim. It will all spring from State rent, and represent
the price paid by each appropriator of natural advantages
for the privilege of using those advantages advantages to
which, being the free gift of nature, all have an equal
right, and for the use of which it can therefore injure no
one's self respect to receive payment.
All that increase of wealth, in short, which now goes as
blackmail to privileged monopolists will go to public
benefits, and the amount of that increase will at the same
time be swelled to proportions yet undreamt of.
But to those who wish to master the whole subject I cannot
do better than refer them to the works of far deeper
thinkers and better writers than I; to the "Progress and
Poverty" of Henry George, a work which revolutionized all
ray thoughts and feelings, and which ought not only to
enlighten, but to fire every thinking man and to the "Land
Nationalisation," and later writings of our great leader in
England, Alfred Russel Wallace.
Printed for the L N.S. by JAMES HARWOOD, Derwent Buildings,
Tenant St.
WANTED, NEW MEMBERS
We earnestly invite all who sympathise with the movement
for abolishing Landlordism to become Members of the Land
Nationalisation Society.
We are conduct ing a great National Propaganda, and funds
are needed for its continuance and extension.
Subscribers receive the Society's Journal, Land and Labour,
every month.
Please Note the Address:
LAND NATIONALISATION SOCIETY,
432 WEST STRAND, LONDON, W.C,
MEMBERSHIP Payment of an Annual Subscription of not less
than One ,<
confers Membership. '<- entitles the giver to a
regular
Subscribers of five guineas or more become Life
Members.
LECTURES. The Secretary will be glad to hear from Political
Associations and Land
Reformers generally, with a view to holding meetings,
supplying lecturers, or
attending debates.
Those who desire a just solution of the Land Problem are
earnestly Invited
to become Members.
Cheques, Postal Orders, Ac., to be crossed " London and
County Banking Co., a/c Land Nationalisation
Society."
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