Birthright
One of the "small bandages" proposed from time to time
is providing each child with an account of their own,
funded by income taxes, perhaps added to each year while
they are young, and made available to the child at
adulthood in order to help give them a start in life, a
stake in society. They could squander it, spend it
on college, spend it on the downpayment on a house or
keep it as a cushion.
While I don't question the good intentions of those
who propose such things, I regard them as a pale imposter
of the reform that is needed — and as wholly
inadequate to equalize conditions for those from poor
families.
Most of us would not have trouble with the idea that air
and water are our birthright. The question is, what
else falls into that category? How do we go about
distinguishing that which is genuinely our
common heritage from that which
is legitimately private
property? Georgists argue that as land-based
creatures, we are just as dependent on land as we are on
water and air, and that therefore we must all have equal
access to the entire natural creation. None of us
is more entitled than another, and therefore whatever
rent is due for the use of land is due not to its current
titleholder but to the commons — all of us,
equally. Many of our most pressing social problems
are the direct result of our current distorted way of
approaching this. And they will be remedied only when we
reform how we treat the commons, acknowledging them as
such.
Henry George: Thou
Shalt Not Steal (1887 speech)
The laws of this universe are the laws of God,
the social laws as well as the physical laws, and He, the
Creator of all, has given us room for all, work for all,
plenty for all.
If today people are in places so crowded that it
seems as though there were too many people in the
world;
if today thousands of men who would gladly be at
work do not find the opportunity to go to
work;
if today the competition for employment crowds
wages down to starvation rates;
if today, amidst abounding wealth, there are in
the centers of our civilization human beings who are
worse off than savages in any normal times, it is not because the Creator has been
niggardly; it is simply because
of our own injustice — simply because we have not
carried the idea of doing to others as we would have them
do unto us into the making of our
statutes.
The Anti-Poverty Society has no patent remedy
for poverty. We propose no new thing. What we propose is
simply to do justice. The principle that we propose to
carry into our laws is neither more nor less than the
golden rule. We propose to abolish poverty by the
sovereign remedy of doing to others as we would have
others do to us, by giving to all their just rights.
And we propose to begin by assuring to
every child of God who, in our country, comes into this
world, its full and equal share of the common
heritage.
Who can claim a title of absolute ownership in
land? Until one who claims the exclusive ownership of a
piece of this planet can show a title originating with
the Maker of this planet; until that one can produce a
decree from the Creator declaring that this city lot, or
that great tract of agricultural or coal land, or that
gas well, was made for that one person alone —
until then we have a right to hold that the land was
intended for all of us.
Natural religion and revealed
religion alike tell us that God is no respecter of
persons; that He did not make this planet for a few
individuals; that He did not give it to one generation in
preference to other generations, but that He made it for
the use during their lives of all the people that His
providence brings into the world. If this be true, the
child that is born tonight in the humblest tenement in
the most squalid quarter of New York, comes into life
seized with as good a title to the land of this city as
any Astor or Rhinelander. ...
People do not have a natural right to demand
employment of another, but they have a natural right, an
inalienable right, a right given by their Creator, to
demand opportunity to employ themselves. And whenever
that right is acknowledged, whenever the people who want
to go to work can find natural opportunities to work
upon, then there will be as much competition among
employers who are anxious to get people to work for them,
as there will be among people who are anxious to get
work.
Wages will rise in every vocation to the true rate
of wages — the full, honest earnings of labor. That
done, with this ever increasing social fund to draw upon,
poverty will be abolished, and in a little while will
come to be looked upon — as we are now beginning to
look upon slavery — as the relic of a darker and
more ignorant age.
I remember — this man here remembers
(turning to Mr. Redpath, who was on the platform) even
better than I, for he was one of the men who brought the
atrocities of human slavery home to the heart and
conscience of the north — I well remember, as he
well knows, and all the older men and women in this
audience will remember, how property in human flesh and
blood was defended just as private property in land is
now defended; how the same charges were hurled upon the
men and women who protested against human slavery as are
now made against the men and women who are intending to
abolish industrial slavery.
We remember how some dignitaries and rich members
of the churches branded as a disturber, almost as a
reviler of religion, any priest or any minister who dared
to get up and assert God’s truth — that there
never was and there never could be rightful property in
human flesh and blood.
So, it is now said that people
who protest against this system, which is simply another
form of slavery, are people who propose robbery. Thus the
commandment, "Thou shalt not steal," they have made "Thou
shalt not object to stealing." When we propose to resume
our own again, when we propose to secure its natural
right to every child that comes into being, such people
talk of us as advocating confiscation — charge us
with being deniers of the rights of property. The real
truth is that we wish to assert the just rights of
property, that we wish to prevent
theft.
Chattel slavery was incarnate theft of the worst
kind. That system which made property of human beings,
which allowed one person to sell another, which allowed
one person to take away the proceeds of another’s
toil, which permitted the tearing of the child from the
mother, and which permitted the so-called owner to hunt
with bloodhounds the person who escaped from the
owner’s tyranny — that form of slavery is
abolished. To that extent, the command, "Thou shalt not
steal," has been vindicated; but there is another form of
slavery. ... read the whole
article
Henry
George: The
Condition of Labor — An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII
in response to Rerum Novarum (1891)
As to the use of land, we hold: That —
While the right of ownership that justly attaches to
things produced by labor cannot attach to land, there may
attach to land a right of possession. As your Holiness
says, “God has not granted the earth to mankind in
general in the sense that all without distinction can
deal with it as they please,” and regulations
necessary for its best use may be fixed by human laws.
But such regulations must conform to the moral law
— must secure to all equal participation in the
advantages of God’s general bounty. The principle
is the same as where a human father leaves property
equally to a number of children. Some of the things thus
left may be incapable of common use or of specific
division. Such things may properly be assigned to some of
the children, but only under condition that the equality
of benefit among them all be preserved.
In the rudest social state, while industry consists in
hunting, fishing, and gathering the spontaneous fruits of
the earth, private possession of land is not necessary.
But as men begin to cultivate the ground and expend their
labor in permanent works, private possession of the land
on which labor is thus expended is needed to secure the
right of property in the products of labor. For who would
sow if not assured of the exclusive possession needed to
enable him to reap? who would attach costly works to the
soil without such exclusive possession of the soil as
would enable him to secure the benefit?
This right of private possession in things created by
God is however very different from the right of private
ownership in things produced by labor. The one is
limited, the other unlimited, save in cases when the
dictate of self-preservation terminates all other rights.
The purpose of the one, the exclusive possession of land,
is merely to secure the other, the exclusive ownership of
the products of labor; and it can never rightfully be
carried so far as to impair or deny this. While any one
may hold exclusive possession of land so far as it does
not interfere with the equal rights of others, he can
rightfully hold it no further.
Thus Cain and Abel, were there only two men on earth,
might by agreement divide the earth between them. Under
this compact each might claim exclusive right to his
share as against the other. But neither could
rightfully continue such claim against the next man born.
For since no one comes into the world without God’s
permission, his presence attests his equal right to the
use of God’s bounty. For them to refuse
him any use of the earth which they had divided between
them would therefore be for them to commit murder. And
for them to refuse him any use of the earth, unless by
laboring for them or by giving them part of the products
of his labor he bought it of them, would be for them to
commit theft. ...
Your use, in so many passages of your Encyclical, of
the inclusive term “property” or
“private” property, of which in morals
nothing can be either affirmed or denied, makes your
meaning, if we take isolated sentences, in many places
ambiguous. But reading it as a whole, there can be no
doubt of your intention that private property in land
shall be understood when you speak merely of private
property. With this interpretation, I find that the
reasons you urge for private property in land are eight.
Let us consider them in order of presentation. You
urge:
1. That what is bought with rightful property is
rightful property. (RN, paragraph 5) ...
2. That private property in land proceeds from
man’s gift of reason. (RN, paragraphs 6-7.)
...
3. That private property in land deprives no one of the
use of land. (RN, paragraph 8.) ...
4. That Industry expended on land gives ownership in the
land itself. (RN, paragraphs 9-10.) ...
5. That private property in land has the support of the
common opinion of mankind, and has conduced to peace and
tranquillity, and that it is sanctioned by Divine Law.
(RN, paragraph 11.) ...
6. That fathers should provide for their children and
that private property in land is necessary to enable them
to do so. (RN, paragraphs 14-17.) ...
7. That the private ownership of land stimulates
industry, increases wealth, and attaches men to the soil
and to their country. (RN, paragraph 51.) ...
8. That the right to possess private property in land is
from nature, not from man; that the state has no right to
abolish it, and that to take the value of landownership
in taxation would be unjust and cruel to the private
owner. (RN, paragraph 51.) ...
2. That private property in land proceeds from
man’s gift of reason. (6-7.)
In the second place your Holiness argues that man
possessing reason and forethought may not only acquire
ownership of the fruits of the earth, but also of the
earth itself, so that out of its products he may make
provision for the future.
Reason, with its attendant forethought, is indeed the
distinguishing attribute of man; that which raises him
above the brute, and shows, as the Scriptures declare,
that he is created in the likeness of God. And this gift
of reason does, as your Holiness points out, involve the
need and right of private property in whatever is
produced by the exertion of reason and its attendant
forethought, as well as in what is produced by physical
labor. In truth, these elements of man’s production
are inseparable, and labor involves the use of reason. It
is by his reason that man differs from the animals in
being a producer, and in this sense a maker. Of
themselves his physical powers are slight, forming as it
were but the connection by which the mind takes hold of
material things, so as to utilize to its will the matter
and forces of nature. It is mind, the intelligent reason,
that is the prime mover in labor, the essential agent in
production.
The right of private ownership does therefore
indisputably attach to things provided by man’s
reason and forethought. But it cannot attach to things
provided by the reason and forethought of God!
To illustrate: Let us suppose a company traveling
through the desert as the Israelites traveled from Egypt.
Such of them as had the forethought to provide themselves
with vessels of water would acquire a just right of
property in the water so carried, and in the thirst of
the waterless desert those who had neglected to provide
themselves, though they might ask water from the
provident in charity, could not demand it in right. For
while water itself is of the providence of God, the
presence of this water in such vessels, at such place,
results from the providence of the men who carried it.
Thus they have to it an exclusive right.
But suppose others use their forethought in pushing
ahead and appropriating the springs, refusing when their
fellows come up to let them drink of the water save as
they buy it of them. Would such forethought give any
right?
Your Holiness, it is not the forethought of carrying
water where it is needed, but the forethought of seizing
springs, that you seek to defend in defending the private
ownership of land!
Let me show this more fully, since it may be worth
while to meet those who say that if private property in
land be not just, then private property in the products
of labor is not just, as the material of these products
is taken from land. It will be seen on consideration that
all of man’s production is analogous to such
transportation of water as we have supposed. In growing
grain, or smelting metals, or building houses, or weaving
cloth, or doing any of the things that constitute
producing, all that man does is to change in place or
form preexisting matter. As a producer man is merely a
changer, not a creator; God alone creates. And since the
changes in which man’s production consists inhere
in matter so long as they persist, the right of private
ownership attaches the accident to the essence, and gives
the right of ownership in that natural material in which
the labor of production is embodied. Thus water, which in
its original form and place is the common gift of God to
all men, when drawn from its natural reservoir and
brought into the desert, passes rightfully into the
ownership of the individual who by changing its place has
produced it there.
But such right of ownership is in reality a mere right
of temporary possession. For though man may take material
from the storehouse of nature and change it in place or
form to suit his desires, yet from the moment he takes
it, it tends back to that storehouse again. Wood decays,
iron rusts, stone disintegrates and is displaced, while
of more perishable products, some will last for only a
few months, others for only a few days, and some
disappear immediately on use. Though, so far as we can
see, matter is eternal and force forever persists; though
we can neither annihilate nor create the tiniest mote
that floats in a sunbeam or the faintest impulse that
stirs a leaf, yet in the ceaseless flux of nature,
man’s work of moving and combining constantly
passes away. Thus the recognition of the ownership of
what natural material is embodied in the products of man
never constitutes more than temporary possession —
never interferes with the reservoir provided for all. As
taking water from one place and carrying it to another
place by no means lessens the store of water, since
whether it is drunk or spilled or left to evaporate, it
must return again to the natural reservoirs — so is
it with all things on which man in production can lay the
impress of his labor.
Hence, when you say that man’s reason puts it
within his right to have in stable and permanent
possession not only things that perish in the using, but
also those that remain for use in the future, you are
right in so far as you may include such things as
buildings, which with repair will last for generations,
with such things as food or fire-wood, which are
destroyed in the use. But when you infer that man can
have private ownership in those permanent things of
nature that are the reservoirs from which all must draw,
you are clearly wrong. Man may indeed hold in private
ownership the fruits of the earth produced by his labor,
since they lose in time the impress of that labor, and
pass again into the natural reservoirs from which they
were taken, and thus the ownership of them by one works
no injury to others. But he cannot so own the earth
itself, for that is the reservoir from which must
constantly be drawn not only the material with which
alone men can produce, but even their very bodies.
The conclusive reason why man cannot claim ownership
in the earth itself as he can in the fruits that he by
labor brings forth from it, is in the facts stated by you
in the very next paragraph (7), when you truly say:
Man’s needs do not die out, but recur;
satisfied today, they demand new supplies tomorrow.
Nature, therefore, owes to man a storehouse that shall
never fail, the daily supply of his daily wants. And
this he finds only in the inexhaustible fertility of
the earth.
By man you mean all men. Can what nature owes to all
men be made the private property of some men, from which
they may debar all other men?
Let me dwell on the words of your Holiness,
“Nature, therefore, owes to man a storehouse that
shall never fail.” By Nature you mean God. Thus
your thought, that in creating us, God himself has
incurred an obligation to provide us with a storehouse
that shall never fail, is the same as is thus expressed
and carried to its irresistible conclusion by the Bishop
of Meath:
God was perfectly free in the act by which He
created us; but having created us he bound himself by
that act to provide us with the means necessary for our
subsistence. The land is the only source of this kind
now known to us. The land, therefore, of every country
is the common property of the people of that country,
because its real owner, the Creator who made it, has
transferred it as a voluntary gift to them.
“Terram autem dedit filiis
hominum.” Now, as every individual in that
country is a creature and child of God, and as all his
creatures are equal in his sight, any settlement of the
land of a country that would exclude the humblest man
in that country from his share of the common
inheritance would be not only an injustice and a wrong
to that man, but, moreover, be AN IMPIOUS RESISTANCE TO
THE BENEVOLENT INTENTIONS OF HIS CREATOR. ...
And it is because that in what we propose —
the securing to all men of equal natural
opportunities for the exercise of their powers and the
removal of all legal restriction on the legitimate
exercise of those powers — we see the
conformation of human law to the moral law, that we hold
with confidence that this is not merely the sufficient
remedy for all the evils you so strikingly portray, but
that it is the only possible remedy.
Nor is there any other. The organization of man is
such, his relations to the world in which he is placed
are such — that is to say, the immutable laws of
God are such, that it is beyond the power of human
ingenuity to devise any way by which the evils born of
the injustice that robs men of their birthright can be
removed otherwise than by doing justice, by opening to
all the bounty that God has provided for all.
...
But worse perhaps than all else is the way in which
this substituting of vague injunctions to charity for the
clear-cut demands of justice opens an easy means for the
professed teachers of the Christian religion of all
branches and communions to placate Mammon while
persuading themselves that they are serving God. Had the
English clergy not subordinated the teaching of justice
to the teaching of charity — to go no further in
illustrating a principle of which the whole history of
Christendom from Constantine’s time to our own is
witness — the Tudor tyranny would never have
arisen, and the separation of the church been averted;
had the clergy of France never substituted charity for
justice, the monstrous iniquities of the ancient
régime would never have brought the horrors of the
Great Revolution; and in my own country had those who
should have preached justice not satisfied themselves
with preaching kindness, chattel slavery could never have
demanded the holocaust of our civil war.
No, your Holiness; as faith without works is dead, as
men cannot give to God his due while denying to their
fellows the rights be gave them, so charity unsupported
by justice can do nothing to solve the problem of the
existing condition of labor. Though the rich were to
“bestow all their goods to feed the poor and give
their bodies to be burned,” poverty would continue
while property in land continues.
Take the case of the rich man today who is honestly
desirous of devoting his wealth to the improvement of the
condition of labor. What can he do?
- Bestow his wealth on those who need it? He may help
some who deserve it, but will not improve general
conditions. And against the good he may do will be the
danger of doing harm.
- Build churches? Under the shadow of churches
poverty festers and the vice that is born of it
breeds.
- Build schools and colleges? Save as it may lead men
to see the iniquity of private property in land,
increased education can effect nothing for mere
laborers, for as education is diffused the wages of
education sink.
- Establish hospitals? Why, already it seems to
laborers that there are too many seeking work, and to
save and prolong life is to add to the pressure.
- Build model tenements? Unless he cheapens house
accommodations he but drives further the class he would
benefit, and as he cheapens house accommodations he
brings more to seek employment and cheapens wages.
- Institute laboratories, scientific schools,
workshops for physical experiments? He but stimulates
invention and discovery, the very forces that, acting
on a society based on private property in land, are
crushing labor as between the upper and the nether
millstone.
- Promote emigration from places where wages are low
to places where they are somewhat higher? If he does,
even those whom he at first helps to emigrate will soon
turn on him to demand that such emigration shall be
stopped as reducing their wages.
- Give away what land he may have, or refuse to take
rent for it, or let it at lower rents than the market
price? He will simply make new landowners or partial
landowners; he may make some individuals the richer,
but he will do nothing to improve the general condition
of labor.
- Or, bethinking himself of those public-spirited
citizens of classic times who spent great sums in
improving their native cities, shall he try to beautify
the city of his birth or adoption? Let him widen and
straighten narrow and crooked streets, let him build
parks and erect fountains, let him open tramways and
bring in railroads, or in any way make beautiful and
attractive his chosen city, and what will be the
result? Must it not be that those who appropriate
God’s bounty will take his also? Will it not be
that the value of land will go up, and that the net
result of his benefactions will be an increase of rents
and a bounty to landowners? Why, even the mere
announcement that he is going to do such things will
start speculation and send up the value of land by
leaps and bounds.
What, then, can the rich man do to improve the
condition of labor?
He can do nothing at all except to use his strength
for the abolition of the great primary wrong that robs
men of their birthright. The justice of God laughs at the
attempts of men to substitute anything else for it.
If when in speaking of the practical measures your
Holiness proposes, I did not note the moral injunctions
that the Encyclical contains, it is not because we do not
think morality practical. On the contrary it seems to us
that in the teachings of morality is to be found the
highest practicality, and that the question, What is
wise? may always safely be subordinated to the question,
What is right? But your Holiness in the Encyclical
expressly deprives the moral truths you state of all real
bearing on the condition of labor, just as the American
people, by their legalization of chattel slavery, used to
deprive of all practical meaning the declaration they
deem their fundamental charter, and were accustomed to
read solemnly on every national anniversary. That
declaration asserts that “We hold these truths to
be self-evident — that all men are created equal;
that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness.” But what did this
truth mean on the lips of men who asserted that one man
was the rightful property of another man who had bought
him; who asserted that the slave was robbing the master
in running away, and that the man or the woman who helped
the fugitive to escape, or even gave him a cup of cold
water in Christ’s name, was an accessory to theft,
on whose head the penalties of the state should be
visited?
Consider the moral teachings of the Encyclical:
- You tell us that God owes to man an inexhaustible
storehouse which he finds only in the land. Yet you
support a system that denies to the great majority of
men all right of recourse to this storehouse.
- You tell us that the necessity of labor is a
consequence of original sin. Yet you support a system
that exempts a privileged class from the necessity for
labor and enables them to shift their share and much
more than their share of labor on others.
- You tell us that God has not created us for the
perishable and transitory things of earth, but has
given us this world as a place of exile and not as our
true country. Yet you tell us that some of the exiles
have the exclusive right of ownership in this place of
common exile, so that they may compel their
fellow-exiles to pay them for sojourning here, and that
this exclusive ownership they may transfer to other
exiles yet to come, with the same right of excluding
their fellows.
- You tell us that virtue is the common inheritance
of all; that all men are children of God the common
Father; that all have the same last end; that all are
redeemed by Jesus Christ; that the blessings of nature
and the gifts of grace belong in common to all, and
that to all except the unworthy is promised the
inheritance of the Kingdom of Heaven! Yet in
all this and through all this you insist as a moral
duty on the maintenance of a system that makes the
reservoir of all God’s material bounties and
blessings to man the exclusive property of a few of
their number — you give us equal rights in
heaven, but deny us equal rights on
earth!
It was said of a famous decision of the Supreme Court
of the United States made just before the civil war, in a
fugitive-slave case, that “it gave the law to the
North and the nigger to the South.” It is thus that
your Encyclical gives the gospel to laborers and the
earth to the landlords. Is it really to be wondered at
that there are those who sneeringly say, “The
priests are ready enough to give the poor an equal share
in all that is out of sight, but they take precious good
care that the rich shall keep a tight grip on all that is
within sight”? ... read the whole
letter
Henry George: The Wages of
Labor
Thus Cain and Abel, were there only two men on
earth, might by agreement divide the earth between them.
Under this compact each might claim exclusive right to
his share as against the other. But neither could
rightfully continue such claim against the next child
born. For since no one comes into the world without God's
permission, his presence attests his equal right to the
use of God’s bounty. For them to refuse him any use
of the earth which they had divided between them would
therefore be for them to commit murder. And for them to
refuse him any use of the earth, unless by laboring for
them or by giving them part of the products of his labor
he bought It of them, would be for them to commit theft.
...
Evil upon evil.
It is this that is driving men from the old
countries to the new countries, only to bring there the
same curses.
It is this that causes our material advance not
merely to fail to improve the condition of the mere
worker, but to make the condition of large classes
positively worse.
It is this that, in our richest Christian
countries, is giving us a large population whose lives
are harder, more hopeless, more degraded than those of
the veriest savages.
It is this that leads so many men to think that
God is a bungler, and is constantly bringing people into
the world for whom He has not made provision.
... The organisation
of man is such, his relations to the world in which he is
placed are such – that is to say, the immutable
laws of God are such that it is beyond the power of human
ingenuity to devise any way by which the evils born of
the injustice that robs men of their birthright can be
removed otherwise than by opening to all the bounty that
God has provided for all!
Since man can live only on land and from land since land
is the reservoir of matter and force from which
man’s body itself is taken, and on which he must
draw for all that he can produce – does it not
irresistibly follow that to give the land in ownership to
some men and to deny to others all right to it is to
divide mankind into the rich and the poor, the privileged
and the helpless? ...... read the whole
article
Henry George: The Great Debate: Single
Tax vs Social Democracy (1889)
We would abolish all taxes, and begin with the
most important of all monopolies, the fruitful parent of
lesser monopolies, that monopoly which disinherits men of
their birthright; that monopoly which puts in the hands
of some that, element absolutely indispensable to the use
of all; and we believe not that labour is a poor weak
thing that must be coddled or protected by Government. We
believe that labour is the producer of all wealth –
(applause) – that all labour wants is a fair field
and no favour, and, therefore, as against the doctrines
of restriction we raise the banner of liberty and equal
right in the gospel of free, fair play. ...
Read the entire article
Henry George: The Land Question
(1881)
A little Island or a little
World
IMAGINE an island girt with ocean; imagine a
little world swimming in space. Put on it, in
imagination, human beings. Let them
divide the land, share and share alike, as individual
property. At first, while population is sparse and
industrial processes rude and primitive, this will work
well enough.
Turn away the eyes of the mind for a
moment, let time pass, and look again. Some families will
have died out, some have greatly multiplied; on the whole,
population will have largely increased, and even supposing
there have been no important inventions or improvements in
the productive arts, the increase in population, by causing
the division of labor, will have made industry more
complex. During this time some of these people will have
been careless, generous, improvident; some will have been
thrifty and grasping. Some of them will have devoted much
of their powers to thinking of how they themselves and the
things they see around them came to be, to inquiries and
speculations as to what there is in the universe beyond
their little island or their little world, to making poems,
painting pictures, or writing books; to noting the
differences in rocks and trees and shrubs and grasses; to
classifying beasts and birds and fishes and insects –
to the doing, in short, of all the many things which add so
largely to the sum of human knowledge and human happiness,
without much or any gain of wealth to the doer. Others
again will have devoted all their energies to the extending
of their possessions. What, then, shall we
see, land having been all this time treated as private
property? Clearly, we shall see that the primitive equality
has given way to inequality. Some will have very much more
than one of the original shares into which the land was
divided; very many will have no land at all. Suppose
that, in all things save this, our little island or our
little world is Utopia – that there are no wars or
robberies; that the government is absolutely pure and taxes
nominal; suppose, if you want to, any sort of a currency;
imagine, if you can imagine such a world or island, that
interest is utterly abolished; yet inequality in the ownership of land will have produced
poverty and virtual slavery.
For the people we have supposed are
human beings – that is to say, in their physical
natures at least, they are animals who can live only on
land and by the aid of the products of land. They may make
machines which will enable them to float on the sea, or
perhaps to fly in the air, but to build and equip these
machines they must have land and the products of land, and
must constantly come back to land. Therefore those who own the land must be the masters
of the rest. Thus, if one man has come to own all the land,
he is their absolute master even to life or death. If they
can live on the land only on his terms, then they can live
only on his terms, for without land they cannot live. They
are his absolute slaves, and so long as his ownership is
acknowledged, if they want to live, they must do in
everything as he wills.
If, however, the concentration of
landownership has not gone so far as to make one or a very
few men the owners of all the land – if there are
still so many landowners that there is competition between
them as well as between those who have only their labor
– then the terms on which these non-landholders can
live will seem more like free
contract. But it will not be free contract. Land can yield
no wealth without the application of labor; labor can
produce no wealth without land. These are the two equally
necessary factors of production. Yet, to say that they are
equally necessary factors of production is not to say that,
in the making of contracts as to how the results of
production are divided, the possessors of these two meet on
equal terms. For the nature of these two factors is very
different. Land is a natural element; the human being must
have his stomach filled every few hours. Land can exist
without labor, but labor cannot exist without land. If I
own a piece of land, I can let it lie idle for a year or
for years, and it will eat nothing. But the laborer must
eat every day, and his family must eat. And so, in the
making of terms between them, the landowner has an immense
advantage over the laborer. It is on the side of the
laborer that the intense pressure of competition comes, for
in his case it is competition urged by hunger. And, further
than this: As population increases, as the competition for
the use of land becomes more and more intense, so are the
owners of land enabled to get for the use of their land a
larger and larger part of the wealth which labor exerted
upon it produces. That is to say, the value of land
steadily rises. Now, this steady rise in the value of land
brings about a confident expectation of future increase of
value, which produces among landowners all the effects of a
combination to hold for higher prices. Thus there is a
constant tendency to force mere laborers to take less and
less or to give more and more (put it which way you please,
it amounts to the same thing) of the products of their work
for the opportunity to work. And thus, in the very nature
of things, we should see on our little island or our little
world that, after a time had passed, some of the people
would be able to take and enjoy a superabundance of all the
fruits of labor without doing any labor at all, while
others would be forced to work the livelong day for a
pitiful living.
But let us introduce another element
into the supposition. Let us suppose great discoveries and
inventions – such as the steam-engine, the
power-loom, the Bessemer process, the reaping-machine, and
the thousand and one labor-saving devices that are such a
marked feature of our era. What would be the
result?
Manifestly, the effect of all such
discoveries and inventions is to increase the power of
labor in producing wealth – to enable the same amount
of wealth to be produced by less labor, or a greater amount
with the same labor. But none of them lessen, or can lessen
the necessity for land. Until we can discover some way of
making something out of nothing – and that is so far
beyond our powers as to be absolutely unthinkable –
there is no possible discovery or invention which can
lessen the dependence of labor upon land. And, this being
the case, the effect of these labor-saving devices, land
being the private property of some, would simply be to
increase the proportion of the wealth produced that
landowners could demand for the use of their land. The
ultimate effect of these discoveries and inventions would
be not to benefit the laborer, but to make him more
dependent.
And, since we are imagining
conditions, imagine laborsaving inventions to go to the
farthest imaginable point, that is to say, to perfection.
What then? Why then, the necessity for labor being done
away with, all the wealth that the land could produce would
go entire to the landowners. None of it whatever could be
claimed by any one else. For the laborers there would be no
use at all. If they continued to exist, it would be merely
as paupers on the bounty of the landowners!
...
The Civilization that is
Possible.
IN the effects upon the distribution
of wealth, of making land private property, we may thus see
an explanation of that paradox presented by modern
progress. The perplexing phenomena of deepening want with
increasing wealth, of labor rendered more dependent and
helpless by the very introduction of labor-saving
machinery, are the inevitable result of natural laws as
fixed and certain as the law of gravitation. Private property in land is the primary cause of the
monstrous inequalities which are developing in modern
society.
- It is this, and not any miscalculation of
Nature in bringing into the world more mouths than she
can feed, that gives rise to that tendency of wages to a
minimum – that "iron law of wages," as the Germans
call it -- that, in spite of all advances in productive
power, compels the laboring-classes to the least return
on which they will consent to live.
- It is this that produces all those phenomena
that are so often attributed to the conflict of labor and
capital.
- It is this that condemns Irish peasants to
rags and hunger, that produces the pauperism of England
and the tramps of America.
- It is this that makes the almshouse and the
penitentiary the marks of what we call high
civilization;
- that in the midst of schools and churches
degrades and brutalizes men, crushes the sweetness out of
womanhood and the joy out of childhood.
- It is this that makes lives that might be a
blessing a pain and a curse, and every year drives more
and more to seek unbidden refuge in the gates of
death.
For, a permanent tendency to inequality once set
up, all the forces of progress tend to greater and
greater inequality.
All this is contrary
to Nature. The poverty and misery, the vice and
degradation, that spring from the unequal distribution of
wealth, are not the results of natural law; they spring
from our defiance of natural law. They are the fruits of
our refusal to obey the supreme law of justice. It is
because we rob the child of his birthright; because we make
the bounty which the Creator intended for all the exclusive
property of some, that these things come upon us, and,
though advancing and advancing, we chase but the
mirage. ...
I doubt not that whichever way a man
may turn to inquire of Nature, he will come upon
adjustments which will arouse not merely his wonder, but
his gratitude. Yet what has most impressed me with the
feeling that the laws of Nature are the laws of beneficent
intelligence is what I see of the social possibilities
involved in the law of rent. Rent (4) springs from
natural causes. It arises, as society develops, from the
differences in natural opportunities and the differences in
the distribution of population. It increases with the
division of labor, with the advance of the arts, with the
progress of invention. And thus, by virtue of a law
impressed upon the very nature of things, has the Creator
provided that the natural advance of mankind shall be an
advance toward equality, an advance toward cooperation, an
advance toward a social state in which not even the weakest
need be crowded to the wall, in which even for the
unfortunate and the cripple there may be ample provision.
For this revenue, which arises from the common property,
which represents not the creation of value by the
individual, but the creation by the community as a whole,
which increases just as society develops, affords a common
fund, which, properly used, tends constantly to equalize
conditions, to open the largest opportunities for all, and
utterly to banish want or the fear of want.
(4) I, of course, use
the word in its economic, not in its common sense,
meaning by it what is commonly called
ground-rent.
The squalid poverty that festers in
the heart of our civilization, the vice and crime and
degradation and ravening greed that flow from it, are the
results of a treatment of land that ignores the simple law
of justice, a law so clear and plain that it is universally
recognized by the veriest savages. What is
by nature the common birthright of all, we have made the
exclusive property of individuals; what is by natural law
the common fund, from which common wants should be met, we
give to a few that they may lord it over their fellows. And
so some are gorged while some go hungry, and more is wasted
than would suffice to keep all in luxury.
... read the
whole article
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
IF we are all here by the equal permission of the
Creator, we are all here with an equal title to the
enjoyment of His bounty — with an equal right to
the use of all that nature so impartially offers. This is
a right which is natural and inalienable; it is a right
which vests in every human being as he enters the world,
and which, during his continuance in the world, can be
limited only by the equal rights of others. There is in
nature no such thing as a fee simple in land. There is on
earth no power which can rightfully make a grant of
exclusive ownership in land. If all existing men were to
unite to grant away their equal rights, they could not
grant away the right of those who follow them. For what
are we but tenants for a day? Have we made the earth that
we should determine the rights of those who after us
shall tenant it in their turn? The Almighty, who created
the earth for man and man for the earth, has entailed it
upon all the generations of the children of men by a
decree written upon the constitution of all things
— a decree which no human action can bar and no
prescription determine, Let the parchments be ever so
many, or possession ever so long, natural justice can
recognize no right in one man to the possession and
enjoyment of land that is not equally the right of all
his fellows. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy:
Injustice of private property in land
HAS the first comer at a banquet the right to turn
back all the chairs and claim that none of the other
guests shall partake of the food provided, except as they
make terms with him? Does the first man who presents a
ticket at the door of a theater and passes in, acquire by
his priority the right to shut the doors and have the
performance go on for him alone? Does the first passenger
who enters a railroad car obtain the right to scatter his
baggage over all the seats and compel the passengers who
come in after him to stand up?
The cases are perfectly analogous. We arrive and we
depart, guests at a banquet continually spread,
spectators and participants in an entertainment where
there is room for all who come; passengers from station
to station, on an orb that whirls through space —
our rights to take and possess cannot be exclusive; they
must be bounded everywhere by the equal rights of others.
Just as the passenger in a railroad car may spread
himself and his baggage over as many seats as he pleases,
until other passengers come in, so may a settler take and
use as much land as he chooses, until it is needed by
others — a fact which is shown by the land
acquiring a value — when his right must be
curtailed by the equal rights of the others, and no
priority of appropriation can give a right which will bar
these equal rights of others. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy:
Injustice of private property in land
THE general subjection of the many to the few, which
we meet with wherever society has reached a certain
development, has resulted from the appropriation of land
as individual property. It is the ownership of the soil
that everywhere gives the ownership of the men that live
upon it. It is slavery of this kind to which the enduring
pyramids and the colossal monuments of Egypt yet bear
witness, and of the institution of which we have,
perhaps, a vague tradition in the biblical story of the
famine during which the Pharaoh purchased up the lands of
the people. It was slavery of this kind to which, in the
twilight of history, the conquerors of Greece reduced the
original inhabitants of that peninsula, transforming them
into helots by making them pay rent for their lands. It
was the growth of the latifundia, or great landed estates, which
transmuted the population of ancient Italy from a race of
hardy husbandmen, whose robust virtues conquered the
world, into a race of cringing bondsmen; it was the
appropriation of the land as the absolute property of
their chieftains which gradually turned the descendants
of free and equal Gallic, Teutonic and Hunnish warriors
into colonii and villains, and which changed the
independent burghers of Sclavonic village communities
into the boors of Russia and the serfs of Poland; which
instituted the feudalism of China and Japan, as well as
that of Europe, and which made the High Chiefs of
Polynesia the all but absolute masters of their fellows.
How it came to pass that the Aryan shepherds and warriors
who, as comparative philology tells us, descended from
the common birth-place of the Indo-Germanic race into the
lowlands of India, were turned into the suppliant and
cringing Hindoo, the Sanscrit verse which I have before
quoted gives us a hint. The white parasols and the
elephants mad with pride of the Indian Rajah are the
flowers of grants of land. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy:
Injustice of private property in land
TRACE to their root the causes that are thus producing
want in the midst of plenty, ignorance in the midst of
intelligence, aristocracy in democracy, weakness in
strength — that are giving to our civilization a
one-sided and unstable development, and you will find it
something which this Hebrew statesman three thousand
years ago perceived and guarded against. Moses saw that
the real cause of the enslavement of the masses of Egypt
was, what has everywhere produced enslavement, the
possession by a class of the land upon which, and from
which, the whole people must live. He saw that to permit
in land the same unqualified private ownership that by
natural right attaches to the things produced by labor,
would be inevitably to separate the people into the very
rich and the very poor, inevitably to enslave labor
— to make the few the masters of. the many, no
matter what the political forms, to bring vice and
degradation, no matter what the religion.
And with the foresight of the philosophic statesman who
legislates not for the need of a day, but for all the
future, he sought, in ways suited to his times and
conditions, to guard against this error. — Moses
THE women who by the thousands are bending over their
needles or sewing machines, thirteen, fourteen, sixteen
hours a day; these widows straining and striving to bring
up the little ones deprived of their natural
bread-winner; the children that are growing up in squalor
and wretchedness, under-clothed, under-fed,
under-educated, even in this city without any place to
play — growing up under conditions in which only a
miracle can keep them pure — under conditions which
condemn them in advance to the penitentiary or the
brothel — they suffer, they die, because we
permit them to be robbed, robbed of their birthright,
robbed by a system which disinherits the vast majority of
the children that come into the world. There is enough
and to spare for them. Had they the equal rights in the
estate which their Creator has given them, there would be
no young girls forced to unwomanly toil to eke out a mere
existence, no widows finding it such a bitter, bitter
struggle to put bread in the mouths of their little
children; no such misery and squalor as we may see here
in the greatest of American cities; misery and squalor
that are deepest in the largest and richest centers of
our civilization today. — Thou
Shalt Not Steal
... go to "Gems from
George"
Clarence Darrow: How to Abolish Unfair
Taxation (1913)
... Most of our laws were made by the dead, and the
dead have no right to legislate for the living. The
present generation has no right to bind its legislation
upon the generation still unborn. When one generation is
dead, it ought to stay dead and not reach out its dead
hand to bind the living. We have no right to fix terms
and conditions for those yet unborn; it is for each
generation to fix the rules and regulations for itself.
The earth should be owned by all men, the coal mines
should belong to the people who live here, so they can
take what they want while they live, as when they are
dead they won't need coal — they will be warm
enough without it — and they should not have the
power to say who shall have it when they are gone.
Carnegie and Morgan cannot use or withhold it much
longer, as they will soon be gone — that is one
consolation. ... read the whole
speech
Upton Sinclair: The
Consequences of Land Speculation are Tenantry and Debt on
the Farms, and Slums and Luxury in the Cities
I know of a woman — I have never had the
pleasure of making her acquaintance, because she lives in
a lunatic asylum, which does not happen to be on my
visiting list. This woman has been mentally incompetent
from birth. She is well taken care of, because her father
left her when he died the income of a large farm on the
outskirts of a city. The city has since grown and the
land is now worth, at conservative estimate, about twenty
million dollars. It is covered with office buildings, and
the greater part of the income, which cannot be spent by
the woman, is piling up at compound interest. The woman
enjoys good health, so she may be worth a hundred million
dollars before she dies.
I choose this case because it is one about which there
can be no disputing; this woman has never been able to do
anything to earn that twenty million dollars. And if a
visitor from Mars should come down to study the
situation, which would he think was most insane, the
unfortunate woman, or the society which compels thousands
of people to wear themselves to death in order to pay her
the income of twenty million dollars?
The fact that this woman is insane makes it easy to
see that she is not entitled to the "unearned increment"
of the land she owns. But how about all the other people
who have bought up and are holding for speculation the
most desirable land? The value of this land increases,
not because of anything these owners do — not
because of any useful service they render to the
community — but purely because the community as a
whole is crowding into that neighborhood and must have
use of the land.
The speculator who bought this land thinks that he
deserves the increase, because he guessed the fact that
the city was going to grow that way. But it seems clear
enough that his skill in guessing which way the community
was going to grow, however useful that skill may be to
himself, is not in any way useful to the community. The
man may have planted trees, or built roads, and put in
sidewalks and sewers; all that is useful work, and for
that he should be paid. But should he be paid for
guessing what the rest of us were going to need?
Before you answer, consider the consequences of this
guessing game. The consequences of land speculation are
tenantry and debt on the farms, and slums and luxury in
the cities. A great part of the necessary land is held
out of use, and so the value of all land continually
increases, until the poor man can no longer own a home.
The value of farm land also increases; so year by year
more independent farmers are dispossessed, because they
cannot pay interest on their mortgages. So the land
becomes a place of serfdom, that land described by the
poet, "where wealth accumulates and men decay." The great
cities fill up with festering slums, and a small class of
idle parasites are provided with enormous fortunes, which
they do not have to earn, and which they cannot
intelligently spend.
This condition wrecked every empire in the history of
mankind, and it is wrecking modern civilization. One of
the first to perceive this was Henry George, and he
worked out the program known as the Single Tax. Let
society as a whole take the full rental value of land, so
that no one would any longer be able to hold land out of
use. So the value of land would decrease, and everyone
could have land, and the community would have a great
income to be spent for social ends. ...
In Philadelphia, as in all our great cities, are
enormously wealthy families, living on hereditary incomes
derived from crowded slums. Here and there among these
rich men is one who realizes that he has not earned what
he is consuming, and that it has not brought him
happiness, and is bringing still less to his children.
Such men are casting about for ways to invest their money
without breeding idleness and parasitism. Some of them
might be grateful to learn about this enclave plan, and
to visit the lovely village of Arden, and see what its
people are doing to make possible a peaceful and joyous
life, even in this land of bootleggers and jazz
orchestras. ... read
the whole article
Clarence Darrow: The Land Belongs To The
People (1916)
This earth is a little raft moving in the endless sea
of space, and the mass of its human inhabitants are
hanging on as best they can. It is as if some raft filled
with shipwrecked sailors should be floating on the ocean,
and a few of the strongest and most powerful would take
all the raft they could get and leave the most of the
people, especially the ones who did the work, hanging to
the edges by their eyebrows. These men who have taken
possession of this raft, this little planet in this
endless space, are not even content with taking all there
is and leaving the rest barely enough to hold onto, but
they think so much of themselves and their brief day that
while they live they must make rules and laws and
regulations that parcel out the earth for thousands of
years after they are dead and, gone, so that their
descendants and others of their kind may do in the tenth
generation exactly what they are doing today —
keeping the earth and all the good things of the earth
and compelling the great mass of mankind to toil for
them.
Now, the question is, how are you going to get it
back? Everybody who thinks knows that private ownership
of the land is wrong. If ten thousand men can own
America, then one man can own it, and if one man may own
it he may take all that the rest produce or he may kill
them if he sees fit. It is inconsistent with the spirit
of manhood. No person who thinks can doubt but
that he was born upon this planet with the same
birthright that came to every man born like him. And it
is for him to defend that birthright. And the man who
will not defend it, whatever the cost, is fitted only to
be a slave. The earth belongs to the people — if
they can get it — because if you cannot get it, it
makes no difference whether you have a right to it or
not, and if you can get it, it makes no difference
whether you have a right to it or not, you just take
it. The earth has been taken from the many by
the few. It made no difference that they had no right to
it; they took it. ... read the whole
article
Charles T. Root — Not a Single Tax! (1925)
Every community, whatever its political name and
extent -- village, city, state or province or nation --
has its own normal, unfailing income, growing with the
growth of the community and always adequate to meet
necessary governmental expenditure.
To explain: Every community has an indefeasible
original right to the land on which it exists, and to all
the natural, unmodified properties and advantages of that
particular area of the earth's surface. To this land in
its natural state, undrained, unfenced, unfertilized,
unplanted and unoccupied, including its waters, its
contents and its location, every individual in the
community (which may consist of any political unit
selected) has an equal right, while all the individuals
together have a joint right to the value for use which
society has conferred upon these natural advantages.
This value for use is known as "Land Value," or by the
not particularly descriptive but generally adopted name
of "Economic Rent."
Briefly defined the land value or economic rent of any
piece of ground is the largest annual amount voluntarily
offered for the exclusive use of that ground, or of an
equivalent parcel, independent of improvements thereon.
Every holder or user of land pays economic rent, but he
now pays most of it to the wrong party. The aggregate
economic rent of the territory occupied by any political
unit is, as has been stated above, always sufficient,
usually more than sufficient, for the legitimate expenses
of the government of that unit. As also stated above, the
economic rent belongs to the community, and not to
individual landowners. ... read the whole article
Bill Batt: Water and
Privatization
It is often argued that the most
efficient solution to the challenge of providing water to
all people is to employ a paradigm that recognizes water
as a good and service to be priced by market mechanisms.
But many conventional economic models fail to see
water as the natural birthright of all
people. To reconcile these positions, one
needs to step back to a framework of thinking arising
from 19th century classical economics. Renewed interest
in these, especially by environmentalists, offers a way
of resolving distributive justice with market efficiency.
If you search on Google the words "economic justice," it
brings up first the work of the Banneker Center and
associated sites that rely on a social philosophy
especially applicable to questions about the ownership of
nature and its services. ...
D. C. MacDonald: Preface (1891?) to
Ogilvie's
Essay (circa 1782)
Professor Ogilvie, who came after Locke, devotes
himself in this treatise to one subject - Birthright in land, it may be called. And the
Author may be justly styled - The Euclid of Land Law
Reform. He has left little or nothing unsolved in
connection with the Land Question. He has given us a true
base line -- man’s equal right to the raw material
of the earth, to the air, to the water, to the rays of
the sun, and all natural products -- from which we can
work out any problem, and by which we can test the
“title and measure” of every man’s
property. Resting on this baseline -- man’s natural
rights -- he represents to us the perpendicular line of
man's right to labour, “with security of reaping
its full produce and just reward.” Here we have the
question in a nutshell. Take away the base line, and you
have no right to labour, and no produce or reward, except
what may be meted out by the usurper of your natural
rights. You have to beg for leave to toil! We thus see
clearly how the robbery of labour may be prevented, and
how impossible it is to put a stop to such robbery while
the industrial classes neglect to claim and exercise
their natural right -- their right to an equal share in
the earth, and all its natural products.
...
When a child is born, we recognise that it has a
natural right to its mother's milk, and no one can deny
that it has the same right to mother-earth. It is really
its mother-earth, plus the dew and sunshine from heaven
and a little labour, that supplies the milk and
everything else required for its subsistence. The monster
that would deprive a babe of its mother's milk, or would
monopolise the breasts of several mothers, to the
exclusion of several children, is not more deserving of
being destroyed than the monster who seizes absolute
possession of more than his share of the common mother of
mankind, to the exclusion of his fellow-creatures.
... Read
the entire preface
James Kiefer: James Huntington and the
ideas of Henry George
Henry George, author of Progress and Poverty, argued
that, while some forms of wealth are produced by human
activity, and are rightly the property of the producers
(or those who have obtained them from the previous owners
by voluntary gift or exchange), land and natural
resources are bestowed by God on the human race, and that
every one of the N inhabitants of the earth has a claim
to 1/Nth of the coal beds, 1/Nth of the oil wells, 1/Nth
of the mines, and 1/Nth of the fertile soil. God wills a
society where everyone may sit in peace under his own
vine and his own fig tree.
The Law of Moses undertook to implement this by making
the ownership of land hereditary, with a man's land
divided among his sons (or, in the absence of sons, his
daughters), and prohibiting the permanent sale of land.
(See Leviticus 25:13-17,23.) The most a man might do with
his land is sell the use of it until the next Jubilee
year, an amnesty declared once every fifty years, when
all debts were cancelled and all land returned to its
hereditary owner.
Henry George's proposed implementation is to tax all
land at about 99.99% of its rental value, leaving the
owner of record enough to cover his bookkeeping expenses.
The resulting revenues would be divided equally among the
natural owners of the land, viz. the people of the
country, with everyone receiving a dividend check
regularly for the use of his share of the earth (here I
am anticipating what I think George would have suggested
if he had written in the 1990's rather than the
1870's).
This procedure would have the effect of making the
sale price of a piece of land, not including the price of
buildings and other improvements on it, practically zero.
The cost of being a landholder would be, not the original
sale price, but the tax, equivalent to rent. A man who
chose to hold his "fair share," or 1/Nth of all the land,
would pay a land tax about equal to his dividend check,
and so would break even. By 1/Nth of the land is meant
land with a value equal to 1/Nth of the value of all the
land in the country.
Naturally, an acre in the business district of a great
city would be worth as much as many square miles in the
open country. Some would prefer to hold more than one
N'th of the land and pay for the privilege. Some would
prefer to hold less land, or no land at all, and get a
small annual check representing the dividend on their
inheritance from their father Adam.
Note that, at least for the able-bodied, this solves
the problem of poverty at a stroke. If the total land and
total labor of the world are enough to feed and clothe
the existing population, then 1/Nth of the land and 1/Nth
of the labor are enough to feed and clothe 1/Nth of the
population. A family of 4 occupying 4/Nths of the land
(which is what their dividend checks will enable them to
pay the tax on) will find that their labor applied to
that land is enough to enable them to feed and clothe
themselves. Of course, they may prefer to apply their
labor elsewhere more profitably, but the situation from
which we start is one in which everyone has his own plot
of ground from which to wrest a living by the strength of
his own back, and any deviation from this is the result
of voluntary exchanges agreed to by the parties directly
involved, who judge themselves to be better off as the
result of the exchanges.
Some readers may think this a very radical proposal.
In fact, it is extremely conservative, in the sense of
being in agreement with historic ideas about land
ownership as opposed to ownership of, say, tools or
vehicles or gold or domestic animals or other movables.
The laws of English-speaking countries uniformly
distinguish between real property (land) and personal
property (everything else). In this context, "real" is
not the opposite of "imaginary." It is a form of the word
"royal," and means that the ultimate owner of the land is
the king, as symbol of the people. Note that
English-derived law does not recognize "landowners." The
term is "landholders." The concept of eminent domain is
that the landholder may be forced to surrender his
landholdings to the government for a public purpose.
Historically, eminent domain does not apply to property
other than land, although complications arise when there
are buildings on the land that is being seized.
I will mention in passing that the proposals of Henry
George have attracted support from persons as diverse as
Felix Morley, Aldous
Huxley, Woodrow Wilson, Helen Keller, Winston Churchill, Leo Tolstoy, William F Buckley Jr, and Sun
Yat-sen. To the Five Nobel Prizes authorized by Alfred
Nobel himself there has been added a sixth, in Economics,
and the Henry George Foundation claims eight of the Economics
Laureates as supporters, in whole or in part, of the
proposals of Henry George (Paul Samuelson, 1970; Milton Friedman, 1976; Herbert A
Simon, 1978; James Tobin, 1981; Franco Modigliani, 1985;
James M Buchanan, 1986; Robert M Solow, 1987; William S Vickrey, 1996).
The immediate concrete proposal favored by most
Georgists today is that cities shall tax land within
their boundaries at a higher rate than they tax buildings
and other improvements on the land. (In case anyone is
about to ask, "How can we possibly distinguish between
the value of the land and the value of the buildings on
it?" let me assure you that real estate assessors do it
all the time. It is standard practice to make the two
assessments separately, and a parcel of land in the
business district of a large city very often has a
different owner from the building on it.) Many cities
have moved to a system of taxing land more heavily than
improvements, and most have been pleased with the
results, finding that landholders are more likely to use
their land productively -- to their own benefit and that
of the public -- if their taxes do not automatically go
up when they improve their land by constructing or
maintaining buildings on it.
An advantage of this proposal in the eyes of many is
that it is a Fabian proposal, "evolution, not
revolution," that it is incremental and reversible. If a
city or other jurisdiction does not like the results of a
two-level tax system, it can repeal the arrangement or
reduce the difference in levels with no great upheaval.
It is not like some other proposals of the form,
"Distribute all wealth justly, and make me absolute
dictator of the world so that I can supervise the
distribution, and if it doesn't work, I promise to
resign." The problem is that absolute dictators seldom
resign. ... read
the whole article
Bill Batt: The
Compatibility of Georgist Economics and Ecological
Economics
The heart of George’s economics was, in a
way, Biblical. As the son of a religious book publisher
born in Philadelphia, he had adequate opportunity to
witness the early growth of the American republic in a
unique way. On his own in San Francisco and responsible
for a wife and child at a young age, his first effort at
resolving the puzzles of injustice were a manuscript
printed in 1871. But only after additional exposure to
Ricardian rent theory was he able to refine his ideas
such that they could form the basis of his Progress and Poverty eight years later. His
Christian roots led him to a deep commitment to the basic
moral equality of all people; his challenge was to find a
way to ensure that this equality was manifest in economic
fairness.
As noted earlier, the starting point of Georgist
philosophy is that nature belongs to owners only in
usufruct and not in freehold. Because any monetary wealth
that accrued to that nature stemmed directly from the
physical presence of people and was therefore social in
character, the resulting added increment of value that
constituted rent belonged in turn to the community that
created it. Nature would have no economic price without
people. Hence rent was the community’s entitlement
and not that of individuals, and the land rent that
accrued to parcels as a result of social investment
should be returned to — recaptured by — the
community. It was obvious to George that the wealthiest
people in the nation usually owed their fortune not to
the sweat of their brow or the inventiveness of their
minds. Rather their position was due to their success as
land speculators, to an increase in rent on land they had
captured title to, land rightfully belonging to all.
The earth and all its product, he
argued, was the common heritage of humanity, a birthright
of all people.
Any failure to pay back that
increment to society, or of government to recapture it in
the form of taxes, constituted not only an injustice to
the poor but a distortion of economic equilibrium.
He witnessed first hand the perverted configurations of
land use that today we know as sprawl development— even in his time it
was apparent that urban, high value land parcels were
being held off the market for speculative gain by
meretricious interests. He witnessed also the boom and
bust cycles of the land markets on account of such
speculation, effects which spread far wider than just
land prices. These inevitable cycles would dislocate
labor and capital supply, giving impetus to the
impoverishment and suffering which he himself had
experienced. He understood that holding the most
strategically valuable landsites out of circulation
constituted a burden on the economy. He understood that
financial resources spent to pay exorbitant land prices
had a depressing effect on capital and labor. And because
government was taxing labor and capital instead of
recovering land rent, it was further restricting the job
market and the growth of capital. He realized that people
who captured monopoly control of strategically valuable
landsites could do so because they were privy to
information prior to its public release. It was not by
any means his insight alone; it was captured also by
George Washington Plunkett writing at the same
time:
There’s an honest graft,
and I’m an example of how it works. I might sum up
the whole thing by sayin’: “I seen my
opportunities and I took ‘em.”
Just let me
explain by examples. My party’s in power in the
city, and it’s goin’ to undertake a lot of
public improvements. Well, I’m tipped off, say,
that they’re going to lay out a new park in a
certain place.
I see my opportunity and I take it. I go to that place
and I buy up all the land I can in the neighborhood. Then
the board of this or that makes its plan public, and
there is a rush to get my land, which nobody cared
particularly for before.
Ain’t it perfectly honest to charge a good price
and make a profit on my investment and foresight? Of
course, it is. Well, that’s honest graft.
32
32William L. Riordan,
Plunkett of Tammany Hall. New York: Dutton, 1963, p.
3.
All society needed to do was to collect the
economic rent from landholders as its rightful due, a
solution that became part of the subtitle of his book,
“the remedy.” Taxing the land (or,
alternatively, collecting the economic rent) was
something common citizens could
understand....
So also in the case of the auctioning of
“pollution credits” or tradeable permits,
what in fact constitute the right of power industries to
treat the air as a dump to the full extent which
environmental tolerances allow.45 These “credits” are now
“owned” by the private sector and traded back
and forth among corporations, even though all people
experience the consequences of its treatment. Airport
landing slots, “prime time” broadcasting, and
many other time-sensitive dimensions have all been handed
over to the private sector with nominal benefit to the
public. London Mayor Ken Livingstone has been a strong
supporter of renting the landing slots at Heathrow and
Gatwick Airports, and is at this very time exploring a
rent recovery scheme to pay for the upgrade of components
of the Jubilee tube line.46
In the Georgist view, this economic rent is the
public’s birthright,47 and the failure to collect it and
to use it to pay for the general costs of government
services is a moral as well as a public policy lapse.
Georgists regard the private confiscation of public
wealth as mistaken policy if not actually an immoral
transgression — in a word, theft! He himself was an
advocate of the public owning and protecting “the
commons” and what is today often called
“natural capital.” Studies have shown that if
economic rent were collected in full as well as other
appropriate revenues such as user fees and green taxes,
the total income would likely be enough to pay not only
the costs of all government services but provide a
citizens’ dividend of significant amounts as
well.48
Statistical data is difficult to compile, but what
studies have been attempted to date indicate that
economic rent in all its forms and from all its sources
comprises approximately a third of the economy as it is
currently calculated.49 Arrangements such as these are to
the followers of Henry George a far more efficient and
moral system of public finance.
...
POINTS OF SYNTHESIS OF GEORGIST
AND ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
The commonalities of Georgist economics and
ecological economics appear to be organizable into six
general points:
1) preservation of the commons,
2) sustainable development,
3) appropriate valuation of natural capital,
4) ensuring social and biological community,
5) fostering individual self-realization, and
6) securing economic justice.
Implicit in all these points is the view that
market activity needs to be circumscribed and juxtaposed
to the non-human, biological realm. It appears that there
is lots to be gained by some synthesis of the two fields
of discourse.
Ecological economists worry about the
encroachment, and even the elimination, of those elements
of nature to which private property title has not been
granted. In their concern about the need to protect the
“commons,” they are torn between the view
that only through privatization can all the world’s
assets be preserved and the alternative view that any
private appropriation of the commons constitutes a moral
compromise. They fear a repeat of Garrett Hardin’s
“tragedy of the commons.” Their argument
often proposed is rather complex to explicate: it assumes
that private property titles may perhaps provide the best
incentive not to exploit the fruits of the earth and the
earth itself.126
To Georgists, on the other hand, the
earth and all its resources are already in fact the
birthright of all humanity; individuals are entitled to
its use in return for the payment of rents. Further
privatization is anathema. The key rather is in
distinguishing the various components of ownership and
getting prices right — mainly in the collection of
economic rents. ...
The grant of land sites and other natural
resources to individuals and corporations in leasehold
rather than freehold has an additional advantage beyond
the revenue collected in rent to support the general
purposes of government. This is the restoration of
ownership of the earth to all people: what in Georgist
terms and in classical philosophy is their birthright.
Acknowledgment that the earth belongs to us all, and is
both our entitlement and our responsibility, has the
effect of enfranchising the people of the earth
everywhere, perhaps ennobling them as well. At a time in
human history when the incomes of the world’s
people are increasingly disparate, and where wealth is
even more unequally distributed, it must be recognized
that titles to the resources of the earth are the most
unequally, and unjustly, distributed of all.
Recognition of this truth may come as a revelation;
indeed it may well be revolutionary in some circles. But
restoration of birthrights to which all people have a
just and proper claim may be the single most important
and effective means by which to facilitate and ensure
sustainable economic policies worldwide. ......
read the whole article
Martin Luther King, Jr: Where Do We
Go From Here? (1967)
I want to say to you as I move to my conclusion, as we
talk about "Where do we go from here," that we honestly
face the fact that the Movement must address itself to
the question of restructuring the whole of American
society. There are forty million poor people here. And
one day we must ask the question, "Why are there forty
million poor people in America?" And when you begin to
ask that question, you are raising questions about the
economic system, about a broader distribution of wealth.
When you ask that question, you begin to question the
capitalistic economy. And I'm simply saying that more and
more, we've got to begin to ask questions about the whole
society. We are called upon to help the discouraged
beggars in life's market place. But one day we must come
to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs
restructuring. It means that questions must be raised.
You see, my friends, when you deal with this,
* you begin to ask the question, "Who owns the
oil?"
* You begin to ask the question, "Who owns the iron
ore?"
* You begin to ask the question, "Why is it that people
have to pay water bills in a world that is two thirds
water?"
These are questions that must be asked. ... read the
book excerpt and whole speech
Robert G. Ingersoll: A Lay Sermon
(1886)
... There is something wrong in a government where
they who do the most have the least. There is something
wrong, when honesty wears a rag, and rascality a robe;
when the loving, the tender, eat a crust, while the
infamous sit at banquets. I cannot do much, but I can at
least sympathize with those who suffer. ...
No man should be allowed to own any
land that he does not use. Everybody knows that -- I do
not care whether he has thousands or millions. I have
owned a great deal of land, but I know just as well as I
know I am living that I should not be allowed to have it
unless I use it. And why? Don't you know that if people
could bottle the air, they would? Don't you know that
there would be an American Air-bottling Association? And
don't you know that they would allow thousands and
millions to die for want of breath, if they could not pay
for air? I am not blaming anybody. I am just telling how
it is. Now, the land belongs to the children of Nature.
Nature invites into this world every babe that is born.
And what would you think of me, for instance, tonight, if
I had invited you here -- nobody had charged you
anything, but you had been invited -- and when you got
here you had found one man pretending to occupy a hundred
seats, another fifty, and another seventy-five, and
thereupon you were compelled to stand up -- what would
you think of the invitation? It seems to me that every
child of Nature is entitled to his share of the land, and
that he should not be compelled to beg the privilege to
work the soil, of a babe that happened to be born before
him. And why do I say this? Because it is not to our
interest to have a few landlords and millions of
tenants. ... read
the whole article
Mason Gaffney: Bottling
the Air
Times have caught up with Ingersoll. Ronald Coase, prominent Chicago
economist, says polluters (whom he calls emitters, to
avoid bias) have as much right to emit as victims (he
says receptors) have to breathe clean air. It
doesn’t matter, says Coase, how we assign property
rights originally: as long as property is firm, the
market will sort it all out. However, since emitters have
invested in costly facilities, and property is sacred...
you see whither this unbiased science is tending.
Was he laughed to scorn? Au contraire, he was raised on the shoulders
of his adulatory peers and anointed a demi-god (which tells
you something about his peers). Having risen on wings of
theory the idea found its way into practice, and today The
South Coast Air Quality Management District awards "offset
rights" to those with worthy track records of emitting. New
emitters must buy "property rights" from old
ones.
In effect, we don’t fine people for
emitting, we reward them with a right to continue.
...
And those who want to breathe? Coase
says they should pay for the privilege, as they pay for
indulging any personal taste. After all, they already pay
those who supply them with land to live on. Only welfare
bums would expect property owners to dip into their
hard-earned savings and supply them with free air, when the
market has a solution at hand. All they need do is buy
offset rights from Ancient and Honorable Emitters. When
they want to breathe, they just retire the rights upwind of
them. This is a marvel of efficiency, too. They retire only
what it takes to clean the air they need: no
waste.
If they can’t afford to buy
outright, they could rent -- markets have ingenious
solutions for all problems, like any good panacea. Gas
masks are another free-market solution: much better than
socialistic policies that would impose uniform clean air on
everyone, whether they want it or not.
...
What about the new-born, with no
prior history of either emitting or breathing? They come
innocently into the world with no basis for being
grandfathered in, and little money. Sometimes real men must
put aside maudlin whining, grit their teeth, and just pull
up the ladder, lest the lifeboat be swamped. It’s the
free market way of population control, a modified kind of
natural selection. As for the alleged innocence of the
little brats, remember Original Sin, and The Lord of the Flies.
There is, to be sure, a noisy crowd
who want clean air to be generally available, and prate
emotionally of natural beauty and rights. They are only
"environmental activists," an odd elitist lot whom
objective scientists may disregard.
For that they gave Coase a Nobel
Prize. You see, old Ingersoll was on the mark. Nothing is
too absurd once we accept invading, usurping, and leeching
as the bases of property ... read the whole
article
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 4: The Limits of
Privatization (pages 49-63)
It’s tempting to believe that private owners, by
pursuing their own self-interest, can preserve shared
inheritances. No one likes being told what to do, and
words like statism conjure fears of bureaucracy at best
and tyranny at worst. By contrast, privatism connotes
freedom.
In this chapter, we look at Garrett Hardin’s
second alternative for saving the commons: privatism, or
privatization. I argue that private corporations,
operating in unconstrained markets, can allocate
resources efficiently but can’t preserve them. The
latter task requires setting aside some supplies for
future generations — something neither markets nor
corporations, when left to their own devices, will do.
The reason lies in the algorithms and starting conditions
of our current operating system. ...
Free Market Environmentalism
One other version of privatism is worth considering. Its
premise is that nature can be preserved, and pollution
reduced, by expanding private property rights. This line
of thought is called free market environmentalism, and
it’s favored by libertarian think tanks such as the
Cato Institute.
The origins of free market environmentalism go back to
an influential paper by University of Chicago economist
Ronald Coase. Writing in 1960, Coase challenged the
then-prevailing orthodoxy that government regulation is
the only way to protect nature. In fact, he argued,
nature can be protected through property rights, provided
they’re clearly defined and the cost of enforcing
them is low.
In Coase’s model, pollution is a two-sided
problem involving a polluter and a pollutee. If one side
has clear property rights (for instance, if the polluter
has a right to emit, or the pollutee has a right not to
be emitted upon), and transaction costs are low, the two
sides will come to a deal that reduces pollution.
How will this happen? Let’s say the pollutee has
a right to clean air. He could, under common law, sue the
polluter for damages. To avoid such potential losses, the
polluter is willing to pay the pollutee a sum of money up
front. The pollutee is willing to accept compensation for
the inconvenience and discomfort caused by the pollution.
They agree on a level of pollution and a payment
that’s satisfactory to both.
It works the other way, too. If the polluter has the
right to pollute, the pollutee offers him money to
pollute less, and the same deal is reached. This
pollution level — which is greater than zero but
less than the polluter would emit if pollution were free
— is, in the language of economists, optimal.
(Whether it’s best for nature is another matter.)
It’s arrived at because the polluter’s
externalities have been internalized.
For fans of privatism, Coase’s theorem was an
intellectual breakthrough. It gave theoretical credence
to the idea that the marketplace, not government, is the
place to tackle pollution. Instead of burdening business
with page after page of regulations, all government has
to do is assign property rights and let markets handle
the rest.
There’s much that’s attractive in free
market environmentalism. Anything that makes the lives of
business managers simpler is, to my mind, a good thing
— not just for business, but for nature and society
as a whole. It’s good because things that are
simple for managers to do will get done, and often
quickly, while things that are complicated may never get
done. Right now, we need to get our economic activity in
harmony with nature. We need to do that quickly, and at
the lowest possible cost. If it’s easiest for
managers to act when they have prices, then let’s
give them prices, not regulations and exhortations.
At the same time, there are critical pieces missing in
free market environmentalism. First and foremost, it
lacks a solid rationale for how property rights to nature
should be assigned. Coase argued that pollution levels
will be the same no matter how those rights are
apportioned. Although this may be true in the world of
theory, it makes a big difference to people’s
pocketbooks whether pollutees pay polluters, or vice
versa.
Most free marketers seem to think pollution
rights should be given free to polluters. In their view,
the citizen’s right to be free of pollution is
trumped by the polluter’s right to pollute. Taking
the opposite tack, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an attorney for
the Natural Resources Defense Council, argues that
polluters have long been trespassing on common property
and that this trespass is a form of subsidy that ought to
end.
The question for me is, what’s the best
way to assign property rights when our goal is to protect
a birthright shared by everyone? It turns out
this is a complicated matter, but one we need to explore.
There’s no textbook way to “propertize”
nature. (When I say to propertize, I mean to treat an
aspect of nature as property, thus making it ownable.
Privatization goes further and assigns that property to
corporate owners.) In fact, there are different ways to
propertize nature, with dramatically different
consequences. And since we’ll be living with these
new property rights — and paying rent to their
owners — for a long time, it behooves us to get
them right. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 4: The Limits of
Privatization (pages 49-63)
Free Market Environmentalism
One other version of privatism is worth considering. Its
premise is that nature can be preserved, and pollution
reduced, by expanding private property rights. This line
of thought is called free market environmentalism, and
it’s favored by libertarian think tanks such as the
Cato Institute.
The origins of free market environmentalism go back to
an influential paper by University of Chicago economist
Ronald Coase. Writing in 1960, Coase challenged the
then-prevailing orthodoxy that government regulation is
the only way to protect nature. In fact, he argued,
nature can be protected through property rights, provided
they’re clearly defined and the cost of enforcing
them is low.
In Coase’s model, pollution is a two-sided
problem involving a polluter and a pollutee. If one side
has clear property rights (for instance, if the polluter
has a right to emit, or the pollutee has a right not to
be emitted upon), and transaction costs are low, the two
sides will come to a deal that reduces pollution.
How will this happen? Let’s say the pollutee has
a right to clean air. He could, under common law, sue the
polluter for damages. To avoid such potential losses, the
polluter is willing to pay the pollutee a sum of money up
front. The pollutee is willing to accept compensation for
the inconvenience and discomfort caused by the pollution.
They agree on a level of pollution and a payment
that’s satisfactory to both.
It works the other way, too. If the polluter has the
right to pollute, the pollutee offers him money to
pollute less, and the same deal is reached. This
pollution level — which is greater than zero but
less than the polluter would emit if pollution were free
— is, in the language of economists, optimal.
(Whether it’s best for nature is another matter.)
It’s arrived at because the polluter’s
externalities have been internalized.
For fans of privatism, Coase’s theorem was an
intellectual breakthrough. It gave theoretical credence
to the idea that the marketplace, not government, is the
place to tackle pollution. Instead of burdening business
with page after page of regulations, all government has
to do is assign property rights and let markets handle
the rest.
There’s much that’s attractive in free
market environmentalism. Anything that makes the lives of
business managers simpler is, to my mind, a good thing
— not just for business, but for nature and society
as a whole. It’s good because things that are
simple for managers to do will get done, and often
quickly, while things that are complicated may never get
done. Right now, we need to get our economic activity in
harmony with nature. We need to do that quickly, and at
the lowest possible cost. If it’s easiest for
managers to act when they have prices, then let’s
give them prices, not regulations and exhortations.
At the same time, there are critical pieces missing in
free market environmentalism. First and foremost, it
lacks a solid rationale for how property rights to nature
should be assigned. Coase argued that pollution levels
will be the same no matter how those rights are
apportioned. Although this may be true in the world of
theory, it makes a big difference to people’s
pocketbooks whether pollutees pay polluters, or vice
versa.
Most free marketers seem to think pollution rights
should be given free to polluters. In their view, the
citizen’s right to be free of pollution is trumped
by the polluter’s right to pollute. Taking the
opposite tack, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an attorney for the
Natural Resources Defense Council, argues that polluters
have long been trespassing on common property and that
this trespass is a form of subsidy that ought to end.
The question for me is, what’s the best way to
assign property rights when our goal is to protect a
birthright shared by everyone? It turns
out this is a complicated matter, but one we need to
explore. There’s no textbook way to
“propertize” nature. (When I say to
propertize, I mean to treat an aspect of nature as
property, thus making it ownable. Privatization goes
further and assigns that property to corporate owners.)
In fact, there are different ways to propertize nature,
with dramatically different consequences. And since
we’ll be living with these new property rights
— and paying rent to their owners — for a
long time, it behooves us to get them right. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 5: Reinventing the Commons
(pages 65-78)
ONE PERSON, ONE
SHARE
Modern democratic government is grounded on the
principle of one person, one vote. In the same way, the
modern commons sector would be grounded on the principle
of one person, one share. In the case of scarce natural
assets, it will be necessary to distinguish between usage
rights and income rights. It’s impossible for
everyone to use a limited commons equally, but everyone
should receive equal shares of the income derived from
selling limited usage rights.
INCLUDE SOME
LIQUIDITY
Currently, private property owners enjoy a near-monopoly
on the privilege of receiving property income. But as the
Alaska Permanent Fund shows, it’s possible for
common property co-owners to receive income too.
Income sharing would end private property’s
monopoly not only on liquidity, but also on attention.
People would notice common property if they got income
from it. They’d care about it, think about it, and
talk about it. Concern for invisible commons would
soar.
Common property liquidity has to be designed
carefully, though. Since common property rights are
birthrights, they shouldn’t be tradeable the way
corporate shares are. This means commons owners
wouldn’t reap capital gains. Instead, they’d
retain their shared income stakes throughout their lives,
and through such stakes, share in rent, royalties,
interest, and dividends. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 7: Universal Birthrights
(pages 101-116)
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all
men are created equal, that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these
are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
— U.S. Declaration of Independence, 1776
The Idea of Birthrights
John Locke’s response to royalty’s claim
of divine right was the idea of everyone’s inherent
right to life, liberty, and property. Thomas Jefferson,
in drafting America’s Declaration of Independence,
changed Locke’s trinity to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness. These, Jefferson and his
collaborators agreed, are gifts from the creator that
can’t be taken away. Put slightly differently,
they’re universal birthrights.
The Constitution and its amendments added meat to
these elegant bones. They guaranteed such birthrights as
free speech, due process, habeas corpus, speedy public
trials, and secure homes and property. Wisely, the Ninth
Amendment affirmed that “the enumeration in the
Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed
to deny or disparage others retained by the
people.” In that spirit, others have since been
added.
If we were to analyze the expansion of American
birthrights, we’d see a series of waves. The first
wave consisted of rights against the state. The second
included rights against unequal treatment based on race,
nationality, gender, or sexual orientation. The third
wave — which, historically speaking, is just
beginning — consists of rights not against things,
but for things — free public education, collective
bargaining for wages, security in old age. They can be
thought of as rights necessary for the pursuit of
happiness.
What makes this latest wave of birthrights strengthen
community is their universality. If some Americans could
enjoy free public education while others couldn’t,
the resulting inequities would divide rather than unite
us as a nation. The universality of these rights puts
everyone in the same boat. It spreads risk,
responsibility, opportunity, and reward across race,
gender, economic classes, and generations. It makes us a
nation rather than a collection of isolated
individuals.
Universality is also what distinguishes the commons
sector from the corporate sector. The starting condition
for the corporate sector, as we’ve seen, is that
the top 5 percent owns more shares than everyone else.
The starting condition for the commons sector, by
contrast, is one person, one share.
The standard argument against third wave universal
birthrights is that, while they might be nice in theory,
in practice they are too expensive. They impose an
unbearable burden on “the economy” —
that is, on the winners in unfettered markets. Much
better, therefore, to let everyone — including poor
children and the sick — fend for themselves. In
fact, the opposite is often true: universal birthrights,
as we’ll see, can be cheaper and more efficient
than individual acquisition. Moreover, they are always
fairer.
How far we might go down the path of extending
universal birthrights is anyone’s guess, but
we’re now at the point where, economically
speaking, we can afford to go farther. Without great
difficulty, we could add three birthrights to our
economic operating system: one would pay everyone a
regular dividend, the second would give every child a
start-up stake, and the third would reduce and share
medical costs. Whether we add these birthrights or not
isn’t a matter of economic ability, but of attitude
and politics.
Why attitude? Americans suffer from a number of
confusions. We think it’s “wrong” to
give people “something for nothing,” despite
the fact that corporations take common wealth for nothing
all the time. We believe the poor are poor and the rich
are rich because they deserve to be, but don’t
consider that millions of Americans work two or three
jobs and still can’t make ends meet. Plus, we think
tinkering with the “natural” distribution of
income is “socialism,” or “big
government,” or some other manifestation of evil,
despite the fact that our current distribution of income
isn’t “natural” at all, but rigged from
the get-go by maldistributed property.
The late John Rawls, one of America’s leading
philosophers, distinguished between pre distribution of
property and re distribution of income. Under income re
distribution, money is taken from “winners”
and transferred to “losers.” Understandably,
this isn’t popular with winners, who tend to
control government and the media. Under property pre
distribution, by contrast, the playing field is leveled
by spreading property ownership before income is
generated. After that, there’s no need for income
redistribution; property itself distributes income to
all. According to Rawls, while income re distribution
creates dependency, property predistribution
empowers.
But how can we spread property ownership without
taking property from some and giving it to others? The
answer lies in the commons — wealth that already
belongs to everyone. By propertizing (without
privatizing) some of that wealth, we can make everyone a
property owner.
What’s interesting is that, for purely
ecological reasons, we need to propertize (without
privatizing) some natural wealth now. This twenty-first
century necessity means we have a chance to save the
planet, and as a bonus, add a universal birthright. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 10: What You Can Do (pages
155-166)
We come at last to the inescapable question: What can
each of us do to help build Capitalism 3.0? ...
Second, we should demand more birthrights and property
rights than we have now. Rights that belong to everyone.
Rights built into our operating system. Rights that
protect future generations as well as our own. The reason
I stress property rights is that, in America, property
rights are sacred. They’re guaranteed by the
Constitution. Once you have them, they can’t be
taken without fair compensation. These protections have
greatly benefited those who own private property. They
should also benefit those who share common wealth. ...
read the whole chapter
Weld Carter: An
Introduction to Henry George
What is the law of human
progress?
George saw ours alone among the civilizations of
the world as still progressing; all others had either
petrified or had vanished. And in our civilization he had
already detected alarming evidences of corruption and
decay. So he sought out the forces that create
civilization and the forces that destroy it.
He found the incentives to progress
to be the desires inherent in human nature, and the motor
of progress to be what he called mental power. But the
mental power that is available for progress is only what
remains after nonprogressive demands have been met. These
demands George listed as maintenance and
conflict.
In his isolated state, primitive
man's powers are required simply to maintain existence;
only as he begins to associate in communities and to enjoy
the resultant economies is mental power set free for higher
uses. Hence, association is the first essential of
progress:
And as the wasteful expenditure of
mental power in conflict becomes greater or less as the
moral law which accords to each an equality of rights is
ignored or is recognized, equality (or justice) is the
second essential of progress.
Thus association in equality is the
law of progress. Association frees mental power for
expenditure in improvement, and equality, or justice, or
freedom -- for the terms here signify the same thing, the
recognition of the moral law -- prevents the dissipation of
this power in fruitless struggles.
He concluded this phase of his
analysis of civilization in these words: "The law of human
progress, what is it but the moral law? Just as social
adjustments promote justice, just as they acknowledge the
equality of right between man and man, just as they insure
to each the perfect liberty which is bounded only by the
equal liberty of every other, must civilization advance.
Just as they fail in this, must advancing civilization come
to a halt and recede..."
However, as the primary relation of
man is to the earth, so must the primary social adjustment
concern the relation of man to the earth. Only that social
adjustment which affords all mankind equal access to nature
and which insures labor its full earnings will promote
justice, acknowledge equality of right between man and man,
and insure perfect liberty to each.
This, according to George, was what
the single tax would do. It was why he saw the single tax
as not merely a fiscal reform but as the basic reform
without which no other reform could, in the long run,
avail. This is why he said, "What is inexplicable, if we
lose sight of man's absolute and constant dependence upon
land, is clear when we recognize it."... read the
whole article
W. E. B. DuBois quoted Henry George extensively in a
piece called Jacob and Esau, from The Talladegan,
Vol. LXII, November 1944, pp. 1-6, available at http://www.webdubois.org/dbJacobEsau.html
:
... This was the promise of Jacob's life.
This would establish the birthright which Esau despised.
But, says George, "Now, however, we are coming into
collision with facts which there can be no mistaking. From
all parts of the civilized world," he says speaking fifty
years ago, "come complaints of industrial depression; of
labor condemned to involuntary idleness; of capital massed
and wasting; of pecuniary distress among business; of want
and suffering and anxiety among the working class. All the
dull, deadening pain, all the keen, maddening anguish, that
to great masses of men are involved into the words 'hard
times' which afflict the world today." What
would Henry George have said in 1933 after airplane and
radio and mass production, turbine and electricity had
come? [Parts of this quotation come from
Henry George's
Progress and Poverty: Ch. 1, para. 8.]
Science and art grew and expanded despite
all this, but it was warped by the poverty of the artist
and the continuous attempt to make Science subservient to
industry. The latter effort finally succeeded so widely
that modern civilization became typified as industrial
technique. Education became learning a trade. Men thought
of civilization as primarily mechanical and the mechanical
means by which they reduced wool and cotton to their
purposes, also reduced and bent human kind to their will.
Individual initiative remained but it was cramped and
distorted and there spread the idea of patriotism to one's
country as the highest virtue, by which it became
established, that just as in the case of Jacob, a man not
only could lie, steal, cheat and murder for his native
land, but by doing so, he became a hero whether his cause
was just or unjust. ... read the entire
speech
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