1
2
3
Wealth and Want | |||||||
... because democracy alone is not enough to produce widely shared prosperity. | |||||||
Home | Essential Documents | Themes | All Documents | Authors | Glossary | Links | Contact Us |
Capital and Labor
H.G Brown: Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress & Poverty, Chapter 8: Why a Land-Value Tax is Better than an Equal Tax on All Property (in the unabridged P&P: Book VIII: Application of the Remedy — Chapter 3: The proposition tried by the canons of taxation)
The Most Rev. Dr Thomas Nulty, Roman Catholic Bishop of Meath (Ireland): Back to the Land (1881)
Both capitalists and operatives,
therefore, are intensely disappointed and supremely
dissatisfied with these disheartening results, and
mutually reproach each other with fraud and foul dealing
in the division of their common earnings. Their
mutual misunderstandings and rival claims to a larger
share than they actually receive have given rise to
"lockouts" on the one side and "strikes" on the other; to
combinations of capitalists among the employers and
"Trade Unions" among the labourers. Thus their mutual
relations, which ought to be of the friendliest
character, have at last settled down into the permanent
form of an insane internecine war, which inflicts
irreparable injury on the common interests of
both.
It never occurs to either side that a third party could possibly be liable to blame. I think I have shown that neither party has received, or at all events can retain for his own use and enjoyment, its fair share of their common earnings. The existing system of Land Tenure, like a great national thief, robs both parties of an enormous amount of their earnings for the benefit of a class who do not labour at all. As the operatives complain the louder,
so the case they make against the capitalists seem really
the weaker and the worse founded of the two. Mr. Cairnes,
with many others, proved to evidence that unless in rare
and exceptional cases it is perfectly impossible for the
capitalist to withhold from the operatives their fair share
in their common earnings. Read the whole
letter
There is in capital no power to oppress labour;
capital is not the employer of labour; labour is the
employer of capital. (Applause.) That is the natural
order; labour came before capital could be; it is labour
produces capital; there is no particle of capital that
can properly be styled capital that labour has not been
exerted to produce. (Hear, hear.) Give labour land; let
it get it on equal terms; secure to the labourer the
reward of his exertions, and the distinction between the
labourer and the capitalist will pass away. With the
increase in the wages of labour if there be great
organizations of capital they must necessarily be
co-operative organizations in which labour shall have its
full share and its full right. (Applause.) ...
Read the entire article
"A. J. O." (probably Mark Twain) Slavery
... I am capital and I employ
people!
But I gain in other ways besides pecuniary benefit. I have lost the stigma of being a slave driver, and have, acquired instead the character of a man of energy and enterprise, of justice and benevolence. I am a "large employer of labour," to whom the whole country, and the labourer especially, is greatly indebted, and people say, "See the power of capital! These poor labourers, having no capital, could not use the land if they had it, so this great and far-seeing man wisely refuses to let them have it, and keeps it all for himself, but by providing them with employment his capital saves them from pauperism, and enables him to build up the wealth of the country, and his own fortune together." Whereas it is not my capital that does any of these things. It is not my capital but the labourer’s toil that builds up my fortune and the wealth of the country. It is not my employment that keeps him from pauperism, but my monopoly of the land forcing him into my employment that keeps him on the brink of it. It is not want of capital that keeps the labourer from using the land, but my refusing him the use of the land that prevents him from acquiring capital. All the capital he wants to begin with is an axe and a spade, which a week’s earnings would buy him, and for his maintenance during the first year, and at any subsequent time, he could work for me or for others, turnabout, with his work on his own land. Henceforth with every year his capital would grow of itself, and his independence with it, and that this is no fancy sketch, anyone can see for himself by taking a trip into the country, where he will find well-to-do farmers who began with nothing but a spade and an axe (so to speak) and worked their way up in the manner described. ... Read the whole piece |
|
to email this page to a friend: right click, choose
"send"
|
||||||
Wealth and Want
|
www.wealthandwant.com
|
|||||
... because democracy alone hasn't yet led to a society
in which all can prosper
|