Common Property
America is in the midst of an interesting debate: what
should be privatized, and what should be common property.
Proposals for an "Ownership Society" seem to intend to
privatize risk and reward, suggesting that the community
has little responsibility other than charity for those
who fall behind or are inherently disadvantaged.
And yet when that which should be common
property is totally privatized, most people are the
losers.
Georgists believe that the economic value of the gifts
of nature and the social surplus should not be private
property, but are our common birthright and therefore
their economic value should be collected and used for
common purposes. On the flip side, Georgists hold that
what the individual produces — once he has
compensated the rest of us for the bits of nature he has
claimed as his own — is rightly his private
property.
And common property is different from government
property, a distinction that may not come easily to all
readers.
Dan Sullivan: Are you
a Real Libertarian, or a ROYAL Libertarian?
The distinction between common property and
state property is lost on royal libertarians. Common
property is that to which we all have inalienable rights.
State property is that which the state actually owns, and
can dispose of as it sees fit. For example, a public
right of way is literally a right of way. Under
principles of common law, nobody, not even the king,
could close a traveled road and make it private property.
A state maintenance truck, on the other hand, is state
property, which can be sold if it no longer suits state
purposes.
The earth, therefore, and all things
therein, are the general property of all mankind, from
the immediate gift of the Creator. --William
Blackstone
It is a royal libertarian notion, and not a
classical liberal ideal, to treat land as state property,
for if land did not rightfully belong to the state, how
could the state have granted it to favored
citizens?
Classical liberals, not royal libertarians, are
the ones who deny the state's right to appropriate the
earth and allocate it to privileged individuals on
favored terms. Classical liberals also who hold the key
to abolishing taxation, by suggesting that the community
(not the state) charge a user fee to landholders based on
the value of the land.... Read the
whole piece
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural
Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation
(1917)
Q5. What is meant by equal right to
land?
A. The right of access upon equal terms -- preference to
be secured only upon payment of a premium that will
extinguish the equal rights of all other men.
Q6. What is meant by a joint or common right to
land?
A. A joint or common right to the rent of land -- a right
such as heirs-at-law have to share the income of or rent
of an estate. ... read the whole
article
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 1: Time to Upgrade (pages
3-14)
Assets in the commons are meant to be preserved
regardless of their return to capital. Just as we receive
them as shared gifts, so we have a duty to pass them on
in at least the same condition as we received them. If we
can add to their value, so much the better, but at a
minimum we must not degrade them, and we certainly have
no right to destroy them.
Besides the commons, I use a few similar-sounding
terms that should be clarified here as well.
- By common wealth I mean the monetary and
nonmonetary value of all the assets in the commons.
Like stockholders’ equity in a corporation, it
may increase or decrease from year to year depending on
how well the commons is managed.
- By common property I mean a class of human-made
rights that lies somewhere between private property and
state property. Like private property, common property
arises when the state recognizes it. Unlike private
property, it’s inclusive rather than exclusive
— it strives to share ownership as widely, rather
than as narrowly, as possible.
- By the commons sector I mean an organized sector of
our economy. It embraces some of the gifts we inherit
together, but not all. In effect, it’s a subset
of the given commons that we consciously organize
according to commons principles. It’s small at
the moment, but the point of this book is that we
should enlarge it. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 2: A Short History of
Capitalism (pages 15-32)
In the beginning, the commons was everywhere. Humans
and other animals roamed around it, hunting and
gathering. Like other species, we had territories, but
these were tribal, not individual.
About ten thousand years ago, human agriculture and
permanent settlements arose, and with them came private
property. Rulers granted ownership of land to heads of
families (usually males). Often, military conquerors
distributed land to their lieutenants. Titles could then
be passed to heirs — typically, oldest sons got
everything.
In Europe, Roman law codified many of these practices.
Despite the growth in private property, much land in
Europe remained part of the commons. In Roman times,
bodies of water, shorelines, wildlife, and air were
explicitly classified as res communes, resources
available to all. During the Middle Ages, kings and
feudal lords often claimed title to rivers, forests, and
wild animals, only to have such claims periodically
rebuked. The Magna Carta, which King John of England was
forced to sign in 1215, established forests and fisheries
as res communes. Given that forests were sources of game,
firewood, building materials, medicinal herbs, and
grazing for livestock, this was no small shift. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 3: The Limits of Government
(pages 33-48)
The notion that government should protect the commons
goes back a long way. Sometimes this duty is considered
so basic it’s taken for granted. At other times,
it’s given a name: the public trust. Several states
actually put this duty in writing. Pennsylvania’s
constitution, for example, declares:
“Pennsylvania’s public natural resources are
the common property of all the people, including
generations yet to come. As trustee of these resources,
the Commonwealth shall conserve and maintain them for the
benefit of all the people.” Note that in this
constitutional dictum, serving as trustee of natural
resources isn’t an option for the state, it’s
an affirmative duty. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 4: The Limits of
Privatization (pages 49-63)
Propertize, But Don’t Privatize
Simply turning the commons over to corporations,
without compensation or further ado, is like putting the
fox in charge of the henhouse. There’s no guarantee
the corporations will preserve the asset, much less share
its benefits widely. We’re asked to believe that
corporate owners will do the right things, either because
it’s in their self-interest or because
they’re socially responsible, but historical
evidence and the inner logic of corporations suggest
otherwise.
Nevertheless, it’s possible to propertize a
natural inheritance without privatizing it, and in the
next chapter I’ll show how this can work. The basic
idea is to turn pieces of the commons into common
property rather than corporate property. This would let
us charge corporations higher (and truer) prices for
using the commons, while sharing the benefits of those
higher prices broadly. And it would ensure that the
quantity of usage rights sold — which is to say,
the level of pollution allowed — is set with the
interests of future generations foremost in mind. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 5: Reinventing the Commons
(pages 65-78)
There’s nothing about property rights, however,
that requires them to be concentrated in
profit-maximizing hands. You could, for example, set up a
trust to own a forest, or certain forest rights, on
behalf of future generations. These property rights would
talk as loudly as shares of Pacific Lumber stock, but
their purpose would be very different: to preserve the
forest rather than to exploit it. If the Lorax had owned
some of these rights, Dr. Seuss’s tale (and Pacific
Lumber’s) would have ended more happily.
Imagine a whole set of property rights like this.
Let’s call them, generically, common
property rights. If such property rights
didn’t exist, there’d be a strong case for
inventing them. Fortunately, they do exist in a variety
of forms — for example, land or easements held in
perpetual trust, as by the Nature Conservancy, and
corporate assets managed on behalf of a broad community,
as by the Alaska Permanent Fund.
Some forms of common property include individual
shares — again, the Alaska Permanent Fund is an
example. These individual shares, however, differ from
shares in private corporations. They’re not
securities you can trade in a market; rather, they depend
on your membership in the community. If you emigrate or
die, you lose your share. Conversely, when you’re
born into the community, your share is a birthright.
I recognize that, for some, turning common wealth into
any kind of property is a sacrilege. As Chief Seattle of
the Suquamish tribe put it, “How can you buy or
sell the sky, the warmth of the land?” I empathize
deeply with this sentiment. However, I’ve come to
believe that it’s more disrespectful of the sky to
pollute it without limit or payment than to turn it into
common property held in trust for future generations.
Hence, I favor propertization, but not
privatization. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 7: Universal Birthrights
(pages 101-116)
Dividends from Common Assets
A cushion of reliable income is a wonderful thing. It
can be saved for rainy days or used to pursue happiness
on sunny days. It can encourage people to take risks,
care for friends and relatives, or volunteer for
community service. For low-income families, it can pay
for basic necessities.
Conversely, the absence of reliable income is a
terrible thing. It heightens anxiety and fear. It
diminishes our ability to cope with crises and
transitions. It traps many families on the knife’s
edge of poverty, and makes it harder for the poor to
rise.
So why don’t we, as Monopoly does, pay
everyone some regular income — not through
redistribution of income, but through predistribution of
common property? One state — Alaska — already
does this. As noted earlier, the Alaska Permanent Fund
uses revenue from state oil leases to invest in stocks,
bonds, and similar assets, and from those investments
pays yearly dividends to every resident. Alaska’s
model can be extended to any state or nation, whether or
not they have oil. We could, for instance, have an
American Permanent Fund that pays equal dividends to
long-term residents of all 50 states. The reason is, we
jointly own many valuable assets.
Recall our discussion about common property trusts.
These trusts could crank down pollution and earn money
from selling ever-scarcer pollution permits. The scarcer
the permits get, the higher their prices would go. Less
pollution would equal more revenue. Over time, trillions
of dollars could flow into an American Permanent
Fund.
What could we do with that common income? In Alaska
the deal with oil revenue is 75 percent to government and
25 percent to citizens. For an American Permanent Fund,
I’d favor a 50/50 split, because paying dividends
to citizens is so important. Also, when scarce ecosystems
are priced above zero, the cost of living will go up and
people will need compensation; this wasn’t, and
isn’t, the case in Alaska. I’d also favor
earmarking the government’s dollars for specific
public goods, rather than tossing them into the general
treasury. This not only ensures identifiable public
benefits; it also creates constituencies who’ll
defend the revenue sharing system.
Waste absorption isn’t the only common resource
an American Permanent Fund could tap. Consider also, the
substantial contribution society makes to stock market
values. As noted earlier, private corporations can
inflate their value dramatically by selling shares on a
regulated stock exchange. The extra value derives from
the enlarged market of investors who can now buy the
corporation’s shares. Given a total stock market
valuation of about $15 trillion, this socially created
liquidity premium is worth roughly $5 trillion.
At the moment, this $5 trillion gift flows mostly to
the 5 percent of the population that own more than half
the private wealth. But if we wanted to, we could spread
it around. We could do that by charging corporations for
using the public trading system, just as investment
bankers do. (For those of you who haven’t been
involved in a public stock offering, investment bankers
are like fancy doormen to a free palace. While the public
charges almost nothing to use the capital markets,
investment bankers exact hefty fees.)
The public’s fee could be in cash or stock.
Let’s say we required publicly traded companies to
deposit 1 percent of their shares each year in the
American Permanent Fund for ten years — reaching a
total of 10 percent of their shares. This would be our
price not just for using a regulated stock exchange, but
also for all the other privileges (limited liability,
perpetual life, copyrights and patents, and so on) that
we currently bestow on private corporations for free.
In due time, the American Permanent Fund would have a
diversified portfolio worth several trillion dollars.
Like its Alaskan counterpart, it would pay equal yearly
dividends to everyone. As the stock market rose and fell,
so would everyone’s dividend checks. A rising tide
would lift all boats. America would truly be an
“ownership society.” ...
read the whole chapter
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