Free Market
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty: 10. Effect of Remedy Upon Wealth
Production (in the unabridged P&P:
Part IX — Effects of the Remedy: Chapter 1 — Of
the effect upon the production of wealth)
... To abolish the taxation which, acting and
reacting, now hampers every wheel of exchange and presses
upon every form of industry, would be like removing an
immense weight from a powerful spring. Imbued with fresh
energy, production would start into new life, and trade
would receive a stimulus which would be felt to the
remotest arteries. The present method of taxation
operates upon exchange like artificial deserts and
mountains;
- it costs more to get goods through a custom house
than it does to carry them around the world.
- It operates upon energy, and industry, and skill,
and thrift, like a fine upon those qualities.
- If I have worked harder and built myself a good
house while you have been contented to live in a hovel,
the taxgatherer now comes annually to make me pay a
penalty for my energy and industry, by taxing me more
than you.
- If I have saved while you wasted, I am mulct, while
you are exempt.
- If a man build a ship we make him pay for his
temerity, as though he had done an injury to the
state;
- if a railroad be opened, down comes the tax
collector upon it, as though it were a public
nuisance;
- if a manufactory be erected we levy upon it an
annual sum which would go far toward making a handsome
profit.
- We say we want capital, but if any one accumulate
it, or bring it among us, we charge him for it as
though we were giving him a privilege.
- We punish with a tax the man who covers barren
fields with ripening grain,
- we fine him who puts up machinery, and him who
drains a swamp.
How heavily these taxes burden production only those
realize who have attempted to follow our system of
taxation through its ramifications, for, as I have before
said, the heaviest part of taxation is that which falls
in increased prices. ... read the whole
chapter
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty: 11 Effect of Remedy Upon the Sharing
of Wealth (in the unabridged P&P:
Part IX Effects of the Remedy — Chapter 2: Of the
Effect Upon Distribution and Thence Upon Production
But great as they thus appear, the advantages of a
transference of all public burdens to a tax upon the
value of land cannot be fully appreciated until we
consider the effect upon the distribution of wealth.
Tracing out the cause of the unequal distribution of
wealth which appears in all civilized countries, with a
constant tendency to greater and greater inequality as
material progress goes on, we have found it in the fact
that, as civilization advances, the ownership of land,
now in private hands, gives a greater and greater power
of appropriating the wealth produced by labor and
capital.
Thus, to relieve labor and capital from all taxation,
direct and indirect, and to throw the burden upon rent,
would be, as far as it went, to counteract this tendency
to inequality, and, if it went so far as to take in
taxation the whole of rent, the cause of inequality would
be totally destroyed. Rent, instead of causing
inequality, as now, would then promote equality. Labor
and capital would then receive the whole produce, minus
that portion taken by the state in the taxation of land
values, which, being applied to public purposes, would be
equally distributed in public benefits.
That is to say, the wealth produced in every community
would be divided into two portions.
- One part would be distributed in wages and interest
between individual producers, according to the part
each had taken in the work of production;
- the other part would go to the community as a
whole, to be distributed in public benefits to all its
members.
In this all would share equally — the weak with
the strong, young children and decrepit old men, the
maimed, the halt, and the blind, as well as the vigorous.
And justly so — for while one part represents the
result of individual effort in production, the other
represents the increased power with which the community
as a whole aids the individual.
Thus, as material progress tends to increase rent,
were rent taken by the community for common purposes the
very cause which now tends to produce inequality as
material progress goes on would then tend to produce
greater and greater equality.
Who can say to what infinite powers the
wealth-producing capacity of labor may not be raised by
social adjustments which will give to the producers of
wealth their fair proportion of its advantages and
enjoyments! With present processes the gain would be
simply incalculable, but just as wages are high, so do
the invention and utilization of improved processes and
machinery go on with greater rapidity and ease.
But I shall not deny, and do not wish to lose sight of
the fact, that while thus preventing waste and thus
adding to the efficiency of labor, the equalization in
the distribution of wealth that would result from the
simple plan of taxation that I propose, must lessen the
intensity with which wealth is pursued. It seems to me
that in a condition of society in which no one need fear
poverty, no one would desire great wealth — at
least, no one would take the trouble to strive and to
strain for it as men do now. For, certainly, the
spectacle of men who have only a few years to live,
slaving away their time for the sake of dying rich, is in
itself so unnatural and absurd, that in a state of
society where the abolition of the fear of want had
dissipated the envious admiration with which the masses
of men now regard the possession of great riches, whoever
would toil to acquire more than he cared to use would be
looked upon as we would now look on a man who would
thatch his head with half a dozen hats.
And though this incentive to production be withdrawn,
can we not spare it? Whatever may have been its office in
an earlier stage of development, it is not needed now.
The dangers that menace our civilization do not come from
the weakness of the springs of production. What it
suffers from, and what, if a remedy be not applied, it
must die from, is unequal distribution!
Nor would the removal of this incentive, regarded only
from the standpoint of production, be an unmixed loss.
For, that the aggregate of production is greatly reduced
by the greed with which riches are pursued, is one of the
most obtrusive facts of modern society. While, were this
insane desire to get rich at any cost lessened, mental
activities now devoted to scraping together riches would
be translated into far higher spheres of usefulness. ...
read the whole chapter
Henry George: Thou
Shalt Not Steal (1887 speech)
What we propose to do is to divide up the rent
that comes from land; and that is a very easy
thing.
We need not disturb anybody in
possession, we need not interfere with anybody’s
building or anybody’s improvement. We only need to
remit taxes on all improvements, on all forms of wealth,
and put the tax on the value of the land, exclusive of the
improvements, so that the dog-in-the-manger who is holding
a piece of vacant land will have to pay the same amount of
tax for it as land of similar value with a building or
other improvements upon it. In that way we would treat the
whole land of such a community as being the common estate
of the whole people of the community.
The people of New York could manage
their estate just as well as any corporation, or any
private family, for that matter. But for the people of New
York to resume their estate and to treat it as their own,
it is not necessary for them to go to any bother of
management. It is not necessary for them to say to any
landowner, this particular piece of land is ours, and no
longer yours.
We can leave land titles just as they
are. We can leave the owners of the land to call themselves
its owners; all we want is the annual value of the land.
Not, mark you, that value which the owner has created, that
value which has been given to it by improvements; but
simply that value which is given to the bare land by the
fact that we are all here —that has attached to the
land because of the growth of this great community. And,
when we take that, then all inducement to monopolize the
land will be gone — then these very worthy gentlemen
who are holding one-half of the area of this city idle and
vacant will find the taxes they have to pay so high that
they will have to go to work and build houses or otherwise
use the land, or give it away to somebody who will build
upon it, or put it to other productive use. And so it will
happen all over the country.... read the whole
article
Mason Gaffney: The Taxable Surplus of
Land: Measuring, Guarding and Gathering It
Common Property in Land is Compatible with
the Market Economy.
You can enjoy the benefits of a market economy without
sacrificing your common rights to the land of Russia.
There is no need to make a hard choice between the two.
One of the great fallacies that western economists and
bankers are foisting on you is that you have to give up
one to enjoy the other. These counselors work through
lending and granting agencies that seduce you with loans
and grants to learn and accept their ideology, which they
variously call Neo-Classical Economics, or "monetarism,"
or "liberalization." It is glitter to distract you and
pave the way for aliens to acquire and control your
resources.
To keep land common while shifting to a
market economy, you simply use the tax system.
Taxation is the form that common property takes in a
monetary, market-oriented economy. To tax is to
socialize. It's then just a simple question of what you
will socialize through taxation, and how; but in the
answers lie success or failure.
Not only can you have both common
land and free markets, you can't have one without the
other. They go together, like love and marriage.
You need market prices to help identify land's taxable
surplus, which is the net product of land after deducting
the human costs of using it. At the same
time, you must support government from land revenues to
have a truly free market, because otherwise you will
raise taxes from production, trade, and capital
formation, interfering with free markets. If you
learn this second point, and act on it, you will have a
much freer market than any of the OECD nations that now
presume to instruct you, and that are campaigning
vigorously to make all nations in the world "harmonize"
their taxes to conform with their own abysmal
systems.
The very people who gave us the term
laissez-faire — the slogan at the core of a free
market economy — made communizing land rents a
central part of their program. These were the
French economistes of the 18th Century, sometimes called
"Physiocrats," who were the tutors of Adam Smith, and who
inspired land reforms throughout Europe. The best-known
of them were François Quesnay and A.R. Jacques
Turgot, who championed land taxation. They accurately
called it the "co-proprietorship of land by the
state."
Since their time we have learned to
measure land values, and we have broadened the meaning of
"land" to comprise all natural resources.
Agrarians will be relieved, and may be surprised, that
farmland ranks well down the list in
terms of total market value. Thus, a land tax is not
primarily a tax on farms; only the very best soils in the
best locations yield much taxable surplus.
The most valuable land by far is city
land. Ted Gwartney, a professional land valuer,
is speaking to us about that. I have data showing that
well over half the value of city real
estate is the pure land value. In big, key cities,
prices per unit of land go astonishingly high, dwarfing
most other values by comparison. For example, at the
height of the Japanese boom, in 1990, land prices in that
great city rose so high that the appraised value of the
land under the Imperial Palace in Tokyo was as great as
all the land in California! At the same time, within
California, most of the land value was in our cities,
even though California is the premier farm state in the
U.S.A. Urban land of such immense value makes a rich,
rich tax base for you, or any nation.
Another natural resource (hence part of "land"), whose
nature and value the mass of people are only slowly
realizing, is the radio spectrum.
...
Hydrocarbons are a third set of valuable
resources. ...
The American state of Alaska holds down
its other taxes by socializing part of its oil revenues,
which otherwise would inure to a handful of the major
stockholders of two corporations (ARCO and BP). Alaska
not only holds down other taxes, it pays each resident -
man, woman, and child - a social dividend of over $1,000
per year. Go thou and do likewise. Your expert,
Dmitri Lvov from the Russian Academy of Sciences, a
speaker at this meeting, has written that you could cover
most of your national budget from your enormous
production of oil and gas.
Many third-world nations like Venezuela
or Nigeria have fabulous mineral oil that they fail to
exploit for their own people, letting sophisticated or
ruthless foreign corporations, in tandem with weak or
corrupt insiders, reap the gains. The question for
Russia is whether to follow their bad example and become
a poor resource-colony of the west, or whether to assert
your own sovereignty over your own resources for the
benefit of your own people. You need look no further than
Norway for a model.
Other subsoil resources have great
value, too. ...
In arid lands, water is life, and the
most valuable natural resource is water. For
example, in southern California we need water so much we
import it from the Feather River 600 miles north of us,
pump it uphill through the long San Joaquin Valley, then
over the high Tehachapi Mountain range, and tunnel it
through the San Bernardino Mountain Range, all at great
cost. When it gets here, it supplements and competes with
local water that nature provides freely in the Santa Ana,
San Jacinto, and other rivers. That local water then has
a value equal to the high cost of importing the remote
northern water. That value in the local waters is a
taxable surplus. However, we have not learned to take
that surplus value into the local treasuries; we give the
water away, and worse, we actually subsidize people to
withdraw water by helping them pay for dams, canals, and
pipelines so they can waste water without paying for it.
Thus we turn a public asset into a
public liability - an extreme form of folly that is
called "dissipating rent." In this age of growing
water scarcities it is past time we learned to husband
and nurture rent, in order to socialize it by taxing the
surplus. So should you, in comparable circumstances.
Another value from water is to generate
power. ...
Fisheries are another source of
value. ...
The government did not sell these
licenses, but simply gave them away to owners of existing
boats, and others with political influence. Each license
now sells for something like a million dollars, creating
a new class of instant millionaires and "parlor fishermen." This giveaway to
the few, and takeaway from the many, created an instant
class society where before there were equal access and
equal opportunities.
These privileges are worth so much that
there are now documented cases off Alaska where the
parlor fisherman takes 70% of the total catch. ...
read the whole
article
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