Generations
It may seem that our current way of doing things works
moderately well for the elderly, particularly those who
were able to buy a home early in their adulthood. But it
clearly is not working well for our young people, and the
problem is getting progressively worse. If the reasons
for this are not obvious to you, go take a look at
Progress & Poverty. What most surprised me
when I read it was that, 125 years ago, Henry George had
already been able to see the precursors of the most
serious social and economic problems we face today, and
that they were serious enough by that time to merit
determined study. He begins the book by asking what
Benjamin Franklin would have expected America to look
like after 100 years of technological progress. Could he
have imagined that with all the technological advances
that had taken place, there would be such great poverty
in America?
Consider the technological advances that have occurred
since 1880. Should we have poverty in America in the
early 21st century?
Now look ahead 50 or 100 years. What sort of world do
you want all our grandchildren and their grandchildren to
live in? What are you going to do to transform
our society, to create a level playing field? If you
don't already know, read widely on this site, and see if
you share George's vision. He dedicated Progress and Poverty
"to those who, seeing the vice and misery that spring
from the unequal distribution of wealth and privilege,
feel the possibility of a higher social state and would
strive for its attainment."
Mason Gaffney, correspondence (used with permission)
We, like you no doubt, are basking in the unearned
increment of the land under our house, turbo-charged by
tax-exemption. Two of our older children in Marin
County are basking, too, and we take comfort in their
well-being. We deserve this, right? Are we
not of The Greatest Generation (how we love that toadying
title)? But how will your
grandchildren afford a home at today's prices? We
get the increment, but they get the
excrement. Oh, well, the plunging dollar,
crumbling infrastructure, far-called navies and troops
melting away, soaring interest rates, higher taxes,
incredible public debts coming due ... it'll all be
different soon. We may all grow poor
together.
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! ... read
the whole article
Henry George:
The Land Question (1881)
The galleys that carried Caesar to Britain, the
accoutrements of his legionaries, the baggage that they
carried, the arms that they bore, the buildings that they
erected; the scythed chariots of the ancient Britons, the
horses that drew them, their wicker boats and wattled
houses–where are they now? But the land for which
Roman and Briton fought, there it is still. That British
soil is yet as fresh and as new as it was in the days of
the Romans. Generation after generation has lived on it
since, and generation after generation will live on it
yet. Now, here is a very great difference. The
right to possess and to pass on the ownership of things
that in their nature decay and soon cease to be is a very
different thing from the right to possess and to pass on
the ownership of that which does not decay, but from
which each successive generation must live.
To show how this difference between land and such
other species of property as are properly styled wealth
bears upon the argument for the vested rights of
landholders, let me illustrate again. Captain Kidd was
a pirate. He made a business of sailing the seas,
capturing merchantmen, making their crews walk the plank,
and appropriating their cargoes. In this way he
accumulated much wealth, which he is thought to have
buried. But let us suppose, for the sake of the
illustration, that he did not bury his wealth, but left
it to his legal heirs, and they to their heirs and so on,
until at the present day this wealth or a part of it has
come to a great-great-grandson of Captain Kidd. Now, let
us suppose that some one – say a
great-great-grandson of one of the shipmasters whom
Captain Kidd plundered, makes complaint, and says: "This
man's great-great-grandfather plundered my
great-great-grandfather of certain things or certain
sums, which have been transmitted to him, whereas but for
this wrongful act they would have been transmitted to me;
therefore, I demand that he be made to restore them."
What would society answer?
Society, speaking by its proper tribunals, and in
accordance with principles recognized among all civilized
nations, would say: "We cannot entertain such a demand.
It may be true that Mr. Kidd's great-great-grandfather
robbed your great-great-grandfather, and that as the
result of this wrong he has got things that otherwise
might have come to you. But we cannot inquire into
occurrences that happened so long ago. Each generation
has enough to do to attend to its own affairs. If we go
to righting the wrongs and reopening the controversies of
our great-great-grandfathers, there will be endless
disputes and pretexts for dispute. What you say may be
true, but somewhere we must draw the line, and have an
end to strife. Though this man's great-great-grandfather
may have robbed your great-great-grandfather, he has not
robbed you. He came into possession of these things
peacefully, and has held them peacefully, and we must
take this peaceful possession, when it has been continued
for a certain time, as absolute evidence of just title;
for, were we not to do that, there would be no end to
dispute and no secure possession of anything."
Now, it is this common-sense principle that is
expressed in the statute of limitations – in the
doctrine of vested rights. This is the
reason why it is held – and as to most things held
justly – that peaceable possession for
a certain time cures all defects of title.
But let us pursue the illustration a little
further:
Let us suppose that Captain Kidd, having established a
large and profitable piratical business, left it to his
son, and he to his son, and so on, until the
great-great-grandson, who now pursues it, has come to
consider it the most natural thing in the world that his
ships should roam the sea, capturing peaceful
merchantmen, making their crews walk the plank, and
bringing home to him much plunder, whereby he is enabled,
though he does no work at all, to live in very great
luxury, and look down with contempt upon people who have
to work. But at last, let us suppose, the merchants get
tired of having their ships sunk and their goods taken,
and sailors get tired of trembling for their lives every
time a sail lifts above the horizon, and they demand of
society that piracy be stopped.
Now, what should society say if Mr. Kidd got
indignant, appealed to the doctrine of vested rights, and
asserted that society was bound to prevent any
interference with the business that he had inherited, and
that, if it wanted him to stop, it must buy him out,
paying him all that his business was worth–that is
to say, at least as much as he could make in twenty
years' successful pirating, so that if he stopped
pirating he could still continue to live in luxury off of
the profits of the merchants and the earnings of the
sailors?
What ought society to say to such a claim as this?
There will be but one answer. We will all say that
society should tell Mr. Kidd that his was a business to
which the statute of limitations and the doctrine of
vested rights did not apply; that because his father, and
his grandfather, and his great- and
great-great-grandfather pursued the business of capturing
ships and making their crews walk the plank, was no
reason why lie should be permitted to pursue it. Society,
we will all agree, ought to say he would have to stop
piracy and stop it at once, and that without getting a
cent for stopping.
Or supposing it had happened that Mr. Kidd had sold
out his piratical business to Smith, Jones, or Robinson,
we will all agree that society ought to say that their
purchase of the business gave them no greater right than
Mr. Kidd had.
We will all agree that that is what society ought to
say. Observe, I do not ask what society would say.
For, ridiculous and preposterous as it may appear, I
am satisfied that, under the circumstances I have
supposed, society would not for a long time say what we
have agreed it ought to say. Not only would all the Kidds
loudly claim that to make them give up their business
without full recompense would be a wicked interference
with vested rights, but the justice of this claim would
at first be assumed as a matter of course by all or
nearly all the influential classes–the great
lawyers, the able journalists, the writers for the
magazines, the eloquent clergymen, and the principal
professors in the principal universities. Nay, even the
merchants and sailors, when they first began to complain,
would be so tyrannized and browbeaten by this public
opinion that they would hardly think of more than of
buying out the Kidds, and, wherever here and there any
one dared to raise his voice in favor of stopping piracy
at once and without compensation, he would only do so
under penalty of being stigmatized as a reckless
disturber and wicked foe of social order.
If any one denies this, if any one says mankind are
not such fools, then I appeal to universal history to
bear me witness. I appeal to the facts of to-day.
Show me a wrong, no matter how monstrous, that ever
yet, among any people, became ingrafted in the social
system, and I will prove to you the truth of what I say.
...
What is the slave-trade but piracy of the worst kind?
Yet it is not long since the slave-trade was looked upon
as a perfectly respectable business, affording as
legitimate an opening for the investment of capital and
the display of enterprise as any other. The proposition
to prohibit it was first looked upon as ridiculous, then
as fanatical, then as wicked. It was only slowly and by
hard fighting that the truth in regard to it gained
ground. Does not our very Constitution bear witness to
what I say? Does not the fundamental law of the nation,
adopted twelve years after the enunciation of the
Declaration of Independence, declare that for twenty
years the slave-trade shall not be prohibited nor
restricted? Such dominion had the idea of vested
interests over the minds of those who had already
proclaimed the inalienable right of man to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness! ...
read the whole article
H.G. Brown: Significant Paragraphs
from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty: Chapter 9. Alleged Difficulty of
Distinguishing Land From Improvements (in the
unabridged P&P:
Part VIII — Application of the Remedy: Chapter 4
— Indorsements and objections
The only objection to the tax on rent or land values
which is to be met with in standard politico-economic
works is one which concedes its advantages — for it
is, that from the difficulty of separation, we might, in
taxing the rent of land, tax something else. McCulloch,
for instance, declares taxes on the rent of land to be
impolitic and unjust because the return received for the
natural and inherent powers of the soil cannot be clearly
distinguished from the return received from improvements
and meliorations, which might thus be discouraged.
Macaulay somewhere says that if the admission of the
attraction of gravitation were inimical to any
considerable pecuniary interest, there would not be
wanting arguments against gravitation — a truth of
which this objection is an illustration. For admitting
that it is impossible invariably to separate the value of
land from the value of improvements, is this necessity of
continuing to tax some improvements any reason why we
should continue to tax all improvements? If it discourage
production to tax values which labor and capital have
intimately combined with that of land, how much greater
discouragement is involved in taxing not only these, but
all the clearly distinguishable values which labor and
capital create?
But, as a matter of fact, the value of land can always
be readily distinguished from the value of
improvements.
- In countries like the United States there is much
valuable land that has never been improved; and in many
of the States the value of the land and the value of
improvements are habitually estimated separately by the
assessors, though afterward reunited under the term
real estate.
- Nor where ground has been occupied from immemorial
times, is there any difficulty in getting at the value
of the bare land, for frequently the land is owned by
one person and the buildings by another, and when a
fire occurs and improvements are destroyed, a clear and
definite value remains in the land.
- In the oldest country in the world no difficulty
whatever can attend the separation, if all that be
attempted is to separate the value of the clearly
distinguishable improvements, made within a moderate
period, from the value of the land, should they be
destroyed.
This, manifestly, is all that justice or policy
requires. Absolute accuracy is impossible in any system,
and to attempt to separate all that the human race has
done from what nature originally provided would be as
absurd as impracticable. A swamp drained or a hill
terraced by the Romans constitutes now as much a part of
the natural advantages of the British Isles as though the
work had been done by earthquake or glacier. The fact
that after a certain lapse of time the value of such
permanent improvements would be considered as having
lapsed into that of the land, and would be taxed
accordingly, could have no deterrent effect on such
improvements, for such works are frequently undertaken
upon leases for years. The fact is, that each generation
builds and improves for itself, and not for the remote
future. And the further fact is, that each generation is
heir, not only to the natural powers of the earth, but to
all that remains of the work of past generations. ...
read the
whole chapter
Nic Tideman:
The Structure of an Inquiry into the Attractiveness of A
Social Order Inspired by the Ideas of Henry George
Is there an obligation to compensate those
whose presently recognized titles to land and other
exclusive natural opportunities will lose value when rent
is shared equally?
Proposed answer: Such individuals may have claims
against those who sold them land. They may have claims
against those who imposed a regime of private
appropriation of rent. But they do not have claims
against future generations. ...
read the whole article
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related
themes:
unearned
increment,
barriers to
entry,
intergenerational
equity
a society with no
victims
rent
housing
affordability,
land
monopoly,
land
concentration,
all
benefits...,
land
monopoly capitalism,
ongoing
justice,
binding
other generations,
prolonged
adolescence,
birthright,
I was there first!,
founding fathers
and first families,
new country,
ownership,
land as
common property,
land
different from capital,
Native
Americans and land,
technological
progress
family
history
desperado
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