Government's Proper
Role
Is it the purpose of our government and our
elected representatives to protect privilege, or is it to
protect the rights of each member of society to their
fair share of the commons and to equal opportunity?
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
IN socialism as distinguished from individualism there
is an unquestionable truth — and that a truth to
which (especially by those most identified with
free-trade principles) too little attention has been
paid. Man is primarily an individual — a separate
entity, differing from his fellows in desires and powers,
and requiring for the exercise of those powers and the
gratification of those desires individual play and
freedom. But he is also a social being, having desires
that harmonize with those of his fellows, and powers that
can only be brought out in concerted action. There is
thus a domain of individual action and a domain of social
action — some things which can best be done when
each acts for himself, and some things which can best be
done when society acts for all its members. And the
natural tendency of advancing civilization is to make
social conditions relatively more important, and more and
more to enlarge the domain of social action. This has not
been sufficiently regarded, and at the present time, evil
unquestionably results from leaving to individual action
functions that by reason of the growth of society and the
developments of the arts have passed into the domain of
social action; just as, on the other hand, evil
unquestionably results from social interference with what
properly belongs to the individual. Society ought not to
leave the telegraph and the railway to the management and
control of individuals; nor yet ought society to step in
and collect individual debts or attempt to direct
individual industry. — Protection or Free
Trade, Chapter 28
econlib
THE primary purpose and end of government being to
secure the natural rights and equal liberty of each, all
businesses that involve monopoly are within the necessary
province of governmental regulation, and businesses that
are in their nature complete monopolies become properly
functions of the State. As society develops, the State
must assume these functions, in their nature
co-operative, in order to secure the equal rights and
liberty of all. That is to say, as, in the process of
integration, the individual becomes more and more
dependent upon and subordinate to the all, it becomes
necessary for government, which is properly that social
organ by which alone the whole body of individuals can
act, to take upon itself, in the interest of all, certain
functions which cannot safely be left to individuals.
—
Social Problems
— Chapter 17, The Functions of
Government
IT is not the business of government to make men virtuous
or religious, or to preserve the fool from the
consequences of his own folly. Government should be
repressive no further than is necessary to secure liberty
by protecting the equal rights of each from aggression on
the part of others, and the moment governmental
prohibitions extend beyond this line they are in danger
of defeating the very ends they are intended to
serve.—
Social Problems
— Chapter 17, The Functions of
Government
ALL schemes for securing equality in the conditions of
men by placing the distribution of wealth in the hands of
government have the fatal defect of beginning at the
wrong end. They pre-suppose pure government; but it is
not government that makes society; it is society that
makes government; and until there is something like
substantial equality in the distribution of wealth, we
cannot expect pure government. — Protection or
Free Trade, Chapter 28
econlib ... go to
"Gems from George"
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
3. THE SINGLE TAX FALLS IN
PROPORTION TO BENEFITS
To perceive that the single tax would justly measure the
value of government service we have only to realize that
the mass of individuals everywhere and now, in paying for
the land they use, actually pay for government service in
proportion to what they receive. He who would enjoy the
benefits of a government must use land within its
jurisdiction. He cannot carry land from where government
is poor to where it is good; neither can he carry it from
where the benefits of good government are few or enjoyed
with difficulty to where they are many and fully enjoyed.
He must rent or buy land where the benefits of government
are available, or forego them. And unless he buys or
rents where they are greatest and most available he must
forego them in degree. Consequently, if he would work or
live where the benefits of government are available, and
does not already own land there, he will be compelled to
rent or buy at a valuation which, other things being
equal, will depend upon the value of the government
service that the site he selects enables him to enjoy. 14
Thus does he pay for the service of government in
proportion to its value to him. But he does not pay the
public which provides the service; he is required to pay
land-owners.
14. Land values are lower in all
countries of poor government than in any country of
better government, other things being equal. They are
lower in cities of poor government, other things being
equal, than in cities of better government.
Land values are lower, for example, in Juarez, on the
Mexican side of the Rio Grande, where government is
bad, than in El Paso, the neighboring city on the
American side, where government is better. They are
lower in the same city under bad government than under
improved government. When Seth Low, after a reform
campaign, was elected mayor of Brooklyn, N.Y., rents
advanced before he took the oath of office, upon the
bare expectation that he would eradicate municipal
abuses. Let the city authorities anywhere pave a
street, put water through it and sewer it, or do any of
these things, and lots in the neighborhood rise in
value. Everywhere that the "good roads" agitation of
wheel men has borne fruit in better highways, the value
of adjacent land has increased. Instances of this
effect as results of public improvements might be
collected in abundance. Every man must be able to
recall some within his own experience.
And it is perfectly reasonable that it
should be so. Land and not other property must rise in
value with desired improvements in government, because,
while any tendency on the part of other kinds of
property to rise in value is checked by greater
production, land can not be reproduced.
Imagine an utterly lawless place, where
life and property are constantly threatened by
desperadoes. He must be either a very bold man or a
very avaricious one who will build a store in such a
community and stock it with goods; but suppose such a
man should appear. His store costs him more than the
same building would cost in a civilized community;
mechanics are not plentiful in such a place, and
materials are hard to get. The building is finally
erected, however, and stocked. And now what about this
merchant's prices for goods? Competition is weak,
because there are few men who will take the chances he
has taken, and he charges all that his customers will
pay. A hundred per cent, five hundred per cent, perhaps
one or two thousand per cent profit rewards him for his
pains and risk. His goods are dear, enormously dear
— dear enough to satisfy the most contemptuous
enemy of cheapness; and if any one should wish to buy
his store that would be dear too, for the difficulties
in the way of building continue. But land is
cheap! This is the type of community in which may
be found that land, so often mentioned and so seldom
seen, which "the owners actually can't give away, you
know!"
But suppose that government improves. An
efficient administration of justice rids the place of
desperadoes, and life and property are safe. What about
prices then? It would no longer require a bold or
desperately avaricious man to engage in selling goods
in that community, and competition would set in. High
profits would soon come down. Goods would be cheap
— as cheap as anywhere in the world, the cost of
transportation considered. Builders and building
materials could be had without difficulty, and stores
would be cheap, too. But land would be dear!
Improvement in government increases the value of that,
and of that alone.
Now, the economic principle pursuant to which
land-owners are thus able to charge their fellow-citizens
for the common benefits of their common government points
to the true method of taxation. With the exception of
such other monopoly property as is analogous to land
titles, and which in the purview of the single tax is
included with land for purposes of taxation, 15 land is
the only kind of property that is increased in value by
government; and the increase of value is in proportion,
other influences aside, to the public service which its
possession secures to the occupant. Therefore, by taxing
land in proportion to its value, and exempting all other
property, kindred monopolies excepted — that is to
say, by adopting the single tax — we should be
levying taxes according to benefits.16
15. Railroad franchises, for example,
are not usually thought of as land titles, but that is
what they are. By an act of sovereign authority they
confer rights of control for transportation purposes
over narrow strips of land between terminals and along
trading points. The value of this right of way is a
land value.
16. Each occupant would pay to his
landlord the value of the public benefits in the way of
highways, schools, courts, police and fire protection,
etc., that his site enabled him to enjoy. The landlord
would pay a tax proportioned to the pecuniary benefits
conferred upon him by the public in raising and
maintaining the value of his holding. And if occupant
and owner were the same, he would pay directly
according to the value of his land for all the public
benefits he enjoyed, both intangible and pecuniary.
And in no sense would this be class taxation. Indeed,
the cry of class taxation is a rather impudent one for
owners of valuable land to raise against the single tax,
when it is considered that under existing systems of
taxation they are exempt. 17 Even the poorest and the
most degraded classes in the community, besides paying
land-owners for such public benefits as come their way,
are compelled by indirect taxation to contribute to the
support of government. But landowners as a class go free.
They enjoy the protection of the courts, and of police
and fire departments, and they have the use of schools
and the benefit of highways and other public
improvements, all in common with the most favored, and
upon the same specific terms; yet, though they go through
the form of paying taxes, and if their holdings are of
considerable value pose as "the tax-payers" on
all important occasions, they, in effect and considered
as a class, pay no taxes, because government, by
increasing the value of their land, enables them to
recover back in higher rents and higher prices more than
their taxes amount to. Enjoying the same tangible
benefits of government that others do, many of them as
individuals and all of them as a class receive in
addition a tangible pecuniary benefit which government
confers upon no other property-owners. The value of their
property is enhanced in proportion to the benefits of
government which its occupants enjoy. To tax them alone,
therefore, is not to discriminate against them; it is to
charge them for what they get.18
17. While the landholders of the City of
Washington were paying something less than two per cent
annually in taxes, a Congressional Committee
(Report of the Select Committee to Investigate Tax
Assessments in the District of Columbia, composed of
Messrs. Johnson, of Ohio, Chairman, Wadsworth, of New
York, and Washington, of Tennessee. Made to the House
of Representatives, May 24, 1892. Report No.
1469), brought out the fact that the value of
their land had been increasing at a minimum rate of ten
per cent per annum. The Washington land-owners as a
class thus appear to have received back in higher land
values, actually and potentially, about ten dollars for
every two dollars that as land-owners they paid in
taxes. If any one supposes that this condition is
peculiar to Washington let him make similar estimates
for any progressive locality, and see if the
land-owners there are not favored in like manner.
But the point is not dependent upon
increase in the capitalized value of land. If the land
yields or will yield to its owner an income in the
nature of actual or potential ground rent, then to the
extent that this actual or possible income is dependent
upon government the landlord is in effect exempt from
taxation. No matter what tax he pays on account of his
ownership of land, the public gives it back to him to
that extent.
18. Take for illustration two towns, one
of excellent government and the other of inefficient
government, but in all other respects alike. Suppose
you are hunting for a place of residence and find a
suitable site in the town of good government. For
simplicity of illustration let us suppose that the land
there is not sold outright but is let upon ground rent.
You meet the owner of the lot you have selected and ask
him his terms. He replies:
"Two hundred and fifty dollars a
year."
"Two hundred and fifty dollars a year!"
you exclaim. "Why, I can get just as good a site in
that other town for a hundred dollars a year."
"Certainly you can," he will say. "But
if you build a house there and it catches fire it will
burn down; they have no fire department. If you go out
after dark you will be 'held up' and robbed; they have
no police force. If you ride out in the spring, your
carriage will stick in the mud up to the hubs, and if
you walk you may break your legs and will be lucky if
you don t break your neck; they have no street
pavements and their sidewalks are dangerously out of
repair. When the moon doesn't shine the streets are in
darkness, for they have no street lights. The water you
need for your house you must get from a well; there is
no water supply there. Now in our town it is different.
We have a splendid fire department, and the best police
force in the world. Our streets are macadamized, and
lighted with electricity; our sidewalks are always in
first class repair; we have a water system that equals
that of New York; and in every way the public benefits
in this town are unsurpassed. It is the best governed
town in all this region. Isn't it worth a hundred and
fifty dollars a year more for a building site here than
over in that poorly governed town?"
You recognize the advantages and agree
to the terms. But when your house is built and the
assessor visits you officially, what would be the
conversation if your sense of the fitness of things
were not warped by familiarity with false systems of
taxation? Would it not be something like what
follows?
"How much do you regard this house as
worth? " asks the assessor.
"What is that to you?" you inquire.
"I am the town assessor and am about to
appraise your property for taxation."
"Am I to be taxed by this town? What
for?"
"What for?" echoes the assessor in
surprise. "What for? Is not your house protected from
fire by our magnificent fire department? Are not you
protected from robbery by the best police force in the
world? Do not you have the use of macadamized
pavements, and good sidewalks, and electric street
lights, and a first class water supply? Don't you
suppose these things cost something? And don't you
think you ought to pay your share?"
"Yes," you answer, with more or less
calmness; "I do have the benefit of these things, and I
do think that I ought to pay my share toward supporting
them. But I have already paid my share for this year. I
have paid it to the owner of this lot. He charges me
two hundred and fifty dollars a year -- one hundred and
fifty dollars more than I should pay or he could get
but for those very benefits. He has collected
my share of this year's expense of maintaining town
improvements; you go and collect from him. If you do
not, but insist upon collecting from me, I shall be
paying twice for these things, once to him and once to
you; and he won't be paying at all, but will be making
money out of them, although he derives the same
benefits from them in all other respects that I do."
...
c. Significance of the Upward Tendency of
Rent
Now, what is the meaning of this tendency of Rent to
rise with social progress, while Wages tend to fall? Is
it not a plain promise that if Rent be treated as common
property, advances in productive power shall be steps in
the direction of realizing through orderly and natural
growth those grand conceptions of both the socialist and
the individualist, which in the present condition of
society are justly ranked as Utopian? Is it not likewise
a plain warning that if Rent be treated as private
property, advances in productive power will be steps in
the direction of making slaves of the many laborers, and
masters of a few land-owners? Does it not mean that
common ownership of Rent is in harmony with natural law,
and that its private appropriation is disorderly and
degrading? When the cause of Rent and the tendency
illustrated in the preceding chart are considered in
connection with the self-evident truth that God made the
earth for common use and not for private monopoly, how
can a contrary inference hold? Caused and increased by
social growth, 97 the benefits of which should be common,
and attaching to land, the just right to which is equal,
Rent must be the natural fund for public expenses. 98
97. Here, far away from
civilization, is a solitary settler. Getting no
benefits from government, he needs no public revenues,
and none of the land about him has any value. Another
settler comes, and another, until a village appears.
Some public revenue is then required. Not much, but
some. And the land has a little value, only a little;
perhaps just enough to equal the need for public
revenue. The village becomes a town. More revenues are
needed, and land values are higher. It becomes a city.
The public revenues required are enormous, and so are
the land values.
98. Society, and society alone, causes
Rent. Rising with the rise, advancing with the growth,
and receding with the decline of society, it measures
the earning power of society as a whole as
distinguished from that of the individuals. Wages, on
the other hand, measure the earning power of the
individuals as distinguished from that of society as a
whole. We have distinguished the parts into which
Wealth is distributed as Wages and Rent; but it would
be correct, indeed it is the same thing, to regard all
wealth as earnings, and to distinguish the two kinds as
Communal Earnings and Individual Earnings. How,
then, can there be any question as to the fund from
which society should be supported? How can it be justly
supported in any other way than out of its own
earnings?
If there be at all such a thing as design in the
universe — and who can doubt it? — then has
it been designed that Rent, the earnings of the
community, shall be retained for the support of the
community, and that Wages, the earnings of the
individual, shall be left to the individual in proportion
to the value of his service. This is the divine law,
whether we trace it through complex moral and economic
relations, or find it in the eighth commandment. ...
read the book
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894) — Appendix: FAQ
Q1. Do you regard the single tax as a panacea for
all social disease?
A. When William Lloyd Garrison announced his conversion
to the single tax in a letter to Henry George, he took
pains to state that he did not believe it to be a
panacea, and Mr. George replied : "Neither do I; but I
believe that freedom is." Your question may be answered
in the same way. Freedom is the panacea for social wrongs
and the ills they breed, and the single tax principle is
the tap-root of freedom.
Q3. In an interior or frontier town, where land
has but little value, how would you raise enough money
for schools, highways, and other public needs?
A. There is no town whose finances are reasonably managed
in which the land values are insufficient for local
needs. Schools, highways, and so forth, are not local but
general, and should be maintained from the land values of
the state at large.
Q21. Do not the benefits of good government
increase the value of houses as well as of
land?
A. No. Houses are never worth any more than it
costs to reproduce them. Good government tends
to diminish the cost of house building; how, then, can
good government increase the value of houses? You are
confused by the fact that houses, being attached to land,
seem to increase in value, when it is the land and not
the house that really increases. It is the same mistake
that a somewhat noted economic teacher, who advocates
protection as his specialty, made when he tried to show
that there is an "unearned increment" to houses as well
as to lands. He did so by instancing a lot of vacant land
which had risen in value from $5000 to $10,000, and
comparing it with a house on a neighboring lot which, as
he said, had also increased in value from $5000 to
$10,000. At the moment when he wrote, the house to which
he referred could have been reproduced for $5000; and had
he been capable of thinking out a proposition he must
have discovered that it was the lot on which the house
stood, and not the house itself, which had increased in
value.
Q26. Hasn't every man who needs it a right to be
employed by the government?
A. No. But he has a right to have government secure him
in the enjoyment of his equal right to the opportunities
for employment that nature and social growth supply. When
government secures him in that respect, if he cannot get
work it is because (1) he does not offer the kind of
service that people want; or (2) he is incapable. His
remedy, if he does not offer the kind of service that
people want, is either to make people see that they are
mistaken, or go to work at something else; if he is
incapable, his remedy is to improve himself. In no case
has he a right to government interference in his behalf,
either through schemes to make work, or by bounties or
tariffs. ... read the
book
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural
Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation
(1917)
Q3. What is meant by economic rent?
A. Gross ground rent -- the annual site value of land --
what land, including any quality or content of the land
itself, is worth annually for use -- what the land does
or would command for use per annum if offered in open
market -- the annual value of the exclusive use in
control of a given area of land, involving the enjoyment
of those "rights and privileges thereto pertaining" which
are stipulated in every title deed, and which, enumerated
specifically, are as follows: right and ease of access
to
* water, and
* health inspection,
* sewerage,
* fire protection,
* police,
* schools,
* libraries,
* museums,
* parks,
* playgrounds,
* steam and electric railway service,
* gas and electric lighting,
* telegraph and telephone service,
* subways,
* ferries,
* churches,
* public schools,
* private schools,
* colleges,
* universities,
* public buildings --
utilities which depend for their efficiency and
economy on the character of the government; which
collectively constitute the economic and social
advantages of the land which are due to the presence and
activity of population, and are inseparable therefrom,
including the benefit of proximity to, and command of,
facilities for commerce and communication with the world
-- an artificial value created primarily through public
expenditure of taxes. For the sake of brevity, the
substance of this definition may be conveniently
expressed as the value of "proximity." It is ordinarily
measured by interest on investment plus taxes.
Q15. What should be the limit of revenue under the
single tax?
A. The same as under any other system of taxation, the
cost of government economically administered.
Q16. Did not Henry George hold that the full
ground rent of land should be taken in
taxation?
A. No! Not only did he concede a margin of rent to the
landlord, but as a matter of fact, as Thomas G. Shearman
said, "not all the power of all governments" could
collect in taxation all of ground rent.
... read
the whole article
Albert Jay Nock — Henry Gorge: Unorthodox
American
George held with Paine and Thomas Jefferson that
government is at best a necessary evil, and the less of
it the better. Hence the right thing was to decentralize
it as far as possible, and reduce the functions and
powers of the state to an absolute minimum, which, he
said, the confiscation of rent would do automatically;
whereas the collectivist proposal to confiscate and
manage natural resources as a state enterprise would have
precisely the opposite effect — it would tend to
make the state everything and the individual nothing.
...read the whole
article
Kris Feder: Progress and Poverty
Today
George's central contribution was to show that the
distinction between individual property and common
property forms a rational basis for distinguishing the
domain of public activity from that of the private. This
distinction leads him to a theory of public finance that
reconciles the competing insights of socialism and
laissez-faire capitalism. By a simple
fiscal device, the revenue arising from common property
can be captured for the public treasury and applied to
the common benefit, so that government may assume needed
general functions without interfering with individual
incentives.
- The benefits of sustained economic
development would be widely shared.
- The limited resources of the earth would be
managed for the benefit of all, including future
generations.
- Government would become,
not a repressive power, but "the administration of a
great cooperative society.
- It would become merely the agency by which
the common property was administered for the common
benefit." 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.
...
Nor do we hesitate to say that this way of securing
the equal right to the bounty of the Creator and the
exclusive right to the products of labor is the way
intended by God for raising public revenues. For we are
not atheists, who deny God; nor semi-atheists, who deny
that he has any concern in politics and legislation.
It is true as you say — a salutary truth too
often forgotten — that “man is older than the
state, and he holds the right of providing for the life
of his body prior to the formation of any state.”
Yet, as you too perceive, it is also true that the state
is in the divinely appointed order. For He who foresaw
all things and provided for all things, foresaw and
provided that with the increase of population and the
development of industry the organization of human society
into states or governments would become both expedient
and necessary.
No sooner does the state arise than, as we all know,
it needs revenues. This need for revenues is small at
first, while population is sparse, industry rude and the
functions of the state few and simple. But with growth of
population and advance of civilization the functions of
the state increase and larger and larger revenues are
needed.
Now, He that made the world and placed man in it, He
that pre-ordained civilization as the means whereby man
might rise to higher powers and become more and more
conscious of the works of his Creator, must have foreseen
this increasing need for state revenues and have made
provision for it. That is to say: The increasing need for
public revenues with social advance, being a natural,
God-ordained need, there must be a right way of raising
them — some way that we can truly say is the way
intended by God. It is clear that this right way of
raising public revenues must accord with the moral
law.
Hence:
It must not take from individuals what rightfully
belongs to individuals.
It must not give some an advantage over others, as by
increasing the prices of what some have to sell and
others must buy.
It must not lead men into temptation, by requiring
trivial oaths, by making it profitable to lie, to swear
falsely, to bribe or to take bribes.
It must not confuse the distinctions of right and
wrong, and weaken the sanctions of religion and the state
by creating crimes that are not sins, and punishing men
for doing what in itself they have an undoubted right to
do.
It must not repress industry. It must not check
commerce. It must not punish thrift. It must offer no
impediment to the largest production and the fairest
division of wealth.
Let me ask your Holiness to consider the taxes on the
processes and products of industry by which through the
civilized world public revenues are collected — the
octroi duties that surround Italian cities with barriers;
the monstrous customs duties that hamper intercourse
between so-called Christian states; the taxes on
occupations, on earnings, on investments, on the building
of houses, on the cultivation of fields, on industry and
thrift in all forms. Can these be the ways God has
intended that governments should raise the means they
need? Have any of them the characteristics indispensable
in any plan we can deem a right one?
All these taxes violate the moral law. They take by
force what belongs to the individual alone; they give to
the unscrupulous an advantage over the scrupulous; they
have the effect, nay are largely intended, to increase
the price of what some have to sell and others must buy;
they corrupt government; they make oaths a mockery; they
shackle commerce; they fine industry and thrift; they
lessen the wealth that men might enjoy, and enrich some
by impoverishing others.
Yet what most strikingly shows how opposed to
Christianity is this system of raising public revenues is
its influence on thought.
Christianity teaches us that all men are brethren;
that their true interests are harmonious, not
antagonistic. It gives us, as the golden rule of life,
that we should do to others as we would have others do to
us. But out of the system of taxing the products and
processes of labor, and out of its effects in increasing
the price of what some have to sell and others must buy,
has grown the theory of “protection,” which
denies this gospel, which holds Christ ignorant of
political economy and proclaims laws of national
well-being utterly at variance with his teaching. This
theory sanctifies national hatreds; it inculcates a
universal war of hostile tariffs; it teaches peoples that
their prosperity lies in imposing on the productions of
other peoples restrictions they do not wish imposed on
their own; and instead of the Christian doctrine of
man’s brotherhood it makes injury of foreigners a
civic virtue.
“By their fruits ye shall know them.” Can
anything more clearly show that to tax the products and
processes of industry is not the way God intended public
revenues to be raised?
But to consider what we propose — the raising of
public revenues by a single tax on the value of land
irrespective of improvements — is to see that in
all respects this does conform to the moral law.
Let me ask your Holiness to keep in mind that the
value we propose to tax, the value of land irrespective
of improvements, does not come from any exertion of labor
or investment of capital on or in it — the values
produced in this way being values of improvement which we
would exempt. The value of land irrespective of
improvement is the value that attaches to land by reason
of increasing population and social progress. This is a
value that always goes to the owner as owner, and never
does and never can go to the user; for if the user be a
different person from the owner he must always pay the
owner for it in rent or in purchase-money; while if the
user be also the owner, it is as owner, not as user, that
he receives it, and by selling or renting the land he
can, as owner, continue to receive it after he ceases to
be a user.
Thus, taxes on land irrespective of improvement cannot
lessen the rewards of industry, nor add to prices,* nor
in any way take from the individual what belongs to the
individual. They can take only the value that attaches to
land by the growth of the community, and which therefore
belongs to the community as a whole.
* As to this point it may be well to add
that all economists are agreed that taxes on land
values irrespective of improvement or use — or
what in the terminology of political economy is styled
rent, a term distinguished from the ordinary use of the
word rent by being applied solely to payments for the
use of land itself — must be paid by the owner
and cannot be shifted by him on the user. To explain in
another way the reason given in the text: Price is not
determined by the will of the seller or the will of the
buyer, but by the equation of demand and supply, and
therefore as to things constantly demanded and
constantly produced rests at a point determined by the
cost of production — whatever tends to increase
the cost of bringing fresh quantities of such articles
to the consumer increasing price by checking supply,
and whatever tends to reduce such cost decreasing price
by increasing supply. Thus taxes on wheat or tobacco or
cloth add to the price that the consumer must pay, and
thus the cheapening in the cost of producing steel
which improved processes have made in recent years has
greatly reduced the price of steel. But land has no
cost of production, since it is created by God, not
produced by man. Its price therefore is fixed
—
1 (monopoly rent), where land is held
in close monopoly, by what the owners can extract
from the users under penalty of deprivation and
consequently of starvation, and amounts to all that
common labor can earn on it beyond what is necessary
to life;
2 (economic rent proper), where there is no special
monopoly, by what the particular land will yield to
common labor over and above what may be had by like
expenditure and exertion on land having no special
advantage and for which no rent is paid; and,
3 (speculative rent, which is a species of monopoly
rent, telling particularly in selling price), by the
expectation of future increase of value from social
growth and improvement, which expectation causing
landowners to withhold land at present prices has the
same effect as combination.
Taxes on land values or economic rent
can therefore never be shifted by the landowner to the
land-user, since they in no wise increase the demand
for land or enable landowners to check supply by
withholding land from use. Where rent depends on mere
monopolization, a case I mention because rent may in
this way be demanded for the use of land even before
economic or natural rent arises, the taking by taxation
of what the landowners were able to extort from labor
could not enable them to extort any more, since
laborers, if not left enough to live on, will die. So,
in the case of economic rent proper, to take from the
landowners the premiums they receive, would in no way
increase the superiority of their land and the demand
for it. While, so far as price is affected by
speculative rent, to compel the landowners to pay taxes
on the value of land whether they were getting any
income from it or not, would make it more difficult for
them to withhold land from use; and to tax the full
value would not merely destroy the power but the desire
to do so.
To take land values for the state, abolishing all
taxes on the products of labor, would therefore leave to
the laborer the full produce of labor; to the individual
all that rightfully belongs to the individual. It would
impose no burden on industry, no check on commerce, no
punishment on thrift; it would secure the largest
production and the fairest distribution of wealth, by
leaving men free to produce and to exchange as they
please, without any artificial enhancement of prices; and
by taking for public purposes a value that cannot be
carried off, that cannot be hidden, that of all values is
most easily ascertained and most certainly and cheaply
collected, it would enormously lessen the number of
officials, dispense with oaths, do away with temptations
to bribery and evasion, and abolish man-made crimes in
themselves innocent.
But, further: That God has intended the state to
obtain the revenues it needs by the taxation of land
values is shown by the same order and degree of evidence
that shows that God has intended the milk of the mother
for the nourishment of the babe.
See how close is the analogy. In that
primitive condition ere the need for the state arises
there are no land values. The products of labor
have value, but in the sparsity of population no value as
yet attaches to land itself. But as increasing
density of population and increasing elaboration of
industry necessitate the organization of the state, with
its need for revenues, value begins to attach to land. As
population still increases and industry grows more
elaborate, so the needs for public revenues increase. And
at the same time and from the same causes land values
increase. The connection is invariable. The
value of things produced by labor tends to decline with
social development, since the larger scale of production
and the improvement of processes tend steadily to reduce
their cost. But the value of land on which population
centers goes up and up. Take Rome or Paris or London or
New York or Melbourne. Consider the enormous
value of land in such cities as compared with the value
of land in sparsely settled parts of the same countries.
To what is this due? Is it not due to the density and
activity of the populations of those cities — to
the very causes that require great public expenditure for
streets, drains, public buildings, and all the many
things needed for the health, convenience and safety of
such great cities? See how with the growth of such cities
the one thing that steadily increases in value is land;
how the opening of roads, the building of railways, the
making of any public improvement, adds to the value of
land. Is it not clear that here is a natural law
— that is to say a tendency willed by the Creator?
Can it mean anything else than that He who ordained the
state with its needs has in the values which attach to
land provided the means to meet those needs?
That it does mean this and nothing else is confirmed
if we look deeper still, and inquire not merely as to the
intent, but as to the purpose of the intent. If we do so
we may see in this natural law by which land values
increase with the growth of society not only such a
perfectly adapted provision for the needs of society as
gratifies our intellectual perceptions by showing us the
wisdom of the Creator, but a purpose with regard to the
individual that gratifies our moral perceptions by
opening to us a glimpse of his beneficence.
Consider: Here is a natural law by which as society
advances the one thing that increases in value is land
— a natural law by virtue of which all growth of
population, all advance of the arts, all general
improvements of whatever kind, add to a fund that both
the commands of justice and the dictates of expediency
prompt us to take for the common uses of society. Now,
since increase in the fund available for the common uses
of society is increase in the gain that goes equally to
each member of society, is it not clear that the law by
which land values increase with social advance while the
value of the products of labor does not increase, tends
with the advance of civilization to make the share that
goes equally to each member of society more and more
important as compared with what goes to him from his
individual earnings, and thus to make the advance of
civilization lessen relatively the differences that in a
ruder social state must exist between the strong and the
weak, the fortunate and the unfortunate? Does it not show
the purpose of the Creator to be that the advance of man
in civilization should be an advance not merely to larger
powers but to a greater and greater equality, instead of
what we, by our ignoring of his intent, are making it, an
advance toward a more and more monstrous inequality?
...
With both anarchists and socialists, we, who for want
of a better term have come to call ourselves single-tax
men, fundamentally differ. We regard them as erring in
opposite directions — the one in ignoring the
social nature of man, the other in ignoring his
individual nature. While we see that man is
primarily an individual, and that nothing but evil has
come or can come from the interference by the state with
things that belong to individual action, we also see that
he is a social being, or, as Aristotle called him, a
political animal, and that the state is requisite to
social advance, having an indispensable place in the
natural order. Looking on the bodily organism as
the analogue of the social organism, and on the
proper functions of the state as akin to those that in
the human organism are discharged by the conscious
intelligence, while the play of individual
impulse and interest performs functions akin to those
discharged in the bodily organism by the unconscious
instincts and involuntary motions, the anarchists seem to
us like men who would try to get along without heads and
the socialists like men who would try to rule the
wonderfully complex and delicate internal relations of
their frames by conscious will. ...
Take, for instance, protectionism.
What support it has, beyond the mere selfish desire of
sellers to compel buyers to pay them more than their
goods are worth, springs from such superficial ideas as
that production, not consumption, is the end of effort;
that money is more valuable than money’s-worth, and
to sell more profitable than to buy; and above all from a
desire to limit competition, springing from an
unanalyzing recognition of the phenomena that necessarily
follow when men who have the need to labor are deprived
by monopoly of access to the natural and indispensable
element of all labor. Its methods involve the
idea that governments can more wisely direct the
expenditure of labor and the investment of capital than
can laborers and capitalists, and that the men who
control governments will use this power for the general
good and not in their own interests. They tend to
multiply officials, restrict liberty, invent crimes. They
promote perjury, fraud and corruption. And they would,
were the theory carried to its logical conclusion,
destroy civilization and reduce mankind to savagery.
...
You state that you approach the subject with
confidence, yet in all that greater part of the
Encyclical (19-67) devoted to the remedy, while there is
an abundance of moral reflections and injunctions,
excellent in themselves but dead and meaningless as you
apply them, the only definite practical proposals for the
improvement of the condition of labor are:
1. That the state should step in to prevent
overwork, to restrict the employment of women and
children, to secure in workshops conditions not
unfavorable to health and morals, and, at least where
there is danger of insufficient wages provoking
strikes, to regulate wages (39-40).
2. That it should encourage the acquisition
of property (in land) by working-men
(50-51).
3. That working-men’s associations should be
formed (52-67). These remedies so far as they go are
socialistic, and though the Encyclical is not without
recognition of the individual character of man and of
the priority of the individual and the family to the
state, yet the whole tendency and spirit of its
remedial suggestions lean unmistakably to socialism
— extremely moderate socialism it is true;
socialism hampered and emasculated by a supreme respect
for private possessions; yet socialism still. But,
although you frequently use the ambiguous term
“private property” when the context shows
that you have in mind private property in land, the one
thing clear on the surface and becoming clearer still
with examination is that you insist that whatever else
may be done, the private ownership of land shall be
left untouched. ... read the whole
letter
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)
The elder Mirabeau, we are told, ranked the
proposition of Quesnay, to substitute one single tax on
rent (the impôt unique) for all other
taxes, as a discovery equal in utility to the invention
of writing or the substitution of the use of money for
barter.
To whosoever will think over the matter, this saying
will appear an evidence of penetration rather than of
extravagance. The advantages which would be gained by
substituting for the numerous taxes by which the public
revenues are now raised, a single tax levied upon the
value of land, will appear more and more important the
more they are considered.
- This is the secret which would transform the little
village into the great city.*
- With all the burdens removed which now oppress
industry and hamper exchange, the production of wealth
would go on with a rapidity now undreamed of.
- This, in its turn, would lead to an increase in the
value of land — a new surplus which society might
take for general purposes.
-
And released from the difficulties which
attend the collection of revenue in a way that begets
corruption and renders legislation the tool of
special interests, society could assume functions
which the increasing complexity of life makes it
desirable to assume, but which the prospect of
political demoralization under the present system now
leads thoughtful men to shrink from.
*At the beginning of
Book IX of the complete Progress & Poverty,
Henry George quotes from Themistocles: "I cannot play
upon any stringed instrument, but I can tell you how
of a little village to make a great and glorious
city."
Consider 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. ... read the whole
chapter
Henry George: In
Liverpool: The Financial Reform Meeting at the Liverpool
Rotunda (1889)
That is what we strive for — for the freedom of
all, for self-government to all (hear, hear) — and
for as little government as possible: (Laughter and
cheers) We don't believe that tyranny is a thing alone of
kings and monarchs; we know well that majorities can be
as tyrannous as aristocracies (hear, hear); we know that
mobs can persecute as well as crowned heads. (Hear, hear)
What we ask for is freedom — that in each locality,
large or small, the people of that locality shall be free
to manage the affairs that pertain only to that locality
(hear, hear, and cheers); that each individual shall be
free to manage the affairs that relate to him; that
government shall not presume to say of whom he shall buy
or to whom he shall sell, shall not attempt to dictate to
him in any way, but shall confine itself to its proper
function of preserving the public peace, of preventing
the strong from oppressing the weak, of utilizing for the
public good all the revenues that belong of right to the
public, and of managing those affairs that are best
managed by the whole. (Cheers) Our doctrine is the
doctrine of freedom, our gospel is the gospel of liberty,
and we have faith in it, why should we not? (Cheers) ...
read the whole
speech
The Most Rev. Dr Thomas Nulty, Roman Catholic Bishop of
Meath (Ireland): Back to
the Land (1881)
How Best to Use the Common
Estate.
The great problem, then, that the nations, or,
what comes to the same thing, that the Governments of
nations have to solve is -- what is the most profitable
and remunerative investment they can make of this common
property in the interest and for the benefit of the
people to whom it belongs? In other words, how can they
bring the largest, and, as far as possible, the most
skilled amount of effective labour to bear on the proper
cultivation and improvement of the land? -- how can they
make it yield the largest amount of human food, human
comforts and human enjoyments -- and how can its aggregate produce be divided so as to
give everyone the fairest and largest share he is
entitled to without passing over or excluding
anyone? Read the whole
letter
Judge Samuel Seabury: An Address delivered upon the
100th anniversary of the birth of Henry George
WE are met to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the
birth of Henry George. We meet, therefore, in a spirit of
joy and thanksgiving for the great life which he devoted
to the service of humanity. To very few of the children
of men is it given to act the part of a great teacher who
makes an outstanding contribution toward revealing the
basic principles to which human society must adhere if it
is to walk in the way which leads to freedom. This Henry
George did, and in so doing he expressed himself with a
clarity of thought and diction which has rarely been
surpassed. ...
Henry George never wrote a line which could be
tortured into the support of the principles of the
totalitarian state, or that gave sanction to the theory
that men in their individual and social activities should
be regimented and directed by great bureaucracies such as
all our modern states, including our so-called
democracies, have set up.
Henry George believed in the state, but it was a state
that was the servant, not the master, of the people: a
state that was to be kept within bounds, and whose powers
were strictly limited and to be exercised in
subordination to the will of the people — a state,
in short, such as is defined in our national and state
constitutions.
Machiavelli and Hobbes in their writings expressed the
foundations for despotism, and disclosed the cruelties,
subterfuges and deceits by which alone a despotism can be
achieved.
Marx and Lenin, because of their belief that the
rights of the individual were fictional rather than real,
built upon those principles of Machiavelli and Hobbes
which constitute the foundation of the modern
totalitarian state. 'The whole idea of the totalitarian
state, whether it finds expression in a system of
fascism, either of the Italian or the German variety, or
in the equally odious system of a dictatorship of the
proletariat, rests upon a disregard of fundamental human
rights and the substitution of an autocratic will for the
encouragement of individual initiative among the people.
The tragic menace implicit in the despotism of the
totalitarian state, which makes it an offense to God and
man, is its claim of absolutism to crush the
individuality and destroy the conscience of men.
The principles of freedom enunciated by Henry George
are utterly inconsistent with the Marxian creed which
ends in state socialism or in the totalitarian state, in
principle identical with it. Indeed, the great French
economist, Charles Gide, in his lecture on the
cooperative program, contrasts a voluntary cooperative
system, which retains individual initiative as the basis
of all economic activity and preserves the spontaneity
and inexhaustible reserves of invention and creation,
with state socialism, which is proving daily more sterile
both in economic production and in affording protection
to public and private freedom.
... Indeed, if we try to envision, in view of our
present location this afternoon, "The World of Tomorrow,"
I have no hesitation in saying that if the world of
tomorrow is to be a civilized world, and not a world
which has relapsed into barbarism, it can be so only by
applying the principles of freedom which Henry George
taught. The principles to which I refer are:
First, that men have equal rights in natural
resources, and that these rights may find recognition in
a system which gives effect to the distinction between
what is justly private property because it has relation
to individual initiative and is the creation of labor and
capital, and what is public property because it is either
a part of the natural resources of the country, whose
value is created by the presence of the community, or is
founded upon some governmental privilege or
franchise.
Henry George believed in an order of society in which
monopoly should be abolished as a means of private
profit. The substitution of state monopoly for private
monopoly will not better the situation. It ignores the
fact that even where a utility is a natural monopoly
which must be operated in the public interests, it should
be operated as a result of cooperation between the
representatives of labor, capital. and consumers, and not
by the politicians who control the political state.
We should never lose sight of the fact that all
monopolies are created and perpetuated by state laws. If
the states wish seriously to abolish monopoly, they can
do so by withdrawing their privileges; but they cannot
grant the privileges which make monopoly inevitable and
avoid the consequences by invoking anti-trust laws
against them.
It is strange that the state, which has assumed all
sorts of functions which it cannot with advantage
perform, still persists in neglecting a vital function
which it should and can perform — the function of
collecting public revenues, as far as possible, from
those who reap the benefits of natural resources. In view
of public and social needs, it is remarkable that no
effort has been made by governments to reduce the tax
burdens on labor and capital, which are engaged in
increasing production, by transferring them to those who
restrict production by making monopoly privileges special
to themselves.
These monopolistic privileges are of course disguised
under many different forms, but the task of ascertaining
what they are, and their true value, is a task within the
competency of government if it really desires to
accomplish it. ... read the whole speech
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0: Preface (pages ix.-xvi)
I’m also a liberal, in the sense that I’m
not averse to a role for government in society. Yet
history has convinced me that representative government
can’t adequately protect the interests of ordinary
citizens. Even less can it protect the interests of
future generations, ecosystems, and nonhuman species. The
reason is that most — though not all — of the
time, government puts the interests of private
corporations first. This is a systemic problem of a
capitalist democracy, not just a matter of electing new
leaders.
If you identify with the preceding sentiments, then
you might be confused and demoralized, as I have been
lately. If capitalism as we know it is deeply flawed, and
government is no savior, where lies hope? This strikes me
as one of the great dilemmas of our time. For years the
Right has been saying — nay, shouting — that
government is flawed and that only privatization,
deregulation, and tax cuts can save us. For just as long,
the Left has been insisting that markets are flawed and
that only government can save us. The trouble is that
both sides are half-right and half-wrong. They’re
both right that markets and state are flawed, and both
wrong that salvation lies in either sphere. But if
that’s the case, what are we to do? Is there,
perhaps, a missing set of institutions that can help us?
...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 3: The Limits of Government
(pages 33-48)
In his essay “The Tragedy of the Commons,”
Garrett Hardin envisioned only two ways to save the
commons: statism and privatism. Either
a coercive government would have to stop humans from
mindlessly destroying the planet, or private property
owners, operating in a free market, would have to do the
job. In the next two chapters I’ll show why neither
of these approaches suffices.
In considering the potential of governmental remedies,
let’s clarify what we mean. We’re not talking
about tyranny; we’re talking about legitimate forms
of government activity such as regulation, taxation, and
public ownership. Can these traditional methods
effectively preserve common wealth for our children?
...
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.
Yet here as elsewhere, rhetoric and reality differ.
Political institutions don’t function in a vacuum;
they function in a world in which power is linked to
property. This was true when fifty-five white male
property owners wrote our Constitution, and it’s no
less true today.
America has been engaged in two experiments
simultaneously: one is called democracy, the other,
capitalism. It would be nice if these experiments ran
separately, but they don’t. They go on in the same
bottle, and each affects the other. After two hundred
years, we can draw some conclusions about how they
interact. One is that capitalism distorts democracy more
than the other way around.
The reason capitalism distorts democracy is simple.
Democracy is an open system, and economic power can
easily infect it. By contrast, capitalism is a gated
system; its bastions aren’t easily accessed by the
masses. Capital’s primacy thus isn’t an
accident, nor the fault of George W. Bush. It’s
what happens when capitalism inhabits democracy.
This isn’t to say the United States government
can’t, at times, restrain corporations. It has a
number of tools at its disposal, and has used them in the
past with some success. But the measures it can take are
woefully inadequate to the task of safeguarding the
planet for our children. Let’s see why.
...
Does this mean there’s no hope? I don’t
think so. The window of opportunity is small, but not
nonexistent. Throughout American history, anticorporate
forces have come to power once or twice per century. In
the nineteenth century, we had the eras of Jackson and
Lincoln; in the twentieth century, those of Theodore and
Franklin Roosevelt. Twenty-first century equivalents
will, I’m sure, arise. It may take a calamity of
some sort — another war, a depression, or an
ecological disaster — to trigger the next
anticorporate ascendancy, but sooner or later it will
come. Our job is to be ready when it comes.
What constitutes readiness? Three things, I
believe.
- First, we must have a proper view of
government’s role. That role isn’t to run
the economy, or even to manage the commons directly;
it’s to assign common property rights to
trustworthy guardians who will.
- Second, we must have a plan to fix our economic
operating system, not just to put patches on
symptoms.
- And third, we must recognize that the duration of
any anticorporate ascendancy will be brief, and that
we must use that small window to build institutions
that outlast it.
Laws, regulations, and taxes are easily rescinded or
weakened when corporations don’t like them.
Property rights, by contrast, tend to endure, as do
institutions that own them. So we should focus on
creating such institutions and endowing them with
permanent property rights.
Make no mistake: it will take more than a few wand
strokes to bring capitalism into harmony with nature and
the human psyche. This is a thirty- to fifty-year
project. During this time, we must be locked on a steady
course. For this reason, I wouldn’t place much
faith in slim and fickle majorities in Congress. As
we’ll see, I would place it in the hands of commons
trustees, empowered with property rights and bound as
much as humanly possible to generations hence. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 9: Building the Commons
Sector (pages 135-154)
One of the most valuable lessons I learned in business
was, when you need something done, find the right person,
give that person clear marching orders, authority, and
resources, and get out of the way. In other words,
delegate.
The same logic applies to government. When government
wants to do things, it has to find people to do them. It
can add people to its own bureaucracy, or it can contract
with outsiders. It shouldn’t matter as long as the
public purpose is met at reasonable cost.
When it comes to building the new commons sector,
there’s plenty for everyone to do. Government in
particular has four important roles to play:
1. Until it assigns responsibility for a commons to
someone else, government is the default trustee, and
should be held to trusteeship standards.
2. Government is the initial assigner and ultimate
arbiter of property rights. Instead of privatizing
nearly everything, it should assign more property
rights to commons trusts and give commons rights
precedence over capital’s.
3. Only government can broker inter- and
intragenerational compacts like Social Security and
Medicare. We need government to do this again for
health insurance and the Children’s Opportunity
Trust.
4. Government can help finance the reacquisition and
restoration of previously privatized pieces of the
commons. State and local governments in particular have
the authority to issue long-term tax-exempt bonds,
which can be used to acquire private land and water
rights.
These four roles reflect government’s unique
responsibilities and strengths. But there are areas where
government doesn’t have a competitive advantage,
and much of this book has been about one of them.
Earlier I discussed the trusteeship function —
the work that someone must do to protect our shared
inheritances. We need this function to work right,
because if it doesn’t, our descendants, along with
many other species’ offspring, are doomed. So we
have to ask, who is best suited to perform this function?
The evidence suggests that neither government nor private
corporations can do this particular job well. So
we’re left with trusts that are accountable to
future generations.
I suggest to those who care about the future:
it’s time to delegate the trusteeship function to
trusts.We should give the trusts clear missions,
authority, and resources, and then get out of their way.
The trusts may not be perfect, but they’re likely
to do a better job, for a longer time, than any of the
known alternatives. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 10: What You Can Do (pages
155-166)
To build Capitalism 3.0, we each have unique roles to
play. I therefore address the final pages of this book to
a variety of people whose participation is critical.
...
POLITICIANS
Everyone wants your attention. Channel 5 is on line 3
and a powerful lobbyist is at your door. It’s hard
for you to see the forest for the trees. What can I
possibly tell you?
What I want to tell you is, there’s a fork in
the road. On one side lies capitalism as we know it; on
the other, an upgrade. You must decide which branch to
take. Your choice has vast ramifications. Very possibly,
the fate of the planet is in your hands. Trillions of
dollars are also at stake. I want you to be courageous. I
want you to choose the upgrade.
But that isn’t what one says to a politician.
What one says is, we need to reduce our dependence on
foreign oil, create jobs in America, and protect the
environment. All those things cost money, and government
doesn’t have enough. But here’s what
government can do.
- First, delegate to an independent authority —
something like the Fed — the power to cap U.S.
carbon consumption. That way, when energy prices go up
(which they inevitably will), you won’t get blamed.
Also, make sure the carbon authority pays dividends, like
the Alaska Permanent Fund. Then, when checks are mailed
to your constituents, you can take credit.
- Second, talk about jobs and energy independence in
your speeches. And push for an American Permanent Fund
financed by sales of pollution permits. Within a few
years, thousands of people in your district will be
installing new energy systems and cashing dividend
checks. You’ll be a hero.
- Finally, tell your donors not to worry. You’re
a low-tax, small-government, pay-as-we-go kind of person.
You think the environment should be protected through
market mechanisms. You favor an ownership society in
which every American has a tax-deferred savings account
and no child is left behind. ...
read the whole chapter
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