Jobs Chasing People
Wouldn't it be nice to live in a society
where, instead of people chasing jobs and wages being
driven down, jobs were chasing people, driving wages up,
and perhaps permitting us to choose more leisure, if that
were our preference?
If we were in that situation, our society's
need for publicly funded social safety nets would be very
different.
Our best route to living in such a society
is to provide incentives for putting our best land to its
highest and best use, and reducing the disincentives.
Further, by making land available to those who have an
entrepreneurial plan they want to try, we all benefit
— all of us except the one whose "business plan" is
to speculate on land or whose "job" description is
"landlord." In George's time, he would have been known as
a "dog in the
manger."
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. ...
Thus, the bonus that wherever labor is most productive
must now be paid before labor can be exerted would
disappear.
- The farmer would not have to pay out half his
means, or mortgage his labor for years, in order to
obtain land to cultivate;
- the builder of a city homestead would not have to
lay out as much for a small lot as for the house he
puts upon it*;
- the company that proposed to erect a manufactory
would not have to expend a great part of its capital
for a site.
- And what would be paid from year to year to the
state would be in lieu of all the taxes now levied upon
improvements, machinery, and stock.
*Many persons, and among them some
professional economists, have never succeeded in
getting a thorough comprehension of this point. Thus,
the editor has heard the objection advanced that the
greater cheapness of land is no advantage to the poor
man who is trying to save enough from his earnings to
buy a piece of land; for, it is said, the higher
taxes on the land after it is acquired, offset the
lower purchase price. What such objectors do not see
is that even if the lower price of land does no more
than balance the higher tax on it, (and this
overlooks, for one thing, the discouragement to
speculation in land), the reduction or removal of
other taxes is all clear gain. It is easier to save
in proportion as earnings and commodities are
relieved of taxation. It is easier to buy land,
because its selling price is lower, if the land is
taxed. And although the land, after its purchase,
continues to be taxed, not only can this tax be fully
paid out of the annual interest on the saving in the
purchase price, but also there is to be reckoned the
saving in taxes on buildings and other improvements
and in whatever other taxes are thus rendered
unnecessary. H.G.B.
Consider the effect of such a change upon the labor
market. Competition would no longer be one-sided, as now.
Instead of laborers competing with each other for
employment, and in their competition cutting down wages
to the point of bare subsistence, employers would
everywhere be competing for laborers, and wages would
rise to the fair earnings of labor. For into the labor
market would have entered the greatest of all competitors
for the employment of labor, a competitor whose demand
cannot be satisfied until want is satisfied — the
demand of labor itself. The employers of labor would not
have merely to bid against other employers, all feeling
the stimulus of greater trade and increased profits, but
against the ability of laborers to become their own
employers upon the natural opportunities freely opened to
them by the tax which prevented monopolization.
With natural opportunities thus free to labor;
- with capital and improvements exempt from tax, and
exchange released from restrictions, the spectacle of
willing men unable to turn their labor into the things
they are suffering for would become impossible;
- the recurring paroxysms which paralyze industry
would cease;
- every wheel of production would be set in
motion;
- demand would keep pace with supply, and supply with
demand;
- trade would increase in every direction, and wealth
augment on every hand. ... read the whole
chapter
Henry George: Thou
Shalt Not Steal (1887 speech)
The relation of employer and employed is a
relation of convenience. It is not one imposed by the
natural order. People are brought into the world with the
power to employ themselves, and they can employ
themselves wherever the natural opportunities for
employment are not shut up from them.
People do not have
a natural right to demand employment of another, but they
have a natural right, an inalienable right, a right given
by their Creator, to demand opportunity to employ
themselves. And whenever that right is acknowledged,
whenever the people who want to go to work can find natural
opportunities to work upon, then there
will be as much competition among employers who are anxious
to get people to work for them, as there will be among
people who are anxious to get work.
Wages will rise in every vocation to
the true rate of wages — the full, honest earnings of
labor. That done, with this ever increasing social fund to
draw upon, poverty will be abolished, and in a little while
will come to be looked upon — as we are now beginning
to look upon slavery — as the relic of a darker and
more ignorant age. ...
read the whole article
Henry George: Thy Kingdom
Come (1889 speech)
Mr Abner Thomas, of New York, a
strict orthodox Presbyterian — and the son of Rev Dr
Thomas, author of a commentary on the bible —wrote a
little while ago an allegory. Dozing off in his chair, he
dreamt that he was ferried over the River of Death, and,
taking the straight and narrow way, came at last within
sight of the Golden City. A fine-looking old gentleman
angel opened the wicket, inquired his name, and let him in;
warning him, at the same time, that it would be better if
he chose his company in heaven, and did not associate with
disreputable angels.
“What!” said the
newcomer, in astonishment: “Is not this
heaven?”
“Yes,” said the warden:
“But there are a lot of tramp angels here
now."
“How can that be?” asked
Mr Thomas. “I thought everybody had plenty in
heaven.”
“It used to be that way some
time ago,” said the warden: “And if you wanted
to get your harp polished or your wings combed, you had to
do it yourself. But matters have changed since we adopted
the same kind of property regulations in heaven as you have
in civilised countries on earth, and we find it a great
improvement, at least for the better
class.”
Then the warden told the newcomer
that he had better decide where he was going to
board.
“I don’t want to board
anywhere,” said Thomas: “I would much rather go
over to that beautiful green knoll and lie
down.”
“I would not advise you to do
so,” said the warden: “The angel who owns that
knoll does not like to encourage trespassing. Some
centuries ago, as I told you, we introduced the system of
private property into the soil of heaven. So we divided the
land up. It is all private property now.”
“I hope I was considered in
that division?” said Thomas.
“No,” said the warden:
“You were not; but if you go to work, and are saving,
you can easily earn enough in a couple of centuries to buy
yourself a nice piece. You get a pair of wings free as you
come in, and you will have no difficulty in hypothecating
them for a few days board until you find work. But I should
advise you to be quick about it, as our population is
constantly increasing, and there is a great surplus of
labour. Tramp angels are, in fact, becoming quite a
nuisance.”
“What shall I go to work
at?” asked Thomas.
“Our principal industries are
the making of harps and crowns and the growing of
flowers,” responded the warden: “But there any
many opportunities for employment in personal
service.”
“I love flowers,” said
Thomas. “I will go to work growing them, There is a
beautiful piece of land over there that nobody seems to be
using. I will go to work on that.”
“You can’t do
that,” said the warden. “That property belongs
to one of our most far-sighted angels who has got very rich
by the advance of land values, and who is holding that
piece for a rise. You will have to buy it or rent it before
you can work on it, and you can’t do that
yet.”
The story goes on to describe how the
roads of heaven, the streets of the New Jerusalem, were
filled with disconsolate tramp angels, who had pawned their
wings, and were outcasts in Heaven itself.
You laugh, and it is ridiculous. But there is a
moral in it that is worth serious thought. Is it not
ridiculous to imagine the application to God’s
heaven of the same rules of division that we apply to
God’s earth, even while we pray that His will may
be done on earth as it is done in Heaven? ...
Read the
whole speech
Henry George: How to Help the
Unemployed
In the first quarter of this century an educated and
thoughtful Englishman, Edward Gibbon Wakefield, visited
this country. He saw its great resources, and noted the
differences between the English-speaking society growing
up here and that to which he had been used. Viewing
everything from the standpoint of a class accustomed to
look on the rest of mankind as created for their benefit,
'what he deemed the great social and economic
disadvantage of the United States was "the scarcity of
labor." It was to this he traced the rudeness of even
what he styled the upper class, its want of those
refinements, enjoyments, and delicacies of life common to
the aristocracy of England. How could an English
gentleman emigrate to a country where labor was so dear
that he might actually have to black his own boots; so
dear that even the capitalist might have to work, and no
one could count on a constant supply ready to accept as a
boon any opportunity to perform the most menial,
degrading, and repulsive services? Mr. Wakefield was not
a man to note facts without seeking their connection.
He saw that this "scarcity of labor"
came from the cheapness of land where the vast area of
the public domain was open for settlement at nominal
prices. A man of his class and time, without the
slightest question that land was made to be owned by
landlords, and laborers were made to furnish a supply of
labor for the upper classes, he was yet a man of
imagination. He saw the future before the
English-speaking race in building up new nations in what
were yet the waste spaces of the earth. But he wished
those new nations to be socially, politically, and
economically newer Englands; not to be settled as the
United States had been, from the "lower classes" alone,
but to contain from the first a proper proportion of the
"upper classes" as well. He saw that "scarcity of
employment" would in time succeed "scarcity of labor"
even in countries like the United States by the growth of
speculation in land; but he did not want to wait for that
in the newer Britains which his imagination pictured.
He proposed at once to produce such
salutary "scarcity of employment " in new colonies as
would give cheap and abundant labor, by a governmental
refusal to sell public land, save at a price so high as
to prevent the poorer from getting land, thus compelling
them to offer their labor for hire.
This was the essential part of what
was once well known as the Wakefield plan of
colonization. It is founded on a correct theory.
In any country, however new and vast, it would be
possible to change "scarcity of labor" into "scarcity of
employment" by increasing the price put on the use of
land. If three families settled a
virgin continent, one family could command the services
of the others as laborers for hire just as fully as
though they were its chattel slaves, if it was accorded
the ownership of the land and could put its own price on
its use. Wakefield proposed only that land should
be held at what he called "a sufficient price" -- that
is, a price high enough to keep wages in new colonies
only a little higher than wages in the mother-country,
and to produce not actual inability to get employment on
the part of laborers, but only such difficulty as would
keep them tractable, and ready to accept what from his
standpoint were reasonable wages. Yet it is evident that
it would only require a somewhat greater increase in the
price of land to go beyond this point and to bring about
in the midst of abundant natural opportunities for the
employment of labor, the phenomena of laborers vainly
seeking employment. Now, in the United States we have not
attempted to create "scarcity of employment" by
Wakefield's plan. But we have made haste by sale and gift
to put the public domain in the hands of private owners,
and thus allowed speculation to bring about more quickly
and effectually than he could have anticipated, more than
Wakefield aimed at. The public domain is now practically
gone; land is rising to European prices, and we are at
last face to face with social difficulties which in the
youth of men of my time we were wont to associate with
"the effete monarchies of the Old World." Today, as the last census reports show, the majority
of American farmers are rack-rented tenants, or hold
under mortgage, the first form of tenancy; and the great
majority of our people are landless men, without right to
employ their own labor and without stake in the land they
still foolishly speak of as their country. This is the
reason why the army of the unemployed has appeared among
us, why by pauperism has already become chronic, and why
in the tramp we have in more dangerous type the
proletarian of ancient Rome. ... Read the whole
article
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
AND will not the community gain by thus refusing to
kill the goose that lays the golden eggs; by thus
refraining from muzzling the ox that treadeth out the
corn; by thus leaving to industry, and thrift, and skill,
their natural reward, full and unimpaired? For there is
to the community also a natural reward. The law of
society is, each for all, as well as all for each. No one
can keep to himself the good he may do, any more than he
can keep the bad. Every productive enterprise, besides
its return to those who undertake it, yields collateral
advantages to others. If a man plant a fruit tree, his
gain is that he gathers the fruit in its time and season.
But in addition to his gain, there is a gain to the whole
community. Others than the owner are benefited by the
increased supply of fruit; the birds which it shelters
fly far and wide; the rain which it helps to attract
falls not alone on his field; and, even to the eye which
rests upon it from a distance, it brings a sense of
beauty. And so with everything else. The building of a
house, a factory, a ship, or a railroad, benefits others
besides those who get the direct profits. Nature laughs
at a miser. He is like the squirrel who buries his nuts
and refrains from digging them up again. Lo! they sprout
and grow into trees. In fine linen, steeped in costly
spices, the mummy is laid away. Thousands and thousands
of years thereafter, the Bedouin cooks his food by a fire
of its encasings, it generates the steam by which the
traveler is whirled on his way, or it passes into far-off
lands to gratify the curiosity of another race. The bee
fills the hollow tree with honey, and along comes the
bear or the man. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book IX, Chapter 1, Effects of the Remedy: Of the
Effect upon the Production of Wealth
CONSIDER the effect of such a change upon the labor
market. Competition would no longer be one-sided, as now.
Instead of laborers competing with each other for
employment, and in their competition cutting down wages
to the point of bare subsistence, employers would
everywhere be competing for laborers, and wages would
rise to the fair earnings of labor. For into the labor
market would have entered the greatest of all competitors
for the employment of labor, a competitor whose demand
cannot be satisfied until want is satisfied — the
demand of labor itself. The employers of labor would not
have merely to bid against other employers, all feeling
the stimulus of greater trade and increased profits, but
against the ability of laborers to become their own
employers upon the natural opportunities freely opened to
them by the tax which prevented monopolization. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book IX, Chapter 1, Effects of the Remedy: Of the
Effect upon the Production of Wealth
... go to "Gems from
George"
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
Note 71: Farmers, millers, bakers, ranchers, butchers,
fishermen, hunters, makers of food-producing implements,
food merchants, railroad men, sailors, draymen, coal
miners, metal miners, builders, bankers who by exchanging
commercial paper facilitate trade. together with clerks,
bookkeepers, foremen, journeymen, common laborers,
seeking for them instead of their seeking for work. To
specify the labor that would be profitably affected by
this demand would involve the cataloguing of all workmen,
all business men, and all professional men who either
directly or indirectly are connected with food
industries, and the naming of every grade of such labor,
from the newest apprentice to the largest supervising
employer.
Would not this be putting an end to "hard times"? For
what is the most striking manifestation of "hard times"?
Is it not "scarcity of work"? Is it not that there are
more men seeking work than there are jobs to do?
Certainly it is. And to say that, is not to limit "hard
times" to hired men. The real trouble with the business
man when he complains of "hard times" is that people do
not employ him as much as he expects to be employed. Work
is scarce with him, just as with those he employs, or as
he would phrase it, "business is slack."
Let there be ten men and but nine jobs, and you have
"hard times." The tenth man will be out of work. He may
be a good union man who abhors a "scab" and will not take
work away from his brother workman. So he hunts for a job
which does not exist, until all his savings are gone.
Still he will not be a "scab," and he suffers
deprivation. But after a while hunger gets the better of
him, and he takes one of the nine jobs away from another
man by underbidding. He becomes a "scab." And who can
blame him? any one would rather be a "scab" than a
corpse. Then the man who has lost his place becomes a
"scab" too, and turns out some one else by underbidding.
And so it goes again and again until wages fall so low
that they but just support life. Then the poorhouse or a
charitable institution takes care of the tenth man, who
thereafter serves the purpose of preventing arise in
wages. Meanwhile, diminished purchasing power, due to low
wages, bears down upon business generally.
But let there be ten jobs and but nine men. Conditions
would instantly reverse, Instead of a man all the time
seeking for a job, a job would be all the time seeking
for a man; and wages would rise until they equaled the
value of the work for which they were paid. And as wages
rose purchasing power would rise, and business in general
would flourish.
If demand freely directed production, there would
always be ten jobs for nine men, and no longer only nine
jobs for ten men. It could not be otherwise while any
wants were unsatisfied. ...
Q25. What good would the single tax do to the
poor? and how?
A. By constantly keeping the demand for labor above the
supply it would enable them to abolish their poverty.
Q27. Would working people, whose savings are in
savings banks or insurance companies which own land or
have mortgages upon land, lose by the shrinkage in land
values?
A. Not if the companies were managed intelligently. Well
managed companies would shift their investments as they
observed the persistent decline of land values. They
would do it even as soon as conditions appeared which
would naturally cause land values to shrink. But working
people could well afford to give all their savings for
the permanent employment and high wages that the single
tax would bring about. It is not working people but idle
people who would lose anything by the single tax.
wealthandwant editorial comment: Post
may be confusing land prices and land value. Land
value will continue to rise; land price
will fall, as the land tax is capitalized into the
price.
Q29. Under the single tax could employers cut
wages to the starvation point?
A. No. Under the single tax employers would be constantly
bidding for workmen, instead of workmen constantly
bidding for employers as is the case now. It is the
"oversupply" of labor that makes starvation wages
possible, and the single tax would abolish that; not by
reducing the supply of labor, the Malthusian device, but
by allowing the effective demand for labor to freely
increase.
Q31. Will not the capitalist be able under the
single tax to undersell the laborer — to sell goods
for less than cost, at least temporarily — and
thereby force him to accept the capitalist's
terms?
A. With capitalists continually hunting for men to help
them fill their orders, and bidding against each other to
get men, as would be the case under the single tax, such
a contingency would be in the highest degree improbable.
It is practically impossible. Nothing short of a trust,
an absolutely perfect trust, of all the owners of capital
the world over could produce it. And even then, plenty of
very useful land of all kinds being free and labor
products being exempt from taxation, all people who were
outside of the trust would resort co-operatively to the
land, and the trust would be obliged to take them in as
the alternative of falling to pieces under their
competition.
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