Labor
Most of us, when we hear the word "labor" think of
"organized labor." That isn't the reference here. Labor
refers to all of us who supply our effort to a project.
Labor is one of the three factors of production (the
other two are land and capital.)
The return to labor is wages, and most of us are
concerned that wages do not keep pace with the cost of
living for the vast majority of Americans. This is not a
new phenomenon: Henry George called attention to it in
1879 in Progress
& Poverty. See also his 1891 letter called
The Condition
of Labor, which lays out George's ideas very
clearly.
Henry George:
Progress & Poverty:
Wages & Capital: The Meaning of the Terms (Book I,
Chapter 2)
Land, labor, and capital are the three factors of
production. If we remember that capital is thus a term
used in contradistinction to land and labor, we at once
see that nothing properly included under either one of
these terms can be properly classed as capital. The term
land necessarily includes, not merely
the surface of the earth as distinguished from the water
and the air, but the whole material universe outside of
man himself, for it is only by having access to land,
from which his very body is drawn, that man can come in
contact with or use nature. The term land embraces, in
short, all natural materials, forces, and opportunities,
and, therefore, nothing that is freely supplied by nature
can be properly classed as capital. A fertile field, a
rich vein of ore, a falling stream which supplies power,
may give to the possessor advantages equivalent to the
possession of capital, but to class such things as
capital would be to put an end to the distinction between
land and capital, and, so far as they relate to each
other, to make the two terms meaningless. The term
labor, in like manner, includes all
human exertion, and hence human powers whether natural or
acquired can never properly be classed as capital. In
common parlance we often speak of a man's knowledge,
skill, or industry as constituting his capital; but this
is evidently a metaphorical use of language that must be
eschewed in reasoning that aims at exactness. Superiority
in such qualities may augment the income of an individual
just as capital would, and an increase in the knowledge,
skill, or industry of a community may have the same
effect in increasing its production as would an increase
of capital; but this effect is due to the increased power
of labor and not to capital. Increased velocity may give
to the impact of a cannon ball the same effect as
increased weight, yet, nevertheless, weight is one thing
and velocity another.
[26] Thus we must exclude from
the category of capital everything that may be included
either as land or labor. Doing so, there remain only
things which are neither land nor labor, but which have
resulted from the union of these two original factors of
production. Nothing can be properly capital that does not
consist of these that is to say, nothing can be capital
that is not wealth. ...
read the entire chapter
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress & Poverty,
Chapter 5: The Basic Cause of Poverty (in the
unabridged:
Book V: The Problem Solved)
For land is the habitation of man, the storehouse upon
which he must draw for all his needs, the material to
which his labor must be applied for the supply of all his
desires; for even the products of the sea cannot be
taken, the light of the sun enjoyed, or any of the forces
of nature utilized, without the use of land or its
products. On the land we are born, from it we live, to it
we return again — children of the soil as truly as
is the blade of grass or the flower of the field. Take
away from man all that belongs to land, and he is but a
disembodied spirit. Material progress cannot rid
us of our dependence upon land; it can but add to the
power of producing wealth from land; and hence, when
land is monopolized, it might go on to infinity
without increasing wages or improving the condition of
those who have but their labor. It can but add
to the value of land and the power which its possession
gives. Everywhere, in all times, among all peoples, the
possession of land is the base of aristocracy, the
foundation of great fortunes, the source of power. ...
read the
whole chapter
H.G. Brown: Significant Paragraphs
from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty, Chapter 8: Why a Land-Value Tax is
Better than an Equal Tax on All Property (in the
unabridged P&P:
Book VIII: Application of the Remedy — Chapter 3: The
proposition tried by the canons of taxation)
The ground upon which the equal taxation of all
species of property is commonly insisted upon is that it
is equally protected by the state. The basis of this idea
is evidently that the enjoyment of property is made
possible by the state — that there is a value
created and maintained by the community, which is justly
called upon to meet community expenses. Now, of what
values is this true? Only of the value of land. This is a
value that does not arise until a community is formed,
and that, unlike other values, grows with the growth of
the community. It exists only as the community exists.
Scatter again the largest community, and land, now so
valuable, would have no value at all. With every increase
of population the value of land rises; with every
decrease it falls. This is true of nothing else save of
things which, like the ownership of land, are in their
nature monopolies.
The tax upon land values is, therefore, the most just
and equal of all taxes.
- It falls only upon those who receive from society a
peculiar and valuable benefit, and upon them in
proportion to the benefit they receive.
- It is the taking by the community, for the use of
the community, of that value which is the creation of
the community.
- It is the application of the common property to
common uses.
When all rent is taken by taxation for the needs of
the community, then will the equality ordained by Nature
be attained. No citizen will have an advantage
over any other citizen save as is given by his industry,
skill, and intelligence; and each will obtain what he
fairly earns. Then, but not till then, will
labor get its full reward, and capital its natural
return. ... read the whole
chapter
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
You assume that the labor question is a question
between wage-workers and their employers. But working for
wages is not the primary or exclusive occupation of
labor. Primarily men work for themselves without the
intervention of an employer. And the primary source of
wages is in the earnings of labor, the man who works for
himself and consumes his own products receiving his wages
in the fruits of his labor. Are not fishermen, boatmen,
cab-drivers, peddlers, working farmers — all, in
short, of the many workers who get their wages directly
by the sale of their services or products without the
medium of an employer, as much laborers as those who work
for the specific wages of an employer? In your
consideration of remedies you do not seem even to have
thought of them. Yet in reality the laborers who work for
themselves are the first to be considered, since what men
will be willing to accept from employers depends
manifestly on what they can get by working for
themselves.
You assume that all employers are rich men, who might
raise wages much higher were they not so grasping. But is
it not the fact that the great majority of employers are
in reality as much pressed by competition as their
workmen, many of them constantly on the verge of failure?
Such employers could not possibly raise the wages they
pay, however they might wish to, unless all others were
compelled to do so.
You assume that there are in the natural order two
classes, the rich and the poor, and that laborers
naturally belong to the poor.
It is true as you say that there are differences in
capacity, in diligence, in health and in strength, that
may produce differences in fortune. These, however, are
not the differences that divide men into rich and poor.
The natural differences in powers and aptitudes are
certainly not greater than are natural differences in
stature. But while it is only by selecting giants and
dwarfs that we can find men twice as tall as others, yet
in the difference between rich and poor that exists today
we find some men richer than other men by the
thousandfold and the millionfold.
Nowhere do these differences between wealth and
poverty coincide with differences in individual powers
and aptitudes. The real difference between rich and poor
is the difference between those who hold the tollgates
and those who pay toll; between tribute-receivers and
tribute-yielders. ...
It seems to us that your Holiness misses its real
significance in intimating that Christ, in becoming the
son of a carpenter and himself working as a carpenter,
showed merely that “there is nothing to be ashamed
of in seeking one’s bread by labor.” To say
that is almost like saying that by not robbing people he
showed that there is nothing to be ashamed of in honesty.
If you will consider how true in any large view is
the classification of all men into working-men,
beggar-men and thieves, you will see that it was
morally impossible that Christ during his stay on earth
should have been anything else than a working-man, since
he who came to fulfil the law must by deed as well as
word obey God’s law of labor.
See how fully and how beautifully Christ’s life
on earth illustrated this law. Entering our earthly life
in the weakness of infancy, as it is appointed that all
should enter it, he lovingly took what in the natural
order is lovingly rendered, the sustenance, secured by
labor, that one generation owes to its immediate
successors. Arrived at maturity, he earned his own
subsistence by that common labor in which the majority of
men must and do earn it. Then passing to a higher —
to the very highest — sphere of labor, he earned
his subsistence by the teaching of moral and spiritual
truths, receiving its material wages in the
love-offerings of grateful hearers, and not refusing the
costly spikenard with which Mary anointed his feet. So,
when he chose his disciples, he did not go to landowners
or other monopolists who live on the labor of others, but
to common laboring-men. And when he called them to a
higher sphere of labor and sent them out to teach moral
and spiritual truths, he told them to take, without
condescension on the one hand or sense of degradation on
the other, the loving return for such labor, saying to
them that “the laborer is worthy of his
hire,” thus showing, what we hold, that all labor
does not consist in what is called manual labor, but that
whoever helps to add to the material, intellectual, moral
or spiritual fullness of life is also a laborer.*
* Nor should it be forgotten that the
investigator, the philosopher, the teacher, the artist,
the poet, the priest, though not engaged in the
production of wealth, are not only engaged in the
production of utilities and satisfactions to which the
production of wealth is only a means, but by acquiring
and diffusing knowledge, stimulating mental powers and
elevating the moral sense, may greatly increase the
ability to produce wealth. For man does not live by
bread alone. . . . He who by any exertion of
mind or body adds to the aggregate of enjoyable wealth,
increases the sum of human knowledge, or gives to human
life higher elevation or greater fullness — he
is, in the large meaning of the words, a
“producer,” a “working-man,” a
“laborer,” and is honestly earning honest
wages. But he who without doing aught to make
mankind richer, wiser, better, happier, lives on the
toil of others — he, no matter by what name of
honor he may be called, or how lustily the priests of
Mammon may swing their censers before him, is in the
last analysis but a beggar-man or a thief. —
Protection or Free Trade, pp. 74-75.
In assuming that laborers, even ordinary manual
laborers, are naturally poor, you ignore the fact that
labor is the producer of wealth, and attribute to the
natural law of the Creator an injustice that comes from
man’s impious violation of his benevolent
intention. In the rudest stage of the arts it is
possible, where justice prevails, for all well men to
earn a living. With the labor-saving appliances of our
time, it should be possible for all to earn much more.
And so, in saying that poverty is no disgrace, you convey
an unreasonable implication. For poverty ought to be a
disgrace, since in a condition of social justice, it
would, where unsought from religious motives or unimposed
by unavoidable misfortune, imply recklessness or
laziness. ... read the whole
letter
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
THE term Labor includes all human exertion in the
production of wealth, whatever its mode. In common
parlance we often speak of brain labor and hand labor as
though they were entirely distinct kinds of exertion, and
labor is often spoken of as though it involved only
muscular exertion. But in reality any form of labor, that
is to say, any form of human exertion in the production
of wealth above that which cattle may be applied to
doing, requires the human brain as truly as the human
hand, and would be impossible without the exercise of
mental faculties on the part of the laborer. Labor in
fact is only physical in external form. In its origin it
is mental or on strict analysis spiritual. —
The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 16: The Production of
Wealth, The Second Factor of Production — Labor
• abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
IT seems to us that your Holiness misses its real
significance in intimating that Christ in becoming the
son of a carpenter and Himself working as a carpenter
showed merely that "there is nothing to be ashamed of in
seeking one's bread by labor." To say that is almost like
saying that by not robbing people He showed that there is
nothing to be ashamed of in honesty. If you will consider
how true in any large view is the classification of all
men into working-men, beggar-men and thieves, you will
see that it was morally impossible that Christ during His
stay on earth should have been anything else than a
working-man, since He who came to fulfill the law must by
deed as well as word obey God's law of labor.
See how fully and how beautifully Christ's life on earth
illustrated this law. Entering our earthly life in the
weakness of infancy, as it is appointed that all should
enter it, He lovingly took what in the natural order is
lovingly rendered, the sustenance, secured by labor, that
one generation owes to its immediate successors. Arrived
at maturity, He earned His own subsistence by that common
labor in which the majority of men must and do earn it.
Then passing to a higher — to the very
highest-sphere of labor. He earned His subsistence by the
teaching of moral and spiritual truths, receiving its
material wages in the love offerings of grateful hearers,
and not refusing the costly spikenard with which Mary
anointed his feet. So, when He chose His disciples, He
did not go to land-owners or other monopolists who live
on the labor of others but to common laboring men. And
when He called them to a higher sphere of labor and sent
them out to teach moral and spiritual truths He told them
to take, without condescension on the one hand, or sense
of degradation on the other, the loving return for such
labor, saying to them that the "laborer is worthy of his
hire," thus showing, what we hold, that all labor does
not consist in what is called manual labor, but that
whoever helps to add to the material, intellectual,
moral, or spiritual fulness of life is also a laborer. -
The Condition
of Labor
NOR should it be forgotten that the investigator, the
philosopher, the teacher, the artist, the poet, the
priest, though not engaged in the production of wealth,
are not only engaged in the production of utilities and
satisfactions to which the production of wealth is only a
means, but by acquiring and diffusing knowledge,
stimulating mental powers and elevating the moral sense,
may greatly increase the ability to produce wealth. For
man does not live by bread alone. He is not an engine, in
which so much fuel gives so much power. On a capstan bar
or a topsail halyard a good song tells like muscle, and a
"Marseillaise" or a "Battle Hymn of the Republic" counts
for bayonets. A hearty laugh, a noble thought, a
perception of harmony, may add to the power of dealing
even with material things.
He who by any exertion of mind or body adds to the
aggregate of enjoyable wealth, increases the sum of human
knowledge or gives to human life higher elevation or
greater fulness — he is, in the large meaning of
the words, a "producer," a "working-man," a "laborer,"
and is honestly earning honest wages. But he who without
doing aught to make mankind richer, wiser, better,
happier, lives on the toil of others — he, no
matter by what name of honor he may be I called, or how
lustily the priests of Mammon may swing their censers
before him, is in the last analysis but a beggarman or a
thief. — Protection or Free Trade, Chapter
7
econlib ...
WHEN we speak of a community increasing in wealth we
do not mean to say that there is more land, or that the
natural powers of the land are greater, or that there are
more people (for when we wish to express that idea we
speak of increase of population) or that the debts or
dues owing by some of these people to others of their
number have increased; but we mean that there is an
increase of certain tangible things, having an actual and
not merely a relative value — such as buildings,
cattle, tools, machinery, agricultural and mineral
products, manufactured goods, ships, wagons, furniture
and the like. . . . The common character of these things
is that they consist of natural substances or products
which have been adapted by human labor to human use or
gratification, their value depending on the amount of
labor which upon the average would be required to produce
things of like kind.—
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 2: Wages and Capital: The Meaning
of the Terms
WEALTH is not the sole object of labor, for labor is also
expended in ministering directly to desire; but it is the
object and result of what we call productive labor
— that is, labor which gives value to material
things. Nothing which nature supplies to man without his
labor is wealth, nor yet does the expenditure of labor
result in wealth unless there is a tangible product which
has and retains the power of ministering to desire.
—
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 2: Wages and Capital: The Meaning
of the Terms
IT will be well for a moment to consider this idea of
accumulated wealth. The truth is, that wealth can be
accumulated but to a slight degree, and that communities
really live, as the vast majority of individuals live,
from hand to mouth. Wealth will not bear much
accumulation; except in a few unimportant forms it will
not keep. The matter of the universe, which, when worked
up by labor into desirable forms, constitutes wealth, is
constantly tending back to its original state. Some forms
of wealth will last for a few hours, some for a few days,
some for a few months, some for a few years; and there
are very few forms of wealth that can be passed from one
generation to another. Take wealth in some of its most
useful and permanent forms — ships, houses,
railways, machinery. Unless labor is constantly exerted
in preserving and renewing them, they will almost
immediately become useless. Stop labor in any community,
and wealth would vanish almost as the jet of a fountain
vanishes when the flow of water is shut off. Let labor
again exert itself, and wealth will almost as immediately
reappear. Accumulated wealth seems to play just about
such a part in relation to the social organism as
accumulated nutriment does to the physical organism. Some
accumulated wealth is necessary, and to a certain extent
it may be drawn upon in exigencies; but the wealth
produced by past generations can no more account for the
consumption of the present than the dinners he ate last
year can supply a man with present strength. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book II, Chapter 4: Population and Subsistence:
Disproof of the Malthusian Theory
THE term Labor includes all human exertion in the
production of wealth, whatever its mode. In common
parlance we often speak of brain labor and hand labor as
though they were entirely distinct kinds of exertion, and
labor is often spoken of as though it involved only
muscular exertion. But in reality any form of labor, that
is to say, any form of human exertion in the production
of wealth above that which cattle may be applied to
doing, requires the human brain as truly as the human
hand, and would be impossible without the exercise of
mental faculties on the part of the laborer. Labor in
fact is only physical in external form. In its origin it
is mental or on strict analysis spiritual. —
The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 16: The Production of
Wealth, The Second Factor of Production — Labor
• abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
IT seems to us that your Holiness misses its real
significance in intimating that Christ in becoming the
son of a carpenter and Himself working as a carpenter
showed merely that "there is nothing to be ashamed of in
seeking one's bread by labor." To say that is almost like
saying that by not robbing people He showed that there is
nothing to be ashamed of in honesty. If you will consider
how true in any large view is the classification of all
men into working-men, beggar-men and thieves, you will
see that it was morally impossible that Christ during His
stay on earth should have been anything else than a
working-man, since He who came to fulfill the law must by
deed as well as word obey God's law of labor.
See how fully and how beautifully Christ's life on earth
illustrated this law. Entering our earthly life in the
weakness of infancy, as it is appointed that all should
enter it, He lovingly took what in the natural order is
lovingly rendered, the sustenance, secured by labor, that
one generation owes to its immediate successors. Arrived
at maturity, He earned His own subsistence by that common
labor in which the majority of men must and do earn it.
Then passing to a higher — to the very
highest-sphere of labor. He earned His subsistence by the
teaching of moral and spiritual truths, receiving its
material wages in the love offerings of grateful hearers,
and not refusing the costly spikenard with which Mary
anointed his feet. So, when He chose His disciples, He
did not go to land-owners or other monopolists who live
on the labor of others but to common laboring men. And
when He called them to a higher sphere of labor and sent
them out to teach moral and spiritual truths He told them
to take, without condescension on the one hand, or sense
of degradation on the other, the loving return for such
labor, saying to them that the "laborer is worthy of his
hire," thus showing, what we hold, that all labor does
not consist in what is called manual labor, but that
whoever helps to add to the material, intellectual,
moral, or spiritual fulness of life is also a laborer. -
The Condition of Labor
NOR should it be forgotten that the investigator, the
philosopher, the teacher, the artist, the poet, the
priest, though not engaged in the production of wealth,
are not only engaged in the production of utilities and
satisfactions to which the production of wealth is only a
means, but by acquiring and diffusing knowledge,
stimulating mental powers and elevating the moral sense,
may greatly increase the ability to produce wealth. For
man does not live by bread alone. He is not an engine, in
which so much fuel gives so much power. On a capstan bar
or a topsail halyard a good song tells like muscle, and a
"Marseillaise" or a "Battle Hymn of the Republic" counts
for bayonets. A hearty laugh, a noble thought, a
perception of harmony, may add to the power of dealing
even with material things.
He who by any exertion of mind or body adds to
the aggregate of enjoyable wealth, increases the sum of
human knowledge or gives to human life higher elevation
or greater fulness — he is, in the large meaning of
the words, a "producer," a "working-man," a "laborer,"
and is honestly earning honest wages. But he who without
doing aught to make mankind richer, wiser, better,
happier, lives on the toil of others — he, no
matter by what name of honor he may be I called, or how
lustily the priests of Mammon may swing their censers
before him, is in the last analysis but a beggarman or a
thief. — Protection or Free
Trade, Chapter 7
econlib
WE talk about the supply
of labor, and the demand for labor, but, evidently, these
are only relative terms. The supply of labor is
everywhere the same — two hands always come into
the world with one mouth, twenty-one boys to every twenty
girls; and the demand for labor must always exist as long
as men want things which labor alone can procure. We talk
about the "want of work," but, evidently it is not work
that is short while want continues; evidently, the supply
of labor cannot be too great, nor the demand for labor
too small, when people suffer for the lack of things that
labor produces. The real trouble must be that the supply
is somehow prevented from satisfying demand, that
somewhere there is an obstacle which prevents labor from
producing the things that laborers want.
Take the case of anyone of these vast masses of
unemployed men, to whom, though he never heard of
Malthus, it today seems that there are too many people in
the world. In his own wants, in the needs of his anxious
wife, in the demands for his half cared for, perhaps even
hungry and shivering, children, there is demand enough
for labor, Heaven knows! In his own willing hands is the
supply. Put him on a solitary island, and though cut off
from all the enormous advantages which the co-operation,
combination, and machinery of a civilized community give
to the productive powers of man, yet his two hands can
fill the mouths and keep warm the backs that depend upon
them. Yet where productive power is at its highest
development, he cannot. Why? Is it not because in the one
case he has access to the material and forces of nature,
and in the other this access is denied? —
Progress & Poverty
Book V, Chapter 1, The Problem Solved: The primary cause
of recurring paroxysms of industrial depression
... go to "Gems from
George"
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
d. Dependence of Labor upon
Land
We have now seen that division of labor and trade, the
distinguishing characteristics of civilization, not only
increase labor power, but grow out of a law of human
nature which tends, by maintaining a perpetual revolution
of the circle of trade, to cause opportunities for mutual
employment to correspond to desire for wealth. Surely
there could be no lack of employment if the circle flowed
freely in accordance with the principle here illustrated;
work would abound until want was satisfied. There must
therefore be some obstruction. That indirect taxes hamper
trade, we have already seen;78 but there is a more
fundamental obstruction. As we learned at the outset, all
the material wants of men are satisfied by Labor from
Land. Even personal services cannot be rendered without
the use of appropriate land.79 Let us then introduce into
the preceding chart, in addition to the different classes
of Labor, the corresponding classes of Land-owning
interests, indicating them by black balls:
78. See ante, pp. 9, 6 and 16.
79. Demand for food is not only demand
for all kinds and grades of Food-makers, but also for
as many different kinds of land as there are different
kinds of labor set at work. So a demand for clothing is
not only a demand for Clothing-makers, a demand for
shelter is not only one for Shelter-makers, a demand
for luxuries is not only one for Luxury-makers, a
demand for services is not only one for Personal
Servants, but those demands are also demands for
appropriate land — pasture land for wool, cotton
land for cotton, factory land, water fronts and rights
of way, store sites, residence sites, office sites,
theater sites, and so on to the end of an almost
endless catalogue.
Every class of Labor has now its own
parasite.
The arrows which run from one kind of Labor to
another, indicating an out-flow of service, are
respectively offset by arrows that indicate a
corresponding in-flow of service; but the arrows
that flow from the various classes of Labor to the
various Land-owning interests are offset by nothing to
indicate a corresponding return. What possible return
could those interests make?
- They do not produce the land which they charge
laborers for using; nature provides that.
- They do not give value to it; Labor as a whole does
that.
- They do not protect the community through the
police, the courts, or the army, nor assist it through
schools and post offices; organized society does that
to the extent to which it is done, and the Land-owning
interests contribute nothing toward it other than a
part of what they exact from Labor.80
As between Labor interests and Land-owning interests
the arrows can be made to run only in the one
direction.
80 See ante, pp. 12, 13, and 14.
Now, suppose that as productive methods
improve, the exactions of the Land-owning interests so
expand — so enlarge the drain from Labor — as
to make it increasingly difficult for any of the workers
to obtain the Land they need in order to satisfy the
demands made upon them for the kind of Wealth they
produce. Would it then be much of a problem to determine
the cause of poverty or to explain hard times?
Assuredly not. It would be plain that poverty and hard
times are due to obstacles placed by Land-owning
interests in the way of Labor's access to Land.
We thus see that in the civilized state as well as in
the primitive, the fundamental cause of poverty is the
divorce of Labor from Land. 81 But the manner in which
that divorce is accomplished in the civilized state
remains to be explained.
... read the
book
Nic Tideman: Basic
Tenets of the Incentive Taxation Philosophy
The Proper Disposition of Returns to
Different Factors of Production
The idea that the rent of land is properly
collected by governments is an example of the more
general idea that it is important to distinguish the
different "factors of production" identified by classical
political economy. The return to each factor has a proper
destination.
- The contributions of human
abilities to productive efforts are called "labor," the return to labor is called
"wages," and the appropriate
recipients of wages are those whose labor contributes to
productive activities.
- The contributions of past human products to
productive efforts are called "capital," the return to capital is called
"interest," and the appropriate
recipients of interest are those who past saving made the
creation of capital possible.
- The contributions of government-assigned
opportunities to the productive process are called
"land," the return to land is
called "rent," and the
appropriate recipient of rent is the public
treasury.
Replacing Existing Taxes
When we say that the appropriate recipient of rent
is the public treasury, it should be understood that this
is not in addition to existing sources of public revenue,
but rather instead of existing sources of public
revenue.
- Those who contribute labor to
productive processes should be allowed to keep the wages
that result from their labor.
- Those whose saving makes the creation of
capital possible should be allowed to keep the interest
that accrues from the use of capital.
- But there is no one who has a corresponding
claim to the return to land. This is the reason that fees
for the use of land and other opportunities assigned by
government ought to be the primary source of government
revenue.
While one might call such fees "taxes," we
consider that designation inappropriate, because the word
"tax" connotes an exaction from someone of something to
which he or she has a just claim, and we deny that there
are such just claims with respect to land. We expect that
the collection of fees for the full value of
opportunities assigned by governments would provide
adequate revenue for all necessary government
expenditures.... Read the
whole article
Mason Gaffney: Full Employment,
Growth And Progress On A Small Planet: Relieving Poverty
While Healing The Earth
Labor is dignified. Today it is common to nod to
this idea, at least for public display. In George’s
time it was more novel: many socialites equated labor,
especially manual labor, with shame, and union labor with
dangerous revolution. They excluded laborers from their
clubs. George’s allies led in proclaiming the first
Labor Day. George was a union member, and ran for public
office with union support.
George did not give equal dignity to saving, in
his theory and oratory. In his policy prescriptions he
did, however – an anomaly I discuss next. Read
the whole article
Mason Gaffney: George's Economics of
Abundance: Replacing dismal choices with practical
resolutions and synergies
Georgist policy harmonizes collectivism and
individalism; government and the market; common rights
and private tenure. It has been called "commons without
tragedy," because it lets common-access resources like
fisheries and open ranges be closed off, without
destroying common rights. The principle is simple and
basic. Common lands, with open access, become
overcrowded. Optimal management calls for restricting
entry and usage. Entry is limited by issuing licenses (or
leases, permits, concessions, possessory interests,
etc.). However, instead of giving these away gratis, as
is the current practice, they are leased out annually to
the highest bidder. Thus, those excluded are compensated,
while those included get only what they pay
for.
As to land already in private tenure, taxation
asserts common rights to the income of that land, without
impairing private tenure rights. Indeed, private tenure
is strengthened when the owner can truly say "This is my
land, I pay the taxes on it." Squatters, trespassers, and
vandals may be evicted with a clear conscience: their
common rights have been protected otherwise, through the
tax system. Thus, the policy reconciles common rights and
heavy taxation with the free market and strong private
tenure rights.
In addition, taking tax revenues
from land lets capital and labor go
untaxed. Private property in
labor - the basic right of a person to himself, as
posited by John Locke - and private property in capital,
the right of a person to the full value of what he saves,
are strengthened. ...
Georgist policy
removes the many big tax wedges between worker and
employer, and employer and customer, and worker and
consumable goods. Thus labor can cost the
employer less, while the worker gets more disposable income
after-tax. Many economists inveigh against
the minimum wage, claiming it overprices labor. It is a
matter of suspicion that they are then silent on the deadly
effects of the payroll tax, which affects workers at all
levels. Sales taxes, too, cut into real wages, yet many of
these same economists would raise sales taxes and introduce
VAT. President and Mrs. Clinton now speak seriously of
raising payroll taxes even more, to finance the new health
plan.
There is a high elasticity of demand
for labor. This may be observed in farming, for example,
where landowners have avoided union wage rates simply by
shifting their land from fresh fruits and vegetables to
labor-sparing uses like small grains or cotton. Conversely,
removing the payroll tax burden will move owners to shift
land back into labor-using enterprises.
Read
the whole article
a synopsis of
Robert V. Andelson and James M. Dawsey: From Wasteland to
Promised land: Liberation Theology for a Post-Marxist
World
Beneath all ideologies, there are basic factors
and relationships that underlie economic behavior. To
understand the (otherwise inexplicable) omission of
attention to land's economic importance, it is useful to
go back to these basics.
- The term "Land" refers to the whole material universe,
exclusive of people and their products. Not the
creation of human labor, yet essential to labor, it is
the raw material from which all wealth is fashioned.
It includes not only soil and minerals,
but water, air, natural vegetation and wildlife, and all
natural opportunities -- even those yet to be
discovered. It is a passive factor of production,
yielding wealth only when labor is applied to
it.
- Labor includes all
human powers, mental and physical, used directly or
indirectly to produce goods or to render service in
exchange. Labor is often thought of as work that is done
for hire, at fixed wages, mainly excluded from the
risk-taking and decision-making that is normally classed
under the heading of "entrepreneurship". Yet labor,
properly understood, includes all human exertion in
production -- including mental exertion. The payment to
labor is called Wages. And it is
important to remember that the payment, or return, to
labor does not include any returns that are the result of
monopoly.
- Capital is the
economic term that is most profoundly misunderstood and
confused. For the term to make sense in any systematic
analysis of wealth distribution, we must define capital
in its classical sense as "wealth which is used to aid in
further production, instead of being directly consumed."
Since production is not completed until the product is in
the hands of the consumer, products on their way to
market, or "wealth in the course of exchange," are also
considered capital.
Now, the objective of all
economic behavior is the satisfaction of human desires.
Human beings always seek to satisfy
their desires with the least exertion: this
self-evident proposition lies at the heart of our
concepts of economic value and exchange. The
primary thing needed for satisfaction is, of course, the
tangible things, made from natural resources, that
satisfy human desires and have exchange value. Things
that meet these four fundamental criteria are termed
"wealth". But money, bonds, and mortgages are but claims
upon and measures of this value; they are not the wealth
they symbolize.
A clear understanding of these basic definitions
points immediately to the primacy of land as an economic
factor. Human beings have inescapable material needs of
food, clothing and shelter. Regardless of how long a
chain of exchanges they may pass through in a modern
economy, these things ultimately have their source in the
land; they can come from nowhere else. Human beings need land in order to live. But if we
must pay rent to a private land "owner" for access to the
gifts of nature, it amounts to being charged a fee for
our very right to live. Read
the whole synopsis
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.
...
WAGE EARNERS
You had it good for a while. Thanks to labor unions,
you lifted yourselves into the middle class. You got paid
vacations, forty-hour workweeks, time-and-half for
overtime, health insurance, a pension, and most of all,
job security. Even companies without unions paid well and
offered lifetime employment if you wanted it. There was a
social contract, if not a legal one, between employers,
workers, and communities. This was America’s
version of the welfare state, and if you were part of it,
it wasn’t bad. But those days are dust.
In today’s global marketplace, capital moves at
the speed of light, and you’re just a cost to be
minimized. What management seeks — what capital
demands — is more profit next quarter. Did you give
the best years of your life to Acme Inc.? Too bad.
Nothing boosts the bottom line faster than downsizing,
outsourcing, or playing games with your pension fund. And
forget about help from the union; it’s toothless
now. We’re all on our own.
What can you do? Truthfully, not much. In the era of
global capital, your form of income — wages —
is at a serious competitive disadvantage. But over time,
things can get better. The way out — for your kids,
if not for you — is through a new version of
capitalism that gives you (and everyone else) property
income from a share of common wealth. That share is your
birthright. It can’t be downsized or
outsourced.
It pays some dividends in cash, and others in no-fuss
health care, free Internet access, healthy food, clean
air, and lots of places to go fishing. So claim your
birthright, and your children’s. Claim it in living
rooms, at church, in barbershops, and hair salons. This
is how movements begin. ...
read the whole chapter
Gems from George, a
themed collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
THE aggregate produce of the labor of a savage tribe
is small, but each member is capable of an independent
life. He can build his own habitation, hew out or stitch
together his own canoe, make his own clothing,
manufacture his own weapons, snares, tools and ornaments.
He has all the knowledge of nature possessed by his tribe
— knows what vegetable productions are fit for
food, and where they maybe found; knows the habits and
resorts of beasts, birds, fishes and insects; can pilot
himself by the sun or the stars, by the turning of
blossoms or the mosses on the trees; is, in short,
capable of supplying all his wants. He may be cut off
from his fellows and still live; and thus possesses an
independent power which makes him a free contracting
party in his relations to the community of which he is a
member.
Compare with this savage the laborer in the lowest
ranks of civilized society, whose life is spent in
producing but one thing, or oftener but the infinitesimal
part of one thing, out of the multiplicity of things that
constitute the wealth of society and go to supply even
the most primitive wants; who not only cannot make even
the tools required for his work, but often works with
tools that he does not own, and can never hope to own.
Compelled to even closer and more continuous labor than
the savage, and gaining by it no more than the savage
gets — the mere necessaries of life — he
loses the independence of the savage. He is not only
unable to apply his own powers to the direct satisfaction
of his own wants, but, without the concurrence of many
others, he is unable to apply them indirectly to the
satisfaction of his wants. He is a mere link in an
enormous chain of producers and consumers, helpless to
separate himself, and helpless to move, except as they
move. The worse his position in society, the more
dependent is he on society; the more utterly unable does
he become to do anything for himself. The very power of
exerting his labor for the satisfaction of his wants
passes from his own control, and may be taken away or
restored by the actions of others, or by general causes
over which he has no more influence than he has over the
motions of the solar system. The primeval curse comes to
be looked upon as a boon, and men think, and talk, and
clamor, and legislate as though monotonous manual labor
in itself were a good and not an evil, an end and not a
means. Under such circumstances, the man loses the
essential quality of manhood — the godlike power of
modifying and controlling conditions. He becomes a slave,
a machine, a commodity — a thing, in some respects,
lower than the animal.
I am no sentimental admirer of the savage state. I do
not get my ideas of the untutored children of nature from
Rousseau, or Chateaubriand, or Cooper. I am conscious of
its material and mental poverty, and its low and narrow
range. I believe that civilization is not only the
natural destiny of man, but the enfranchisement,
elevation, and refinement of all his powers, and think
that it is only in such moods as may lead him to envy the
cud-chewing cattle, that a man who is free to the
advantages of civilization could look with regret upon
the savage state. But, nevertheless, I think no one who
will open his eyes to the facts, can resist the
conclusion that there are in the heart of our
civilization large classes with whom the veriest savage
could not afford to exchange. It is my deliberate opinion
that if, standing on the threshold of being, one were
given the choice of entering life as a Terra del Fuegan,
a black fellow of Australia, an Esquimaux in the Arctic
Circle, or among the lowest classes in such a highly
civilized country as Great Britain, he would make
infinitely the better choice in selecting the lot of the
savage. For those classes who in the midst of wealth are
condemned to want, suffer all the privations of the
savage, without his sense of personal freedom; they are
condemned to more than his narrowness and littleness,
without opportunity for the growth of his rude virtues;
if their horizon is wider, it is but to reveal blessings
that they cannot enjoy. — Progress & Poverty
— Book V, Chapter 2: The Problem Solved: The
Persistence of Poverty Amid Advancing Wealth
THE term Labor includes all human exertion in the
production of wealth, whatever its mode. In common
parlance we often speak of brain labor and hand labor as
though they were entirely distinct kinds of exertion, and
labor is often spoken of as though it involved only
muscular exertion. But in reality any form of labor, that
is to say, any form of human exertion in the production
of wealth above that which cattle may be applied to
doing, requires the human brain as truly as the human
hand, and would be impossible without the exercise of
mental faculties on the part of the laborer. Labor in
fact is only physical in external form. In its origin it
is mental or on strict analysis spiritual. — The
Science of Political Economy unabridged: Book III,
Chapter 16: The Production of Wealth, The Second Factor
of Production — Labor • abridged: Part III,
Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of Production
IT seems to us that your Holiness misses its real
significance in intimating that Christ in becoming the
son of a carpenter and Himself working as a carpenter
showed merely that "there is nothing to be ashamed of in
seeking one's bread by labor." To say that is almost like
saying that by not robbing people He showed that there is
nothing to be ashamed of in honesty. If you will consider
how true in any large view is the classification of all
men into working-men, beggar-men and thieves, you will
see that it was morally impossible that Christ during His
stay on earth should have been anything else than a
working-man, since He who came to fulfill the law must by
deed as well as word obey God's law of labor.
See how fully and how beautifully Christ's life on earth
illustrated this law.. Entering our earthly life in the
weakness of infancy, as it is appointed that all should
enter it, He lovingly took what in the natural order is
lovingly rendered, the sustenance, secured by labor, that
one generation owes to its immediate successors. Arrived
at maturity, He earned His own subsistence by that common
labor in which the majority of men must and do earn it.
Then passing to a higher — to the very
highest-sphere of labor. He earned His subsistence by the
teaching of moral and spiritual truths, receiving its
material wages in the love offerings of grateful hearers,
and not refusing the costly spikenard with which Mary
anointed his feet. So, when He chose His disciples, He
did not go to land-owners or other monopolists who live
on the labor of others but to common laboring men. And
when He called them to a higher sphere of labor and sent
them out to teach moral and spiritual truths He told them
to take, without condescension on the one hand, or sense
of degradation on the other, the loving return for such
labor, saying to them that the "laborer is worthy of his
hire," thus showing, what we hold, that all labor does
not consist in what is called manual labor, but that
whoever helps to add to the material, intellectual,
moral, or spiritual fulness of life is also a laborer. -
The Condition of Labor
NOR should it be forgotten that the investigator, the
philosopher, the teacher, the artist, the poet, the
priest, though not engaged in the production of wealth,
are not only engaged in the production of utilities and
satisfactions to which the production of wealth is only a
means, but by acquiring and diffusing knowledge,
stimulating mental powers and elevating the moral sense,
may greatly increase the ability to produce wealth. For
man does not live by bread alone. He is not an engine, in
which so much fuel gives so much power. On a capstan bar
or a topsail halyard a good song tells like muscle, and a
"Marseillaise" or a "Battle Hymn of the Republic" counts
for bayonets. A hearty laugh, a noble thought, a
perception of harmony, may add to the power of dealing
even with material things.
He who by any exertion of mind or body adds to the
aggregate of enjoyable wealth, increases the sum of human
knowledge or gives to human life higher elevation or
greater fulness — he is, in the large meaning of
the words, a "producer," a "working-man," a "laborer,"
and is honestly earning honest wages. But he who without
doing aught to make mankind richer, wiser, better,
happier, lives on the toil of others — he, no
matter by what name of honor he may be I called, or how
lustily the priests of Mammon may swing their censers
before him, is in the last analysis but a beggarman or a
thief. — Protection or Free Trade, Chapter 7
econlib
... go to "Gems from
George"
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