Protectionists
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)
The great problem, of which these recurring seasons of
industrial depression are but peculiar manifestations, is
now, I think, fully solved, and the social phenomena
which all over the civilized world appall the
philanthropist and perplex the statesman, which hang with
clouds the future of the most advanced races, and suggest
doubts of the reality and ultimate goal of what we have
fondly called progress, are now explained.
The reason why, in spite of the increase of productive
power, wages constantly tend to a minimum which will give
but a bare living, is that, with increase in productive
power, rent tends to even greater increase, thus
producing a constant tendency to the forcing down of
wages.
Land being necessary to labor, and being reduced to
private ownership, every increase in the productive power
of labor but increases rent — the price that labor
must pay for the opportunity to utilize its powers; and
thus all the advantages gained by the march of progress
go to the owners of land, and wages do not increase.*
*Whatever be the fact as to wages, the
reader will, of course, recognize that higher money
wages which merely balance higher living costs, are not
to be reckoned as real wage increases. H.G.B
The simple theory which I have outlined (if indeed it
can be called a theory which is but the recognition of
the most obvious relations) explains this conjunction of
poverty with wealth, of low wages with high productive
power, of degradation amid enlightenment, of virtual
slavery in political liberty.
- It harmonizes, as results flowing from a general
and inexorable law, facts otherwise most perplexing,
and exhibits the sequence and relation between
phenomena that without reference to it are diverse and
contradictory.
- It explains why improvements which increase the
productive power of labor and capital increase the
reward of neither.
- It explains what is commonly called the conflict
between labor and capital, while proving the real
harmony of interest between them.
- It cuts the last inch of ground from under
the fallacies of protection, while showing why free
trade fails to benefit permanently the working
classes.
- It explains why want increases with abundance, and
wealth tends to greater and greater aggregations.
- It explains the vice and misery which show
themselves amid dense population, without attributing
to the laws of the All-Wise and All-Beneficent defects
which belong only to the shortsighted and selfish
enactments of men.
The truth is self-evident. ... read the whole
chapter
Henry George: The Wages of
Labor
What most strikingly shows how opposed
to Christianity is the existing system of raising public
revenue 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 for the nation
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. ...
The vice of Socialism in all its
degrees is its want of radicalism, of going to the
root.
Its advocates generally teach the
preposterous and degrading doctrine that slavery was the
first condition of labor. It assumes that the tendency of
wages to a minimum is the natural law, and seeks to abolish
wages; it assumes that the natural result of competition is
to grind down workers, and seeks to abolish competition by
restrictions, prohibitions, and extensions of governing
power. Thus, mistaking effects for causes, and childishly
blaming the state for hitting it, it wastes strength in
striving for remedies that when not worse are
futile.
Associated though it is in many places
with democratic aspiration, yet its essence is the same
delusion to which the Children of Israel yielded when,
against the protest of their prophet, they insisted on a
king; the delusion that has everywhere corrupted
democracies and enthroned, tyrants – that power over
the people can be used for the benefit of the people; that
there may be devised machinery that through human agencies
will secure for the management of individual affairs more
wisdom and mare virtue than the people themselves possess.
This superficiality and this tendency may be seen in all
the phases of Socialism.
Though not usually classed as
Socialists; both the Trade Unionists and the Protectionists
have the same essential character. Take, for instance,
Protectionism. The Protectionists seek by governmental
prohibitions or taxes on imports to regulate the industry
and control the exchanges of their country, so as they
imagine, to diversify home industries and prevent the
competition of people of other countries.
What support Protectionism 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 unanalysing 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 civilisation and reduce mankind
to savagery.... read the whole article
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
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? ...
I have said enough to show your Holiness the injustice
into which you fall in classing us, who in seeking
virtually to abolish private property in land seek more
fully to secure the true rights of property, with those
whom you speak of as socialists, who wish to make all
property common. But you also do injustice to the
socialists.
There are many, it is true, who feeling bitterly the
monstrous wrongs of the present distribution of wealth
are animated only by a blind hatred of the rich and a
fierce desire to destroy existing social adjustments.
This class is indeed only less dangerous than those who
proclaim that no social improvement is needed or is
possible. But it is not fair to confound with them those
who, however mistakenly, propose definite schemes of
remedy.
The socialists, as I understand them, and as the term
has come to apply to anything like a definite theory and
not to be vaguely and improperly used to include all who
desire social improvement, do not, as you imply, seek the
abolition of all private property. Those who do this are
properly called communists. What the socialists seek is
the state assumption of capital (in which they vaguely
and erroneously include land), or more properly speaking,
of large capitals, and state management and direction of
at least the larger operations of industry. In this way
they hope to abolish interest, which they regard as a
wrong and an evil; to do away with the gains of
exchangers, speculators, contractors and middlemen, which
they regard as waste; to do away with the wage system and
secure general cooperation; and to prevent competition,
which they deem the fundamental cause of the
impoverishment of labor. The more moderate of them,
without going so far, go in the same direction, and seek
some remedy or palliation of the worst forms of poverty
by government regulation. The essential character of
socialism is that it looks to the extension of the
functions of the state for the remedy of social evils;
that it would substitute regulation and direction for
competition; and intelligent control by organized society
for the free play of individual desire and effort.
Though not usually classed as socialists, both
the trades-unionists and the protectionists have the same
essential character. The trades-unionists seek
the increase of wages, the reduction of working-hours and
the general improvement in the condition of wage-workers,
by organizing them into guilds or associations which
shall fix the rates at which they will sell their labor;
shall deal as one body with employers in case of dispute;
shall use on occasion their necessary weapon, the strike;
and shall accumulate funds for such purposes and for the
purpose of assisting members when on a strike, or
(sometimes) when out of employment. The
protectionists seek by governmental prohibitions or taxes
on imports to regulate the industry and control the
exchanges of each country, so as, they imagine, to
diversify home industries and prevent the competition of
people of other countries. ...
With the socialists we have some points of agreement,
for we recognize fully the social nature of man and
believe that all monopolies should be held and governed
by the state. In these, and in directions where the
general health, knowledge, comfort and convenience might
be improved, we, too, would extend the functions of the
state.
But it seems to us the vice of socialism in all its
degrees is its want of radicalism, of going to the root.
It takes its theories from those who have sought to
justify the impoverishment of the masses, and its
advocates generally teach the preposterous and degrading
doctrine that slavery was the first condition of labor.
It assumes that the tendency of wages to a minimum is the
natural law, and seeks to abolish wages; it assumes that
the natural result of competition is to grind down
workers, and seeks to abolish competition by
restrictions, prohibitions and extensions of governing
power. Thus mistaking effects for causes, and childishly
blaming the stone for hitting it, it wastes strength in
striving for remedies that when not worse are futile.
Associated though it is in many places with democratic
aspiration, yet its essence is the same delusion to which
the children of Israel yielded when against the protest
of their prophet they insisted on a king; the delusion
that has everywhere corrupted democracies and enthroned
tyrants — that power over the people can be used
for the benefit of the people; that there may be devised
machinery that through human agencies will secure for the
management of individual affairs more wisdom and more
virtue than the people themselves possess. This
superficiality and this tendency may be seen in all the
phases of socialism.
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.
Take trades-unionism. While within narrow lines
trades-unionism promotes the idea of the mutuality of
interests, and often helps to raise courage and further
political education, and while it has enabled limited
bodies of working-men to improve somewhat their
condition, and gain, as it were, breathing-space, yet it
takes no note of the general causes that determine the
conditions of labor, and strives for the elevation of
only a small part of the great body by means that cannot
help the rest. Aiming at the restriction of competition
— the limitation of the right to labor, its methods
are like those of an army, which even in a righteous
cause are subversive of liberty and liable to abuse,
while its weapon, the strike, is destructive in its
nature, both to combatants and non-combatants, being a
form of passive war. To apply the principle of
trades-unions to all industry, as some dream of doing,
would be to enthrall men in a caste system.
Or take even such moderate measures as the limitation
of working-hours and of the labor of women and children.
They are superficial in looking no further than to the
eagerness of men and women and little children to work
unduly, and in proposing forcibly to restrain overwork
while utterly ignoring its cause — the sting of
poverty that forces human beings to it. And the methods
by which these restraints must be enforced, multiply
officials, interfere with personal liberty, tend to
corruption, and are liable to abuse.
As for thoroughgoing socialism, which is the more to
be honored as having the courage of its convictions, it
would carry these vices to full expression. Jumping to
conclusions without effort to discover causes, it fails
to see that oppression does not come from the nature of
capital, but from the wrong that robs labor of capital by
divorcing it from land, and that creates a fictitious
capital that is really capitalized monopoly. It fails to
see that it would be impossible for capital to oppress
labor were labor free to the natural material of
production; that the wage system in itself springs from
mutual convenience, being a form of cooperation in which
one of the parties prefers a certain to a contingent
result; and that what it calls the “iron law of
wages” is not the natural law of wages, but only
the law of wages in that unnatural condition in which men
are made helpless by being deprived of the materials for
life and work. It fails to see that what it mistakes for
the evils of competition are really the evils of
restricted competition — are due to a one-sided
competition to which men are forced when deprived of
land. While its methods, the organization of men into
industrial armies, the direction and control of all
production and exchange by governmental or
semi-governmental bureaus, would, if carried to full
expression, mean Egyptian despotism.
We differ from the socialists in our diagnosis of the
evil and we differ from them as to remedies. We have no
fear of capital, regarding it as the natural handmaiden
of labor; we look on interest in itself as natural and
just; we would set no limit to accumulation, nor impose
on the rich any burden that is not equally placed on the
poor; we see no evil in competition, but deem
unrestricted competition to be as necessary to the health
of the industrial and social organism as the free
circulation of the blood is to the health of the bodily
organism — to be the agency whereby the fullest
cooperation is to be secured. We would simply take for
the community what belongs to the community, the value
that attaches to land by the growth of the community;
leave sacredly to the individual all that belongs to the
individual; and, treating necessary monopolies as
functions of the state, abolish all restrictions and
prohibitions save those required for public health,
safety, morals and convenience.
But the fundamental difference — the difference
I ask your Holiness specially to note, is in this:
socialism in all its phases looks on the evils of our
civilization as springing from the inadequacy or
inharmony of natural relations, which must be
artificially organized or improved. In its idea there
devolves on the state the necessity of intelligently
organizing the industrial relations of men; the
construction, as it were, of a great machine whose
complicated parts shall properly work together under the
direction of human intelligence. This is the reason why
socialism tends toward atheism. Failing to see the order
and symmetry of natural law, it fails to recognize
God.
On the other hand, we who call ourselves single-tax
men (a name which expresses merely our practical
propositions) see in the social and industrial relations
of men not a machine which requires construction, but an
organism which needs only to be suffered to grow. We see
in the natural social and industrial laws such harmony as
we see in the adjustments of the human body, and that as
far transcends the power of man’s intelligence to
order and direct as it is beyond man’s intelligence
to order and direct the vital movements of his frame. We
see in these social and industrial laws so close a
relation to the moral law as must spring from the same
Authorship, and that proves the moral law to be the sure
guide of man where his intelligence would wander and go
astray. Thus, to us, all that is needed to remedy the
evils of our time is to do justice and give freedom. This
is the reason why our beliefs tend toward, nay are indeed
the only beliefs consistent with a firm and reverent
faith in God, and with the recognition of his law as the
supreme law which men must follow if they would secure
prosperity and avoid destruction. This is the reason why
to us political economy only serves to show the depth of
wisdom in the simple truths which common people heard
gladly from the lips of Him of whom it was said with
wonder, “Is not this the Carpenter of
Nazareth?”
And it is because that in what we propose — the
securing to all men of equal natural opportunities for
the exercise of their powers and the removal of all legal
restriction on the legitimate exercise of those powers
— we see the conformation of human law to the moral
law, that we hold with confidence that this is not merely
the sufficient remedy for all the evils you so strikingly
portray, but that it is the only possible remedy. ...
read the whole
letter
Henry George: In
Liverpool: The Financial Reform Meeting at the Liverpool
Rotunda (1889)
It is a deep pleasure for me to be here tonight, the
guest of the Liverpool Financial Reform Association, and
to speak at my last meeting in England with my honored
countrymen, [including] William Lloyd Garrison of
Massachusetts. (Cheers)
You are right, Mr. Garrison. The true republic, the
American Republic that we hope for and pray is not yet
here. (Hear, hear) A poor thing is a republic where the
tramp jostles the millionaire, where liberty is mocked by
a paternal system of interference with human rights,
where, under the pretext of protecting labor, labor is
robbed! (Cheers) And here, in the motherland, in the
United States, in Australia and New Zealand, we of the
English tongue find the same difficulties confronting us.
Liberty is not yet here; but, thank God, she is coming.
(Cheers) Not merely the American Republic, not merely the
Republic of the Southern Cross, not merely the Republic
of Great Britain and Ireland is it that we see in the
future, but that great republic that some day is to
confederate the English speaking people everywhere (loud
cheers) that is to bring a grander "Roman peace" to the
world. (A voice: More than that.) Aye, more than that
— that is to bring civilization as much higher, as
much better than what we call a Christian civilization,
as this is higher and better than barbarism. And already,
in meetings such as this, it seems to me that I feel an
earnest [presentiment] of the coming time when we of one
blood and one speech are also to be one. (Cheers) For the
same principles, for the same great cause that we stand
in the United States we stand here. And in a little over
a week from now I will be standing on an American
platform speaking to men whose hearts are beating in the
same cause in which we are engaged here. (Cheers)
Our little local politics may differ; our greater
politics are one and the same. We have the same evils to
redress, the same truth to propagate, the same end to
seek.
And that end, what is it but liberty? (Hear, hear) He
who listens to the voice of Freedom, she will lead and
lead him on. Before I was born, before our friend there
was born, there was in a southern city of the United
States a young printer bearing the name William Lloyd
Garrison. (Cheers) He saw around him the iniquity of
negro slavery. (Hear, hear) The voice of the oppressed
cried to him and would not let him rest, and he took up
the cross. He became the great apostle of human liberty,
and today in American cities that once hooted and stoned
him there are now statues raised to William Lloyd
Garrison.
He began as a protectionist. As he moved on he saw
that liberty meant something more than simply the
abolition of chattel slavery. He saw that liberty also
meant, not merely the right to freely labor for oneself,
but the right to freely exchange one's production, and,
from a protectionist, William Lloyd Garrison became a
free trader. (Cheers)
And now, when the first is gone, the second comes
forward, to take one further step to realize that for
perfect freedom there must also be freedom in the use of
natural opportunities. (Hear, hear, and cheers)
We have come . . . to the same point by converging
lines. Why is freedom of trade good? Simply that trade
— exchange — is but a mode of production.
Therefore, to secure full free trade we must also secure
freedom to the natural opportunities of production.
(Hear, hear) Our production—what is it? We produce
from what? From land. All human production consists but
in working up the raw materials that we find in nature
— consists simply in changing in place, or in form,
that matter which we call land. To free production there
must be no monopoly of the natural element. Even in our
methods we agree primarily on this essential point
— that everyone ought to be free to exert his
labor, to retain or to exchange its fruits, unhampered by
restrictions, unvexed by the tax gatherer. (Hear, hear) .
. .
Chattel slavery, thank God, is abolished at last.
Nowhere, where the American flag flies, can one man be
bought, or sold, or held by another. (Cheers) But a great
struggle still lies before us now. Chattel slavery is
gone; industrial slavery remains. The effort, the aim of
the abolitionists of this time is to abolish industrial
slavery. (Cheers)
The free trade movement in England was a necessary
step in this direction. The men who took part in it did
more than they knew. Striking at restrictions in the form
of protection, aiming at emancipating trade by reducing
tariffs to a minimum for revenue only, they aroused a
spirit that yet goes further. There sits, in the person
of my friend, Mr. Briggs [Thomas Briggs], one of the men
of that time, one of the men who, not stopping, has
always aimed a a larger freedom, one of the men who today
hails what we in the United States call the single tax
movement, as the natural outcome and successor of the
movement which Richard Cobden led.39 (A voice: "Three
cheers for Mr. Briggs," and cheers)
And here, in your Financial Reform Association, you
have the society that has best preserved the best spirit
of that time, that has never cried "Hold!" [and] that has
always striven to move forward to a fuller and a brighter
day. (Hear, hear)
In the United States, carried away by the heat of the
great struggle, we allowed protection to build itself up.
We have to now make the fight that you have partially won
over here; but, in making that fight, we make the fight
for full and absolute free trade. I don't believe that
protection can ever be abolished in the United States
until a majority of the people have been brought to see
the absurdity and the wickedness of all tariffs, whether
protective or for revenue only (hear, hear); have been
brought to realize the deep truth of the fatherhood of
God and the brotherhood of man; have been led to see what
Mr. Garrison has so eloquently said, that the interests
of mankind are harmonious, not antagonistic, that one
nation cannot profit at the expense of another, but that
every people is benefited by the advance of other peoples
— (cheers) — until we shall aim at a free
trade that will enable the citizen of England to enter
the ports of the United States as freely as today, the
citizen of Massachusetts crosses into New York. (Cheers)
... read the whole
speech
Henry George: Justice
the Object -- Taxation the Means (1890)
Go over to Europe; travel around for a while among
the effete monarchies of the old world, and what you see
will make you appreciate democracy. Then come home. At
length you take a pilot. There is the low-lying land upon
the horizon — the land of the free and the home of
the brave — and if you are entering the port of New
York, as most Americans do, finally you will see that
great statue, presented by a citizen of the French
republic — the statue of Liberty holding aloft a
light that talks to the world.
Just as you get to see that statue
clearly, Liberty enlightening the world, you will be called
down by a Customhouse officer to form in line, men and
women, and to call on God Almighty, maker of heaven and
earth, to bear witness that you have nothing dutiable in
your trunks or in your carpet sacks, or rolled up in your
shawl straps; and you take that oath. The United States of
America compels you to. But the United States of America
don't leave you there. The very next thing, another
official steps up to demand your keys and to open your box
or package and to look through it for things dutiable,
unless, as may be, his eyes are stopped by a greenback.
Well, now, everyone who has made that visit does know that
most passengers have things dutiable; and I notice that the
protectionists have them fully as often as the free
traders. I have never yet seen a consistent protectionist.
There may he protectionists who would not smuggle when they
get a chance, but I think they must be very, very
few.
Read the entire article
Henry George: The Great Debate: Single
Tax vs Social Democracy (1889)
Here is an example of Government directing
production: under the plea of directing production, of
controlling exchange, you had a system called a
protective tariff – we in the States have it still.
The wisdom of the people freely expressed by means of
manhood suffrage, endeavouring to so direct industry as
to benefit the whole people, and what has been the
result? A system of utter robbery and spoliation; a
system that has given to men such as Andrew Carnegie
incomes of five millions of dollars per year, and has
driven our ships off the high seas; a system that has
been used by every corrupt influence to add to the wealth
of men who are willing to spend their money for corrupt
purposes. (Hear, hear.) Think of what would be the result
if you were to apply that system to all industry.
(Applause.) You speak about organising an industrial
army; the organising of an army always means tyranny; it
means that a man must be put in the ranks as a machine,
and must obey arbitrary authority. Do you think that
there is less tyranny because men claim to act in the
name and by the authority of the people than without it?
Not at all. Do you think that there is any virtue in any
party, or any men, or any system of Government attempting
to do things for the benefit of the whole?
(“No.”) Why, we know that in the United
States there can be a tyranny of majorities just as bad
as the tyranny of despotism. ... Read
the entire article
Henry George:
Concentrations of Wealth Harm America
(excerpt from Social
Problems)
(1883)
Sources of Great Wealth
An acquaintance of mine died in San
Francisco recently, leaving $4,000,000, which will go to
heirs to be looked up in England. I have known many men
more industrious, more skilful, more temperate than he --
men who did not or who will not leave a cent. This man did
not get his wealth by his industry, skill or temperance. He
no more produced it than did those lucky relations in
England who may now do nothing for the rest of their lives.
He became rich by getting hold of a piece of land in the
early days, which, as San Francisco grew, became very
valuable. His wealth represented not what he had earned,
but what the monopoly of this bit of the earth's surface
enabled him to appropriate of the earnings of
others.
A man died in Pittsburgh, the other
day, leaving $3,000,000. He may or may not have been
particularly industrious, skilful and economical, but it
was not by virtue of these qualities that he got so rich.
It was because he went to Washington and helped lobby
through a bill which, by way of "protecting American
workmen against the pauper labor of Europe," gave him the
advantage of a sixty-per-cent, tariff. To the day of his
death he was a stanch protectionist, and said free trade
would ruin our "infant industries." Evidently the
$3,000,000 which he was enabled to lay by from his own
little cherub of an "infant industry" did not represent
what he had added to production. It was the advantage given
him by the tariff that enabled him to scoop it up from
other people's earnings.
"Beneath all political problems lies the social
problem of the distribution of wealth."
This element of monopoly, of
appropriation and spoliation will, when we come to analyze
them, be found largely to account for all great
fortunes....
Take the great Vanderbilt fortune. The
first Vanderbilt was a boatman who earned money by hard
work and saved it. But it was not working and saving that
enabled him to leave such an enormous fortune. It was
spoliation and monopoly. As soon as he got money enough he
used it as a club to extort from others their earnings. He
ran off opposition lines and monopolized routes of
steamboat travel. Then he went into railroads, pursuing the
same tactics. The Vanderbilt fortune no more comes from
working and saving than did the fortune that Captain Kidd
buried.
Or take the great Gould fortune. Mr.
Gould might have got his first little start by superior
industry and superior self-denial. But it is not that which
has made him the master of a hundred millions. It was by
wrecking railroads, buying judges, corrupting legislatures,
getting up rings and pools and combinations to raise or
depress stock values and transportation rates.
So, like wise, of the great fortunes
which the Pacific railroads have created. They have been
made by lobbying through profligate donations of lands,
bonds and subsidies, by the operations of Credit Mobilier
and Contract and Finance Companies, by monopolizing and
gouging. And so of fortunes made by such combinations as
the Standard Oil Company, the Bessemer Steel Ring, the
Whisky Tax Ring, the Lucifer Match Ring, and the various
rings for the "protection of the American workman from the
pauper labor of Europe."
Or take the fortunes made out of
successful patents. Like that element in so many fortunes
that comes from the increased value of land, these result
from monopoly, pure and simple. And though I am not now
discussing the expediency of patent laws, it may be
observed, in passing, that in the vast majority of cases
the men who make fortunes out of patents are not the men
who make the inventions.
Through all great fortunes, and, in
fact, through nearly all acquisitions that in these days
can fairly be termed fortunes, these elements of monopoly,
of spoliation, of gambling run. The head of one of the
largest manufacturing firms in the United States said to me
recently, "It is not on our ordinary business that we make
our money; it is where we can get a monopoly." And this, I
think, is generally true.
The Evils of
Monopolists
Consider the important part in building up
fortunes which the increase of land values has had, and
is having, in the United States. This is, of course,
monopoly, pure and simple. When land increases in value
it does not mean that its owner has added to the general
wealth. The owner may never have seen the land or done
aught to improve it. He may, and often does, live in a
distant city or in another country. Increase of land
values simply means that the owners, by virtue of their
appropriation of something that existed before man was,
have the power of taking a larger share of the wealth
produced by other people's labor. Consider how much the
monopolies created and the advantages given to the
unscrupulous by the tariff and by our system of internal
taxation -- how much the railroad (a business in its
nature a monopoly), telegraph, gas, water and other
similar monopolies, have done to concentrate wealth; how
special rates, pools, combinations, corners,
stock-watering and stock-gambling, the destructive use of
wealth in driving off or buying off opposition which the
public must finally pay for, and many other things which
these will suggest, have operated to build up large
fortunes, and it will at least appear that the unequal
distribution of wealth is due in great measure to sheer
spoliation; that the reason why those who work hard get
so little, while so many who work little get so much, is,
in very large measure, that the earnings of the one class
are, in one way or another, filched away from them to
swell the incomes of the other.
That individuals are constantly making
their way from the ranks of those who get less than their
earnings to the ranks of those who get more than their
earnings, no more proves this state of things right than
the fact that merchant sailors were constantly becoming
pirates and participating in the profits of piracy, would
prove that piracy was right and that no effort should be
made to suppress it.
I am not denouncing the rich, nor
seeking, by speaking of these things, to excite envy and
hatred; but if we would get a clear understanding of social
problems, we must recognize the fact that it is due to
monopolies which we permit and create, to advantages which
we give one man over another, to methods of extortion
sanctioned by law and by public opinion, that some men are
enabled to get so enormously rich while others remain so
miserably poor. If we look around us and note the elements
of monopoly, extortion and spoliation which go to the
building up of all, or nearly all, fortunes, we see on the
one hand now disingenuous are those who preach to us that
there is nothing wrong in social relations and that the
inequalities in the distribution of wealth spring from the
inequalities of human nature; and on the other hand, we see
how wild are those who talk as though capital were a public
enemy, and propose plans for arbitrarily restricting the
acquisition of wealth. Capital is a good; the
capitalist is a helper, if he is not also a monopolist. We
can safely let any one get as rich as he can if he will not
despoil others in doing so.
There are deep wrongs in the present
constitution of society, but they are not wrongs inherent
in the constitution of man nor in those social laws which
are as truly the laws of the Creator as are the laws of the
physical universe. They are wrongs resulting from bad
adjustments which it is within our power to amend. The
ideal social state is not that in which each gets an equal
amount of wealth, but in which each gets in proportion to
his contribution to the general stock. And in such a social
state there would not be less incentive to exertion than
now; there would be far more incentive. Men will be more
industrious and more moral, better workmen and better
citizens, if each takes his earnings and carries them home
to his family, than where they put their earnings in a
"pot" and gamble for them until some have far more than
they could have earned, and others have little or
nothing. ...
Read the entire
article
Henry George:
Progress & Poverty:
The Current Doctrine of Wages — Its
Insufficiency
What gives to the fallacies of protection such a
tenacious hold, in spite of their evident inconsistencies
and absurdities, is the idea that the sum to be
distributed in wages is in each community a fixed one,
which the competition of "foreign labor" must still
further subdivide. The same idea underlies most of
the theories which aim at the abolition of interest and
the restriction of competition, as the means whereby the
share of the laborer in the general wealth can be
increased; and it crops out in every direction among
those who are not thoughtful enough to have any theories,
as may be seen in the columns of newspapers and the
debates of legislative bodies.
And yet, widely accepted and deeply rooted as it is,
it seems to me that this theory does not tally with
obvious facts. For, if wages depend upon the ratio
between the amount of labor seeking employment and the
amount of capital devoted to its employment, the relative
scarcity or abundance of one factor must mean the
relative abundance or scarcity of the other. Thus,
capital must be relatively abundant where wages are high,
and relatively scarce where wages are low. Now, as the
capital used in paying wages must largely consist of the
capital constantly seeking investment, the current rate
of interest must be the measure of its relative abundance
or scarcity. So, if it be true that wages depend upon the
ratio between the amount of labor seeking employment and
the capital devoted to its employment, then high wages,
the mark of the relative scarcity of labor, must be
accompanied by low interest, the mark of the relative
abundance of capital, and reversely, low wages must be
accompanied by high interest.
This is not the fact, but the contrary. Eliminating
from interest the element of insurance, and regarding
only interest proper, or the return for the use of
capital, is it not a general truth that interest is high
where and when wages are high, and low where and when
wages are low? Both wages and interest have been higher
in the United States than in England, in the Pacific than
in the Atlantic States. ...
read the entire chapter
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
WE should keep our own market for
our own producers, seems by many to be regarded as
the same kind of a proposition as, We
should keep our own pasture for our own cows;
whereas, in truth, it is such a proposition as,
We should keep our own appetites for
our own cookery, or, We should
keep our own transportation for our own
legs.— Protection or Free Trade,
Chapter 11: The Home Market and Home Trade -
econlib
THE protection of the masses has in all times been the
pretense of tyranny — the plea of monarchy, of
aristocracy, of special privilege of every kind. The
slave owners justified slavery as protecting the slaves.
British misrule in Ireland is upheld on the ground that
it is for the protection of the Irish. But, whether under
a monarchy or under a republic, is there an instance in
the history of the world in which the "protection" of the
laboring masses has not meant their oppression? The
protection that those who have got the law-making power
into their hands have given labor, has at best always
been the protection that man gives to cattle — he
protects them that he may use and eat them. —
Protection or Free Trade — Chapter 2,
Clearing Ground
econlib
IT is never intimated that the land-owner or the
capitalist needs protection. They, it is always assumed,
can take care of themselves. It is only the poor
workingman who must be protected. What is labor that it
should so need protection? Is not labor the creator of
capital, the producer of all wealth? Is it not the men
who labor that feed and clothe all others? Is it not
true, as has been said, that the three great orders of
society are "workingmen, beggarmen, and thieves?" How,
then, does it come that workingmen alone need protection?
— Protection or Free Trade — Chapter
2, Clearing Ground
econlib -|- abridged
WHAT should we think of human laws framed for the
government of a country which should compel each family
to keep constantly on their guard against every other
family, to expend a large part of their time and labor in
preventing exchanges with their neighbors, and to seek
their own prosperity by opposing the natural efforts of
other families to become prosperous? Yet the protective
theory implies that laws such as these have been imposed
by the Creator upon the families of men who tenant this
earth. It implies that by virtue of social laws, as
immutable as the physical laws, each nation must stand
jealously on guard against every other nation and erect
artificial obstacles to national intercourse.—
Protection or Free Trade, Chapter 4: Protection
as a Universal Need
econlib
TO attempt to make a nation prosperous by preventing it
from buying from other nations is as absurd as it would
be to attempt to make a man prosperous by preventing him
from buying from other men. How this operates in the case
of the individual we can see from that practice which,
since its application in the Irish land agitation, has
come to be called "boycotting." Captain Boycott, upon
whom has been thrust the unenviable fame of having his
name turned into a verb, was in fact "protected." He had
a protective tariff of the most efficient kind built
around him by a neighborhood decree more effective than
act of Parliament. No one would sell him labor, no one
would sell him milk or bread or meat or any service or
commodity whatever. But instead of growing prosperous,
this much-protected man had to fly from a place where his
own market was thus reserved for his own productions.
What protectionists ask us to do to ourselves in
reserving our home market for home producers, is in kind
what the Land Leaguers did to Captain Boycott. They ask
us to boycott ourselves. — Protection or Free
Trade, Chapter 11: The Home Market and Home Trade -
econlib
WHEN not caused by artificial obstacles, any tendency in
trade to take a certain course is proof that it ought to
take that course, and restrictions are harmful because
they restrict, and in proportion as they restrict. To
assert that the way for men to become healthy and strong
is for them to force into their stomachs what nature
tries to reject, to regulate the play of their lungs by
bandages, or to control the circulation of their blood by
ligatures, would be not a whit more absurd than to assert
that the way for nations to become rich is for them to
restrict the natural tendency to trade. —
Protection or Free Trade, Chapter 6: Trade -
econlib
... go to "Gems from
George"
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.
The second principle to which I wish to refer is Henry
George's advocacy of freedom of trade among the nations
— not free trade introduced overnight, but freedom
of trade as an end toward which the nations should move.
When he wrote his great work on "Protection or Free
Trade," he demolished the protectionist argument and in
chapter after chapter he showed the absurdities to which
the protectionist principle led if carried to its logical
conclusion. But even he, penetrating as his vision was,
could not foresee that mankind was heading for a world
order of economic nationalism and isolation, based upon
the principle of protection carried to its utmost
extreme. And yet that it is precisely the doctrine which
is now currently accepted. If it becomes general, it can
serve only to sow the seeds of destruction of that
measure of civilization which we now have and force a
lowering of the standard of living throughout the
world.
There are two ways by which the people of one nation
can acquire the property or goods of the people of
another nation. These are by war and by trade. There are
no other methods. The present tendency among civilized
people to outlaw trade must drive the states which
prescribe such outlawry to acquire the property and goods
of other peoples by war. Early in man's struggle for
existence the resort to war was the common method
adopted. With the advancement of civilization men
resorted to trade as a practical substitute for war. The
masses of men wish to trade with one another. The action
of the states alone prevents them from so doing. In
prohibiting trade, the state gives an importance to
territorial boundaries which would not exist if freedom
of trade existed. In accentuating the importance of mere
boundary disputes, rather than assuring the right of
peoples to trade with one another, the nations put the
emphasis upon the precise issue which is, itself, one of
the most prolific causes of war.
All the great modern states are turning away from
freedom of trade, and indeed, from trade itself, and
forbidding their people the right to earn their own
livelihood and to associate freely with one another in
industry. In order to accomplish this end they are
compelled to regiment the lives of their people under
state bureaucracies and this can be accomplished only by
a despotic state. If the powers of the modern states are
to be augmented by conferring upon them the right to run
all industry, despotism is inevitable. A dictator may, by
reducing the standard of living and regimenting the
people, run all industry within the state over which he
rules, but a democracy, which, if it is to be true to
itself, must preserve individual initiative, can not do
so without transforming itself into a dictatorship. ...
read the whole
speech
|
To share this page with a friend:
right click, choose "send," and add your
comments.
|
|
Red links have not been
visited; .
Green links are pages you've seen
|
Essential Documents pertinent
to this theme:
|
|