How should we treat scarce resources, natural
resources that none of us can rightly claim as our
private property? How do we justly share their value
among all of us, while rewarding the effort of those
who labor to extract them from the earth? How do we
rightly share the huge value of our most choice urban
land among all of us?
We can always create more buildings, but we can't
create land, so we must treat it differently from that
which we can create more of.
Henry George: Thou
Shalt Not Steal
"Thou shalt not steal"; that is the law of God. What
does it mean? Well, it does not merely mean that you
shall not pick pockets! It does not merely mean that you
shall not commit burglary or highway robbery! There are
other forms of stealing which it prohibits as well. It
certainly means (if it has any meaning) that we shall not
take that to which we are not entitled, to the detriment
of others.
Now, here is a desert. Here is a caravan going along
over the desert. Here is a gang of robbers. They say:
"Look! There is a rich caravan; let us go and rob it,
kill the men if necessary, take their goods from them,
their camels and horses, and walk off." But one of the
robbers says: "Oh, no; that is dangerous; besides,
that would be stealing! Let us, instead of doing
that, go ahead to where there is a spring, the only
spring at which this caravan can get water in this
desert. Let us put a wall around it and call it ours, and
when they come up we won’t let them have any water
until they have given us all the goods they have." That
would be more gentlemanly, more polite, and more
respectable; but would it not be theft all the
same? And is it not theft of the same kind when
people go ahead in advance of population and get land
they have no use whatever for, and then, as people come
into the world and population increases, will not let
this increasing population use the land until they pay an
exorbitant price?
That is the sort of theft on which our first families
are founded. Do that under the false code of morality
which exists here today and people will praise your
forethought and your enterprise, and will say you have
made money because you are a very superior person, and
that all can make money if they will only work and be
industrious! But is it not as clearly a violation of the
command: "Thou shalt not steal," as taking the money out
of a person’s pocket?
"Thou shalt not steal." That means, of course, that we
ourselves must not steal. But does it not also mean that
we must not suffer anybody else to steal if we can help
it?
"Thou shalt not steal." Does it not also mean: "Thou
shalt not suffer thyself or anybody else to be stolen
from?" If it does, then we, all of us, rich and poor
alike, are responsible for this social crime that
produces poverty. Not merely the people who monopolize
the land — they are not to blame above anyone else,
but we who permit them to monopolize land are also
parties to the theft. ... read the whole article
Henry George: The Land Question
(1881)
When there is famine among savages it is because
food enough is not to be had. But this was not the case
in Ireland. In any part of Ireland, during the height of
what was called the famine, there was food enough for
whoever had means to pay for it. The trouble was not in
the scarcity of food. There was, as a matter of fact, no
real scarcity of food, and the proof of it is that food
did not command scarcity prices. During all the so-called
famine, food was constantly exported from Ireland to
England, which would not have been the case had there
been true famine in one country any more than in the
other. During all the so-called famine a practically
unlimited supply of American meat and grain could have
been poured into Ireland, through the existing mechanism
of exchange, so quickly that the relief would have been
felt instantaneously. Our sending of supplies in a
national war-ship was a piece of vulgar ostentation,
fitly paralleled by their ostentatious distribution in
British gunboats under the nominal superintendence of a
royal prince. Had we been bent on relief, not display, we
might have saved our government the expense of fitting up
its antiquated warship, the British gunboats their coal,
the Lord Mayor his dinner, and the Royal Prince his
valuable time. A cable draft, turned in Dublin into
postal orders, would have afforded the relief, not merely
much more easily and cheaply, but in less time than it
took our war-ship to get ready to receive her cargo; for
the reason that so many of the Irish people were starving
was, not that the food was not to be had, but that they
had not the means to buy it. Had the Irish people had
money or its equivalent, the bad seasons might have come
and gone without stinting any one of a full meal. Their
effect would merely have been to determine toward Ireland
the flow of more abundant harvests. ...
read the whole article
Henry George: The Wages of
Labor
The very robbery that the masses of men thus
suffer gives rise in advancing communities to a new
robbery. For the value that with the increase of
population and social advance attaches to land being
suffered to go to individuals who have secured ownership
of the land, it prompts to a forestalling of and
speculation in land wherever there is any prospect of
advancing population or of coming improvement,
thus producing an artificial scarcity of
the natural element of life and labor, and a
strangulation of production that shows itself in
recurring spasms of industrial depression as disastrous
to the world as destructive wars. ... read the whole
article
The Most Rev. Dr Thomas Nulty, Roman Catholic Bishop
of Meath (Ireland): Back
to the Land (1881)
The Price of Land a Monopoly
Price.
This privileged class not merely sells the use of
God's gifts, but extorts for them a price which is most
unjust and exorbitant; in fact, they hardly ever sell
them at less than scarcity or famine prices. If a man
wants to buy a suit of broadcloth, the price he will be
required to pay for it will amount to very little more
than what it cost to produce it -- and yet that suit of
clothes may be a requirement of such necessity or utility
to him that he would willingly pay three times the amount
it actually cost rather than submit to the inconvenience
of doing without it. On the other hand, the manufacturer
would extort the last shilling he would be willing to
give for it, only that he knows there are scores of other
manufacturers ready to undersell him if he demanded much
more than the cost of its production. The price,
therefore, of commodities of all kinds that can be
produced on a large scale, and to an indefinite extent,
will depend on the cost required to produce them, or at
least that part of them which is produced at the highest
expense.
But there is a limited class of
commodities whose selling price has no relation or
dependence at all on the cost at which they have been
produced; for example, rare wines that grow only on soils
of limited extent; paintings by the old masters; statues at
exquisite beauty and finish by celebrated sculptors; rare
books, bronzes and medals, and provisions or articles of
human food in cities during a siege, and more generally in
times of scarcity and famine -- these commodities are
limited in quantity, and it is physically impossible in the
circumstances existing to increase, multiply, or augment
them further. The seller of these commodities, not being
afraid of competition, can put any price he pleases on them
short of the purchasers' extreme estimate of the necessity,
utility, or advantage to themselves of such
commodities.
Fabulous sums of money, therefore,
have been expended in the purchase of such commodities --
sometimes to indulge a taste for the fine arts; sometimes
to satisfy a passion for the rare and the beautiful; and,
sometimes, too, to gratify a feeling of vanity or ambition
to be the sole proprietors of objects of antiquarian
interest and curiosity. On the other hand, enormous sums of
money have been paid in times of scarcity or during a siege
for the commonest necessaries of life, or, failing these,
for substitutes that have been requisitioned for human
food, the use of which would make one shudder in
circumstances of less pressing necessity. Read the whole
letter
Henry George: How to Help the
Unemployed (1894)
AN EPIDEMIC of what passes for charity is
sweeping over the land. ...
Yet there has been no disaster of fire or flood,
no convulsion of nature, no destruction by public
enemies. The seasons have kept their order, we have had
the former and the latter rain, and the earth has not
refused her increase. Granaries are filled to
overflowing, and commodities, even these we have tried to
make dear by tariff, were never before so
cheap. The scarcity that is distressing
and frightening the whole country is a scarcity of
employment. It is the unemployed for whom charity is
asked: not those who cannot or will not work, but those
able to work and anxious to work, who, through no fault
of their own, cannot find work. So clear, indeed, is it
that of the great masses who are suffering in this
country to-day, by far the greater part are honest,
sober, and industrious, that the pharisees who preach
that poverty is due to laziness and thriftlessness, and
the fanatics who attribute it to drink, are for the
moment silent.
Yet why is it that men able to work and willing
to work cannot find work? It is not strange that the
failure to work should bring want, for it is only by work
that human wants are satisfied. But to say that
widespread distress comes from widespread inability to
find employment no more explains the distress than to say
that the man died from want of breath explains a sudden
death. The pressing question, the real question, is, What
causes the want of employment?
...
What more unnatural than that alms should be
asked, not for the maimed, the halt and the blind, the
helpless widow and the tender orphan, but for grown men,
strong men, skilful men, men able to work and anxious to
work! What more unnatural than that labor -- the producer
of all food, all clothing, all shelter -- should not be
exchangeable for its full equivalent in food, clothing,
and shelter; that while the things it produces have
value, labor, the giver of all value, should seem
valueless!
Here are men, having the natural wants of man,
having the natural powers of man -- powers adapted and
intended and more than sufficient to supply those wants.
To say that they are willing to use their powers for the
satisfaction of their wants, yet cannot do so, is to say
that there is a wrong. If it is not their fault, whose
fault is it? Wrong somewhere there must be.
...
Why should charity be offered the unemployed?
It is not alms they ask. They are insulted and embittered
and degraded by being forced to accept as paupers what
they would gladly earn as workers. What they ask is not
charity, but the opportunity to use their own labor in
satisfying their own wants. Why can they not have that?
It is their natural right. He who made food and clothing
and shelter necessary to man's life has also given to
man, in the power of labor, the means of maintaining that
life; and when, without fault of their own, men cannot
exert that power, there is somewhere a wrong of the same
kind as denial of the right of property and denial of the
right of life -- a wrong equivalent to robbery and murder
on the grandest scale.
Charity can only palliate present suffering a
little at the risk of fatal disease. For charity cannot
right a wrong; only justice can do that.
Yet this is to be expected. For the question of
the unemployed is but a more than usually acute phase of
the great labor question -- a question of the
distribution of wealth. ...
What do we mean when we say that it is scarcity of
employment from which the masses are suffering? Not what
we mean when we say of the idle rich that they suffer
from want of employment. There is no scarcity of the need
for work when so many are suffering for the want of
things that work produces, when all of us would like
more, and all but a very few of us could advantageously
use more, of those things. Nor do we mean that there is
scarcity of ability to work or willingness to work. Nor
yet do we mean that there is scarcity of the natural
materials and forces necessary for work. 'They are as
abundant as they ever were or ever will be until the
energy radiated by the sun upon our globe loses its
intensity. What we really mean by "scarcity of employment
" is such scarcity as would be brought about were an ice
sheet continued into the summer to shut out the farmer
from the fertile field he was anxious to cultivate; such
a scarcity as was brought about in Lancashire when our
blockade of the Southern ports raised suddenly and
enormously the price of the staple that English
operatives were anxious to turn into cloth.
What answers to the ice sheet or the blockade?
Need we ask? May it not be seen, from our greatest cities
to our newest territories, in the speculation which has
everywhere been driving up the price of land -- that is
to say, the toll that the active factor in all production
must pay for permission to use the indispensable passive
factor. ...
If there are any who do not see the relation of
these facts, it is because they have become accustomed to
think of labor as deriving employment from capital,
instead of, which is the true and natural relation,
capital being the product and tool of labor.
...
So that, whether we begin at the right or the
wrong end, any analysis brings us at last to the
conclusion that the opportunities of
finding employment and the rate of all wages depend
ultimately upon the freedom of access to land; the price
that labor must pay for its use.
"Scarcity of employment" is a comparatively new
complaint in the United States. In our earlier times it
was never heard of or thought of. There was "scarcity of
employment " in Europe, but on this side of the Atlantic
the trouble -- so it was deemed by a certain class -- was
"scarcity of labor." ...
Today, as the last census reports show, the
majority of American farmers are rack-rented tenants, or
hold under mortgage, the first form of tenancy; and the
great majority of our people are landless men, without
right to employ their own labor and without stake in the
land they still foolishly speak of as their country. This
is the reason why the army of the unemployed has appeared
among us, why by pauperism has already become chronic,
and why in the tramp we have in more dangerous type the
proletarian of ancient Rome.
These recurring spasms of business stagnation;
these long-drawn periods of industrial depression, common
to the civilized world, do not come from our treatment of
money; are not caused and are not to be cured by changes
of tariffs. Protection is a robbery of labor, and what is
called free trade would give some temporary relief, but
speculation in land would only set in the stronger, and
at last labor and capital would again resist, by partial
cessation, the blackmail demanded for their employment in
production, and the same round would be run again. There
is but one remedy, and that is what is now known as the
single-tax -- the abolition of all taxes upon labor and
capital, and of all taxes upon their processes and
products, and the taking of economic rent, the unearned
increment which now goes to the mere appropriator, for
the payment of public expenses. Charity can merely
demoralize and pauperize, while that indirect form of
charity, the attempt to artificially "make work" by
increasing public expenses and by charity woodyards and
sewing-rooms, is still more dangerous. If, in this sense,
work is to be made, it can be made more quickly by
dynamite and kerosene.
But there is no need for charity; no need for
"making work." All that is needed is to remove the
restrictions that prevent the natural demand for the
products of work from availing itself of the natural
supply. Remove them today, and every unemployed man in
the country could find for himself employment tomorrow,
and his "effective demand" for the things he desires
would infuse new life into every subdivision of business
and industry, even that of the dentist, the preacher, the
magazine writer, or the actor.
The country is suffering from "scarcity of
employment." But let anyone to-day attempt to employ his
own labor or that of others, whether in making two blades
of grass grow where one grew before, or in erecting a
factory, and he will at once meet the speculator to
demand of him an unnatural price for the land he must
use, and the tax-gatherer to fine him for his act in
employing labor as if he had committed a crime. The
common-sense way to cure "scarcity of employment" is to
take taxes off the products and processes of employment
and to impose in their stead the tax that would end
speculation in land. ...
Read the entire article
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural
Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation
(1917)
Q8. How about fertility value?
A. On the surface of the globe are countless varieties of
exhaustible fertility, i.e. chemical
constituency, differing in kind and degree, from the
nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon of the soil to the
carbon of the coal, the gold, and the diamond. Fertility
as an attribute need not be predicated of agricultural
land alone. Economic fertility belongs equally to any
other land which yields to labor its product whether in
food, mineral, or metal. Land may be fertile in wheat,
corn, and potatoes. It may be fertile in cotton, in
tobacco, or in rice. It may be fertile in diamonds, in
gold, silver, copper, lead, or iron. It may be fertile in
oil, coal, or natural gas, in a water power or water
front. The value of artificial fertility is an
improvement value. The value of natural fertility of any
kind is a site value.
... read
the whole article
Mason Gaffney: Full Employment,
Growth And Progress On A Small Planet: Relieving Poverty
While Healing The Earth
2. Effect of artificial scarcity on marginal
returns to labor and capital. Underuse of better lands forces labor and capital
(which is mobile, like labor) to resort to worse or
“marginal” lands, thus scattering and
spreading out settlement, raising aggregate demands on
land, and wasting capital (George, 1879). This
lowering of the “margin of production” lowers
the marginal productivity of labor and capital, and hence
their economic rewards, tilting the distribution of
income in favor of landowners, creating
an illusion of overpopulation (Malthus), and lack
of investment outlets (Marx, Keynes, Hobson et
al.).
That pattern was first recognized in farming, but
it is universal. The underuse of central
city lands (large parts of which are derelict) drives
demand outwards to less accessible urban sites. From
there, the same force drives demand outwards to the inner
suburbs; from there, to further suburbs, and so
on. “Urban sprawl”
is the generic name, but “scatter” and
“disintegration” express the point
better. Farm and wilderness defenders perceive the
problem mainly at the edge of cities, noting the loss of
open land, but that is a lesser social and economic loss
than the destruction of urban values inside the
edge.
One way of denying the basic problem is to call it
“unbalanced growth,” as in Orange County,
where people recognize it as too many jobs relative to
the housing supply. It is not the “unbalance”
that is the problem, though: how can there be too many
jobs? It is too little housing that is the problem,
driving demand eastwards up through Sta. Ana Canyon, with
its awful traffic bottleneck, to central Riverside
County, where it meets demand fleeing north from San
Diego.
Now weave this pattern of scattered
settlement into the whole system. It forces auto-dependency and truck-dependency,
multiplying the need for fuels, pushing up their prices,
and lowering the real wages of those who have to consume
them in larger quantities at higher prices. Much of what looks like self-indulgent consumption of
U.S. motorists is not joy-riding, but the forced
consumption of commutation, forced by scattered urban
sprawl, the product of land
speculation. Auto-apologists get this backwards, of
course, making joy-riding the cause and sprawl the
effect.
In forestry, the places to grow commercial timber
are lands that are “flat, wet, and warm,” as
John Baden summarizes it. (He might have added,
“accessible.”) Failure to restock such lands
economically pushes demand onto lands that are steep, dry
and cold, creating the “forestry
sprawl” from which we suffer.
Failure to put
indigenous waters of southern California to full economical
use creates the appearance of scarcity where there is
actually enough water. It drives demand northwards
to the Owens Valley and the Feather River, and eastward to
the Colorado River, at enormous social cost, much of it for
energy. Those who issue doomsday
dessication scenarios, and deplore the loss of water to
farming, also seem to have no idea of how
a handful of giant landowners waste most of our water on
low-valued uses like pasture, hay, small grains and rice,
using primitive wasteful methods like flooding, or furrow
irrigation. Only 2-3% of our irrigated lands
use basic conservation techniques like drip emitters.
Those who waste water in this way are
basically substituting water, a limited natural resource,
for the labor and capital others use to conserve water
while growing higher-valued crops (Gaffney, 1997;
Kahrl).
One could go on through a long list
of natural resources, but once one gets the idea, those
with understanding and imagination can fill in hundreds of
details. ... read the whole article
Ted Gwartney: Estimating Land
Values
UTILITY, SCARCITY AND
DESIRABILITY
Land value can be thought of as the
relationship between a desired location and a potential
user. The ingredients that constitute land value are
utility, scarcity and desirability. These factors must
all be present for land to have value.
Land that lacks utility and scarcity also lacks
value, since utility arouses desire for use and has the
power to give satisfaction. The air we breathe has
utility and is generally considered important, since it
sustains and nourishes life. However, in the economic
sense, air is not valuable because it hasn't been
appropriated and there is enough for everyone. Thus there
is no scarcity -- at least at the moment. This may not be
true in the future, however, as knowledge of air
pollution and its effect on human health make people
aware that clean and breathable air may become scarce and
subsequently valuable.
By themselves, utility and scarcity confer no
value on land. User desire backed up by the ability to
pay value must also exist in order to constitute
effective demand. The potential user must be able to
participate in the market to satisfy their desire.
... Read
the whole article
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0: Preface (pages ix.-xvi)
I began pondering this dilemma about ten years ago
after retiring from Working Assets, a business I
cofounded in 1982. (Working Assets offers telephone and
credit card services which automatically donate to
nonprofit groups working for a better world.) My initial
ruminations focused on climate change caused by human
emissions of heat-trapping gases. Some analysts saw this
as a “tragedy of the commons,” a concept
popularized forty years ago by biologist Garrett Hardin.
According to Hardin, people will always overuse a commons
because it’s in their self-interest to do so. I saw
the problem instead as a pair of tragedies: first a
tragedy of the market, which has no way of curbing its
own excesses, and second a tragedy of government, which
fails to protect the atmosphere because polluting
corporations are powerful and future generations
don’t vote.
This way of viewing the situation led to a hypothesis:
if the commons is a victim of market and government
failures, rather than the cause of its own destruction,
the remedy might lie in strengthening the commons. But
how might that be done? According to prevailing wisdom,
commons are inherently difficult to manage because no one
effectively owns them. If Waste Management Inc. owned the
atmosphere, it would charge dumpers a fee, just as it
does for terrestrial landfills. But since no one has
title to the atmosphere, dumping proceeds without limit
or cost.
There’s a reason, of course, why no one has
title to the atmosphere. For as long as anyone can
remember there’s been more than enough air to go
around, and thus no point in owning any of it. But
nowadays, things are different. Our spacious skies
aren’t empty anymore. We’ve filled them with
invisible gases that are altering the climate patterns to
which we and other species have adapted. In this new
context, the atmosphere is a scarce resource, and having
someone own it might not be a bad idea. ...
In retrospect, I realized the question I’d been
asking since early adulthood was: Is capitalism a
brilliant solution to the problem of scarcity, or is it
itself modernity’s central problem? The question
has many layers, but explorations of each layer led me to
the same verdict. Although capitalism started as a
brilliant solution, it has become the central problem of
our day. It was right for its time, but times have
changed.
When capitalism started, nature was abundant and
capital was scarce; it thus made sense to reward capital
above all else. Today we’re awash in capital and
literally running out of nature. We’re also losing
many social arrangements that bind us together as
communities and enrich our lives in nonmonetary ways.
This doesn’t mean capitalism is doomed or useless,
but it does mean we have to modify it. We have to adapt
it to the twenty-first century rather than the
eighteenth. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 2: A Short History of
Capitalism (pages 15-32)
Sometime around 1950, capitalism entered a new phase.
Until then, poverty was a widely shared American
experience. Wages were low, hours were long, and
unemployment was a wolf at almost every door. In the
1930s, it reached 25 percent.
This changed in the period following World War II. In
1958, economist John Kenneth Galbraith wrote a
best-seller called The Affluent Society in which he noted
that scarcity of goods was now a thing of the past for a
majority of Americans. “The ordinary individual has
access to amenities — foods, entertainment,
personal transportation and plumbing — in which not
even the rich rejoiced a century ago,” Galbraith
observed. “So great has been the change that many
of the desires of the individual are no longer even
evident to him. They become so only as they are
synthesized, elaborated, and nurtured by advertising and
salesmanship, and these, in turn, have become among our
most important and talented professions.”
This was a major phase change for capitalism. Before,
people wanted more goods than the economy could provide.
Demand, in other words, exceeded supply, and we lived in
what might be called shortage capitalism. We could also
call it Capitalism 1.0.
After the change, we shifted into surplus capitalism,
or what I call Capitalism 2.0. In this version,
there’s no limit to what corporations can produce;
their problem is finding buyers. A sizeable chunk of GDP
is spent to make people want this unneeded output. And
credit is lavishly extended so they can buy it.
This historic shift can be described another way. A
century ago, our chief scarcity was goods. It thus made
sense to sacrifice other things in pursuit of goods, and
capitalism was masterful at doing this. Today we’re
waist-deep in thneeds, and our scarcities are different.
Among the middle classes, the top scarcities, I’d
say, are time, companionship, and community (see figure
2.2). Among the poor, there remains a lack of goods, but
that lack isn’t due to a shortage of production
capacity — it’s due to the poor’s
inability to pay. The critical scarcity here, in other
words, is income. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 6: Trusteeship of Creation
(pages 79-100)
Commons Rent
It shouldn’t be thought that the commons is, or
ought to be, a money-free zone. In fact, an important
subject for economists (and the rest of us) to understand
is commons rent.
By this I don’t mean the monthly check you send
to a landlord. In economics, rent has a more precise
meaning: it’s money paid because of scarcity. If
you’re not an economist, that may sound puzzling,
but consider this. A city has available a million
apartments. In absolute terms, that means apartments
aren’t scarce. But the city is confined
geographically and demand for apartments is intense. In
this economic sense, apartments are scarce. Now think
back to that check you pay your landlord, or the mortgage
you pay the bank. Part of it represents the
landlord’s operating costs or the bank’s cost
of money, but part of it is pure rent — that is,
money paid for scarcity. That’s why New Yorkers and
San Franciscans write such large checks to landlords and
banks, while people in Nebraska don’t.
Rent rises when an increase in demand bumps into a
limit in supply. Rent due to such bumping isn’t
good or bad; it just is.We can (and should) debate the
distribution of that rent, but the rent itself arises
automatically. And it’s important that it does so,
because this helps the larger economy allocate scarce
resources efficiently. Other methods of allocation are
possible. We can distribute scarce things on a first
come, first served basis, or by lottery, political power,
seniority, or race. Experience has shown, though, that
selling scarce resources in open markets is usually the
best approach, and such selling inevitably creates
rent.
Rent was of great interest to the early economists
— Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and John Stuart Mill,
among others — because it constituted most of the
money earned by landowners, and land was then a major
cost of production. The supply of land, these economists
noted, is limited, but demand for it steadily increases.
So, therefore, does its rent. Thus, landowners benefit
from what Mill called the unearned increment — the
rise in land value attributable not to any effort of the
owner, but purely to a socially created increase in
demand bumping into a limited supply of good land.
The underappreciated American economist Henry George
went further. Seeing both the riches and the miseries of
the Gilded Age, he asked a logical question: Why does
poverty persist despite economic growth? The answer, he
believed, was the appropriation of rent by landowners.
Even as the economy grew, the property rights system and
the scarcity of land diverted almost all the gains to a
landowning minority. Whereas competition limited the
gains of working people, nothing kept down the
landowners’ gains. As Mill had noted, the value of
their land just kept rising. To fix the problem, George
advocated a steep tax on land and the abolition of other
taxes. His bestselling book Progress and Poverty
catapulted him to fame in the 1880s, but mainstream
economists never took him seriously.
By the twentieth century, economists had largely lost
interest in rent; it seemed a trivial factor in wealth
production compared to capital and labor. But the
twenty-first century ecological crisis brings rent back
to center-stage. Now it’s not just land
that’s scarce, but clean water, undisturbed
habitat, biological diversity, waste absorption capacity,
and entire ecosystems.
This brings us back to common property rights. The
definition and allocation of property rights are the
primary factors in determining who pays whom for what.
If, in the case of pollution rights, pollution rights are
given free to past polluters, the rent from the polluted
ecosystem will also go to them. That’s because
prices for pollution-laden products will rise as
pollution is limited (remember, if demand is constant, a
reduction in supply causes prices to go up), and those
higher prices will flow to producers (which is to say,
polluters).
By contrast, if pollution rights are assigned to
trusts representing pollutees and future generations, and
if these trusts then sell these rights to polluters, the
trusts rather than the polluters will capture the commons
rent. If the trusts split this money between per capita
dividends and expenditures on public goods, everyone
benefits.
At this moment, based on pollution rights allocated so
far, polluting corporations are getting most of the
commons rent. But the case for trusts getting the rent in
the future is compelling. If this is done, consumers will
pay commons rent not to corporations or government, but
to themselves as beneficiaries of commons trusts. Each
citizen’s dividend will be the same, but his
payments will depend on his purchases of pollution-laden
products. The more he pollutes, the more rent he’ll
pay. High polluters will get back less than they put in,
while low polluters will get back more. The microeconomic
incentives, in other words, will be perfect. (See figure
6.1.)
What’s equally significant, though less obvious,
is that the macroeconomic incentives will be perfect too.
That is, it will be in everyone’s interest to
reduce the total level of pollution. Remember how rent
for scarce things works: the lower the supply, the higher
the rent. Now, imagine you’re a trustee of an
ecosystem, and leaving aside (for the sake of argument)
your responsibility to preserve the asset for future
generations, you want to increase dividends. Do you raise
the number of pollution permits you sell, or lower it?
The correct, if counterintuitive answer is: you lower the
number of permits. ...
read the whole chapter
Hanno Beck: Bathroom Policy
We were four college sophomores. And we were not
going to live in a dorm, no sir, we figured that we were
smart, mature fellows and so we arranged to rent a house.
Each person would have his own private bedroom and we
would share the bathroom. Four guys, one bathroom. That
sounds reasonable, right?
...
Now let's talk about you and everyone on Earth. We
don't have to share a single bathroom. But we do all share one
planet.
Our planet's natural resources are a common
heritage for all humanity, just as the bathroom was a
common resource for the four of us in
college.
Look what happens to our planet.
- We see people or corporations like Edward,
taking more than their fair share of oil, fresh water,
minerals, without compensating the rest of
us.
- We see people or corporations like Charlie,
polluting the land, water and air with toxic wastes,
chemicals, carbon in the atmosphere, making the world
less safe, forcing others to clean up, and they are not
compensating the rest of us.
- We see people or corporations like Andrew,
monopolizing resources such as land -– an urban
land speculator who holds an acre out of use,
anticipating a price rise, is displacing the rest of us,
forcing development out into the countryside. A single
acre of downtown land brought into use would save a dozen
outside acres from premature sprawl
development.
Those who take, monopolize, and pollute, are
imposing costs on the rest of us and on the economy in
general. We are forced to be less efficient, or forced to
endure hardships, so that the takers, monopolizers and
polluters can benefit. That is not fair.
Is there a solution? Of course there is. It's a
simple solution. To respect our common interest in our
planet's resources, those who
take or monopolize or pollute more than their fair share of our
planet should compensate those of us who they are taking
from. ... read the whole
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