Tariffs
Henry George: The
Common Sense of Taxation (1881 article)
Quite as fallacious is the idea that all property
should be equally taxed, because equally protected. The
fact is that all property is not equally protected,
cannot be equally protected, and ought not to be equally
protected, if by protection anything more is meant than
the mere preservation of the peace. The protection of
property is not the end, it is only one of the incidents,
of government. As John Stuart Mill says: "The ends of
government are as comprehensive as those of the social
union. They consist of all the good and all the immunity
from evil which the existence of government can be made,
either directly or indirectly, to bestow." And to say
that government should impartially protect and equally
tax all property, is like saying that the farmer should
bestow the same care upon everything he may find growing
in his fields, whether weeds or grain.
That there is no obligation to equally tax all
property is fully realized in regard to property brought
from abroad. No one contends for a tariff which should
equally tax all such property. The protectionists assert
that the leading idea in determining what should be taxed
and what not taxed, and the different rates which various
imports should bear, ought to be the promotion of the
general good by the encouragement and protection of
industry. Their opponents, on the other hand, do not deny
the propriety of such exemptions and discriminations.
They merely deny that industry can be protected and
encouraged by the endeavor to shield certain classes of
producers from foreign competition; and, in the enactment
of a purely revenue tariff, they would make the same kind
of exemptions and discriminations, with a view to the
collection of the revenue with the smallest cost and
least interference with trade. Both parties equally
recognize the general good as the true guiding principle
in taxation of this kind. ... read the whole
article
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty: 10. Effect of Remedy Upon Wealth
Production (in the unabridged P&P:
Part IX — Effects of the Remedy: Chapter 1 — Of
the effect upon the production of wealth)
... To abolish the taxation which, acting and
reacting, now hampers every wheel of exchange and presses
upon every form of industry, would be like removing an
immense weight from a powerful spring. Imbued with fresh
energy, production would start into new life, and trade
would receive a stimulus which would be felt to the
remotest arteries. The present method of taxation
operates upon exchange like artificial deserts and
mountains;
- it costs more to get goods through a custom
house than it does to carry them around the
world.
- It operates upon energy, and industry, and skill,
and thrift, like a fine upon those qualities.
- If I have worked harder and built myself a good
house while you have been contented to live in a hovel,
the taxgatherer now comes annually to make me pay a
penalty for my energy and industry, by taxing me more
than you.
- If I have saved while you wasted, I am mulct, while
you are exempt.
- If a man build a ship we make him pay for his
temerity, as though he had done an injury to the
state;
- if a railroad be opened, down comes the tax
collector upon it, as though it were a public
nuisance;
- if a manufactory be erected we levy upon it an
annual sum which would go far toward making a handsome
profit.
- We say we want capital, but if any one accumulate
it, or bring it among us, we charge him for it as
though we were giving him a privilege.
- We punish with a tax the man who covers barren
fields with ripening grain,
- we fine him who puts up machinery, and him who
drains a swamp.
How heavily these taxes burden production only those
realize who have attempted to follow our system of
taxation through its ramifications, for, as I have before
said, the heaviest part of taxation is that which falls
in increased prices. ... read the whole
chapter
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: In
Liverpool: The Financial Reform Meeting at the Liverpool
Rotunda (1889)
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) ...
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
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
HE term Land in political economy means the natural or
passive element in production, and includes the whole
external world accessible to man, with all its powers,
qualities, and products, except perhaps those portions of
it which are for the time included in man's body or in
his products, and which therefore temporarily belong to
the categories, man and wealth, passing again in their
reabsorption by nature into the category, land. —
The Science of Political Economy —
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 14: The Production of
Wealth, Order of the Three Factors of Production
• abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
THAT land is only a passive factor in production must be
carefully kept in mind. . . . Land cannot act, it can
only be acted upon. . . . Nor is this principle changed
or avoided when we use the word land as expressive of the
people who own land. . . .
That the persons whom we call landowners may contribute
their labor or their capital to production is of course
true, but that they should contribute to production as
landowners, and by virtue of that ownership, is as
ridiculously impossible as that the belief of a lunatic
in his ownership of the moon should be the cause of her
brilliancy. — The Science of Political
Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 15, The Production of
Wealth: The First Factor of Production — Land
• abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
I AM writing these pages on the shore of Long Island,
where the Bay of New York contracts to what is called the
Narrows, nearly opposite the point where our legalized
robbers, the Custom-House officers, board incoming
steamers to ask strangers to take their first American
swear, and where, if false oaths really colored the
atmosphere the air would be bluer than is the sky on this
gracious day. I turn from my writing-machine to the
window, and drink in, with a pleasure that never seems to
pall, the glorious panorama.
"What do you see?" If in ordinary talk I were asked
this, I should of course say, "I see land and water and
sky, ships and houses, and light clouds, and the sun
drawing to its setting over the low green hills of Staten
Island and illuminating all."
But if the question refer to the terms of political
economy, I should say, "I see land and wealth." Land,
which is the natural factor of production; and wealth,
which is the natural factor so changed by the exertion of
the human factor, labor, as to fit it for the
satisfaction of human desires. For water and clouds, sky
and sun, and the stars that will appear when the sun is
sunk, are, in the terminology of political economy, as
much land as is the dry surface of the earth to which we
narrow the meaning of the word in ordinary talk. And the
window through which I look; the flowers in the garden;
the planted trees of the orchard; the cow that is
browsing beneath them; the Shore Road under the window;
the vessels that lie at anchor near the bank, and the
little pier that juts out from it; the trans-Atlantic
liner steaming through the channel; the crowded
pleasure-steamers passing by; the puffing tug with its
line of mud-scows; the fort and dwellings on the opposite
side of the Narrows; the lighthouse that will soon begin
to cast its far-gleaming eye from Sandy Hook; the big
wooden elephant of Coney Island; and the graceful sweep
of the Brooklyn Bridge, that may be discovered from a
little higher up; all alike fall into the economic term
wealth — land modified by labor so as to afford
satisfaction to human desires. All in this panorama that
was before man came here, and would remain were he to go,
belongs to the economic category land; while all that has
been produced by labor belongs to the economic category
wealth, so long as it retains its quality of ministering
to human desire.
But on the hither shore, in view from the window, is a
little rectangular piece of dry surface, evidently
reclaimed from the line of water by filling in with rocks
and earth. What is that? In ordinary speech it is land,
as distinguished from water, and I should intelligibly
indicate its origin by speaking of it as "made land." But
in the categories of political economy there is no place
for such a term as "made land." For the term land refers
only and exclusively to productive powers derived wholly
from nature and not at all from industry, and whatever
is, and in so far as it is, derived from land by the
exertion of labor, is wealth. This bit of dry
surface raised above the level of the water by filling in
stones and soil, is, in the economic category, not land
but wealth. It has land below it and around it, and the
material of which it is composed has been drawn from
land; but in itself it is, in the proper speech of
political economy, wealth; just as truly as the ships I
behold are not land but wealth, though they too have land
below them and around them and are composed of material
drawn from land. — The Science of Political
Economy
unabridged: Book IV, Chapter 6, The Distribution of
Wealth: Cause of Confusion as to Property •
abridged
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
"COME with me," said Richard Cobden, as John Bright
turned heart-stricken from a new-made grave. "There are
in England women and children dying with hunger —
with hunger made by the laws. Come with me, and we will
not rest until we repeal those laws."
In this spirit the free trade movement waxed and grew,
arousing an enthusiasm that no mere fiscal reform could
have aroused. And intrenched though it was by restricted
suffrage and rotten boroughs and aristocratic privilege,
protection was overthrown in Great Britain.
And — there is hunger in Great Britain still, and
women and children yet die of it.
But this is not the failure of free trade. When
protection had been abolished and a revenue tariff
substituted for a protective tariff, free trade had only
won an outpost. That women and children still die of
hunger in Great Britain arises from the failure of the
reformers to go on. Free trade has not yet been tried in
Great Britain. Free trade in its fulness and entirety
would indeed abolish hunger. — Protection or
Free Trade — Chapter 26: True Free Trade -
econlib -|- abridged
THE mere abolition of protection — the mere
substitution of a revenue tariff for a protective tariff
— is such a lame and timorous application of the
free-trade principle that it is a misnomer to speak of it
as free trade. A revenue tariff is only a somewhat milder
restriction on trade than a protective tariff.
Free trade, in its true meaning, requires not merely the
abolition of protection but the sweeping away of all
tariffs — the abolition of all restrictions (save
those imposed in the interests of public health or
morals) on the bringing of things into a country or the
carrying of things out of a country.
But free trade cannot logically stop with the abolition
of custom-houses. It applies as well to domestic as to
foreign trade, and in its true sense requires the
abolition of all internal taxes that fall on buying,
selling, transporting or exchanging, on the making of any
transaction or the carrying on of any business, save of
course where the motive of the tax is public safety,
health or morals. Thus the adoption of true free trade
involves the abolition of all indirect taxation of
whatever kind, and the resort to direct taxation for all
public revenues.
But this is not all. Trade, as we have seen, is a mode of
production, and the freeing of trade is beneficial
because it is a freeing of production. For the same
reason, therefore, that we ought not to tax anyone for
adding to the wealth of a country by bringing valuable
things into it, we ought not to tax anyone for adding to
the wealth of a country by producing within that country
valuable things. Thus the principle of free trade
requires that we should not merely abolish all indirect
taxes, but that we should abolish as well all direct
taxes on things that are the produce of labor; that we
should, in short, give full play to the natural stimulus
to production — the possession and enjoyment of the
things produced — by imposing no tax whatever upon
the production, accumulation or possession of wealth (the
things produced by labor), leaving everyone free to make
exchange, give, spend or bequeath. — Protection
or Free Trade — Chapter 26: True Free Trade -
econlib -|- abridged
... go to "Gems from
George"
Weld Carter: An
Introduction to Henry George
However, what is the effect on
production of taxes levied on products and of taxes levied
on the value of land?
Of taxes levied on products, George
said: "The present method of taxation operates upon
exchange like artificial deserts and mountains; it costs
more to get goods through a custom house than it does to
carry them around the world. It operates upon energy, and
industry, and skill, and thrift, like a fine upon those
qualities. If I have worked harder and built myself a good
house while you have been contented to live in a hovel, the
taxgatherer now comes annually to make me pay a penalty for
my energy and industry, by taxing me more than you. If I
have saved while you wasted, I am mulct, while you are
exempt. If a man build a ship we make him pay for his
temerity, as though he had done an injury to the state; if
a railroad be opened, down comes the taxcollector upon it,
as though it were a public nuisance; if a manufactory be
erected we levy upon it an annual sum which would go far
toward making a handsome profit. We say we want capital,
but if anyone accumulate it, or bring it among us, we
charge him for it as though we were giving him a privilege.
We punish with a tax the man who covers barren fields with
ripening grain, we fine him who puts up machinery, and him
who drains a swamp. How heavily these taxes burden
production only those realize who have attempted to follow
our system of taxation through its ramifications, for, as I
have before said, the heaviest part of taxation is that
which falls in increased prices" (1879, rpt. 1958, p.
434).
Turning to taxation levied on the
value of land, George went on to say:
For this simple device of placing
all taxes on the value of land would be in effect putting
up the land at auction to whosoever would pay the highest
rent to the state. The demand for land fixes its value,
and hence, if taxes were placed so as very nearly to
consume that value, the man who wished to hold land
without using it would have to pay very nearly what it
would be worth to anyone who wanted to use
it.
And it must be remembered that this
would apply, not merely to agricultural land, but to all
land. Mineral land would be thrown open to use, just as
agricultural land; and in the heart of a city no one
could afford to keep land from its most profitable use,
or on the outskirts to demand more for it than the use to
which it could at the time be put would warrant.
Everywhere that land had attained a value, taxation,
instead of operating, as now, as a fine upon improvement,
would operate to force improvement (1879, rpt. 1958, p.
437).
A few pages before this he had told
us that, "It is sufficiently evident that with regard to
production, the tax upon the value of land is the best tax
that can be imposed. Tax manufactures, and the effect is to
check manufacturing; tax improvements, and the effect is to
lessen improvement; tax commerce, and the effect is to
prevent exchange; tax capital, and the effect is to drive
it away. But the whole value of land may be taken in
taxation, and the only effect will be to stimulate
industry, to open new opportunities to capital, and to
increase the production of wealth" (1879, rpt. 1958, p.
414).
In other words, according to George,
taxation of products checks production, whereas taxation of
land values stimulates production. ... read the
whole article
Albert Jay Nock — Henry George: Unorthodox
American
George was moreover the terror of the political
routineer. When the Republicans suddenly raised the
tariff issue in 1880 the Democratic committee asked him
to go on the stump. They arranged a long list of
engagements for him, but after he made one speech they
begged him by telegraph not to make any more. The nub of
his speech was that he had heard of high-tariff Democrats
and revenue-tariff Democrats, but he was a no-tariff
Democrat who wanted real free trade, and he was out for
that or nothing; and naturally no good bi-partisan
national committee could put up with such talk as that,
especially from a man who really meant it.
Yet, on the other hand, when the official free-traders
of the Atlantic seaboard, led by Sumner, Godkin, Beecher,
Curtis, Lowell, and Hewitt, opened their arms to George,
he refused to fall in. His free-trade speeches during
Cleveland’s second campaign were really devoted to
showing by implication that they were a hollow lot, and
that their idea of free trade was nothing more or less
than a humbug. His speeches hurt Cleveland more than they
helped him, and some of George’s closest associates
split with him at this point. In George’s view,
freedom of exchange would not benefit the masses of the
people a particle unless it were correlated with freedom
of production; if it would, how was it that the people of
free-trade England, for example, were no better off than
the people of protectionist Germany! None of the official
free-traders could answer that question, of course, for
there was no answer. George had already developed his
full doctrine of trade in a book, published in 1886,
called Protection or Free Trade — a book
which, incidentally, gives a reader the best possible
introduction to Progress and Poverty.
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