Wealth, in George's precise thinking, does not
include land. Wealth consists of those things
that can be produced, and land (not just
acreage, but all of the natural creation) is not
something any of us can produce, individually
or as a community or as a corporation. On this website,
you'll see wealth used both in George's
precise definition and in the more common usage, in
which it refers to all of one's assets without regard
to their nature. Keep in mind the distinction between
common usage and George's more precise usage; it is a
distinction critical to achieving justice!
Henry George: The
Common Sense of Taxation (1881 article)
... These are truisms. Yet so widespread and
persistent is the notion that all property should be
taxed, that they are generally ignored. Nothing is
clearer than that when a farmer who wants more capital
puts a mortgage on his farm, no new value is thereby
created. Yet, in most of our States, both the farm and
the mortgage are taxed; though so obvious is the double
taxation that in some of them the clumsy expedient of
making an exemption to the debtor is resorted to.
But it is manifest that property of this kind is not a
fit subject for taxation, and ought not to be considered
in making up the assessment rolls. It has, in itself, no
value. It is merely the representative, or token, of
value — the certificate of ownership, or the
obligation to pay value. It either represents other
property, or property yet to be brought into existence.
And, as nothing real can be drawn from that which is not
real, taxation upon property of this kind must ultimately
fall, either upon the property represented, in which case
there is double taxation, or upon those whose obligations
it expresses, in which case men are taxed, not upon what
they own, but upon what they owe; and all cumbrous
devices to prevent the unjust effects of such taxation,
like other complications of the revenue system, simply
give to the stronger and more unscrupulous opportunities
of throwing the burden upon the weaker and more
conscientious. Property of this kind ought not to be
taxed at all. Property in itself valuable is clearly that
with which any wise scheme of taxation should alone
deal.
To consider the nature of property of this kind is
again to see a clear distinction. That distinction is
not, as the lawyers have it, between movables and
immovables, between personal property and real estate.
The true distinction is between property which is, and
property which is not, the result of human labor; or, to
use the terms of political economy, between land and
wealth. For, in any precise use of the term, land is not
wealth, any more than labor is wealth. Land and
labor are the factors of production. Wealth is such
result of their union as retains the capacity of
ministering to human desire. A lot and the house
which stands upon it are alike property, alike have a
tangible value, and are alike classed as real estate. But
there are between them the most essential
differences.
- The one is the free gift of Nature, the other the
result of human exertion;
- the one exists from generation to generation, while
men come and go; the other is constantly tending to
decay, and can only be preserved by continual
exertion.
- To the one, the right of exclusive possession,
which makes it individual property, can, like the right
of property in slaves, be traced to nothing but
municipal law; to the other, the right of exclusive
property springs clearly from those natural relations
which are among the primary perceptions of the human
mind.
Nor are these mere abstract distinctions. They are
distinctions of the first importance in determining what
should and what should not be taxed.
For, keeping in mind the fact that all wealth is the
result of human exertion, it is clearly seen that, having
in view the promotion of the general prosperity, it is
the height of absurdity to tax wealth for purposes of
revenue while there remains, unexhausted by taxation, any
value attaching to land. We may tax land values as much
as we please, without in the slightest degree lessening
the amount of land, or the capabilities of land, or the
inducement to use land. But we cannot tax wealth without
lessening the inducement to the production of wealth, and
decreasing the amount of wealth. We might take the whole
value of land in taxation, so as to make the ownership of
land worth nothing, and the land would still remain, and
be as useful as before. The effect would be to throw land
open to users free of price, and thus to increase its
capabilities, which are brought out by increased
population. But impose anything like such taxation upon
wealth, and the inducement to the production of wealth
would be gone. Movable wealth would be hidden or carried
off, immovable wealth would be suffered to go to decay,
and where was prosperity would soon be the silence of
desolation. ... read the whole
article
Henry George:
Progress & Poverty:
Wages & Capital: The Meaning of the Terms (Book I,
Chapter 2)
Land, labor, and capital are the three factors of
production. If we remember that capital is thus a term
used in contradistinction to land and labor, we at once
see that nothing properly included under either one of
these terms can be properly classed as capital. The term
land necessarily includes, not merely
the surface of the earth as distinguished from the water
and the air, but the whole material universe outside of
man himself, for it is only by having access to land,
from which his very body is drawn, that man can come in
contact with or use nature. The term land embraces, in
short, all natural materials, forces, and opportunities,
and, therefore, nothing that is freely supplied by nature
can be properly classed as capital. A fertile field, a
rich vein of ore, a falling stream which supplies power,
may give to the possessor advantages equivalent to the
possession of capital, but to class such things as
capital would be to put an end to the distinction between
land and capital, and, so far as they relate to each
other, to make the two terms meaningless. The term
labor, in like manner, includes all
human exertion, and hence human powers whether natural or
acquired can never properly be classed as capital. In
common parlance we often speak of a man's knowledge,
skill, or industry as constituting his capital; but this
is evidently a metaphorical use of language that must be
eschewed in reasoning that aims at exactness. Superiority
in such qualities may augment the income of an individual
just as capital would, and an increase in the knowledge,
skill, or industry of a community may have the same
effect in increasing its production as would an increase
of capital; but this effect is due to the increased power
of labor and not to capital. Increased velocity may give
to the impact of a cannon ball the same effect as
increased weight, yet, nevertheless, weight is one thing
and velocity another.
Thus we must exclude from the category of capital
everything that may be included either as land or labor.
Doing so, there remain only things which are neither land
nor labor, but which have resulted from the union of
these two original factors of production. Nothing can be
properly capital that does not consist of these that is
to say, nothing can be capital that is not wealth.
But it is from ambiguities in the use of this
inclusive term wealth that many of the ambiguities which
beset the term capital are derived.
As commonly used the word "wealth" is applied to
anything having an exchange value. But when used as a
term of political economy it must be limited to a much
more definite meaning, because many things are commonly
spoken of as wealth which in taking account of collective
or general wealth cannot be considered as wealth at all.
Such things have an exchange value, and are commonly
spoken of as wealth, insomuch as they represent as
between individuals, or between sets of individuals, the
power of obtaining wealth; but they are not truly wealth,
inasmuch as their increase or decrease does not affect
the sum of wealth. Such are bonds, mortgages, promissory
notes, bank bills, or other stipulations for the transfer
of wealth. Such are slaves, whose value represents merely
the power of one class to appropriate the earnings of
another class. Such are lands, or other natural
opportunities, the value of which is but the result of
the acknowledgment in favor of certain persons of an
exclusive right to their use, and which represents merely
the power thus given to the owners to demand a share of
the wealth produced by those who use them. Increase in
the amount of bonds, mortgages, notes, or bank bills
cannot increase the wealth of the community that includes
as well those who promise to pay as those who are
entitled to receive. The enslavement of a part of their
number could not increase the wealth of a people, for
what the enslavers gained the enslaved would lose.
Increase in land values does not represent increase in
the common wealth, for what landowners gain by higher
prices, the tenants or purchasers who must pay them will
lose. And all this relative wealth, which, in common
thought and speech, in legislation and law, is
undistinguished from actual wealth, could, without the
destruction or consumption of anything more than a few
drops of ink and a piece of paper, be utterly
annihilated. By enactment of the sovereign political
power debts might be canceled, slaves emancipated, and
land resumed as the common property of the whole people,
without the aggregate wealth being diminished by the
value of a pinch of snuff, for what some would lose
others would gain. There would be no more destruction of
wealth than there was creation of wealth when Elizabeth
Tudor enriched her favorite courtiers by the grant of
monopolies, or when Boris Godoonof made Russian peasants
merchantable property.
All things which have an exchange value are,
therefore, not wealth, in the only sense in which the
term can be used in political economy. Only such things
can be wealth the production of which increases and the
destruction of which decreases the aggregate of wealth.
If we consider what these things are, and what their
nature is, we shall have no difficulty in defining
wealth.
When we speak of a community increasing in wealth --
as when we say that England has increased in wealth since
the accession of Victoria, or that California is a
wealthier country than when it was a Mexican territory --
we do not mean to say that there is more land, or that
the natural powers of the land are greater, or that there
are more people, for when we wish to express that idea we
speak of increase of population; or that the debts or
dues owing by some of these people to others of their
number have increased; but we mean that there is an
increase of certain tangible things, having an actual and
not merely a relative value -- such as buildings, cattle,
tools, machinery, agricultural and mineral products,
manufactured goods, ships, wagons, furniture, and the
like. The increase of such things constitutes an increase
of wealth; their decrease is a lessening of wealth; and
the community that, in proportion to its numbers, has
most of such things is the wealthiest community. The
common character of these things is that they consist of
natural substances or products which have been adapted by
human labor to human use or gratification, their value
depending on the amount of labor which upon the average
would be required to produce things of like kind.
Thus wealth, as alone the term can be used in
political economy, consists of natural products that have
been secured, moved, combined, separated, or in other
ways modified by human exertion, so as to fit them for
the gratification of human desires. It is, in other
words, labor impressed upon matter in such a way as to
store up, as the beat of the sun is stored up in coal,
the power of human labor to minister to human desires.
Wealth is not the sole object of labor, for labor is also
expended in ministering directly to desire; but it is the
object and result of what we call productive labor --
that is, labor which gives value to material things.
Nothing which nature supplies to man without his labor is
wealth, nor yet does the expenditure of labor result in
wealth unless there is a tangible product which has and
retains the power of ministering to desire.
Now, as capital is wealth devoted to a certain
purpose, nothing can be capital which does not fall
within this definition of wealth. By recognizing and
keeping this in mind, we get rid of misconceptions which
vitiate all reasoning in which they are permitted, which
befog popular thought, and have led into mazes of
contradiction even acute thinkers.
But though all capital is wealth, all wealth is not
capital. Capital is only a part of wealth -- that part,
namely, which is devoted to the aid of production. It is
in drawing this line between the wealth that is and the
wealth that is not capital that a second class of
misconceptions are likely to occur. ...
Increase in the amount of bonds, mortgages, notes, or
bank bills cannot increase the wealth of the community
that includes as well those who promise to pay as those
who are entitled to receive. The enslavement of a part of
their number could not increase the wealth of a people,
for what the enslavers gained the enslaved would lose.
Increase in land values does not represent increase in
the common wealth, for what landowners gain by higher
prices, the tenants or purchasers who must pay them will
lose. And all this relative wealth, which, in common
thought and speech, in legislation and law, is
undistinguished from actual wealth, could, without the
destruction or consumption of anything more than a few
drops of ink and a piece of paper, be utterly
annihilated. By enactment of the sovereign political
power debts might be canceled, slaves emancipated, and
land resumed as the common property of the whole people,
without the aggregate wealth being diminished by the
value of a pinch of snuff, for what some would lose
others would gain. There would be no more destruction of
wealth than there was creation of wealth when Elizabeth
Tudor enriched her favorite courtiers by the grant of
monopolies, or when Boris Godonof made Russian peasants
merchantable property. ...
When we speak of a community increasing in wealth --
as when we say that England has increased in wealth since
the accession of Victoria, or that California is a
wealthier country than when it was a Mexican territory --
we do not mean to say that there is more land, or that
the natural powers of the land are greater, or that there
are more people, for when we wish to express that idea we
speak of increase of population; or that the debts or
dues owing by some of these people to others of their
number have increased; but we mean that there is an
increase of certain tangible things, having an actual and
not merely a relative value -- such as buildings, cattle,
tools, machinery, agricultural and mineral products,
manufactured goods, ships, wagons, furniture, and the
like. The increase of such things constitutes an increase
of wealth; their decrease is a lessening of wealth; and
the community that, in proportion to its numbers, has
most of such things is the wealthiest community. The
common character of these things is that they consist of
natural substances or products which have been adapted by
human labor to human use or gratification, their value
depending on the amount of labor which upon the average
would be required to produce things of like kind.
[31] Thus wealth, as alone
the term can be used in political economy, consists of
natural products that have been secured, moved, combined,
separated, or in other ways modified by human exertion,
so as to fit them for the gratification of human desires.
It is, in other words, labor impressed upon matter in
such a way as to store up, as the beat of the sun is
stored up in coal, the power of human labor to minister
to human desires. Wealth is not the sole object of labor,
for labor is also expended in ministering directly to
desire; but it is the object and result of what we call
productive labor -- that is, labor which gives value to
material things. Nothing which nature supplies to man
without his labor is wealth, nor yet does the expenditure
of labor result in wealth unless there is a tangible
product which has and retains the power of ministering to
desire. ...
read the entire chapter
This right of ownership that springs from labor
excludes the possibility of any other right of
ownership. If a man be rightfully entitled to the
produce of his labor, then no one can be rightfully
entitled to the ownership of anything which is not the
produce of his labor, or the labor of some one else
from whom the right has passed to him. For the right to
the produce of labor cannot be enjoyed without the
right to the free use of the opportunities offered by
nature, and to admit the right of property in these is
to deny the right of property in the produce of labor.
When nonproducers can claim as rent a portion of the
wealth created by producers, the right of the producers
to the fruits of their labor is to that extent
denied.
A house and the lot on which it stands are alike
property, as being the subject of ownership, and are
alike classed by the lawyers as real estate. Yet in
nature and relations they differ widely.
- The one is produced by human labor, and belongs
to the class in political economy styled wealth.
- The other is a part of nature, and belongs to the
class in political economy styled land.
The essential character of the one class of things
is that they embody labor, are brought into being by
human exertion, their existence or nonexistence, their
increase or diminution, depending on man. The essential
character of the other class of things is that they do
not embody labor, and exist irrespective of human
exertion and irrespective of man; they are the field or
environment in which man finds himself; the storehouse
from which his needs must be supplied, the raw material
upon which and the forces with which alone his labor
can act.
The moment this distinction is realized, that moment
is it seen that the sanction which natural justice
gives to one species of property is denied to the
other. ... read
the whole chapter
H.G. Brown:
Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's
Progress & Poverty: 12.
Effect of Remedy Upon Various Economic Classes (in the
unabridged P&P:
Part IX: Effects of the Remedy — Chapter 3. Of the
effect upon individuals and classes)
When it is first proposed to put all taxes upon the
value of land, all landholders are likely to take the
alarm, and there will not be wanting appeals to the fears
of small farm and homestead owners, who will be told that
this is a proposition to rob them of their hard-earned
property. But a moment's reflection will show that this
proposition should commend itself to all whose interests
as landholders do not largely exceed their interests as
laborers or capitalists, or both. And further
consideration will show that though the large landholders
may lose relatively, yet even in their case there will be
an absolute gain. For, the increase in production will be
so great that labor and capital will gain very much more
than will be lost to private landownership, while in
these gains, and in the greater ones involved in a more
healthy social condition, the whole community, including
the landowners themselves, will share.
- It is manifest, of course, that the change I
propose will greatly benefit all those who live by
wages, whether of hand or of head -- laborers,
operatives, mechanics, clerks, professional men of all
sorts.
- It is manifest, also, that it will benefit all
those who live partly by wages and partly by the
earnings of their capital -- storekeepers, merchants,
manufacturers, employing or undertaking producers and
exchangers of all sorts from the peddler or drayman to
the railroad or steamship owner -- and
- it is likewise manifest that it will increase the
incomes of those whose incomes are drawn from the
earnings of capital. ...
... In short, the working farmer is both a laborer and
a capitalist, as well as a landowner, and it is by his
labor and capital that his living is made. His loss would
be nominal; his gain would be real and great. In varying
degrees is this true of all landholders. Many landholders
are laborers of one sort or another. This measure would
make no one poorer but such as could be made a great deal
poorer without being really hurt. It would cut down great
fortunes, but it would impoverish no one.
Wealth would not only be enormously increased; it
would be equally distributed. I do not mean that each
individual would get the same amount of wealth. That
would not be equal distribution, so long as different
individuals have different powers and different desires.
But I mean that wealth would be distributed in accordance
with the degree in which the industry, skill, knowledge,
or prudence of each contributed to the common stock. The
great cause which concentrates wealth in the hands of
those who do not produce, and takes it from the hands of
those who do, would be gone. The inequalities that
continued to exist would be those of nature, not the
artificial inequalities produced by the denial of natural
law. The nonproducer would no longer roll in luxury while
the producer got but the barest necessities of animal
existence. ...
read the whole chapter
H.G. Brown:
Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's
Progress & Poverty: 13 Effect
of Remedy Upon Social Ideals (in the unabridged
P&P:
Part IX: Effects of the Remedy — 4. Of the changes
that would be wrought in social organization and social
life)
From whence springs this lust for gain, to gratify
which men tread everything pure and noble under their
feet; to which they sacrifice all the higher
possibilities of life; which converts civility into a
hollow pretense, patriotism into a sham, and religion
into hypocrisy; which makes so much of civilized
existence an Ishmaelitish warfare, of which the weapons
are cunning and fraud?
Does it not spring from the existence of want? Carlyle
somewhere says that poverty is the hell of which the
modern Englishman is most afraid. And he is right.
Poverty is the openmouthed, relentless hell which yawns
beneath civilized society. And it is hell enough. ...
To remove want and the fear of want, to give to all
classes leisure, and comfort, and independence, the
decencies and refinements of life, the opportunities of
mental and moral development, would be like turning water
into a desert. The sterile waste would clothe itself with
verdure, and the barren places where life seemed banned
would ere long be dappled with the shade of trees and
musical with the song of birds. Talents now hidden,
virtues unsuspected, would come forth to make human life
richer, fuller, happier, nobler. For
- in these round men who are stuck into
three-cornered holes, and three-cornered men who are
jammed into round holes;
- in these men who are wasting their energies in the
scramble to be rich;
- in these who in factories are turned into machines,
or are chained by necessity to bench or plow;
- in these children who are growing up in squalor,
and vice, and ignorance, are powers of the highest
order, talents the most splendid.
They need but the opportunity to bring them forth.
Consider the possibilities of a state of society that
gave that opportunity to all. Let imagination fill out
the picture; its colors grow too bright for words to
paint.
- Consider the moral elevation, the intellectual
activity, the social life.
- Consider how by a thousand actions and interactions
the members of every community are linked together, and
how in the present condition of things even the
fortunate few who stand upon the apex of the social
pyramid must suffer, though they know it not, from the
want, ignorance, and degradation that are
underneath.
- Consider these things and then say whether the
change I propose would not be for the benefit of every
one — even the greatest landholder? ...
read the whole chapter
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
CAPITAL, which is not in itself a distinguishable
element, but which it must always be kept in mind
consists of wealth applied to the aid of labor in further
production, is not a primary factor. There can be
production without it, and there must have been
production without it, or it could not in the first place
have appeared. It is a secondary and compound factor,
coming after and resulting from the union of labor and
land in the production of wealth. It is in essence labor
raised by a second union with land to a third or higher
power. But it is to civilized life so necessary and
important as to be rightfully accorded in political
economy the place of a third factor in production.
— The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 17, The Production of
Wealth: The Third Factor of Production —
Capital • abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
IT is to be observed that capital of itself can do
nothing. It is always a subsidiary, never an initiatory,
factor. The initiatory factor is always labor. That is to
say, in the production of wealth labor always uses
capital, is never used by capital. This is not merely
literally true, when by the term capital we mean the
thing capital. It is also true when we personify the term
and mean by it not the thing capital, but the men who are
possessed of capital. The capitalist pure and simple, the
man who merely controls capital, has in his hands the
power of assisting labor to produce. But purely as
capitalist he cannot exercise that power. It can be
exercised only by labor. To utilize it he must himself
exercise at least some of the functions of labor, or he
must put his capital, on some terms, at the use of those
who do. — The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 17, The Production of
Wealth: The Third Factor of Production —
Capital • abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
THUS we must exclude from the category of capital
everything that may be included either as land or labor.
Doing so, there remain only things which are neither land
nor labor, but which have resulted from the union of
these two original factors of production. Nothing can be
properly capital that does not consist of these —
that is to say, nothing can be capital that is not
wealth. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 2: Wages and Capital: The Meaning
of the Terms
THUS, a government bond is not capital, nor yet is it the
representative of capital. The capital that was once
received for it by the government has been consumed
unproductively — blown away from the mouths of
cannon, used up in war ships, expended in keeping men
marching and drilling, killing and destroying. The bond
cannot represent capital that has been destroyed. It does
not represent capital at all. It is simply a solemn
declaration that the government will, some time or other,
take by taxation from the then existing stock of the
people, so much wealth, which it will turn over to the
holder of the bond; and that, in the meanwhile, it will,
from time to time, take, in the same way, enough to make
up to the holder the increase which so much capital as it
some day promises to give him would yield him were it
actually in his possession. The immense sums which are
thus taken from the produce of every modern country to
pay interest on public debts are not the earnings or
increase of capital — are not really interest in
the strict sense of the term, but are taxes levied on the
produce of labor and capital, leaving so much less for
wages and so much less for real interest. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book III, Chapter 4: The Laws of Distribution: Of
Spurious Capital and of Profits Often Mistaken For
Interest
CAPITAL, as we have seen, consists of wealth used for
the procurement of more wealth, as distinguished from
wealth used for the direct satisfaction of desire; or, as
I think it may be defined, of wealth in the course of
exchange.
Capital, therefore, increases the power of labor to
produce wealth: (1) By enabling labor to apply itself in
more effective ways, as by digging up clams with a spade
instead of the hand, or moving a vessel by shoveling coal
into a furnace, instead of tugging at an oar. (2) By
enabling labor to avail itself of the reproductive forces
of nature, as to obtain corn by sowing it, or animals by
breeding them. (3) By permitting the division of labor,
and thus, on the one hand, increasing the efficiency of
the human factor of wealth, by the utilization of special
capabilities, the acquisition of skill, and the reduction
of waste; and, on the other, calling in the powers of the
natural factor at their highest, by taking advantage of
the diversities of soil, climate and situation, so as to
obtain each particular species of wealth where nature is
most favorable to its production.
Capital does not supply the materials which labor works
up into wealth, as is erroneously taught; the materials
of wealth are supplied by nature. But such materials
partially worked up and in the course of exchange are
capital. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 5: Wages and Capital: The Real
Functions of Capital
WHEN we speak of a community increasing in wealth we
do not mean to say that there is more land, or that the
natural powers of the land are greater, or that there are
more people (for when we wish to express that idea we
speak of increase of population) or that the debts or
dues owing by some of these people to others of their
number have increased; but we mean that there is an
increase of certain tangible things, having an actual and
not merely a relative value — such as buildings,
cattle, tools, machinery, agricultural and mineral
products, manufactured goods, ships, wagons, furniture
and the like. . . . The common character of these things
is that they consist of natural substances or products
which have been adapted by human labor to human use or
gratification, their value depending on the amount of
labor which upon the average would be required to produce
things of like kind.—
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 2: Wages and Capital: The Meaning
of the Terms
WEALTH is not the sole object of labor, for labor is also
expended in ministering directly to desire; but it is the
object and result of what we call productive labor
— that is, labor which gives value to material
things. Nothing which nature supplies to man without his
labor is wealth, nor yet does the expenditure of labor
result in wealth unless there is a tangible product which
has and retains the power of ministering to desire.
—
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 2: Wages and Capital: The Meaning
of the Terms
IT will be well for a moment to consider this idea of
accumulated wealth. The truth is, that wealth can be
accumulated but to a slight degree, and that communities
really live, as the vast majority of individuals live,
from hand to mouth. Wealth will not bear much
accumulation; except in a few unimportant forms it will
not keep. The matter of the universe, which, when worked
up by labor into desirable forms, constitutes wealth, is
constantly tending back to its original state. Some forms
of wealth will last for a few hours, some for a few days,
some for a few months, some for a few years; and there
are very few forms of wealth that can be passed from one
generation to another. Take wealth in some of its most
useful and permanent forms — ships, houses,
railways, machinery. Unless labor is constantly exerted
in preserving and renewing them, they will almost
immediately become useless. Stop labor in any community,
and wealth would vanish almost as the jet of a fountain
vanishes when the flow of water is shut off. Let labor
again exert itself, and wealth will almost as immediately
reappear. Accumulated wealth seems to play just about
such a part in relation to the social organism as
accumulated nutriment does to the physical organism. Some
accumulated wealth is necessary, and to a certain extent
it may be drawn upon in exigencies; but the wealth
produced by past generations can no more account for the
consumption of the present than the dinners he ate last
year can supply a man with present strength. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book II, Chapter 4: Population and Subsistence:
Disproof of the Malthusian Theory
IN the economic meaning of the term production, the
transporter or exchanger, or anyone engaged in any
subdivision of those functions, is as truly engaged in
production as is the primary extractor or maker. A
newspaper-carrier or the keeper of a news-stand would,
for instance, in common speech be styled a distributor.
But in economic terminology he is not a distributor of
wealth, but a producer of wealth. Although his part in
the process of producing the newspaper to the final
receiver comes last, not first, he is as much a producer
as the paper-maker or type-founder, the editor, or
compositor, or press-man. For the object of production is
the satisfaction of human desires, that is to say, it is
consumption; and this object is not made capable of
attainment, that is to say, production is not really
complete, until wealth is brought to the place where it
is to be consumed and put at the disposal of him whose
desire it is to satisfy. — The Science of
Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 1, The Production of
Wealth: The Meaning of Production • abridged:
Part III, Chapter 1, The Production of Wealth: The
Meaning of Production
PRODUCTION and distribution are not separate things, but
two mentally distinguishable parts of one thing —
the exertion of human labor in the satisfaction of human
desire. Though materially distinguishable, they are as
closely related as the two arms of the syphon. And as it
is the outflow of water at the longer end of the syphon
that is the cause of the inflow of water at the shorter
end, so it is that distribution is really the cause of
production, not production the cause of distribution. In
the ordinary course, things are not distributed because
they have been produced, but are produced in order that
they may be distributed. Thus interference with the
distribution of wealth is interference with the
production of wealth, and shows its effect in lessened
production. — The Science of Political
Economy —
unabridged Book IV, Chapter 2, The Distribution of
Wealth: The Nature of Distribution • abridged
Part IV, Chapter 2, The Distribution of Wealth: The
Nature of Distribution
OUR inquiry into the laws of the distribution of wealth
is not an inquiry into the municipal laws or human
enactments which either here and now, or in any other
time and place, prescribe or have prescribed how wealth
shall be divided among men. With them we have no concern,
unless it may be for purposes of illustration. What we
have to seek are those laws of the distribution of wealth
which belong to the natural order — laws which are
a part of that system or arrangement which constitutes
the social organism or body economic, as distinguished
from the body politic or state, the Greater Leviathan
which makes its appearance with civilization and develops
with its advance. These natural laws are in all times and
places the same, and though they may be crossed by human
enactment, can never be annulled or swerved by it. It is
more needful to call this to mind, because, in what have
passed for systematic treatises on political economy, the
fact that it is with natural laws, not human laws, that
the science of political economy is concerned, has, in
treating of the distribution of wealth, been utterly
ignored, and even flatly denied. — The Science
of Political Economy —
unabridged: Part IV, Chapter 1, The Distribution of
Wealth: The Meaning of Distribution • abridged:
Part IV, Chapter 1, The Distribution of Wealth: The
Meaning of Distribution
THE distinction between the laws of production and the
laws of distribution is not, as is erroneously taught in
the scholastic political economy, that the one set of
laws are natural laws and the other human laws. Both sets
of laws are laws of nature. The real distinction is that
the natural laws of production are physical laws and the
natural laws of distribution are moral laws. . . . The
moment we turn from a consideration of the laws of the
production of wealth to a consideration of the laws of
the distribution of wealth, the idea of ought or duty
becomes primary. All consideration of distribution
involves the ethical principle, is necessarily a
consideration of ought or duty — a consideration in
which the idea of right or justice is from the very first
involved. — The Science of Political
Economy —
unabridged: Book IV, Chapter 4, The Distribution of
Wealth: The Real Difference Between Laws of Production
and of Distribution • abridged:
Part IV, Chapter 3: The Distribution of Wealth: Physical
and Moral Laws
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
In addition, George differentiated
sharply between land itself and the products — or
wealth, as he termed them — which labor made from the
land. "In producing wealth, labor, with the aid of natural
forces, but works up, into the forms desired, pre-existing
matter, and, to produce wealth, must, therefore, have
access to this matter and to these forces — that is
to say, to land. The land is the source of all wealth. It
is the mine from which must be drawn the ore that labor
fashions. It is the substance to which labor gives the
form."
George saw, as between land and
products, certain elementary differences. "In every
essential, land differs from those things which... [are]
the product of human labor. ...It is the creation of God;
they are produced by man. It is fixed in quantity; they may
be increased illimitably. It exists, though generations
come and go; they in a little while decay and pass again
into the elements."...
read the whole article
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
1. THE SOURCE OF
WEALTH
The first demand upon us is to make sure that we know
the source of the things that satisfy want.43 But it is
quite unnecessary to tediously specify these and trace
them to their origin in detail. In searching for the
source of one we shall discover the source of all.
43. For it is ability or inability to
satisfy his wants that determines whether or not a man
is poor. He who has the power to procure what he wants,
as he wants it, and in satisfactory quality and
quantity, is not poor. No matter how he gets the power,
provided he keeps out of the penitentiary, he is
accounted rich.
As a common object of this kind, the production of
which is a familiar process, bread is probably the best
example for our purpose. Let us, then, carefully trace
bread to its source. To make the results of our work
clear to the eye as well as to the ear we will construct
a chart as we proceed. The chart should begin with a
classification of Bread with reference to Man, for it is
as an object for satisfying the wants of man that we
consider bread at all. Is Bread a part of the personality
of Man? or is it an object external to him? That is our
first question. The answer is so obvious that a child
could make no mistake. Bread is external to Man. It
should, therefore, be classified with what for brevity we
will call "External Objects." It is also a product having
certain constituents.
Let us so arrange the chart as to indicate these facts
and also to provide a place for particularizing the
constituents of bread as we ascertain them. Thus:
[chart]
Now let the necessary constituents of bread be
inserted. Any housewife, any kitchen girl, knows what
they are as well as does the most expert baker or learned
chemist. They are named in the place reserved for them in
the chart: [chart]
In respect of Man the constituents of Bread all fall
into two general classes: Man, and objects that are
external to him — or, briefly, External Objects.
Thus: [chart]
While all these External Objects are alike in the one
particular that they are external to Man, some of them
may differ from others in respects which, for clear
thinking, must be distinguished. Compare the first two
External Objects — the lot of land and the oven
— and a radical difference at once appears. The lot
of land is a natural object. The oven is an artificial
object. The lot exists independently of man's art; the
oven can have no existence whatever as an oven but for
man's art. 44 And when the remaining External Objects are
considered the same difference appears. Objects are
considered the same difference appears. All of them,
Bread included, differ from the lot of land precisely as
the oven does; they are artificial.45 Let us note this
difference upon our chart:
44. This difference is frequently
ignored, even by political economists; but it is plain
to any intelligent mind that no reasoning can be
trusted which does not distinguish a difference so
radical.
...
Wealth is produced solely by the application of Labor
to Land.51
50. It may at first seem like a great
waste of time and space to have gone through this long
analysis for no other purpose at last than to
demonstrate the self-evident fact that land and labor
are the sole original factors in the production of
Wealth. But it will have been no waste if it enables
the reader to firmly grasp the fact. Nothing is more
obvious, to be sure. Nothing is more readily assented
to. Yet by layman and college professor and economic
author alike, this simple truth is cast adrift at the
very threshold of argument or investigation, with
results akin to what might be expected in physics if
after recognizing the law of gravitation its effects
should be completely ignored.
51. There is ample authority among
economic writers for this conclusion.
Professor Ely enumerates Nature, Labor,
and Capital as the factors of production, but he
describes Capital as a combination of Nature and Labor
— Ely's Introduction, part ii, ch. iii.
Say describes industry as " nothing more
or less than human employment of natural agents."
— Say's Trea., book i, ch. ii.
And though John Stuart Mill and numerous
others speak of Land, Labor, and Capital as the three
factors of production, as does Professor Jevons, most
of them, like Jevons, recognize the fact, though in
their reasoning they often fail to profit by it, that
Capital is not a primary but a secondary requisite. See
Jevons's Pol. Ec., secs. 16, 19.
Henry George says: "Land, labor, and
capital are the factors of production. The term land
includes all natural opportunities or forces; the term
labor, all human exertion; and the term capital, all
wealth used to produce more wealth. . . Capital is not
a necessary factor in production. Labor exerted upon
land can produce wealth without the aid of capital, and
in the necessary genesis of things must so produce
wealth before capital can exist." — Progress and
Poverty, book iii, ch. i.
Also : "The complexities of production
in the civilized state, in which so great a part is
borne by exchange, and so much labor is bestowed upon
materials after they have been separated from the land,
though they may to the unthinking disguise, do not
alter the fact that all production is still the union
of the two factors, land and labor."— Id., ch.
viii.
This is the final analysis. In the union of Labor,
which includes all human effort,52 with Land, which
includes the whole material universe outside of man,53 we
discover the ultimate source of Wealth, which includes
all the material things that satisfy want.54 And that is
the first great truth upon which the single tax
philosophy is built.
52. The term labor includes all human
exertion in the production of wealth." — Progress
and Poverty, book i, ch. ii.
53. "The term land necessarily includes,
not merely the surface of the earth as distinguished
from the water and the air, but the whole material
universe outside of man himself, for it is only by
having access to land, from which his very body is
drawn, that man can come in contact with or use
nature." — Progress and Poverty, book i, ch.
ii.
54. "As commonly used the word
'wealth ' is applied to anything having exchange value.
But ... wealth, as alone the term can be used in
political economy, consists of natural products that
have been secured, moved, combined, separated, or in
other ways modified by human exertion, so as to fit
them for the gratification of human desires." —
Progress and Poverty, book i, ch ii.
...
69. Demand for consumption is satisfied
not from hoards of accumulated wealth, but from the
stream of current production. Broadly speaking there
can be no accumulation of wealth in the sense of saving
up wealth from generation to generation. Imagine a
man's satisfying his demand for eggs from the
accumulated stores of his ancestors! Yet eggs do not
differ in this respect from other forms of wealth,
except that some other forms will keep a little longer,
and some not so long.
The notion that a saving instinct must
be aroused before the great and more lasting forms of
wealth can be brought forth is a mistake. Houses and
locomotives, for example, are built not because of any
desire to accumulate wealth, but because we need houses
to live in and locomotives to transport us and our
goods. It is not the saving, but the serving,, instinct
that induces the production of these things; the same
instinct that induces the production of a loaf of
bread.
Artificial things do not save. No sooner
are the processes of production from land complete than
the products are on their way back to the land. If man
does not return them by means of consumption, then
through decay they return themselves. Mankind as a
whole lives literally from hand to mouth. What is
demanded for consumption in the present must be
produced by the labor of the present. From current
production, and from that alone, can current
consumption be satisfied.
"Accumulated wealth" is, in fact, not
wealth at all in any great degree. It is merely titles
to wealth yet to be produced. A share in a mining
company, for example, is but a certificate that the
owner is legally entitled to a proportion of the wealth
to be produced in the future from a certain mine.
Titles to future wealth may be both
morally and legally valid. This is so when they
represent past labor or its products loaned in free
contract for future labor or its products; for example,
a contract for the delivery of goods of any kind today
to be paid for next week. or next month, or next year,
or in ten years, or later.
They may be legally but not morally
valid. This is so when they represent the product of a
franchise (whether paid for in labor or not) to exact
tribute from future labor; for example, a franchise to
confiscate a man's labor through ownership of his body,
as in slavery, or a franchise to confiscate the
products of labor in general through ownership of
land.
Or they may be both legally and
morally invalid, as when they are obtained by illegal
force or fraud from the rightful owner....
read the
book
Alanna Hartzok: In
the History of Thought: Henry George's "Single
Tax"
One day, while riding horseback in the Oakland
hills, merchant seaman and journalist Henry George had
a startling epiphany. He realized that
speculation and private profiteering in the gifts of
nature were the root causes of the unjust distribution of
wealth. The insights presented in Progress and
Poverty, George's masterwork, launched him to
fame. His policy approach was known at
that time as the "single tax" - meaning that taxation
should be shifted off of labor and onto the socially
created surplus value of land and other natural
resources. His message reached as far as the great
Russian Leo Tolstoy, who was so taken with the idea that
he frequently referred to George and "Georgism" in his
novel Resurrection....
Read the
whole article
Henry George: Justice
the Object — Taxation the Means (1890)
We say that industry is a good thing, and that
thrift is a good thing; and there are some people who say
that if a man be industrious, and if a man he thrifty, he
can easily accumulate wealth. Whether that be true or
not, industry is certainly a good thing, and thrift is
certainly a good thing. But what do we do if a man be
industrious? If he produces wealth enough, and by thrift
accumulates wealth at all, down comes the tax-gatherer to
demand a part of it.
We say that that is stupid; that we
ought not by our taxes to repress the production of wealth;
that when a farmer reclaims a strip of the desert and turns
it into an orchard and a vineyard, or on the prairie
produces crops and feeds fine cattle, that, so far from
being taxed and fined for having done these things, we
ought to be glad that he has done it; that we ought to
welcome all energy; that no man can
produce wealth for himself without augmenting the general
stock, without making the whole country richer. We
impose some taxes for the purpose of getting rid of things,
for the purpose of having fewer of the things that we tax.
In most of our counties and States when dogs become too
numerous, there is imposed a dog tax to get rid of dogs.
Well, we impose a dog tax to get rid of dogs, and why
should we impose a house tax unless we want to get rid of
houses? Why should we impose a farm tax unless we want
fewer farms? Why should we tax any man for having exerted
industry or energy in the production of wealth?
...
What do we do when we tax a building?
When a man puts up a building by his own exertion, or it
comes to him through the transfer of the right that others
have to their exertion, down comes the community and says,
virtually, you must give us a portion of that building. For
where a man honestly earns and accumulates wealth, down
come the tax-gatherers and demand every year a portion of
those earnings. Now, is it not as much an impairment of the
right of property to take a lamb as to take a sheep? To
take 5% or 20%, as to take 100%? We should leave the whole
of the value produced by individual exertion to the
individual. We should respect the rights of property not to
any limited extent, but fully. We should leave to him who
produces wealth, to him to whom the title of the producer
passed, all that wealth. No matter what be its form, it
belongs to the individual. We should take for the uses of
the community the value of land for the same reason. It
belongs to the community because the growth of the
community produces it.
Read the entire
article
Marjorie Carter: My
Introduction to Henry George
... Dinner that night grew cold, while Bruce
explained to the boys and me that money was not wealth,
nor was a wild duck flying in the air. Our younger said,
Well, was it poverty? But that seemed wrong, too. When,
however, he tried to tell us that a ploughed field was
not land, whereas a whale might fairly be considered
land, we decided to go up to the course in a body, and
see what they were doing to Daddy. ... Read the
whole piece
Bill Batt: How the
Railroads Got Us On the Wrong Economic Track
In classical economics, the definition of capital
grew out of labor mixed with earlier capital. Land, by
conventional definition, was not capital, nor was it a
component of wealth. Rather land was its own category.
Conflating land into capital allowed land rent to be
hidden and diluted in ways so that the unearned increment
arising from social improvements fell to speculators
rather than being returned to society in rent.
...
The failure of society to recapture the
appropriate level of land rent from titleholders led also
to depression of labor wages at the margin, creating
poverty and artificial scarcity of labor where otherwise
it could be relieved. Hence the title of George's book,
Progress
and Poverty. George recognized that the value of
any land parcel arose out of its social activity, not
from anything which a titleholder might have done to it.
He recognized that many, perhaps most, titleholders in
land were speculators, reaping the benefit of others'
investments, and selling out at last when their price was
met. Hence it made sense that society had a right to a
return on what it had brought about, as well as from the
fact that those titles could never be other than
leaseholds. That land rent, shortly confused by use of
the words "single tax," was, to George, the rightful
return to society. The railroad barons of the 19th
century were not just coincidentally the land barons.
They also had strong holds on the founding and growth of
the major American universities of the period, some of
which carry their names. Johns Hopkins, Andrew Dickson
White, Daniel Gilman, John D. Rockefeller, George Leland
Stanford, Nicholas Murray Butler were all as attached to
various universities in the country as they were to
powerful railroad interests. They were able, through
their control of universities either as actual presidents
or as benefactors to influence the dominant figures
responsible for establishing the American Economic
Association in 1885. ... read the
whole article
Henry George:
The Land Question (1881)
The galleys that carried Caesar to Britain, the
accoutrements of his legionaries, the baggage that they
carried, the arms that they bore, the buildings that they
erected; the scythed chariots of the ancient Britons, the
horses that drew them, their wicker boats and wattled
houses–where are they now? But the land for which
Roman and Briton fought, there it is still. That British
soil is yet as fresh and as new as it was in the days of
the Romans. Generation after generation has lived on it
since, and generation after generation will live on it
yet. Now, here is a very great difference. The
right to possess and to pass on the ownership of things
that in their nature decay and soon cease to be is a very
different thing from the right to possess and to pass on
the ownership of that which does not decay, but from
which each successive generation must live.
To show how this difference between land and
such other species of property as are properly styled
wealth bears upon the argument for the vested rights of
landholders, let me illustrate again.
Captain Kidd was a pirate. He made a business of
sailing the seas, capturing merchantmen, making their
crews walk the plank, and appropriating their cargoes. In
this way he accumulated much wealth, which he is thought
to have buried. But let us suppose, for the sake of the
illustration, that he did not bury his wealth, but left
it to his legal heirs, and they to their heirs and so on,
until at the present day this wealth or a part of it has
come to a great-great-grandson of Captain Kidd. Now, let
us suppose that some one – say a
great-great-grandson of one of the shipmasters whom
Captain Kidd plundered, makes complaint, and says: "This
man's great-great-grandfather plundered my
great-great-grandfather of certain things or certain
sums, which have been transmitted to him, whereas but for
this wrongful act they would have been transmitted to me;
therefore, I demand that he be made to restore them."
What would society answer?
Society, speaking by its proper tribunals, and in
accordance with principles recognized among all civilized
nations, would say: "We cannot entertain such a demand.
It may be true that Mr. Kidd's great-great-grandfather
robbed your great-great-grandfather, and that as the
result of this wrong he has got things that otherwise
might have come to you. But we cannot inquire into
occurrences that happened so long ago. Each generation
has enough to do to attend to its own affairs. If we go
to righting the wrongs and reopening the controversies of
our great-great-grandfathers, there will be endless
disputes and pretexts for dispute. What you say may be
true, but somewhere we must draw the line, and have an
end to strife. Though this man's great-great-grandfather
may have robbed your great-great-grandfather, he has not
robbed you. He came into possession of these things
peacefully, and has held them peacefully, and we must
take this peaceful possession, when it has been continued
for a certain time, as absolute evidence of just title;
for, were we not to do that, there would be no end to
dispute and no secure possession of anything."
Now, it is this common-sense principle that is
expressed in the statute of limitations – in the
doctrine of vested rights. This is the
reason why it is held – and as to most things held
justly – that peaceable possession for
a certain time cures all defects of title.
But let us pursue the illustration a little
further:
Let us suppose that Captain Kidd, having established a
large and profitable piratical business, left it to his
son, and he to his son, and so on, until the
great-great-grandson, who now pursues it, has come to
consider it the most natural thing in the world that his
ships should roam the sea, capturing peaceful
merchantmen, making their crews walk the plank, and
bringing home to him much plunder, whereby he is enabled,
though he does no work at all, to live in very great
luxury, and look down with contempt upon people who have
to work. But at last, let us suppose, the merchants get
tired of having their ships sunk and their goods taken,
and sailors get tired of trembling for their lives every
time a sail lifts above the horizon, and they demand of
society that piracy be stopped.
Now, what should society say if Mr. Kidd got
indignant, appealed to the doctrine of vested rights, and
asserted that society was bound to prevent any
interference with the business that he had inherited, and
that, if it wanted him to stop, it must buy him out,
paying him all that his business was worth–that is
to say, at least as much as he could make in twenty
years' successful pirating, so that if he stopped
pirating he could still continue to live in luxury off of
the profits of the merchants and the earnings of the
sailors?
What ought society to say to such a claim as this?
There will be but one answer. We will all say that
society should tell Mr. Kidd that his was a business to
which the statute of limitations and the doctrine of
vested rights did not apply; that because his father, and
his grandfather, and his great- and
great-great-grandfather pursued the business of capturing
ships and making their crews walk the plank, was no
reason why lie should be permitted to pursue it. Society,
we will all agree, ought to say he would have to stop
piracy and stop it at once, and that without getting a
cent for stopping.
Or supposing it had happened that Mr. Kidd had sold
out his piratical business to Smith, Jones, or Robinson,
we will all agree that society ought to say that their
purchase of the business gave them no greater right than
Mr. Kidd had.
We will all agree that that is what society ought to
say. Observe, I do not ask what society would say.
For, ridiculous and preposterous as it may appear, I
am satisfied that, under the circumstances I have
supposed, society would not for a long time say what we
have agreed it ought to say. Not only would all the Kidds
loudly claim that to make them give up their business
without full recompense would be a wicked interference
with vested rights, but the justice of this claim would
at first be assumed as a matter of course by all or
nearly all the influential classes–the great
lawyers, the able journalists, the writers for the
magazines, the eloquent clergymen, and the principal
professors in the principal universities. Nay, even the
merchants and sailors, when they first began to complain,
would be so tyrannized and browbeaten by this public
opinion that they would hardly think of more than of
buying out the Kidds, and, wherever here and there any
one dared to raise his voice in favor of stopping piracy
at once and without compensation, he would only do so
under penalty of being stigmatized as a reckless
disturber and wicked foe of social order.
If any one denies this, if any one says mankind are
not such fools, then I appeal to universal history to
bear me witness. I appeal to the facts of to-day.
Show me a wrong, no matter how monstrous, that ever
yet, among any people, became ingrafted in the social
system, and I will prove to you the truth of what I say.
...
What is the slave-trade but piracy of the worst kind?
Yet it is not long since the slave-trade was looked upon
as a perfectly respectable business, affording as
legitimate an opening for the investment of capital and
the display of enterprise as any other. The proposition
to prohibit it was first looked upon as ridiculous, then
as fanatical, then as wicked. It was only slowly and by
hard fighting that the truth in regard to it gained
ground. Does not our very Constitution bear witness to
what I say? Does not the fundamental law of the nation,
adopted twelve years after the enunciation of the
Declaration of Independence, declare that for twenty
years the slave-trade shall not be prohibited nor
restricted? Such dominion had the idea of vested
interests over the minds of those who had already
proclaimed the inalienable right of man to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness! ...
read the whole
article
Henry Ford Talks About
War and Your Future - 1942 interview
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