Finders keepers, losers weepers?
My ancestors were pioneers, therefore I ...
Does that fact the one was the first to
claim a piece of land as one's own, or bought it from
someone in a direct chain of people who bought it from
whomever first claimed that piece of land as one's own,
mean that one is entitled to keep that piece of land
forever as one's own, to will it to one's selected
heirs, with no taxes or liens against it, forever? Many
people's immediate reaction would be "of course!"
Georgists are among those who see it
somewhat differently. Land is different from that which
man creates with his own work. Land was here before
man, and will be here after we're gone, and we are all
directly and completely dependent on having access to
land in order to support ourselves and our families.
This necessarily means that all of us who claim a piece
of land as our own are entitled to secure title, but
that in return for that secure title, must pay to the
community the economic value of the site, every year or
every month.
I'm not suggesting that those who created
the improvements on land ought not to be compensated
for their value. Those improvements are legitimately
private property. But the economic value of land is
different. It is rightly our common treasure.
Henry George:
The Wages of Labor
Thus Cain and Abel, were there only two men on
earth, might by agreement divide the earth between
them. Under this compact each might claim exclusive
right to his share as against the other. But neither
could rightfully continue such claim against the next
child born. For since no one comes into the world
without God's permission, his presence attests his
equal right to the use of God’s bounty. For
them to refuse him any use of the earth which they
had divided between them would therefore be for them
to commit murder. And for them to refuse him any use
of the earth, unless by laboring for them or by
giving them part of the products of his labor he
bought It of them, would be for them to commit theft.
...
read the whole
article
The value of land, as we have seen, is the price
of monopoly. It is not the absolute, but the
relative, capability of land that determines its
value. No matter what may be its intrinsic
qualities land that is no better than other land
which may be had for the using can have no value.
And the value of land always measures the
difference between it and the best land that may be
had for the using. Thus, the value of land
expresses in exact and tangible form the right of
the community in land held by an individual; and
rent expresses the exact amount which the
individual should pay to the community to satisfy
the equal rights of all other members of the
community.
Thus, if we concede to priority of possession
the undisturbed use of land, taxing rent into the
public treasury for the benefit of the community,
we reconcile the fixity of tenure which is
necessary for improvement with a full and complete
recognition of the equal rights of all to the use
of land.
Consider what rent is. It does not arise
spontaneously from land; it is due to nothing that
the land owners have done. It represents a value
created by the whole community.
Let the land holders have, if you
please, all that the possession of the land would
give them in the absence of the rest of the
community. But rent, the creation of the whole
community, necessarily belongs to the whole
community. ... read the whole
chapter
Henry George: The Crime of
Poverty (1885 speech)
... You may say that those Scotch people are
very absurd people, but they are not a whit more so
than we are. I read only a little while ago of some
Long Island fishermen who had been paying as rent for
the privilege of fishing there, a certain part of the
catch. They paid it because they believed that James
II, a dead man centuries ago, a man who never put his
foot in America, a king who was kicked off the
English throne, had said they had to pay it, and they
got up a committee, went to the county town and
searched the records. They could not find anything in
the records to show that James II had ever ordered
that they should give any of their fish to anybody,
and so they refused to pay any longer. But if they
had found that James II had really said they should
they would have gone on paying. Can anything be more
absurd?
There is a square in New
York—Stuyvesant Square that is locked up at six
o'clock every evening, even on the long summer
evenings. Why is it locked up? Why are the children not
allowed to play there? Why because old Mr. Stuyvesant,
dead and gone I don't know how many years ago, so
willed it. Now can anything be more
absurd?*
*After a popular
agitation, the park authorities since decided to have
the gates open later than six
o'clock.
Yet that is not any more
absurd than our land titles. From whom do they
come? Dead man after dead man. Suppose you get on
the cars here going to Council Bluffs or Chicago. You
find a passenger with his baggage strewn over the
seats. You say: "Will you give me a seat, if you
please, sir?" He replies: "No; I bought this seat."
"Bought this seat? From whom did you buy it?" I bought
it from the man who got out at the last station," That
is the way we manage this earth of ours. ...
read the whole speech Henry
George: Thou Shalt Not
Steal (1887 speech)
Crowded! Is it any wonder that people are
crowded together as they are in this city, when we
see other people taking up far more land than they
can by any possibility use, and holding it for
enormous prices? Why, what would have happened if,
when these doors were opened, the first people who
came in had claimed all the seats around them, and
demanded a price of others who afterwards came in by
the same equal right? Yet that is precisely the way
we are treating this continent. ...
"Thou shalt not steal"; that is the law of
God. What does it mean? Well, it does not merely mean
that you shall not pick pockets! It does not merely
mean that you shall not commit burglary or highway
robbery! There are other forms of stealing which it
prohibits as well. It certainly means (if it has any
meaning) that we shall not take that to which we are
not entitled, to the detriment of
others.
Now, here is a desert. Here is a caravan going
along over the desert. Here is a gang of robbers.
They say: "Look! There is a rich caravan; let us go
and rob it, kill the men if necessary, take their
goods from them, their camels and horses, and walk
off." But one of the robbers says:
"Oh, no; that is dangerous; besides, that
would be stealing! Let us, instead
of doing that, go ahead to where there is a spring,
the only spring at which this caravan can get water
in this desert. Let us put a wall around it and call
it ours, and when they come up we won’t let
them have any water until they have given us all the
goods they have." That would be more
gentlemanly, more polite, and more respectable; but
would it not be theft all the same? And is it not
theft of the same kind when people go ahead in
advance of population and get land they have no use
whatever for, and then, as people come into the world
and population increases, will not let this
increasing population use the land until they pay an
exorbitant price?
That is the sort of theft on which our first
families are founded. Do that under the false code of
morality which exists here today and people will
praise your forethought and your enterprise, and will
say you have made money because you are a very
superior person, and that all can make money if they
will only work and be industrious! But is it not as
clearly a violation of the command: "Thou shalt not
steal," as taking the money out of a person’s
pocket? ... read the
whole article
Henry George: Justice
the Object -- Taxation the Means (1890)
Suppose that in answer to the prayers that
ascend for the relief of poverty, the Almighty were
to rain down wealth from heaven, or cause it to spout
tip from the bowels of the earth. Who, under our
present system, would own it? The landowner. There
would be no benefit to labour. Consider, conceive any
kind of a world your imagination will permit.
Conceive of heaven itself, which, from the very
necessities of our minds, we cannot otherwise think
of than as having an expansion of space — what
would be the result in heaven itself, if the people
who should first get to heaven were to parcel it out
in big tracts among themselves? ...
Read the entire article
Henry George:
The Single Tax:
What It Is and Why We Urge It (1890)
From the Single Tax we may expect
these advantages:
1. It would dispense with a whole army of tax
gatherers and other officials which present taxes
require, and place in the treasury a much larger
portion of what is taken from people, while by making
government simpler and cheaper, it would tend to make
it purer. It would get rid of taxes
which necessarily promote fraud, perjury, bribery,
and corruption, which lead men into temptation, and
which tax what the nation can least afford to
spare--honesty and conscience. Since land lies
out-of-doors and cannot be removed, and its value is
the most readily ascertained of all values, the tax
to which we would resort can be collected with the
minimum of cost and the least strain on public
morals. ...
... These are the
fundamental reasons for which we urge the Single Tax,
believing it to be the greatest and most fundamental
of all reforms. We do not think it
will change human nature. That, man can never do; but
it will bring about conditions in which human nature
can develop what is best, instead of, as now in so
many cases, what is worst.
- It will permit such an enormous production
as we can now hardly conceive.
- It will secure an
equitable distribution.
- It will solve the labor problem and dispel
the darkening clouds which are now gathering over the
horizon of our civilization.
- It will make undeserved poverty an unknown
thing.
- It will check the soul-destroying greed of
gain.
- It will enable men to be at least as
honest, as true, as considerate, and as high-minded
as they would like to be.
- It will remove temptation
to lying, false, swearing, bribery, and law
breaking.
- It will open to all, even the poorest, the
comforts and refinements and opportunities of an
advancing civilization.
It will thus, so we reverently believe, clear
the way for the coming of that kingdom of right and
justice, and consequently of abundance and peace and
happiness, for which the Master told His disciples to
pray and work. It is not that it is a promising
invention or cunning device that we look for the
Single Tax to do all this; but it is because it
involves a conforming of the most important and
fundamental adjustments of society to the supreme law
of justice, because it involves the basing of the
most important of our laws on the principle that we
should do to others as we would be done by.
The readers of this article, I
may fairly presume, believe, as I believe, that there
is a world for us beyond this. The limit of space has
prevented me from putting before them more than some
hints for thought. Let me in conclusion present two
more:
1. What would be the result in heaven itself
if those who get there first instituted private
property in the surface of heaven, and parceled it
out in absolute ownership among themselves, as we
parcel out the surface of the earth?
2. Since we cannot conceive of a heaven in
which the equal rights of God's children to their
Father's bounty is denied, as we now deny them on
this earth, what is the duty enjoined on Christians
by the daily prayer: "Thy kingdom come, Thy will be
done, on earth, as it is in heaven?"
read the whole article
Henry George:
The Land
Question (1881)
IMAGINE an island girt with ocean; imagine a
little world swimming in space. Put on it, in
imagination, human beings. Let them divide the land,
share and share alike, as individual property. At
first, while population is sparse and industrial
processes rude and primitive, this will work well
enough.
Turn away the eyes of the mind for a moment, let
time pass, and look again. Some families will have
died out, some have greatly multiplied; on the whole,
population will have largely increased, and even
supposing there have been no important inventions or
improvements in the productive arts, the increase in
population, by causing the division of labor, will
have made industry more complex. During this time
some of these people will have been careless,
generous, improvident; some will have been thrifty
and grasping. Some of them will have devoted much of
their powers to thinking of how they themselves and
the things they see around them came to be, to
inquiries and speculations as to what there is in the
universe beyond their little island or their little
world, to making poems, painting pictures, or writing
books; to noting the differences in rocks and trees
and shrubs and grasses; to classifying beasts and
birds and fishes and insects – to the doing, in
short, of all the many things which add so largely to
the sum of human knowledge and human happiness,
without much or any gain of wealth to the doer.
Others again will have devoted all their energies to
the extending of their possessions. What, then, shall
we see, land having been all this time treated as
private property? Clearly, we shall see that the
primitive equality has given way to inequality. Some
will have very much more than one of the original
shares into which the land was divided; very many
will have no land at all. Suppose that, in all things
save this, our little island or our little world is
Utopia – that there are no wars or robberies;
that the government is absolutely pure and taxes
nominal; suppose, if you want to, any sort of a
currency; imagine, if you can imagine such a world or
island, that interest is utterly abolished; yet
inequality in the ownership of land will have
produced poverty and virtual slavery.
For the people we have supposed are human beings
– that is to say, in their physical natures at
least, they are animals who can live only on land and
by the aid of the products of land. They may make
machines which will enable them to float on the sea,
or perhaps to fly in the air, but to build and equip
these machines they must have land and the products
of land, and must constantly come back to land.
Therefore those who own the land must be the masters
of the rest. Thus, if one man has come to own all the
land, he is their absolute master even to life or
death. If they can live on the land only on his
terms, then they can live only on his terms, for
without land they cannot live. They are his absolute
slaves, and so long as his ownership is acknowledged,
if they want to live, they must do in everything as
he wills.
If, however, the concentration of landownership
has not gone so far as to make one or a very few men
the owners of all the land – if there are still
so many landowners that there is competition between
them as well as between those who have only their
labor – then the terms on which these
non-landholders can live will seem more like free
contract. But it will not be free contract. Land can
yield no wealth without the application of labor;
labor can produce no wealth without land. These are
the two equally necessary factors of production. Yet,
to say that they are equally necessary factors of
production is not to say that, in the making of
contracts as to how the results of production are
divided, the possessors of these two meet on equal
terms. For the nature of these two
factors is very different. Land is a natural element;
the human being must have his stomach filled every
few hours. Land can exist without labor, but labor
cannot exist without land. If I own a piece of
land, I can let it lie idle for a year or for years,
and it will eat nothing. But the
laborer must eat every day, and his family must eat.
And so, in the making of terms between them, the
landowner has an immense advantage over the laborer.
It is on the side of the laborer that the intense
pressure of competition comes, for in his case it is
competition urged by hunger. And, further than
this: As population increases, as the competition for
the use of land becomes more and more intense, so are
the owners of land enabled to get for the use of
their land a larger and larger part of the wealth
which labor exerted upon it produces. That is to say,
the value of land steadily rises. Now, this steady
rise in the value of land brings about a confident
expectation of future increase of value, which
produces among landowners all the effects of a
combination to hold for higher prices. Thus there is
a constant tendency to force mere laborers to take
less and less or to give more and more (put it which
way you please, it amounts to the same thing) of the
products of their work for the opportunity to work.
And thus, in the very nature of things, we should see
on our little island or our little world that, after
a time had passed, some of the people would be able
to take and enjoy a superabundance of all the fruits
of labor without doing any labor at all, while others
would be forced to work the livelong day for a
pitiful living.
But let us introduce another element into the
supposition. Let us suppose great discoveries and
inventions – such as the steam-engine, the
power-loom, the Bessemer process, the
reaping-machine, and the thousand and one
labor-saving devices that are such a marked feature
of our era. What would be the result?
Manifestly, the effect of all such discoveries and
inventions is to increase the power of labor in
producing wealth – to enable the same amount of
wealth to be produced by less labor, or a greater
amount with the same labor. But none of them lessen,
or can lessen the necessity for land. Until we can
discover some way of making something out of nothing
– and that is so far beyond our powers as to be
absolutely unthinkable – there is no possible
discovery or invention which can lessen the
dependence of labor upon land. And, this being the
case, the effect of these labor-saving devices, land
being the private property of some, would simply be
to increase the proportion of the wealth produced
that landowners could demand for the use of their
land. The ultimate effect of these discoveries and
inventions would be not to benefit the laborer, but
to make him more dependent.
And, since we are imagining conditions, imagine
laborsaving inventions to go to the farthest
imaginable point, that is to say, to perfection. What
then? Why then, the necessity for labor being done
away with, all the wealth that the land could produce
would go entire to the landowners. None of it
whatever could be claimed by any one else. For the
laborers there would be no use at all. If they
continued to exist, it would be merely as paupers on
the bounty of the landowners! ... read the whole article
Henry George: The
Savannah (excerpt from
Progress & Poverty, Book IV: Chapter 2:
The Effect of Increase of Population upon the
Distribution of Wealth; also found in Significant Paragraphs
from Progress & Poverty, Chapter 3: Land Rent Grows
as Community Develops)
Here, let us imagine, is an unbounded
savannah, stretching off in unbroken sameness of
grass and flower, tree and rill, till the traveler
tires of the monotony. Along comes the wagon of the
first immigrant. Where to settle he cannot tell
— every acre seems as good as every other acre.
As to wood, as to water, as to fertility, as to
situation, there is absolutely no choice, and he is
perplexed by the embarrassment of richness. Tired out
with the search for one place that is better than
another, he stops — somewhere, anywhere —
and starts to make himself a home. The soil is virgin
and rich, game is abundant, the streams flash with
the finest trout. Nature is at her very best. He has
what, were he in a populous district, would make him
rich; but he is very poor. To say nothing of the
mental craving, which would lead him to welcome the
sorriest stranger, he labors under all the material
disadvantages of solitude. He can get no temporary
assistance for any work that requires a greater union
of strength than that afforded by his own family, or
by such help as he can permanently keep. Though he
has cattle, he cannot often have fresh meat, for to
get a beefsteak he must kill a bullock. He must be
his own blacksmith, wagonmaker, carpenter, and
cobbler — in short, a "jack of all trades and
master of none." He cannot have his children
schooled, for, to do so, he must himself pay and
maintain a teacher. Such things as he cannot produce
himself, he must buy in quantities and keep on hand,
or else go without, for he cannot be constantly
leaving his work and making a long journey to the
verge of civilization; and when forced to do so, the
getting of a vial of medicine or the replacement of a
broken auger may cost him the labor of himself and
horses for days. Under such circumstances, though
nature is prolific, the man is poor. It is an easy
matter for him to get enough to eat; but beyond this,
his labor will suffice to satisfy only the simplest
wants in the rudest way.
Soon there comes another immigrant. Although every
quarter section* of the boundless plain is as good as
every other quarter section, he is not beset by any
embarrassment as to where to settle. Though the land
is the same, there is one place that is clearly
better for him than any other place, and that is
where there is already a settler and he may have a
neighbor. He settles by the side of the first comer,
whose condition is at once greatly improved, and to
whom many things are now possible that were before
impossible, for two men may help each other to do
things that one man could never do.
*The public prairie lands of the
United States were surveyed into sections of one
mile square, and a quarter section (160 acres) was
the usual government allotment to a settler under
the Homestead Act.
Another immigrant comes, and, guided by the
same attraction, settles where there are already two.
Another, and another, until around our first comer
there are a score of neighbors. Labor has now an
effectiveness which, in the solitary state, it could
not approach. If heavy work is to be done, the
settlers have a logrolling, and together accomplish
in a day what singly would require years. When one
kills a bullock, the others take part of it,
returning when they kill, and thus they have fresh
meat all the time. Together they hire a schoolmaster,
and the children of each are taught for a fractional
part of what similar teaching would have cost the
first settler. It becomes a comparatively easy matter
to send to the nearest town, for some one is always
going. But there is less need for such journeys. A
blacksmith and a wheelwright soon set up shops, and
our settler can have his tools repaired for a small
part of the labor it formerly cost him. A store is
opened and he can get what he wants as he wants it; a
postoffice, soon added, gives him regular
communication with the rest of the world. Then come a
cobbler, a carpenter, a harness maker, a doctor; and
a little church soon arises. Satisfactions become
possible that in the solitary state were impossible.
There are gratifications for the social and the
intellectual nature — for that part of the man
that rises above the animal. The power of sympathy,
the sense of companionship, the emulation of
comparison and contrast, open a wider, and fuller,
and more varied life. In rejoicing, there are others
to rejoice; in sorrow, the mourners do not mourn
alone. There are husking bees, and apple parings, and
quilting parties. Though the ballroom be unplastered
and the orchestra but a fiddle, the notes of the
magician are yet in the strain, and Cupid dances with
the dancers. At the wedding, there are others to
admire and enjoy; in the house of death, there are
watchers; by the open grave, stands human sympathy to
sustain the mourners. Occasionally, comes a
straggling lecturer to open up glimpses of the world
of science, of literature, or of art; in election
times, come stump speakers, and the citizen rises to
a sense of dignity and power, as the cause of empires
is tried before him in the struggle of John Doe and
Richard Roe for his support and vote. And, by and by,
comes the circus, talked of months before, and
opening to children whose horizon has been the
prairie, all the realms of the imagination —
princes and princesses of fairy tale, mailclad
crusaders and turbaned Moors, Cinderella's fairy
coach, and the giants of nursery lore; lions such as
crouched before Daniel, or in circling Roman
amphitheater tore the saints of God; ostriches who
recall the sandy deserts; camels such as stood around
when the wicked brethren raised Joseph from the well
and sold him into bondage; elephants such as crossed
the Alps with Hannibal, or felt the sword of the
Maccabees; and glorious music that thrills and builds
in the chambers of the mind as rose the sunny dome of
Kubla Khan.
Go to our settler now, and say to him: "You have
so many fruit trees which you planted; so much
fencing, such a well, a barn, a house — in
short, you have by your labor added so much value to
this farm. Your land itself is not quite so good. You
have been cropping it, and by and by it will need
manure. I will give you the full value of all your
improvements if you will give it to me, and go again
with your family beyond the verge of settlement." He
would laugh at you. His land yields no more wheat or
potatoes than before, but it does yield far more of
all the necessaries and comforts of life. His labor
upon it will bring no heavier crops, and, we will
suppose, no more valuable crops, but it will bring
far more of all the other things for which men work.
The presence of other settlers — the increase
of population — has added to the
productiveness, in these things, of labor bestowed
upon it, and this added productiveness gives it a
superiority over land of equal natural quality where
there are as yet no settlers. If no land remains to
be taken up, except such as is as far removed from
population as was our settler's land when he first
went upon it, the value or rent of this land will be
measured by the whole of this added capability. If,
however, as we have supposed, there is a continuous
stretch of equal land, over which population is now
spreading, it will not be necessary for the new
settler to go into the wilderness, as did the first.
He will settle just beyond the other settlers, and
will get the advantage of proximity to them. The
value or rent of our settler's land will thus depend
on the advantage which it has, from being at the
center of population, over that on the verge. In the
one case, the margin of production will remain as
before; in the other, the margin of production will
be raised.
Population still continues to increase, and as it
increases so do the economies which its increase
permits, and which in effect add to the
productiveness of the land. Our first settler's land,
being the center of population, the store, the
blacksmith's forge, the wheelwright's shop, are set
up on it, or on its margin, where soon arises a
village, which rapidly grows into a town, the center
of exchanges for the people of the whole district.
With no greater agricultural productiveness than it
had at first, this land now begins to develop a
productiveness of a higher kind. To labor expended in
raising corn, or wheat, or potatoes, it will yield no
more of those things than at first; but to labor
expended in the subdivided branches of production
which require proximity to other producers, and,
especially, to labor expended in that final part of
production, which consists in distribution, it will
yield much larger returns. The wheatgrower may go
further on, and find land on which his labor will
produce as much wheat, and nearly as much wealth; but
the artisan, the manufacturer, the storekeeper, the
professional man, find that their labor expended
here, at the center of exchanges, will yield them
much more than if expended even at a little distance
away from it; and this excess of productiveness for
such purposes the landowner can claim just as he
could an excess in its wheat-producing power. And so
our settler is able to sell in building lots a few of
his acres for prices which it would not bring for
wheatgrowing if its fertility had been multiplied
many times. With the proceeds, he builds himself a
fine house, and furnishes it handsomely. That is to
say, to reduce the transaction to its lowest terms,
the people who wish to use the land build and furnish
the house for him, on condition that he will let them
avail themselves of the superior productiveness which
the increase of population has given the land.
Population still keeps on increasing, giving
greater and greater utility to the land, and more and
more wealth to its owner. The town has grown into a
city — a St. Louis, a Chicago or a San
Francisco — and still it grows. Production is
here carried on upon a great scale, with the best
machinery and the most favorable facilities; the
division of labor becomes extremely minute,
wonderfully multiplying efficiency; exchanges are of
such volume and rapidity that they are made with the
minimum of friction and loss. Here is the heart, the
brain, of the vast social organism that has grown up
from the germ of the first settlement; here has
developed one of the great ganglia of the human
world. Hither run all roads, hither set all currents,
through all the vast regions round about. Here, if
you have anything to sell, is the market; here, if
you have anything to buy, is the largest and the
choicest stock. Here intellectual activity is
gathered into a focus, and here springs that stimulus
which is born of the collision of mind with mind.
Here are the great libraries, the storehouses and
granaries of knowledge, the learned professors, the
famous specialists. Here are museums and art
galleries, collections of philosophical apparatus,
and all things rare, and valuable, and best of their
kind. Here come great actors, and orators, and
singers, from all over the world. Here, in short, is
a center of human life, in all its varied
manifestations.
So enormous are the advantages which this land now
offers for the application of labor, that instead of
one man — with a span of horses scratching over
acres, you may count in places thousands of workers
to the acre, working tier on tier, on floors raised
one above the other, five, six, seven and eight
stories from the ground, while underneath the surface
of the earth engines are throbbing with pulsations
that exert the force of thousands of horses.
All these advantages attach to the land; it is
on this land and no other that they can be utilized,
for here is the center of population — the
focus of exchanges, the market place and workshop of
the highest forms of industry. The productive
powers which density of population has attached to
this land are equivalent to the multiplication of its
original fertility by the hundredfold and the
thousandfold. And rent, which measures the difference
between this added productiveness and that of the
least productive land in use, has increased
accordingly. Our settler, or whoever has succeeded to
his right to the land, is now a millionaire. Like
another Rip Van Winkle,
he may have lain down and slept; still he is rich
— not from anything he has done, but from the
increase of population. There are lots from which for
every foot of frontage the owner may draw more than
an average mechanic can earn; there are lots that
will sell for more than would suffice to pave them
with gold coin. In the principal streets are towering
buildings, of granite, marble, iron, and plate glass,
finished in the most expensive style, replete with
every convenience. Yet they are not worth as much as
the land upon which they rest — the same land,
in nothing changed, which when our first settler came
upon it had no value at all.
That this is the way in which the increase of
population powerfully acts in increasing rent,
whoever, in a progressive country, will look around
him, may see for himself. The process is going on
under his eyes. The increasing difference in the
productiveness of the land in use, which causes an
increasing rise in rent, results not so much from the
necessities of increased population compelling the
resort to inferior land, as from the increased
productiveness which increased population gives to
the lands already in use. The most valuable lands
on the globe, the lands which yield the highest rent,
are not lands of surpassing natural fertility, but
lands to which a surpassing utility has been given by
the increase of population.
The increase of productiveness or utility which
increase of population gives to certain lands, in the
way to which I have been calling attention, attaches,
as it were, to the mere quality of extension. The
valuable quality of land that has become a center of
population is its superficial capacity — it
makes no difference whether it is fertile, alluvial
soil like that of Philadelphia, rich bottom land like
that of New Orleans; a filled-in marsh like that of
St. Petersburg, or a sandy waste like the greater
part of San Francisco.
And where value seems to arise from superior
natural qualities, such as deep water and good
anchorage, rich deposits of coal and iron, or heavy
timber, observation also shows that these superior
qualities are brought out, rendered tangible, by
population. The coal and iron fields of
Pennsylvania, that today [1879] are worth enormous
sums, were fifty years ago valueless. What is the
efficient cause of the difference? Simply the
difference in population. The coal and iron beds of
Wyoming and Montana, which today are valueless, will,
in fifty years from now, be worth millions on
millions, simply because, in the meantime, population
will have greatly increased.
It is a well-provisioned ship, this on which we
sail through space. If the bread and beef above decks
seem to grow scarce, we but open a hatch and there is
a new supply, of which before we never dreamed.
And very great command over the
services of others comes to those who as the hatches
are opened are permitted to say, "This is mine!" ...
read the
whole chapter of Significant
Paragraphs
Henry George: The Condition of
Labor — An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in
response to Rerum Novarum (1891)
Your use, in so many passages of your Encyclical,
of the inclusive term “property” or
“private” property, of which in morals
nothing can be either affirmed or denied, makes your
meaning, if we take isolated sentences, in many
places ambiguous. But reading it as a whole, there
can be no doubt of your intention that private
property in land shall be understood when you speak
merely of private property. With this interpretation,
I find that the reasons you urge for private property
in land are eight. Let us consider them in order of
presentation. You urge:
1. That what is bought with rightful property is
rightful property. (RN, paragraph 5) ...
2. That private property in land proceeds from
man’s gift of reason. (RN, paragraphs 6-7.)
...
3. That private property in land deprives no one of
the use of land. (RN, paragraph 8.) ...
4. That Industry expended on land gives ownership in
the land itself. (RN, paragraphs 9-10.) ...
5. That private property in land has the support of
the common opinion of mankind, and has conduced to
peace and tranquillity, and that it is sanctioned by
Divine Law. (RN, paragraph 11.) ...
6. That fathers should provide for their children and
that private property in land is necessary to enable
them to do so. (RN, paragraphs 14-17.) ...
7. That the private ownership of land stimulates
industry, increases wealth, and attaches men to the
soil and to their country. (RN, paragraph 51.)
...
8. That the right to possess private property in land
is from nature, not from man; that the state has no
right to abolish it, and that to take the value of
landownership in taxation would be unjust and cruel
to the private owner. (RN, paragraph 51.) ...
2. That private property in land proceeds
from man’s gift of reason. (6-7.)
In the second place your Holiness argues that man
possessing reason and forethought may not only
acquire ownership of the fruits of the earth, but
also of the earth itself, so that out of its products
he may make provision for the future.
Reason, with its attendant forethought, is indeed
the distinguishing attribute of man; that which
raises him above the brute, and shows, as the
Scriptures declare, that he is created in the
likeness of God. And this gift of reason does, as
your Holiness points out, involve the need and right
of private property in whatever is produced by the
exertion of reason and its attendant forethought, as
well as in what is produced by physical labor. In
truth, these elements of man’s production are
inseparable, and labor involves the use of reason. It
is by his reason that man differs from the animals in
being a producer, and in this sense a maker. Of
themselves his physical powers are slight, forming as
it were but the connection by which the mind takes
hold of material things, so as to utilize to its will
the matter and forces of nature. It is mind, the
intelligent reason, that is the prime mover in labor,
the essential agent in production.
The right of private ownership does therefore
indisputably attach to things provided by man’s
reason and forethought. But it cannot attach to
things provided by the reason and forethought of
God!
To illustrate: Let us suppose a company traveling
through the desert as the Israelites traveled from
Egypt. Such of them as had the forethought to provide
themselves with vessels of water would acquire a just
right of property in the water so carried, and in the
thirst of the waterless desert those who had
neglected to provide themselves, though they might
ask water from the provident in charity, could not
demand it in right. For while water itself is of the
providence of God, the presence of this water in such
vessels, at such place, results from the providence
of the men who carried it. Thus they have to it an
exclusive right.
But suppose others use their forethought in
pushing ahead and appropriating the springs, refusing
when their fellows come up to let them drink of the
water save as they buy it of them. Would such
forethought give any right?
Your Holiness, it is not the forethought of
carrying water where it is needed, but the
forethought of seizing springs, that you seek to
defend in defending the private ownership of
land!
Let me show this more fully, since it may be worth
while to meet those who say that if private property
in land be not just, then private property in the
products of labor is not just, as the material of
these products is taken from land. It will be seen on
consideration that all of man’s production is
analogous to such transportation of water as we have
supposed. In growing grain, or smelting metals, or
building houses, or weaving cloth, or doing any of
the things that constitute producing, all that man
does is to change in place or form preexisting
matter. As a producer man is merely a changer, not a
creator; God alone creates. And since the changes in
which man’s production consists inhere in
matter so long as they persist, the right of private
ownership attaches the accident to the essence, and
gives the right of ownership in that natural material
in which the labor of production is embodied. Thus
water, which in its original form and place is the
common gift of God to all men, when drawn from its
natural reservoir and brought into the desert, passes
rightfully into the ownership of the individual who
by changing its place has produced it there.
But such right of ownership is in reality a mere
right of temporary possession. For though man may
take material from the storehouse of nature and
change it in place or form to suit his desires, yet
from the moment he takes it, it tends back to that
storehouse again. Wood decays, iron rusts, stone
disintegrates and is displaced, while of more
perishable products, some will last for only a few
months, others for only a few days, and some
disappear immediately on use. Though, so far as we
can see, matter is eternal and force forever
persists; though we can neither annihilate nor create
the tiniest mote that floats in a sunbeam or the
faintest impulse that stirs a leaf, yet in the
ceaseless flux of nature, man’s work of moving
and combining constantly passes away. Thus the
recognition of the ownership of what natural material
is embodied in the products of man never constitutes
more than temporary possession — never
interferes with the reservoir provided for all. As
taking water from one place and carrying it to
another place by no means lessens the store of water,
since whether it is drunk or spilled or left to
evaporate, it must return again to the natural
reservoirs — so is it with all things on which
man in production can lay the impress of his
labor.
Hence, when you say that man’s reason puts
it within his right to have in stable and permanent
possession not only things that perish in the using,
but also those that remain for use in the future, you
are right in so far as you may include such things as
buildings, which with repair will last for
generations, with such things as food or fire-wood,
which are destroyed in the use. But when you infer
that man can have private ownership in those
permanent things of nature that are the reservoirs
from which all must draw, you are clearly wrong. Man
may indeed hold in private ownership the fruits of
the earth produced by his labor, since they lose in
time the impress of that labor, and pass again into
the natural reservoirs from which they were taken,
and thus the ownership of them by one works no injury
to others. But he cannot so own the earth itself, for
that is the reservoir from which must constantly be
drawn not only the material with which alone men can
produce, but even their very bodies.
The conclusive reason why man cannot claim
ownership in the earth itself as he can in the fruits
that he by labor brings forth from it, is in the
facts stated by you in the very next paragraph (7),
when you truly say:
Man’s needs do not die out, but recur;
satisfied today, they demand new supplies tomorrow.
Nature, therefore, owes to man a storehouse that
shall never fail, the daily supply of his daily
wants. And this he finds only in the inexhaustible
fertility of the earth.
By man you mean all men. Can what nature owes to
all men be made the private property of some men,
from which they may debar all other men?
Let me dwell on the words of your Holiness,
“Nature, therefore, owes to man a storehouse
that shall never fail.” By Nature you mean God.
Thus your thought, that in creating us, God himself
has incurred an obligation to provide us with a
storehouse that shall never fail, is the same as is
thus expressed and carried to its irresistible
conclusion by the Bishop of Meath:
God was perfectly free in the act by which He
created us; but having created us he bound himself
by that act to provide us with the means necessary
for our subsistence. The land is the only source of
this kind now known to us. The land, therefore, of
every country is the common property of the people
of that country, because its real owner, the
Creator who made it, has transferred it as a
voluntary gift to them. “Terram autem
dedit filiis hominum.” Now, as every
individual in that country is a creature and child
of God, and as all his creatures are equal in his
sight, any settlement of the land of a country that
would exclude the humblest man in that country from
his share of the common inheritance would be not
only an injustice and a wrong to that man, but,
moreover, be AN IMPIOUS RESISTANCE TO THE
BENEVOLENT INTENTIONS OF HIS CREATOR.
4. That Industry expended on land gives
ownership in the land itself. (9-10.)
Your Holiness next contends that industry expended
on land gives a right to ownership of the land, and
that the improvement of land creates benefits
indistinguishable and inseparable from the land
itself.
This contention, if valid, could only justify the
ownership of land by those who expend industry on it.
It would not justify private property in land as it
exists. On the contrary, it would justify a gigantic
no-rent declaration that would take land from those
who now legally own it, the landlords, and turn it
over to the tenants and laborers. And if it also be
that improvements cannot be distinguished and
separated from the land itself, how could the
landlords claim consideration even for improvements
they had made?
But your Holiness cannot mean what your words
imply. What you really mean, I take it, is that the
original justification and title of landownership is
in the expenditure of labor on it. But neither can
this justify private property in land as it exists.
For is it not all but universally true that existing
land titles do not come from use, but from force or
fraud?
Take Italy! Is it not true that the greater part
of the land of Italy is held by those who so far from
ever having expended industry on it have been mere
appropriators of the industry of those who have? Is
this not also true of Great Britain and of other
countries? Even in the United States, where the
forces of concentration have not yet had time fully
to operate and there has been some attempt to give
land to users, it is probably true today that the
greater part of the land is held by those who neither
use it nor propose to use it themselves, but merely
hold it to compel others to pay them for permission
to use it.
And if industry give ownership to land what are
the limits of this ownership? If a man may acquire
the ownership of several square miles of land by
grazing sheep on it, does this give to him and his
heirs the ownership of the same land when it is found
to contain rich mines, or when by the growth of
population and the progress of society it is needed
for farming, for gardening, for the close occupation
of a great city? Is it on the rights given by the
industry of those who first used it for grazing cows
or growing potatoes that you would found the title to
the land now covered by the city of New York and
having a value of thousands of millions of
dollars?
But your contention is not valid. Industry
expended on land gives ownership in the fruits of
that industry, but not in the land itself, just as
industry expended on the ocean would give a right of
ownership to the fish taken by it, but not a right of
ownership in the ocean. Nor yet is it true that
private ownership of land is necessary to secure the
fruits of labor on land; nor does the improvement of
land create benefits indistinguishable and
inseparable from the land itself. That secure
possession is necessary to the use and improvement of
land I have already explained, but that ownership is
not necessary is shown by the fact that in all
civilized countries land owned by one person is
cultivated and improved by other persons. Most of the
cultivated land in the British Islands, as in Italy
and other countries, is cultivated not by owners but
by tenants. And so the costliest buildings are
erected by those who are not owners of the land, but
who have from the owner a mere right of possession
for a time on condition of certain payments. Nearly
the whole of London has been built in this way, and
in New York, Chicago, Denver, San Francisco, Sydney
and Melbourne, as well as in continental cities, the
owners of many of the largest edifices will be found
to be different persons from the owners of the
ground. So far from the value of improvements being
inseparable from the value of land, it is in
individual transactions constantly separated. For
instance, one-half of the land on which the immense
Grand Pacific Hotel in Chicago stands was recently
separately sold, and in Ceylon it is a not infrequent
occurrence for one person to own a fruit-tree and
another to own the ground in which it is
implanted.
There is, indeed, no improvement of land, whether
it be clearing, plowing, manuring, cultivating, the
digging of cellars, the opening of wells or the
building of houses, that so long as its usefulness
continues does not have a value clearly
distinguishable from the value of the land. For land
having such improvements will always sell or rent for
more than similar land without them.
If, therefore, the state levy a tax equal to what
the land irrespective of improvement would bring, it
will take the benefits of mere ownership, but will
leave the full benefits of use and improvement, which
the prevailing system does not do. And since the
holder, who would still in form continue to be the
owner, could at any time give or sell both possession
and improvements, subject to future assessment by the
state on the value of the land alone, he will be
perfectly free to retain or dispose of the full
amount of property that the exertion of his labor or
the investment of his capital has attached to or
stored up in the land.
Thus, what we propose would secure, as it is
impossible in any other way to secure, what you
properly say is just and right — ”that
the results of labor should belong to him who has
labored.” But private property in land —
to allow the holder without adequate payment to the
state to take for himself the benefit of the value
that attaches to land with social growth and
improvement — does take the results of labor
from him who has labored, does turn over the fruits
of one man’s labor to be enjoyed by another.
For labor, as the active factor, is the producer of
all wealth. Mere ownership produces nothing. A man
might own a world, but so sure is the decree that
“by the sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat
bread,” that without labor he could not get a
meal or provide himself a garment. Hence, when the
owners of land, by virtue of their ownership and
without laboring themselves, get the products of
labor in abundance, these things must come from the
labor of others, must be the fruits of others’
sweat, taken from those who have a right to them and
enjoyed by those who have no right to them.
The only utility of private ownership of land as
distinguished from possession is the evil utility of
giving to the owner products of labor he does not
earn. For until land will yield to its owner some
return beyond that of the labor and capital he
expends on it — that is to say, until by sale
or rental he can without expenditure of labor obtain
from it products of labor, ownership amounts to no
more than security of possession, and has no value.
Its importance and value begin only when, either in
the present or prospectively, it will yield a revenue
— that is to say, will enable the owner as
owner to obtain products of labor without exertion on
his part, and thus to enjoy the results of
others’ labor.
What largely keeps men from realizing the robbery
involved in private property in land is that in the
most striking cases the robbery is not of
individuals, but of the community. For, as I have
before explained, it is impossible for rent in the
economic sense — that value which attaches to
land by reason of social growth and improvement
— to go to the user. It can go only to the
owner or to the community. Thus those who pay
enormous rents for the use of land in such centers as
London or New York are not individually injured.
Individually they get a return for what they pay, and
must feel that they have no better right to the use
of such peculiarly advantageous localities without
paying for it than have thousands of others. And so,
not thinking or not caring for the interests of the
community, they make no objection to the system.
It recently came to light in New York that a man
having no title whatever had been for years
collecting rents on a piece of land that the growth
of the city had made very valuable. Those who paid
these rents had never stopped to ask whether he had
any right to them. They felt that they had no right
to land that so many others would like to have,
without paying for it, and did not think of, or did
not care for, the rights of all.... read the whole
letter
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
IF we are all here by the equal permission of the
Creator, we are all here with an equal title to the
enjoyment of His bounty — with an equal right
to the use of all that nature so impartially offers.
This is a right which is natural and inalienable; it
is a right which vests in every human being as he
enters the world, and which, during his continuance
in the world, can be limited only by the equal rights
of others. There is in nature no such thing as a fee
simple in land. There is on earth no power which can
rightfully make a grant of exclusive ownership in
land. If all existing men were to unite to grant away
their equal rights, they could not grant away the
right of those who follow them. For what are we but
tenants for a day? Have we made the earth that we
should determine the rights of those who after us
shall tenant it in their turn? The Almighty, who
created the earth for man and man for the earth, has
entailed it upon all the generations of the children
of men by a decree written upon the constitution of
all things — a decree which no human action can
bar and no prescription determine, Let the parchments
be ever so many, or possession ever so long, natural
justice can recognize no right in one man to the
possession and enjoyment of land that is not equally
the right of all his fellows. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy:
Injustice of private property in land
HAS the first comer at a banquet the right to turn
back all the chairs and claim that none of the other
guests shall partake of the food provided, except as
they make terms with him? Does the first man who
presents a ticket at the door of a theater and passes
in, acquire by his priority the right to shut the
doors and have the performance go on for him alone?
Does the first passenger who enters a railroad car
obtain the right to scatter his baggage over all the
seats and compel the passengers who come in after him
to stand up?
The cases are perfectly analogous. We arrive and we
depart, guests at a banquet continually spread,
spectators and participants in an entertainment where
there is room for all who come; passengers from
station to station, on an orb that whirls through
space — our rights to take and possess cannot
be exclusive; they must be bounded everywhere by the
equal rights of others. Just as the passenger in a
railroad car may spread himself and his baggage over
as many seats as he pleases, until other passengers
come in, so may a settler take and use as much land
as he chooses, until it is needed by others — a
fact which is shown by the land acquiring a value
— when his right must be curtailed by the equal
rights of the others, and no priority of
appropriation can give a right which will bar these
equal rights of others. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy:
Injustice of private property in land
THE general subjection of the many to the few,
which we meet with wherever society has reached a
certain development, has resulted from the
appropriation of land as individual property. It is
the ownership of the soil that everywhere gives the
ownership of the men that live upon it. It is slavery
of this kind to which the enduring pyramids and the
colossal monuments of Egypt yet bear witness, and of
the institution of which we have, perhaps, a vague
tradition in the biblical story of the famine during
which the Pharaoh purchased up the lands of the
people. It was slavery of this kind to which, in the
twilight of history, the conquerors of Greece reduced
the original inhabitants of that peninsula,
transforming them into helots by making them pay rent
for their lands. It was the growth of the
latifundia, or great landed
estates, which transmuted the population of ancient
Italy from a race of hardy husbandmen, whose robust
virtues conquered the world, into a race of cringing
bondsmen; it was the appropriation of the land as the
absolute property of their chieftains which gradually
turned the descendants of free and equal Gallic,
Teutonic and Hunnish warriors into colonii and
villains, and which changed the independent burghers
of Sclavonic village communities into the boors of
Russia and the serfs of Poland; which instituted the
feudalism of China and Japan, as well as that of
Europe, and which made the High Chiefs of Polynesia
the all but absolute masters of their fellows. How it
came to pass that the Aryan shepherds and warriors
who, as comparative philology tells us, descended
from the common birth-place of the Indo-Germanic race
into the lowlands of India, were turned into the
suppliant and cringing Hindoo, the Sanscrit verse
which I have before quoted gives us a hint. The white
parasols and the elephants mad with pride of the
Indian Rajah are the flowers of grants of land.
—
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy:
Injustice of private property in land
TRACE to their root the causes that are thus
producing want in the midst of plenty, ignorance in
the midst of intelligence, aristocracy in democracy,
weakness in strength — that are giving to our
civilization a one-sided and unstable development,
and you will find it something which this Hebrew
statesman three thousand years ago perceived and
guarded against. Moses saw that the real cause of the
enslavement of the masses of Egypt was, what has
everywhere produced enslavement, the possession by a
class of the land upon which, and from which, the
whole people must live. He saw that to permit in land
the same unqualified private ownership that by
natural right attaches to the things produced by
labor, would be inevitably to separate the people
into the very rich and the very poor, inevitably to
enslave labor — to make the few the masters of.
the many, no matter what the political forms, to
bring vice and degradation, no matter what the
religion.
And with the foresight of the philosophic statesman
who legislates not for the need of a day, but for all
the future, he sought, in ways suited to his times
and conditions, to guard against this error. —
Moses
THE women who by the thousands are bending over their
needles or sewing machines, thirteen, fourteen,
sixteen hours a day; these widows straining and
striving to bring up the little ones deprived of
their natural bread-winner; the children that are
growing up in squalor and wretchedness,
under-clothed, under-fed, under-educated, even in
this city without any place to play — growing
up under conditions in which only a miracle can keep
them pure — under conditions which condemn them
in advance to the penitentiary or the brothel —
they suffer, they die, because we permit them to
be robbed, robbed of their birthright, robbed by a
system which disinherits the vast majority of the
children that come into the world. There is enough
and to spare for them. Had they the equal rights in
the estate which their Creator has given them, there
would be no young girls forced to unwomanly toil to
eke out a mere existence, no widows finding it such a
bitter, bitter struggle to put bread in the mouths of
their little children; no such misery and squalor as
we may see here in the greatest of American cities;
misery and squalor that are deepest in the largest
and richest centers of our civilization today.
—
Thou Shalt Not Steal
... go to "Gems
from George"
Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F. Post's
Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and Charts
(1894)
Note 56: The ownership of the land
is essentially the ownership of the men who must
use it.
"Let the circumstances be what they
may — the ownership of land will always give
the ownership of men to a degree measured by the
necessity (real or artificial) for the use of land.
Place one hundred men on an island from which there
is no escape, and whether you make one of these men
the absolute owner of the other ninety-nine, or the
absolute owner of the soil of the island, will make
no difference either to him or to them." —
Progress and Poverty, book vii, ch. ii.
Let us imagine a shipwrecked sailor
who, after battling with the waves, touches land
upon an uninhabited but fertile island. Though
hungry and naked and shelterless, he soon has food
and clothing and a house — all of them rude,
to be sure, but comfortable. How does he get them?
By applying his Labor to the Land of the island. In
a little while he lives as comfortably as an
isolated man can.
Now let another shipwrecked sailor
be washed ashore. As he is about to step out of the
water the first man accosts him:
"Hello, there! If you want to come
ashore you must agree to be my slave."
The second replies: "I can't. I come
from the United States, where they don't believe in
slavery."
"Oh, I beg your pardon. I didn't
know you came from the United States. I had no
intention of hurting your feelings, you know. But
say, they believe in owning land in the United
States, don't they?"
"Yes."
"Very well; you just agree that this
island is mine, and you may come ashore a free
man."
"But how does the island happen to
be yours? Did you make it?"
"No, I didn't make it."
"Have you a title from its
maker?"
"No, I haven't any title from its
maker."
"Well, what is your title,
anyhow?"
"Oh, my title is good enough. I got
here first."
Of course he got there first. But he
didn't mean to, and he wouldn't have done it if he
could have helped it. But the newcomer is
satisfied, and says:
"Well, that's a good United States
title, so I guess I'll recognize it and come
ashore. But remember, I am to be a free man."
"Certainly you are. Come right along
up to my cabin."
For a time the two get along well
enough together. But on some fine morning the
proprietor concludes that he would rather lie abed
than scurry around for his breakfast and not being
in a good humor, perhaps, he somewhat roughly
commands his "brother man" to cook him a bird.
"What?" exclaims the brother.
"I tell you to go and kill a bird
and cook it for my breakfast."
"That sounds big," sneers the second
free and equal member of the little community; "but
what am I to get for doing this?"
"Oh," the first replies languidly,
"if you kill me a fat bird and cook it nicely, then
after I have had my breakfast off the bird you may
cook the gizzard for your own breakfast. That's pay
enough. The work is easy."
"But I want you to understand that I
am not your slave, and I won't do that work for
that pay. I'll do as much work for you as you do
for me, and no more."
"Then, sir," the first comer shouts
in virtuous wrath, "I want you to understand that
my charity is at an end. I have treated you better
than you deserved in the past, and this is your
gratitude. Now I don't propose to have any loafers
on my property. You will work for the wages I offer
or get off my land! You are perfectly free. Take
the wages or leave them. Do the work or let it
alone. There is no slavery here. But if you are not
satisfied with my terms, leave my island!"
The second man, if accustomed to the
usages of the labor unions, would probably go out
and, to the music of his own violent language about
the "greed of capital," destroy as many bows and
arrows as he could, so as to paralyze the
bird-shooting industry; and this proceeding he
would call a strike for honest wages and the
dignity of labor. If he were accustomed to social
reform notions of the namby-pamby variety, he would
propose an arbitration, and be mildly indignant
when told that there was nothing to arbitrate
— that he had only to accept the other's
offer or get off his property. But if a sensible
man, he would notify his comrade that the privilege
of owning islands in that latitude had expired.
...
c. The Law of Division of Labor and
Trade
Now, what is it that leads men to conform their
conduct to the principle illustrated by the last
chart? Why do they divide their labor, and trade its
products? A simple, universal and familiar law of
human nature moves them. Whether men be isolated, or
be living in primitive communities, or in advanced
states of civilization, their demand for consumption
determines the direction of Labor in production.67
That is the law. Considered in connection with a
solitary individual, like Robinson Crusoe upon his
island, it is obvious. What he demanded for
consumption he was obliged to produce. Even as to the
goods he collected from stranded ships —
desiring to consume them, he was obliged to labor to
produce them to places of safety. His demand for
consumption always determined the direction of his
labor in production.68 And when we remember that what
Robinson Crusoe was to his island in the sea,
civilized man as a whole is to this island in space,
we may readily understand the application of the same
simple law to the great body of labor in the
civilized world.69 Nevertheless, the complexities of
civilized life are so likely to obscure its operation
and disguise its relations to social questions like
that of the persistence of poverty as to make
illustration desirable.
68. It is highly significant that
while Robinson Crusoe had unsatisfied wants he was
never out of a job.
d. Effect of Confiscating Rent to
Private Use.
By giving Rent to individuals society ignores this
most just law, 99 thereby creating social disorder
and inviting social disease. Upon society alone,
therefore, and not upon divine Providence which has
provided bountifully, nor upon the disinherited poor,
rests the responsibility for poverty and fear of
poverty.
99. "Whatever dispute arouses the
passions of men, the conflict is sure to rage, not
so much as to the question 'Is it wise?' as to the
question 'Is it right?'
"This tendency of popular
discussions to take an ethical form has a cause. It
springs from a law of the human mind; it rests upon
a vague and instinctive recognition of what is
probably the deepest truth we can grasp. That alone
is wise which is just; that alone is enduring which
is right. In the narrow scale of individual actions
and individual life this truth may be often
obscured, but in the wider field of national life
it everywhere stands out.
"I bow to this arbitrament, and
accept this test." — Progress and Poverty,
book vii, ch. i.
The reader who has been deceived
into believing that Mr. George's proposition is in
any respect unjust, will find profit in a perusal
of the entire chapter from which the foregoing
extract is taken.
Let us try to trace the connection by means of a
chart, beginning with the white spaces on page 68. As
before, the first-comers take possession of the best
land. But instead of leaving for others what they do
not themselves need for use, as in the previous
illustrations, they appropriate the whole space,
using only part, but claiming ownership of the rest.
We may distinguish the used part with red color, and
that which is appropriated without use with blue.
Thus: [chart]
But what motive is there for appropriating more of
the space than is used? Simply that the appropriators
may secure the pecuniary benefit of future social
growth. What will enable them to secure that? Our
system of confiscating Rent from the community that
earns it, and giving it to land-owners who, as such,
earn nothing.100
100. It is reported from Iowa that a
few years ago a workman in that State saw a
meteorite fall, and. securing possession of it
after much digging, he was offered $105 by a
college for his "find." But the owner of the land
on which the meteorite fell claimed the money, and
the two went to law about it. After an appeal to
the highest court of the State, it was finally
decided that neither by right of discovery, nor by
right of labor, could the workman have the money,
because the title to the meteorite was in the man
who owned the land upon which it fell.
Observe the effect now upon Rent and Wages. When
other men come, instead of finding half of the best
land still common and free, as in the corresponding
chart on page 68, they find all of it owned, and are
obliged either to go upon poorer land or to buy or
rent from owners of the best. How much will they pay
for the best? Not more than 1, if they want it for
use and not to hold for a higher price in the future,
for that represents the full difference between its
productiveness and the productiveness of the next
best. But if the first-comers, reasoning that the
next best land will soon be scarce and theirs will
then rise in value, refuse to sell or to rent at that
valuation, the newcomers must resort to land of the
second grade, though the best be as yet only partly
used. Consequently land of the first grade commands
Rent before it otherwise would.
As the sellers' price, under these circumstances,
is arbitrary it cannot be stated in the chart; but
the buyers' price is limited by the superiority of
the best land over that which can be had for nothing,
and the chart may be made to show it: [chart]
And now, owing to the success of the appropriators
of the best land in securing more than their fellows
for the same expenditure of labor force, a rush is
made for unappropriated land. It is not to use it
that it is wanted, but to enable its appropriators to
put Rent into their own pockets as soon as growing
demand for land makes it valuable.101 We may, for
illustration, suppose that all the remainder of the
second space and the whole of the third are thus
appropriated, and note the effect: [chart]
At this point Rent does not increase nor Wages
fall, because there is no increased demand for land
for use. The holding of inferior land for higher
prices, when demand for use is at a standstill, is
like owning lots in the moon — entertaining,
perhaps, but not profitable. But let more land be
needed for use, and matters promptly assume a
different appearance. The new labor must either go to
the space that yields but 1, or buy or rent from
owners of better grades, or hire out. The effect
would be the same in any case. Nobody for the given
expenditure of labor force would get more than 1; the
surplus of products would go to landowners as Rent,
either directly in rent payments, or indirectly
through lower Wages. Thus: [chart]
101. The text speaks of Rent only as
a periodical or continuous payment — what
would be called "ground rent." But actual or
potential Rent may always be, and frequently is,
capitalized for the purpose of selling the right to
enjoy it, and it is to selling value that we
usually refer when dealing in land.
Land which has the power of yielding
Rent to its owner will have a selling value,
whether it be used or not, and whether Rent is
actually derived from it or not. This selling value
will be the capitalization of its present or
prospective power of producing Rent. In fact, much
the larger proportion of laud that has a selling
value is wholly or partly unused, producing no Rent
at all, or less than it would if fully used. This
condition is expressed in the chart by the blue
color.
"The capitalized value of land is
the actuarial 'discounted' value of all the net
incomes which it is likely to afford, allowance
being made on the one hand for all incidental
expenses, including those of collecting the rents,
and on the other for its mineral wealth, its
capabilities of development for any kind of
business, and its advantages, material, social, and
aesthetic, for the purposes of residence." —
Marshall's Prin., book vi, ch. ix, sec. 9.
"The value of land is commonly
expressed as a certain number of times the current
money rental, or in other words, a certain 'number
of years' purchase' of that rental; and other
things being equal, it will be the higher the more
important these direct gratifications are, as well
as the greater the chance that they and the money
income afforded by the land will rise." —
Id., note.
"Value . . . means not utility, not
any quality inhering in the thing itself, but a
quality which gives to the possession of a thing
the power of obtaining other things, in return for
it or for its use. . . Value in this sense —
the usual sense — is purely relative. It
exists from and is measured by the power of
obtaining things for things by exchanging them. . .
Utility is necessary to value, for nothing can be
valuable unless it has the quality of gratifying
some physical or mental desire of man, though it be
but a fancy or whim. But utility of itself does not
give value. . . If we ask ourselves the reason of .
. . variations in . . . value . . . we see that
things having some form of utility or desirability,
are valuable or not valuable, as they are hard or
easy to get. And if we ask further, we may see that
with most of the things that have value this
difficulty or ease of getting them, which
determines value, depends on the amount of labor
which must be expended in producing them ; i.e.,
bringing them into the place, form and condition in
which they are desired. . . Value is simply an
expression of the labor required for the production
of such a thing. But there are some things as to
which this is not so clear. Land is not produced by
labor, yet land, irrespective of any improvements
that labor has made on it, often has value. . . Yet
a little examination will show that such facts are
but exemplifications of the general principle, just
as the rise of a balloon and the fall of a stone
both exemplify the universal law of gravitation. .
. The value of everything produced by labor, from a
pound of chalk or a paper of pins to the elaborate
structure and appurtenances of a first-class ocean
steamer, is resolvable on analysis into an
equivalent of the labor required to produce such a
thing in form and place; while the value of things
not produced by labor, but nevertheless susceptible
of ownership, is in the same way resolvable into an
equivalent of the labor which the ownership of such
a thing enables the owner to obtain or save."
—
Perplexed Philosopher, ch. v.
The figure 1 in parenthesis, as an item of Rent,
indicates potential Rent. Labor would give that much
for the privilege of using the space, but the owners
hold out for better terms; therefore neither Rent nor
Wages is actually produced, though but for this both
might be.
In this chart, notwithstanding that but little
space is used, indicated with red, Wages are reduced
to the same low point by the mere appropriation of
space, indicated with blue, that they would reach if
all the space above the poorest were fully used. It
thereby appears that under a system which confiscates
Rent to private uses, the demand for land for
speculative purposes becomes so great that Wages fall
to a minimum long before they would if land were
appropriated only for use.
In illustrating the effect of confiscating Rent to
private use we have as yet ignored the element of
social growth. Let us now assume as before (page 73),
that social growth increases the productive power of
the given expenditure of labor force to 100 when
applied to the best land, 50 when applied to the next
best, 10 to the next, 3 to the next, and 1 to the
poorest. Labor would not be benefited now, as it
appeared to be when on page 73 we illustrated the
appropriation of land for use only, although much
less land is actually used. The prizes which
expectation of future social growth dangles before
men as the rewards of owning land, would raise demand
so as to make it more than ever difficult to get
land. All of the fourth grade would be taken up in
expectation of future demand; and "surplus labor"
would be crowded out to the open space that
originally yielded nothing, but which in consequence
of increased labor power now yields as much as the
poorest closed space originally yielded, namely, 1 to
the given expenditure of labor force.102 Wages would
then be reduced to the present productiveness of the
open space. Thus: [chart]
102. The paradise to which the youth
of our country have so long been directed in the
advice, "Go West, young man, go West," is
truthfully described in "Progress and Poverty,"
book iv, ch. iv, as follows :
"The man who sets out from the
eastern seaboard in search of the margin of
cultivation, where he may obtain land without
paying rent, must, like the man who swam the
river to get a drink, pass for long distances
through half-titled farms, and traverse vast
areas of virgin soil, before he reaches the point
where land can be had free of rent — i.e.,
by homestead entry or preemption."
If we assume that 1 for the given expenditure of
labor force is the least that labor can take while
exerting the same force, the downward movement of
Wages will be here held in equilibrium. They cannot
fall below 1; but neither can they rise above it, no
matter how much productive power may increase, so
long as it pays to hold land for higher values. Some
laborers would continually be pushed back to land
which increased productive power would have brought
up in productiveness from 0 to 1, and by perpetual
competition for work would so regulate the labor
market that the given expenditure of labor force,
however much it produced, could nowhere secure more
than 1 in Wages.103 And this tendency would persist
until some labor was forced upon land which, despite
increase in productive power, would not yield the
accustomed living without increase of labor force.
Competition for work would then compel all laborers
to increase their expenditure of labor force, and to
do it over and over again as progress went on and
lower and lower grades of land were monopolized,
until human endurance could go no further.104 Either
that, or they would be obliged to adapt themselves to
a lower scale of living.105
103. Henry Fawcett, in his work on
"Political Economy," book ii, ch. iii, observes
with reference to improvements in agricultural
implements which diminish the expense of
cultivation, that they do not increase the profits
of the farmer or the wages of his laborers, but
that "the landlord will receive in addition to the
rent already paid to him, all that is saved in the
expense of cultivation." This is true not alone of
improvements in agriculture, but also of
improvements in all other branches of industry.
104. "The cause which limits
speculation in commodities, the tendency of
increasing price to draw forth additional supplies,
cannot limit the speculative advance in land
values, as land is a fixed quantity, which human
agency can neither increase nor diminish; but there
is nevertheless a limit to the price of land, in
the minimum required by labor and capital as the
condition of engaging in production. If it were
possible to continuously reduce wages until zero
were reached, it would be possible to continuously
increase rent until it swallowed up the whole
produce. But as wages cannot be permanently reduced
below the point at which laborers will consent to
work and reproduce, nor interest below the point at
which capital will be devoted to production, there
is a limit which restrains the speculative advance
of rent. Hence, speculation cannot have the same
scope to advance rent in countries where wages and
interest are already near the minimum, as in
countries where they are considerably above it. Yet
that there is in all progressive countries a
constant tendency in the speculative advance of
rent to overpass the limit where production would
cease, is, I think, shown by recurring seasons of
industrial paralysis." — Progress and
Poverty, book iv, ch. iv.
105. As Puck once put it, "the man
who makes two blades of grass to grow where but one
grew before, must not be surprised when ordered to
'keep off the grass.' "
They in fact do both, and the incidental
disturbances of general readjustment are what we call
"hard times." 106 These culminate in forcing unused
land into the market, thereby reducing Rent and
reviving industry. Thus increase of labor force, a
lowering of the scale of living, and depression of
Rent, co-operate to bring on what we call "good
times." But no sooner do "good times" return than
renewed demands for land set in, Rent rises again,
Wages fall again, and "hard times" duly reappear. The
end of every period of "hard times" finds Rent higher
and Wages lower than at the end of the previous
period.107
106. "That a speculative advance in
rent or land values invariably precedes each of
these seasons of industrial depression is
everywhere clear. That they bear to each other the
relation of cause and effect, is obvious to whoever
considers the necessary relation between land and
labor." — Progress and Poverty, book v, ch.
i.
107. What are called "good times"
reach a point at which an upward land market sets
in. From that point there is a downward tendency of
wages (or a rise in the cost of living, which is
the same thing) in all departments of labor and
with all grades of laborers. This tendency
continues until the fictitious values of land give
way. So long as the tendency is felt only by that
class which is hired for wages, it is poverty
merely; when the same tendency is felt by the class
of labor that is distinguished as "the business
interests of the country," it is "hard times." And
"hard times" are periodical because land values, by
falling, allow "good times" to set it, and by
rising with "good times" bring "hard times" on
again. The effect of "hard times" may be overcome,
without much, if any, fall in land values, by
sufficient increase in productive power to overtake
the fictitious value of land.
The dishonest and disorderly system under which
society confiscates Rent from common to individual
uses, produces this result. That maladjustment is the
fundamental cause of poverty. And progress, so long
as the maladjustment continues, instead of tending to
remove poverty as naturally it should, actually
generates and intensifies it. Poverty persists with
increase of productive power because land values,
when Rent is privately appropriated, tend to even
greater increase. There can be but one outcome if
this continues: for individuals suffering and
degradation, and for society destruction.
... read the
book
Clarence Darrow: The Land Belongs To
The People (1916)
This earth is a little raft moving in the endless sea
of space, and the mass of its human inhabitants are
hanging on as best they can. It is as if some raft
filled with shipwrecked sailors should be floating on
the ocean, and a few of the strongest and most powerful
would take all the raft they could get and leave the
most of the people, especially the ones who did the
work, hanging to the edges by their eyebrows. These men
who have taken possession of this raft, this little
planet in this endless space, are not even content with
taking all there is and leaving the rest barely enough
to hold onto, but they think so much of themselves and
their brief day that while they live they must make
rules and laws and regulations that parcel out the
earth for thousands of years after they are dead and,
gone, so that their descendants and others of their
kind may do in the tenth generation exactly what they
are doing today — keeping the earth and all the
good things of the earth and compelling the great mass
of mankind to toil for them. ... read the whole
article
Nic Tideman: The Case for Taxing Land
I. Taxing Land as Ethics and
Efficiency
II. What is Land?
III. The simple efficiency argument for
taxing land
IV. Taxing Land is Better Than
Neutral
V. Measuring the Economic Gains from
Shifting Taxes to Land
VI. The Ethical Case for Taxing
Land
VII. Answer to Arguments against Taxing
Land
There is a case for taxing land based on ethical
principles and a case for taxing land based on
efficiency principles. As a matter of logic,
these two cases are separate. Ethical
conclusions follow from ethical premises and
efficiency conclusions from efficiency
principles. However, it is natural for human
minds to conflate the two cases. It is easier to
believe that something is good if one knows that it is
efficient, and it is easier to see that something is
efficient if one believes that it is good.
Therefore it is important for a discussion of land
taxation to address both question of efficiency and
questions of ethics.
This monograph will first address the
efficiency case for taxing
land, because that is the less controversial
case. The efficiency case for taxing land has two
main parts. ...
To estimate the magnitudes of the impacts that
additional taxes on land would have on an economy, one
must have a model of the economy. I report on
estimates of the magnitudes of impacts on the U.S.
economy of shifting taxes to land, based on a
mathematical model that is outlined in the
Appendix.
The ethical case for
taxing land is based on two ethical premises:
...
The ethical case for taxing land ends with a
discussion of the reasons why recognition of the equal
rights of all to land may be essential for world
peace.
After developing the efficiency argument and the
ethical argument for taxing land, I consider a variety
of counter-arguments that have been offered against
taxing land. For a given level of other taxes, a
rise in the rate at which land is taxed causes a fall
in the selling price of land. It is sometimes
argued that only modest taxes on land are therefore
feasible, because as the rate of taxation on land
increases and the selling price of land falls, market
transactions become increasingly less reliable as
indicators of the value of land.
...
Another basis on which it is argued that greatly
increased taxes on land are infeasible is that if land
values were to fall precipitously, the financial system
would collapse.
...
Apart from questions of feasibility, it is
sometimes argued that erosion of land values from
taxing land would harm economic efficiency, because it
would reduce opportunities for entrepreneurs to use
land as collateral for loans to finance their
ideas. ...
.
Another ethical argument that is made against
taxing land is that the return to unusual ability is
“rent” just as the return to land is
rent. ...
But before developing any of these arguments, I
must discuss what land is. ...
The Ethical Case
for Taxing Land
The ethical case for taxing land is based on two
premises. The first is that people have rights to
themselves. This has not been controversial since
the end of slavery, so I will simply assume that this
is agreed. The second premise is that all people
have equal rights to natural opportunities. This
is not so widely agreed.
Natural opportunities include not only land, but
also water, fish in oceans and rivers, the frequency
spectrum, minerals, virgin forests, and geosynchronous
orbits. Some natural opportunities, such as the
opportunity to use the oceans for transport, are most
valuable to people when all are allowed to use them as
they wish. (This does not imply that their value
is greatest when all can pollute as they wish.)
Other natural opportunities, such as most plots of
land, are most valuable when one person has exclusive
use of them.
The processes that humans employ to determine
who shall have exclusive use of natural opportunities
are complex. To some extent, opportunities are
assigned to those who first make use of them.
However, another important component of the
natural-opportunity-assignment process is the ability
and willingness to use deadly force to exclude
others. Americans from Europe undertook some
negotiations with the native American Indians, but
primarily they threatened to kill the Indians if they
did not agree to move into smaller territories.
All over the world, nations emerged when war-minded
leaders imposed their rule where they could. We
have built a relatively humane world on this violent
foundation, but the origins of the assignment of
natural opportunities cannot be characterized as
just.
Nor would have been just (or efficient) to
adhere to a rule of initial assignment based on first
use. It would not be just because a person who
arrives later than another is not inherently less
deserving. (It would not be efficient because a
rule of assignment based on first use promotes
inefficient, excessive investment in being first.
Still, to motivate efficient discovery, it pays
to provide some reward for discoverers.)
Read the
whole article
Nic Tideman: The Ethics of Coercion
in Public Finance
Utilitarian and Contractarian theories of
justice share the feature that they do not acknowledge
self-ownership. Under Utilitarianism, persons are
inputs into the generation of aggregate utility. Under
Contractarianism, persons might have owned themselves
in the contractual setting, but there they sold
themselves. The rights of real people are gone.
Theories in these classes can be contrasted with a
class of theories that justify power with direct
responses to those who question power, treating them as
individuals who own themselves. There are two
theories in this class: Liberalism and Libertarianism.
The two theories share the idea of self-ownership, the
idea that each person is free to decide the purpose of
his or her life, provided that the rights of others to
do the same are respected.
The fundamental difference
between Libertarianism and Liberalism concerns the basis
for claims to own things. The Libertarian axiom
(Rothbard, 1982, pp. 29-43) is that everything in nature
is the property of the first person who transforms it.
This contrasts with the Liberal axiom (Ackerman, 1980,
pp. 11, 31- 68) that the claims that people make on
natural opportunities are respectable only if the person
making the claim leaves as much for others as she takes
for herself.
When a Libertarian is asked, "Why
should you have that opportunity instead of me?" he can
reply, within his own theory, "Because I got here first
and did something." The Liberal says that any
appropriation of natural opportunities that leaves less
for those who come later fails to satisfy the condition
of evenhandedness that is required for
justice.
The Libertarian and Liberal
theories both have limitations in terms of efficiency.
Acceptance of the Libertarian theory promotes a land
rush, in which people waste resources doing the minimal
work necessary to establish claims to land, so that they
can later sell it to others. (Whoever burns down the most
rain forest gets the most land.) This first inefficiency
is compounded by a continuing inefficient use of land,
arising from the inability of people to manage all that
they have claimed. If the Liberal theory is accepted, an
opposite inefficiency occurs. There is no incentive for
people to seek to discover opportunities hidden in
nature, because whatever is discovered belongs equally to
all.
While it may be difficult to avoid
having these inefficiencies color our evaluations of the
theories, we should remember that the pursuit of justice
does not guarantee efficiency. It is possible that a
commitment to justice will entail accepting some
inefficiency.
The basic problem with the justice
of Libertarian theory is that it allows the first
arrivers to deprive those who come later of any natural
opportunities that it suits the first arrivers to claim
and transform. To permit this is inconsistent with the
evenhandedness that justice requires.
A Libertarian might allege that it
would never be possible for the first arrivers to leave
as much for all later arrivers as they take for
themselves, because there may be an endless stream of
generations, and each person would be unable to claim
even enough land to stand on. This objection presumes
that any claims would be made on the stock of land,
rather than on the flow of land services. Under
Liberalism, each person may respectably claim the use of
an amount of land during her lifetime that leaves as much
land rent per person for others who are alive at the same
time as the rent of the land that the claimant reserves
for herself. People may also respectably reserve more for
themselves, if they compensate those who therefore have
less. There will be plenty of room for everyone to
stand.
Libertarianism is an excellent
framework for analyzing justice when there is no scarcity
of natural opportunities. But when natural opportunities
are scarce it denies the equal rights of those who come
later. ... Read
the whole article
Karl Williams: Social Justice In Australia:
INTRODUCTORY KIT
How do you react to this scenario? You are
star-trekking through space and come upon a planet with
many promising conditions which might support life. And
there is life down there - intelligent life at that!
And the planetary inhabitants possess a physical form
not unlike humans, and are grouped into organised
communities.
But then you discover something curious. A small
minority of these ET's claim that the very surface of
the planets is theirs, and either charge the other
helpless inhabitants rent for its use or extortionate
prices for the outright purchase of certain
parts.
WHOSE
PLANET?
What a planet, eh?! Here we are with an
arrangement somehow foisted on us whereby land, which
should be our equal and common inheritance, has been
privately misappropriated. Or put it this way: we're
born on to a planet where "all the seats are taken",
and we have to pay someone else for permission to live!
There's no way of escaping it for, as long as the Law
of Gravity holds, we need something to stand on. And to
compound the land problem - they're not making any more
of it !
And this most important part of the Global
Commons, land, usually "belongs" to somebody in
perpetuity, so that they can pass on this "commodity"
of theirs to their descendants ad infinitum, no matter
how much this all-too-scarce resource might appreciate
in value over time. And how did they come to own the
Earth in the first place? Read the
entire article
Karl Williams: Social Justice In Australia:
ADVANCED KIT - Part 2
INDIGENOUS LAND
RIGHTS
"When the white man came we
had the land and they had the Bible. They taught us to
pray with our eyes closed and when we opened them, they
had the land and we had the Bible." - Jomo
Kenyatta, (1889 - 1978), prime minister of
Kenya
Before European settlement/invasion, Aboriginals
generally, we are told, had a beautiful thing going -
they really knew how to share. Each tribal group was a
custodian of a traditional area, and all were taught
how to look after and respect their ancestral land.
They belonged to the Earth, and not the other way
around. No individual owned any land, and none could
personally profit from Nature's gifts.
These are Geonomic principles, pure and simple.
However, Geonomics has developed things such that each
person is, in effect, the co-owner of the entire
country. Geonomics further allows for those wishing to
live in fixed abodes to take advantage of
infrastructure, allocating land of greatly unequal
value in an elegantly fair manner. ...
"I SAW IT
FIRST!"
And what, if anything, is the basis for the
race-based privilege of indigenous land rights? "Prior
occupancy", no less! So because someone's distant
ancestors, whom he never knew, got to a continent
first, they claim ownership! The logic of this
declaration is certainly worth examining. So then, what
if new archeological evidence came to light which
revealed that a certain Aboriginal clan are the sole
descendants of the very first guy who crossed the
Torres Strait? Could this clan then say, "OK all you
whitefellas and blackfellas descended from the later
arrivals ….. you all have to pay us the rent for
living in Australia, or clear out!"
Or what if Australia hadn't been occupied when
the first Europeans landed? Could the king who sent the
ship have personally claimed ownership based on first
occupancy, or would Australia more rightly belong to
the ship's captain? But hang on! - what if one of the
oarsmen jumped off the boat before the captain, and was
first to hit the beach? But, wait! - the oarsman was
wearing boots, and his skin never touched the soil
until after the first mate slipped over on the beach
and got a face full of sand!
Steady on, guys - what about me?! Where's my
share of the Earth? Do I have to return to England and
Ireland where my ancestors had "prior occupancy", and
can I then tell those Pakistani and West Indian
immigrants to clear off or else pay me rent for
standing on my homeland? No-one stands on my spiritual
motherland for nothing!
ACTUALLY, IT'S ALL PRETTY
SIMPLE
The Earth and its bounty are the birthright of
all humanity. Land and natural resources are our equal
and common inheritance, regardless of race, creed, or
gender.
But it's true that culture, history, attachment
to place and arbitrary national boundaries have
complicated these straightforward principles of human
rights. And there is a clear case in Australia for
studying and acknowledging the shameful history of
European invasion, saying "Sorry" on behalf of our
ancestors, and trying to make amends as best we can. If
this means special programs, roles, and grants for
Aboriginals in order to help them out of their
appalling condition, then let's do it. And we should
acknowledge Aboriginals being the first occupants,
caretakers and custodians, but don't use that word
"ownership", OK?
"The whole of the people have
the right of the ownership of land and the right to
share in the value of land itself, though not to share
in the fruits of land which properly belong to the
individuals by whose labour they are produced."
- Alfred Deakin, (1857 - 1919), Australia's second
prime minister ... Read the
entire article
a synopsis of Robert V. Andelson and James M. Dawsey:
From Wasteland to
Promised land: Liberation Theology for a Post-Marxist
World
Does the passenger who enters a
railroad car obtain the right to scatter his baggage over
all the seats and compel the passengers who come in after
him to stand up? ... We arrive and we depart...
passengers from station to station, on an orb that whirls
through space -- our rights to take and possess cannot be
exclusive; they must be bounded everywhere by the equal
rights of others. Just as the passenger in a railroad car
may spread himself and his baggage over as many seats as
he pleases, until other passengers come in, so may a
settler take as much land as he chooses, until it is
needed by others -- a fact which is shown by the land
acquiring a value....
On the land we are born, from it
we live, to it we return again -- children of the soil as
truly as is the blade of grass or the flower of the
field. Take away from man all that belongs to the land,
and he is but a disembodied spirit. Material progress
cannot rid us of our dependence upon land.
Read the whole synopsis
Dan Sullivan: Are
you a Real Libertarian, or a ROYAL Libertarian?
... According to royal libertarians, land becomes
private property when one mixes one's labor with it. And
mixing what is yours with what is not yours in order to
own the whole thing is considered great sport. But the
notion is filled with problems. How much labor does it
take to claim land, and how much land can one claim for
that labor? And for how long can one make that
claim?
According to classical liberals, land
belonged to the user for as long as the land was being
used, and no longer. But according to royal libertarians,
land belongs to the first user, forever. So, do the oceans
belong to the heirs of the first person to take a fish out
or put a boat in? Does someone who plows the same field
each year own only one field, while someone who plows a
different field each year owns dozens of fields? Should the
builder of the first transcontinental railroad own the
continent? Shouldn't we at least have to pay a toll to
cross the tracks? Are there no common rights to the earth
at all? To royal libertarians there are not, but classical
liberals recognized that unlimited ownership of land never
flowed from use, but from the state:
A right of property in movable things is
admitted before the establishment of government. A
separate property in lands not till after that
establishment.... He who plants a field keeps possession
of it till he has gathered the produce, after which one
has as good a right as another to occupy it. Government
must be established and laws provided, before lands can
be separately appropriated and their owner protected in
his possession. Till then the property is in the body of
the nation. --Thomas Jefferson
... Read the
whole piece
Fred Foldvary: A Geoist Robinson
Crusoe Story
Once upon a time, Robinson G. Crusoe was the only
survivor of a ship that sunk. He floated on a piece of
wood to an unpopulated island. Robinson was an absolute
geoist. He believed with his mind, heart, and soul that
everyone should have an equal share of land rent. ...
Read
the whole piece
Robert G. Ingersoll: A Lay Sermon
(1886)
... No man should be allowed to own any
land that he does not use. Everybody knows that -- I do
not care whether he has thousands or millions. I have
owned a great deal of land, but I know just as well as I
know I am living that I should not be allowed to have it
unless I use it. And why? Don't you know that if people
could bottle the air, they would? Don't you know that
there would be an American Air-bottling Association? And
don't you know that they would allow thousands and
millions to die for want of breath, if they could not pay
for air? I am not blaming anybody. I am just telling how
it is. Now, the land belongs to the children of Nature.
Nature invites into this world every babe that is born.
And what would you think of me, for
instance, tonight, if I had invited you here -- nobody
had charged you anything, but you had been invited -- and
when you got here you had found one man pretending to
occupy a hundred seats, another fifty, and another
seventy-five, and thereupon you were compelled to stand
up -- what would you think of the invitation? It
seems to me that every child of Nature is entitled to his
share of the land, and that he should not be compelled to
beg the privilege to work the soil, of a babe that
happened to be born before him. And why do I say this?
Because it is not to our interest to have a few landlords
and millions of tenants. ... read
the whole article
Nic Tideman:
Applications of Land Value Taxation to Problems of
Environmental Protection, Congestion, Efficient Resource
Use, Population, and Economic Growth
Thus a nation that provides the rest of the
world with technology that eases the task of providing
for future generations should receive a credit for this,
although there will be difficulty in estimating the
contribution of any innovation. (If one
person had not discovered something, the chances are that
eventually some else would have.) ...
read the whole article
Thomas Flavin, writing in The
Iconoclast, 1897
Now, it is quite true that all taxes of whatever
nature are paid out of the products of labor. But must
they be for that reason a tax on labor products. Let us
see.
I suppose you won't deny that a unit of labor applies
to different kinds of land will give very different
results. Suppose that a unit of labor produces on A's
land 4, on B's 3, on C's 2 and on D's 1. A's land is the
most, and D's is the least, productive land in use in the
community to which they belong. B's and C's represent
intermediate grades. Suppose each occupies the best land
that was open to him when he entered into possession.
Now, B, and C, and D have just as good a right to the use
of the best land as A had.
Manifestly then, if this be the whole story, there
cannot be equality of opportunity where a unit of labor
produces such different results, all other things being
equal except the land.
How is this equality to be secured? There is but one
possible way. Each must surrender for the common use of
all, himself included, whatever advantages accrues to him
from the possession of land superior to that which falls
to the lot of him who occupies the poorest.
In the case stated, what the unit of labor produces
for D, is what it should produce for A, B and C, if these
are not to have an advantage of natural opportunity over
D.
Hence equity is secured when A pays 3, D, 2 and C, 1
into a common fund for the common use of all--to be
expended, say in digging a well, making a road or bridge,
building a school, or other public utility.
Is it not manifest that here the tax which A, B and C
pay into a common fund, and from which D is exempt, is
not a tax on their labor products (though paid out of
them) but a tax on the superior advantage which they
enjoy over D, and to which D has just as good a right as
any of them.
The result of this arrangement is that each takes up
as much of the best land open to him as he can put to
gainful use, and what he cannot so use he leaves open for
the next. Moreover, he is at no disadvantage with the
rest who have come in ahead of him, for they provide for
him, in proportion to their respective advantages, those
public utilities which invariably arise wherever men live
in communities. Of course he will in turn hold to those
who come later the same relation that those who came
earlier held to him.
Suppose now that taxes had been levied on labor
products instead of land; all that any land-holder would
have to do to avoid the tax is to produce little or
nothing. He could just squat on his land, neither using
it himself nor letting others use it, but he would not
stop at this, for he would grab to the last acre all that
he could possibly get hold of. Each of the others would
do the same in turn, with the sure result that by and by,
E, F and G would find no land left for them on which they
might make a living.
So they would have to hire their labor to those who
had already monopolized the land, or else buy or rent a
piece of land from them. Behold now the devil of
landlordism getting his hoof on God's handiwork! Exit
justice, freedom, social peace and plenty. Enter robbery,
slavery, social discontent, consuming grief, riotous but
unearned wealth, degrading pauperism, crime breeding,
want, the beggar's whine, and the tyrant's iron heel.
And how did it all come about? By the simple expedient
of taxing labor products in order that precious
landlordism might laugh and grow fat on the bovine
stupidity of the community that contributes its own land
values toward its own enslavement!
And yet men vacuously ask, "What difference does it
make?"
O tempora! O mores! To be as plain as is
necessary, it makes this four-fold difference.
- First, it robs the community of its land
values;
- second, it robs labor of its wages in the name of
taxation;
- third, it sustains and fosters landlordism, a most
conspicuously damnable difference;
- fourth, it exhibits willing workers in enforced
idleness; beholding their families in want on the one
hand, and unused land that would yield them abundance
on the other.
This last is a difference that cries to heaven for
vengeance, and if it does not always cry in vain, will W.
C. Brann be able to draw his robe close around him and
with a good conscience exclaim, "It's none of my fault; I
am not my brother's keeper."
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