Malthus
Frank Stilwell and Kirrily Jordan:
The Political Economy of Land: Putting Henry George in His
Place
Land is the most basic of all economic resources,
fundamental to the form that economic development takes.
Its use for agricultural purposes is integral to the
production of the means of our subsistence. Its use in an
urban context is crucial in shaping how effectively
cities function and who gets the principal benefits from
urban economic growth. Its ownership is a major
determinant of the degree of economic inequality: surges
of land prices, such as have occurred in Australian
cities during the last decade, cause major
redistributions of wealth. In both an urban and rural
context the use of land – and nature more generally
– is central to the possibility of ecological
sustainability. Contemporary social concerns about
problems of housing affordability and environmental
quality necessarily focus our attention on ‘the
land question.’
These considerations indicate the need for a coherent
political economic analysis of land in capitalist
society. Indeed, the analysis of land was central in an
earlier era of political economic analysis. The
role of land in relation to economic production, income
distribution and economic growth was a major concern for
classical political economists, such as Smith, Ricardo
and Malthus. But the intervening years have seen
land slide into a more peripheral status within economic
analysis. Political economists working in the Marxian
tradition have tended to focus primarily on the
capital-labour relation as the key to understanding the
capitalist economy.1 Neo-classical economists typically
treat land, if they acknowledge it at all, as a
‘factor of production’ equivalent to labour
or capital, thereby obscuring its distinctive features
and differences. Keynesian and post-Keynesian economists
have also given little attention to land because
typically their analyses focus more on consumption,
saving, investment and other economic aggregates. ...
read the whole article
Henry George: The Condition of
Labor — An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response
to Rerum Novarum (1891)
And in taking for the uses of society what we clearly
see is the great fund intended for society in the divine
order, we would not levy the slightest tax on the
possessors of wealth, no matter how rich they might be.
Not only do we deem such taxes a violation of the right
of property, but we see that by virtue of beautiful
adaptations in the economic laws of the Creator, it is
impossible for any one honestly to acquire wealth,
without at the same time adding to the wealth of the
world.
To persist in a wrong, to refuse to undo it, is always
to become involved in other wrongs. Those who defend
private property in land, and thereby deny the first and
most important of all human rights, the equal right to
the material substratum of life, are compelled to one of
two courses. Either they must, as do those whose gospel
is “Devil take the hindermost,” deny the
equal right to life, and by some theory like that to
which the English clergyman Malthus has given his name,
assert that nature (they do not venture to say God)
brings into the world more men than there is provision
for; or, they must, as do the socialists, assert as
rights what in themselves are wrongs. ... 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)
DOES not the fact that all of the things which furnish
man's subsistence have the power to multiply many fold
— some of them many thousand fold, and some of them
many million or even billion fold — while he is
only doubling his numbers, show that, let human beings
increase to the full extent of their reproductive power,
the increase of population can never exceed subsistence?
This is clear when it is remembered that though in the
vegetable and animal kingdoms each species, by virtue of
its reproductive power, naturally and necessarily presses
against the conditions which limit its further increase,
yet these conditions are nowhere fixed and final. No
species reaches the ultimate limit of soil, water, air,
and sunshine; but the actual limit of each is in the
existence of other species, its rivals, its enemies, or
its food. Thus the conditions which limit the existence
of such of these species as afford him subsistence man
can extend (in some cases his mere appearance will extend
them), and thus the reproductive forces of the species
which supply his wants, instead of wasting themselves
against their former limit, start forward in his service
at a pace which his powers of increase cannot rival. If
he but shoot hawks, food-birds will increase: if he but
trap foxes the wild rabbits will multiply; the bumble bee
moves with the pioneer, and on the organic matter with
which man's presence fills the rivers, fishes feed.
— Progress & Poverty — Book II, Chapter
3: Population and Subsistence: Inferences from
Analogy
IF bears instead of men had been shipped from Europe
to the North American continent, there would now be no
more bears than in the time of Columbus, and possibly
fewer, for bear food would not have been increased nor
the conditions of bear life extended, by the bear
immigration, but probably the reverse. But within the
limits of the United States alone, there are now
forty-five millions of men where then there were only a
few hundred thousand, and yet there is now within that
territory much more food per capita for the forty-five
millions than there was then for the few hundred
thousand. It is not the increase of food that has caused
this increase of men; but the increase of men that has
brought about the increase of food. There is more food,
simply because there are more Man. — Progress &
Poverty — Book II, Chapter 3: Population and
Subsistence: Inferences from Analogy
TWENTY men working together will, where nature is
niggardly, produce more than twenty times the wealth that
one man can produce where nature is most bountiful. The
denser the population the more minute becomes the
subdivision of labor, the greater the economies of
production and distribution, and, hence, the very reverse
of the Malthusian doctrine is true; and, within the
limits in which we have any reason to suppose increase
would still go on, in any given state of civilization a
greater number of people can produce a larger
proportionate amount of wealth and more fully supply
their wants, than can a smaller number. — Progress
& Poverty — Book II, Chapter 4: Population and
Subsistence: Disproof of the Malthusian Theory
WE talk about the supply of labor, and the demand for
labor, but, evidently, these are only relative terms. The
supply of labor is everywhere the same — two hands
always come into the world with one mouth, twenty-one
boys to every twenty girls; and the demand for labor must
always exist as long as men want things which labor alone
can procure. We talk about the "want of work," but,
evidently it is not work that is short while want
continues; evidently, the supply of labor cannot be too
great, nor the demand for labor too small, when people
suffer for the lack of things that labor produces. The
real trouble must be that the supply is somehow prevented
from satisfying demand, that somewhere there is an
obstacle which prevents labor from producing the things
that laborers want.
Take the case of anyone of these vast masses of
unemployed men, to whom, though he never heard of
Malthus, it today seems that there are too many people in
the world. In his own wants, in the needs of his anxious
wife, in the demands for his half cared for, perhaps even
hungry and shivering, children, there is demand enough
for labor, Heaven knows! In his own willing hands is the
supply. Put him on a solitary island, and though cut off
from all the enormous advantages which the co-operation,
combination, and machinery of a civilized community give
to the productive powers of man, yet his two hands can
fill the mouths and keep warm the backs that depend upon
them. Yet where productive power is at its highest
development, he cannot. Why? Is it not because in the one
case he has access to the material and forces of nature,
and in the other this access is denied? — Progress
& Poverty Book V, Chapter 1, The Problem Solved: The
primary cause of recurring paroxysms of industrial
depression ... go to
"Gems from George"
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