Land a Gift of Nature
Frank Stilwell and Kirrily Jordan:
The Political Economy of Land: Putting Henry George in His
Place
Georgism has a distinctive ethical basis. So a review
of the contemporary relevance of Georgist political
economy can usefully begin by making this explicit. The
key moral issue is the private appropriation of public
wealth. As George recognised, land is a ‘gift from
nature’ and, as such, is rightfully a community
resource. Hence, those deriving benefits from the private
ownership of land should recompense the community for the
privilege. This principle has strong echoes of the idea
of ‘usufruct’, a pre-capitalist term denoting
a person’s legal right to use and accrue benefits
from property that does not belong to them. In return,
the user is obliged to keep the property in good repair
and pay all costs as a ‘ground rent’
(‘Lectric Law Library, n.d). The concept of
‘usufruct’ has fallen out of common usage, so
one hesitates to try to revive it. Moreover, as Richards
(2002) notes, ‘it is difficult to image how this
word could be employed, or brought back into circulation,
in the modern world, since we live in a world in which
people tend to be remarkably unsympathetic to the
property rights or claims of others’. ...
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