50. It may at first seem like a great
waste of time and space to have gone through this
long analysis for no other purpose at last than to
demonstrate the self-evident fact that land and
labor are the sole original factors in the
production of Wealth. But it will have been no
waste if it enables the reader to firmly grasp the
fact. Nothing is more obvious, to be sure. Nothing
is more readily assented to. Yet by layman and
college professor and economic author alike, this
simple truth is cast adrift at the very threshold
of argument or investigation, with results akin to
what might be expected in physics if after
recognizing the law of gravitation its effects
should be completely ignored.
51. There is ample authority among
economic writers for this conclusion.
Professor Ely enumerates Nature,
Labor, and Capital as the factors of production,
but he describes Capital as a combination of Nature
and Labor — Ely's Introduction, part ii, ch.
iii.
Say describes industry as " nothing
more or less than human employment of natural
agents." — Say's Trea., book i, ch. ii.
And though John Stuart Mill and
numerous others speak of Land, Labor, and Capital
as the three factors of production, as does
Professor Jevons, most of them, like Jevons,
recognize the fact, though in their reasoning they
often fail to profit by it, that Capital is not a
primary but a secondary requisite. See Jevons's
Pol. Ec., secs. 16, 19.
Henry George says: "Land, labor, and
capital are the factors of production. The term
land includes all natural opportunities or forces;
the term labor, all human exertion; and the term
capital, all wealth used to produce more wealth. .
. Capital is not a necessary factor in production.
Labor exerted upon land can produce wealth without
the aid of capital, and in the necessary genesis of
things must so produce wealth before capital can
exist." — Progress and Poverty, book iii, ch.
i.
Also : "The complexities of
production in the civilized state, in which so
great a part is borne by exchange, and so much
labor is bestowed upon materials after they have
been separated from the land, though they may to
the unthinking disguise, do not alter the fact that
all production is still the union of the two
factors, land and labor."— Id., ch. viii.
By intelligent observers no authority
is needed. In all the phenomena of human life,
whether primitive or civilized, the lesson of the
chart stands out in bold relief. Nothing can be
produced without Labor and Land, and nothing can be
named which under any circumstances enters into
productive processes that is not resolvable into
either the one or the other. To satisfy all human
wants mankind requires nothing but human labor and
natural material, and each of them is
indispensable.