Mines and Minerals
Henry George: Political
Dangers (Chapter 2 of Social
Problems, 1883)
[11] The rise in the United
States of monstrous fortunes, the aggregation of enormous
wealth in the hands of corporations, necessarily implies
the loss by the people of governmental control.
Democratic forms may be maintained, but there can be as
much tyranny and misgovernment under democratic forms as
any other — in fact, they lend themselves most
readily to tyranny and misgovernment. Forms count for
little. The Romans expelled their kings, and continued to
abhor the very name of king. But under the name of
Cæsars and Imperators, that at first meant no more
than our "Boss," they crouched before tyrants more
absolute than kings. We have already, under the popular
name of "bosses," developed political Cæsars in
municipalities and states. If this development continues,
in time there will come a national boss. We are young but
we are growing. The day may arrive when the "Boss of
America" will be to the modern world what Cæsar was
to the Roman world. This, at least, is certain:
Democratic government in more than name can exist only
where wealth is distributed with something like equality
— where the great mass of citizens are personally
free and independent, neither fettered by their poverty
nor made subject by their wealth. There is, after all,
some sense in a property qualification. The man who is
dependent on a master for his living is not a free man.
To give the suffrage to slaves is only to give votes to
their owners. That universal suffrage may add to,
instead of decreasing, the political power of wealth we
see when mill-owners and mine operators vote their
hands. The freedom to earn, without fear or
favor, a comfortable living, ought to go with the freedom
to vote. Thus alone can a sound basis for republican
institutions be secured. How can a man be said to have a
country where he has no right to a square inch of soil;
where he has nothing but his hands, and, urged by
starvation, must bid against his fellows for the
privilege of using them? When it comes to voting tramps,
some principle has been carried to a ridiculous and
dangerous extreme. I have known elections to be decided
by the carting of paupers from the almshouse to the
polls. But such decisions can scarcely be in the interest
of good government. ... read the
entire essay
Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F. Post's
Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and Charts (1894)
— Appendix: FAQ
Q11. How can mines be taxed without increasing the
price of the out-put?
A. By taxing the royalty, or, what is essentially the
same, by taxing their capitalized value as mining
opportunities. This would tend to lower rather than
increase the price of the product. Read note 11.
Note 11: This is usually a stumbling
block to those who, without much experience in economic
thought, consider the single tax for the first time. As
soon as they grasp the idea that taxes upon commodities
shift to consumers they jump to the conclusion that
similarly taxes upon land values would shift to the
users. But this is a mistake, and the explanation is
simple. Taxes upon what men produce make production
more difficult and so tend toward scarcity in the
supply, which stimulates prices; but taxes upon land,
provided the taxes be levied in proportion to value,
tend toward plenty in supply (meaning market supply of
course), because they make it more difficult to hold
valuable land idle, and so depress prices.
"A tax on rent falls wholly on the
landlord. There are no means by which he can shift the
burden upon anyone else. . . A tax on rent, therefore,
has no effect other than its obvious one. It merely
takes so much from the landlord and transfers it to the
state." — John Stuart Mill's Prin. of Pol.
Ec., book v, ch. iii, sec. 1.
"A tax laid upon rent is borne solely by
the owner of land." — Bascom's Tr.,
p.159.
"Taxes which are levied on land . . .
really fall on the owner of the land." — Mrs.
Fawcett's Pol. Ec. for Beginners, pp.209, 210.
"A land tax levied in proportion to the
rent of land, and varying with every variation of
rents, . . . will fall wholly on the landlords."
— Walker's Pol. Ec., ed. of 1887, p. 413,
quoting Ricardo.
"The power of transferring a tax from the
person who actually pays it to some other person varies
with the object taxed. A tax on rents cannot be
transferred. A tax on commodities is always transferred
to the consumer." — Thorold Rogers's Pol.
Ec., ch. xxi, 2d ed., p. 285.
"Though the landlord is in all cases the
real contributor, the tax is commonly advanced by the
tenant, to whom the landlord is obliged to allow it in
payment of the rent." — Adam Smith's Wealth
of Nations, book v, ch. ii, part ii, art. i.
"The way taxes raise prices is by
increasing the cost of production and checking supply.
But land is not a thing of human production, and taxes
upon rent cannot check supply. Therefore, though a tax
upon rent compels land-owners to pay more, it gives
them no power to obtain more for the use of their land,
as it in no way tends to reduce the supply of land. On
the contrary, by compelling those who hold land on
speculation to sell or let for what they can get, a tax
on land values tends to increase the competition
between owners, and thus to reduce the price of land."
— Progress and Poverty, book viii, ch. iii,
subd. i.
Sometimes this point is raised as a
question of shifting the tax in higher rent to the
tenant, and at others as a question of shifting it to
the consumers of goods in higher prices. The principle
is the same. Merchants cannot charge higher prices for
goods than their competitors do, merely because they
pay higher ground rents. A country storekeeper whose
business lot is worth but few dollars charges as much
for sugar, probably more, than a city grocer whose lot
is worth thousands. Quality for quality and quantity
for quantity, goods sell for about the same price
everywhere. Differences in price are altogether in
favor of places where land has a high value. This is
due to the fact that the cost of getting goods to
places of low land value, distant villages for example,
is greater than to centers, which are places of high
land value. Sometimes it is true that prices for some
things are higher where land values are high. Tiffany's
goods, for instance, may be more expensive than goods
of the same quality at a store on a less expensive
site. But that is not due to the higher land value; it
is because the dealer has a reputation for technical
knowledge and honesty (or has become a fad among rich
people), for which his customers are willing to pay
whether his store is on a high priced-lot or a
low-priced one.
Though land value has no effect upon the
price of good, it is easier to sell goods in some
locations than in others. Therefore, though the price
and the profit of each sale be the same, or even less,
in good locations than in poorer ones, aggregate
receipts and aggregate profits are much greater at the
good location. And it is out of his aggregate, and not
out of each profit, that rent is paid, For example: A
cigar store on a thoroughfare supplies a certain
quality of cigar for fifteen cents. On a side street
the same quality of cigar can be bought no cheaper.
Indeed, the cigars there are likely to be poorer, and
therefore really dearer. Yet ground rent on the
thoroughfare is very high compared with ground rent on
the sidestreet. How, then, can the first dealer, he who
pays the high ground rent, afford to sell as good or
better cigars for fifteen cents than his competitor of
the low priced location? Simply because he is able to
make so many more sales with a given outlay of labor
and capital in a given time that his aggregate profit
is greater. This is due to the advantage of his
location, and for that advantage he pays a premium in
higher ground rent. But that premium is not charged to
smokers; the competing dealer of the side street
protects them. It represents the greater ease, the
lower cost, of doing a given volume of business upon
the site for which it is paid; add if the state should
take any of it, even the whole of it, in taxation, the
loss would be finally borne by the owner of the
advantage which attaches to that site — by the
landlord. Any attempt to shift it to tenant or buyer
would be promptly checked by the competition of
neighboring but cheaper land.
"A land-tax, levied in proportion to the
rent of land, and varying with every variation of rent,
is in effect a tax on rent; and as such a tax will not
apply to that land which yields no rent, nor to the
produce of that capital which is employed on the land
with a view to profit merely, and which never pays
rent; it will not in any way affect the price of raw
produce, but will fall wholly on the landlords."
— McCulloch's Ricardo (3d ed.), p.
207
Q19. In your lecture you tell of a meteorite which
a poor man found, but which the law gave to the owner of
the land on which it fell. (See note 100.) Wouldn't the
owner, or possessor, or whatever you choose to call him,
of that land get the meteorite just the same if the
single tax were in force?
A. Yes, if only one meteorite fell upon his land. But
if meteorites got into the habit of falling there the
land would grow in value, and then the single tax would
operate to take the value of those meteorites for common
use, less the labor expended upon them, the value of
which would go to the laborer. I told of the one
meteorite to illustrate a principle. But as a practical
question we need deal only with land upon which, speaking
in metaphor, meteorites have a habit of falling. The
occasional diamond, the nugget of gold, or other valuable
thing found here or there as one of the accidents of a
day, are of no practical moment; it is the diamond
fields, the gold mines, the fertile farming spots, the
centers of trade, and similar valuable opportunities for
labor, that are of moment as factors in social
problems.
Q52. Is not the right of ownership of a gold ring
the same as the ownership of a gold mine? and if the
latter is wrong is not the former also wrong?
A. If it be wrong for you to own the spring of water
which you and your fellows use, is it therefore wrong for
you to own the water that you lift from the spring to
drink? If so how do you propose to slake your thirst? If
you argue in reply that it is not wrong for you to own
the spring, then how shall your fellows slake their
thirst when you treat them, as you would have a right to,
as trespassers upon your property? To own the source of
labor products is to own the labor of others; to own what
you produce from that source is to own only your own
labor. Nature furnishes gold mines, but men fashion gold
rings. The right of ownership is radically different. ...
read the
book
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of
Natural Taxation, from Principles of Natural
Taxation (1917)
Q8. How about fertility value?
A. On the surface of the globe are countless varieties of
exhaustible fertility, i.e. chemical constituency,
differing in kind and degree, from the nitrogen,
hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon of the soil to the carbon of
the coal, the gold, and the diamond. Fertility as an
attribute need not be predicated of agricultural land
alone. Economic fertility belongs equally to any other
land which yields to labor its product whether in food,
mineral, or metal. Land may be fertile in wheat, corn,
and potatoes. It may be fertile in cotton, in tobacco, or
in rice. It may be fertile in diamonds, in gold, silver,
copper, lead, or iron. It may be fertile in oil, coal, or
natural gas, in a water power or water front. The value
of artificial fertility is an improvement value. The
value of natural fertility of any kind is a site
value.
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