Public Debt
Henry George:
The Common Sense of Taxation (1881 article)
Taxes could be lightened in the city of New York by
dispensing with street-lamps and disbanding the police
force. But would a reduction in taxation gained in this
way be for the benefit of the people of New York and make
New York a more desirable place to live in? Or if it
should be found that heat and light could be conducted
through the streets at public expense and supplied to
each house at but a small fraction of the cost of
supplying them by individual effort, or that the city
railroads could be run at public expense so as to give
every one transportation at very much less than it now
costs the average resident, the increased taxation
necessary for these purposes would not be increased
burden, and in spite of the larger taxation required, New
York would become a more desirable place to live in. It
is a mistake to condemn taxation as bad merely because it
is high; it is a mistake to impose by constitutional
provision, as in many of our States has been advocated,
and in some of our States has been done, any restriction
upon the amount of taxation. A restriction upon
the incurring of public indebtedness is another
matter. In nothing is the far-reaching
statesmanship of Jefferson more clearly shown than in his
proposition that all public obligations should be deemed
void after a certain brief term — a proposition
which he grounds upon the self-evident truth that the
earth belongs in usufruct to the living, and that the
dead have no control over it, and can give no title to
any part of it. But restriction upon public debts is a
very different thing from restriction upon the power of
taxation, and reasons which urge the one do not apply to
the other. Nor is increased taxation necessarily proof of
governmental extravagance. Increase in taxation is in the
order of social development, for the reason that social
development tends to the doing of things collectively
that in a ruder state are done individually, to the
giving to government of new functions and the imposing of
new duties. Our public schools and libraries and parks,
our signal service and fish commissions and agricultural
bureaus and grasshopper investigations, are evidences of
this. ...
To consider what is included in the category of
property is to see the absurdity of saying that all
property should be equally taxed. For not to speak of
minor differences that arise from application and use,
there are commonly included under this term things of
essentially different nature. Whatever is recognized by
municipal law as subject to ownership is property. But
between things thus classed together are wide
differences. In the first place, there are certain of
them which have in themselves no value, but are merely
the representatives or doubles of property in itself
valuable. Such are stocks, bonds, mortgages, promissory
notes of all kinds, whether made by individuals or issued
by governments to serve as money, solvent
debts, book-accounts, etc. These things
may be to the individual valuable property, and are
correctly included in any estimate of his wealth. But
they are no part of the wealth of the community. Their
increase does not make the community a whit the richer;
and they may be utterly destroyed without the community
becoming a whit the poorer. If I buy a horse, giving my
note for the amount, the result of the transaction
(supposing me to be solvent) is that the seller gets
property to the value of the horse, while I get the
horse. But there has been no increase in wealth. To the
seller, my note may be quite as good as the horse, and in
estimating his wealth it may be as properly included as
the horse; but if the note be destroyed, the community is
nothing the poorer, while if the horse break his neck,
there is a lessening of the general wealth by one horse.
And so, the issuance of bonds by a government, or the
watering of stock by a corporation, can in no wise
increase the general sum of wealth, nor will any
diminution either in the amount or in the selling price
of such bonds or stock reduce it. If all the
governments of the world were to repudiate their debts
tomorrow, an immense amount of property, now carefully
guarded, would become waste paper, and thousands of
people now rich would be made poor, but the wealth of the
human race would not be diminished one iota. ...
read the whole article
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
CAPITAL, which is not in itself a distinguishable
element, but which it must always be kept in mind
consists of wealth applied to the aid of labor in further
production, is not a primary factor. There can be
production without it, and there must have been
production without it, or it could not in the first place
have appeared. It is a secondary and compound factor,
coming after and resulting from the union of labor and
land in the production of wealth. It is in essence labor
raised by a second union with land to a third or higher
power. But it is to civilized life so necessary and
important as to be rightfully accorded in political
economy the place of a third factor in production.
— The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 17, The Production of
Wealth: The Third Factor of Production —
Capital • abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
IT is to be observed that capital of itself can do
nothing. It is always a subsidiary, never an initiatory,
factor. The initiatory factor is always labor. That is to
say, in the production of wealth labor always uses
capital, is never used by capital. This is not merely
literally true, when by the term capital we mean the
thing capital. It is also true when we personify the term
and mean by it not the thing capital, but the men who are
possessed of capital. The capitalist pure and simple, the
man who merely controls capital, has in his hands the
power of assisting labor to produce. But purely as
capitalist he cannot exercise that power. It can be
exercised only by labor. To utilize it he must himself
exercise at least some of the functions of labor, or he
must put his capital, on some terms, at the use of those
who do. — The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 17, The Production of
Wealth: The Third Factor of Production —
Capital • abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
THUS we must exclude from the category of capital
everything that may be included either as land or labor.
Doing so, there remain only things which are neither land
nor labor, but which have resulted from the union of
these two original factors of production. Nothing can be
properly capital that does not consist of these —
that is to say, nothing can be capital that is not
wealth. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 2: Wages and Capital: The Meaning
of the Terms
THUS, a government bond is not capital, nor yet is it the
representative of capital. The capital that was once
received for it by the government has been consumed
unproductively — blown away from the mouths of
cannon, used up in war ships, expended in keeping men
marching and drilling, killing and destroying. The bond
cannot represent capital that has been destroyed. It does
not represent capital at all. It is simply a solemn
declaration that the government will, some time or other,
take by taxation from the then existing stock of the
people, so much wealth, which it will turn over to the
holder of the bond; and that, in the meanwhile, it will,
from time to time, take, in the same way, enough to make
up to the holder the increase which so much capital as it
some day promises to give him would yield him were it
actually in his possession. The immense sums which are
thus taken from the produce of every modern country to
pay interest on public debts are not the earnings or
increase of capital — are not really interest in
the strict sense of the term, but are taxes levied on the
produce of labor and capital, leaving so much less for
wages and so much less for real interest. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book III, Chapter 4: The Laws of Distribution: Of
Spurious Capital and of Profits Often Mistaken For
Interest
CAPITAL, as we have seen, consists of wealth used for
the procurement of more wealth, as distinguished from
wealth used for the direct satisfaction of desire; or, as
I think it may be defined, of wealth in the course of
exchange.
Capital, therefore, increases the power of labor to
produce wealth: (1) By enabling labor to apply itself in
more effective ways, as by digging up clams with a spade
instead of the hand, or moving a vessel by shoveling coal
into a furnace, instead of tugging at an oar. (2) By
enabling labor to avail itself of the reproductive forces
of nature, as to obtain corn by sowing it, or animals by
breeding them. (3) By permitting the division of labor,
and thus, on the one hand, increasing the efficiency of
the human factor of wealth, by the utilization of special
capabilities, the acquisition of skill, and the reduction
of waste; and, on the other, calling in the powers of the
natural factor at their highest, by taking advantage of
the diversities of soil, climate and situation, so as to
obtain each particular species of wealth where nature is
most favorable to its production.
Capital does not supply the materials which labor works
up into wealth, as is erroneously taught; the materials
of wealth are supplied by nature. But such materials
partially worked up and in the course of exchange are
capital. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 5: Wages and Capital: The Real
Functions of Capital
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