Small Landholders
Upton Sinclair: The Consequences of Land
Speculation are Tenantry and Debt on the Farms, and Slums
and Luxury in the Cities
This condition wrecked every empire in the history of
mankind, and it is wrecking modern civilization. One of
the first to perceive this was Henry George, and he
worked out the program known as the Single Tax. Let
society as a whole take the full rental value of land, so
that no one would any longer be able to hold land out of
use. So the value of land would decrease, and everyone
could have land, and the community would have a great
income to be spent for social ends.
A few years ago, out here in Southern California, a
fine enthusiast by the name of Luke North started what he
called the "Great Adventure" movement, to carry
California for the Single Tax. I did what I could to
help, and in the course of the campaign discovered what I
believe is the weakness of the Single Tax movement. Our
opponents, the great rich bankers and land speculators of
California, persuaded the poor man that we were going to
put all taxes on this poor man's lot, and to let the rich
man's stocks and bonds, his inheritance, his wife's
jewels, and all his income, escape taxation. The poor man
swallowed this argument, and the "Great Adventure" did
not carry California.
So, I no longer advocate the Single Tax. I advocate
many taxes. I want to tax the rich man's stocks and
bonds, also his income, and his inheritances, and his
wife's jewels. In addition, I advocate a land tax, but
one graduated like the income tax. If a man or a
corporation owns a great deal of land, I want to tax him
on the full rental value. If he owns only one
little lot, I don't want to tax him at all. Some
day that measure will come before the voters of
California, and then I should like to see the bankers and
land speculators of the state persuade the poor man that
the measure would not be to the poor man's advantage!
James Kiefer: 1/Nth
Fred E. Foldvary — The Ultimate Tax Reform:
Public Revenue from Land Rent
Even a relatively flat income tax imposes what
economists call a “deadweight loss” or
“excess burden” on society. Taxes on
productive activity increase the price of labor or goods
beyond economic costs, and so reduce the quantity
provided. This reduction in production, income, and
investment is a misallocation of resources. Resources are
wasted because they do not go to where they are most
wanted. We can reduce this excess burden by reducing
taxes, but changing the type of tax can also reduce this
deadweight loss. Economists recognize that if we tap for
public revenue a resource whose quantity is fixed, the
excess burden disappears. The tax does not reduce the
supply and does not increase prices.
This might seem too good to be true, but in fact, such
a resource exists everywhere and is indispensable for
human action. That resource is land. The supply is fixed,
immobile, and inherently visible. If land value is taxed,
the land will not flee, shrink, or hide. A tax on land
value has no deadweight loss. If the purpose of tax
reform is to reduce the extra costs imposed on the
economy, a tax on land value does this far better than
any tax on income or goods.
If you currently pay property taxes on a home
or business, you may be shaking your head at this point.
You are not eager to read about a proposal that would
make your taxes even more onerous. But the proposal here
is not to increase taxes but to shift and reduce
taxation. Unless you own a valuable vacant lot, the
proposal presented below would most likely reduce your
total tax bill, since if fully implemented it abolishes
taxes on your earnings and spending, and it also
eliminates the portion of real property taxes that falls
on buildings and other improvements. ...
read the whole
document
Henry George: The Condition of
Labor — An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response
to Rerum Novarum (1891)
I have already referred generally to the defects that
attach to all socialistic remedies for the evil condition
of labor, but respect for your Holiness dictates that I
should speak specifically, even though briefly, of the
remedies proposed or suggested by you.
Of these, the widest and strongest are that the state
should restrict the hours of labor, the employment of
women and children, the unsanitary conditions of
workshops, etc. Yet how little may in this way be
accomplished.
A strong, absolute ruler might hope by such
regulations to alleviate the conditions of chattel
slaves. But the tendency of our times is toward
democracy, and democratic states are necessarily weaker
in paternalism, while in the industrial slavery, growing
out of private ownership of land, that prevails in
Christendom today, it is not the master who forces the
slave to labor, but the slave who urges the master to let
him labor. Thus the greatest difficulty in enforcing such
regulations comes from those whom they are intended to
benefit. It is not, for instance, the masters who make it
difficult to enforce restrictions on child labor in
factories, but the mothers, who, prompted by poverty,
misrepresent the ages of their children even to the
masters, and teach the children to misrepresent.
But while in large factories and mines regulations as
to hours, ages, etc., though subject to evasion and
offering opportunities for extortion and corruption, may
be to some extent enforced, how can they have any effect
in those far wider branches of industry where the laborer
works for himself or for small employers?
All such remedies are of the nature of the remedy for
overcrowding that is generally prescribed with them
— the restriction under penalty of the number who
may occupy a room and the demolition of unsanitary
buildings. Since these measures have no tendency to
increase house accommodation or to augment ability to pay
for it, the overcrowding that is forced back in some
places goes on in other places and to a worse degree. All
such remedies begin at the wrong end. They are like
putting on brake and bit to hold in quietness horses that
are being lashed into frenzy; they are like trying to
stop a locomotive by holding its wheels instead of
shutting off steam; like attempting to cure smallpox by
driving back its pustules. Men do not overwork themselves
because they like it; it is not in the nature of the
mother’s heart to send children to work when they
ought to be at play; it is not of choice that laborers
will work under dangerous and unsanitary conditions.
These things, like overcrowding, come from the sting of
poverty. And so long as the poverty of which they are the
expression is left untouched, restrictions such as you
indorse can have only partial and evanescent results. The
cause remaining, repression in one place can only bring
out its effects in other places, and the task you assign
to the state is as hopeless as to ask it to lower the
level of the ocean by bailing out the sea.
Nor can the state cure poverty by regulating wages. It
is as much beyond the power of the state to regulate
wages as it is to regulate the rates of interest. Usury
laws have been tried again and again, but the only effect
they have ever had has been to increase what the poorer
borrowers must pay, and for the same reasons that all
attempts to lower by regulation the price of goods have
always resulted merely in increasing them. The general
rate of wages is fixed by the ease or difficulty with
which labor can obtain access to land, ranging from the
full earnings of labor, where land is free, to the least
on which laborers can live and reproduce, where land is
fully monopolized. Thus, where it has been comparatively
easy for laborers to get land, as in the United States
and in Australasia, wages have been higher than in Europe
and it has been impossible to get European laborers to
work there for wages that they would gladly accept at
home; while as monopolization goes on under the influence
of private property in land, wages tend to fall, and the
social conditions of Europe to appear. Thus, under the
partial yet substantial recognition of common rights to
land, of which I have spoken, the many attempts of the
British Parliament to reduce wages by regulation failed
utterly. And so, when the institution of private property
in land had done its work in England, all attempts of
Parliament to raise wages proved unavailing. In the
beginning of this century it was even attempted to
increase the earnings of laborers by grants in aid of
wages. But the only result was to lower commensurately
what wages employers paid.
The state could maintain wages above the tendency of
the market (for as I have shown labor deprived of land
becomes a commodity), only by offering employment to all
who wish it; or by lending its sanction to strikes and
supporting them with its funds. Thus it is, that the
thoroughgoing socialists who want the state to take all
industry into its hands are much more logical than those
timid socialists who propose that the state should
regulate private industry — but only a little.
The same hopelessness attends your suggestion
that working-people should be encouraged by the state in
obtaining a share of the land. It is evident that by this
you mean that, as is now being attempted in Ireland, the
state shall buy out large landowners in favor of small
ones, establishing what are known as peasant proprietors.
Supposing that this can be done even to a considerable
extent, what will be accomplished save to substitute a
larger privileged class for a smaller privileged class?
What will be done for the still larger class that must
remain, the laborers of the agricultural districts, the
workmen of the towns, the proletarians of the cities? Is
it not true, as Professor De Laveleye says, that in such
countries as Belgium, where peasant proprietary exists,
the tenants, for there still exist tenants, are
rack-rented with a mercilessness unknown in Ireland? Is
it not true that in such countries as Belgium the
condition of the mere laborer is even worse than it is in
Great Britain, where large ownerships obtain? And if the
state attempts to buy up land for peasant proprietors
will not the effect be, what is seen today in Ireland, to
increase the market value of land and thus make it more
difficult for those not so favored, and for those who
will come after, to get land? How, moreover, on the
principle which you declare (36), that “to the
state the interests of all are equal, whether high or
low,” will you justify state aid to one man to buy
a bit of land without also insisting on state aid to
another man to buy a donkey, to another to buy a shop, to
another to buy the tools and materials of a trade —
state aid in short to everybody who may be able to make
good use of it or thinks that he could? And are you not
thus landed in communism — not the communism of the
early Christians and of the religious orders, but
communism that uses the coercive power of the state to
take rightful property by force from those who have, to
give to those who have not? For the state has no purse of
Fortunatus; the state cannot repeat the miracle of the
loaves and fishes; all that the state can give, it must
get by some form or other of the taxing power. And
whether it gives or lends money, or gives or lends
credit, it cannot give to those who have not, without
taking from those who have.
But aside from all this, any scheme of
dividing up land while maintaining private property in
land is futile. Small holdings cannot coexist with the
treatment of land as private property where civilization
is materially advancing and wealth augments. We may see
this in the economic tendencies that in ancient times
were the main cause that transformed world-conquering
Italy from a land of small farms to a land of great
estates. We may see it in the fact that while
two centuries ago the majority of English farmers were
owners of the land they tilled, tenancy has been for a
long time the all but universal condition of the English
farmer. And now the mighty forces of steam and
electricity have come to urge concentration. It is in the
United States that we may see on the largest scale how
their power is operating to turn a nation of landowners
into a nation of tenants. The principle is clear and
irresistible. Material progress makes land more valuable,
and when this increasing value is left to private owners
land must pass from the ownership of the poor into the
ownership of the rich, just as diamonds so pass when poor
men find them. What the British government is attempting
in Ireland is to build snow-houses in the Arabian desert!
to plant bananas in Labrador!
There is one way, and only one way, in which
working-people in our civilization may be secured a share
in the land of their country, and that is the way that we
propose — the taking of the profits of
landownership for the community. ... read the whole
letter
|
To share this page with a friend:
right click, choose "send," and add your
comments.
|
|
Red links have not been
visited; .
Green links are pages you've seen
|
Essential Documents pertinent
to this theme:
essential_documents
|
|