Progress and Poverty
[01] We have now obtained
a clear, simple, and consistent theory of the distribution of wealth,
which accords with first principles and existing facts, and which,
when understood, will commend itself as self-evident.
[02] Before working
out this theory, I have deemed it necessary to show conclusively the
insufficiency of current theories; for, in thought, as in action,
the majority of men do but follow their leaders, and a theory of wages
which has not merely the support of the highest names, but is firmly
rooted in common opinions and prejudices, will, until it has been
proved untenable, prevent any other theory from being even considered,
just as the theory that the earth was the center of the universe prevented
any consideration of the theory that it revolves on its own axis and
circles round the sun, until it was clearly shown that the apparent
movements of the heavenly bodies could not be explained in accordance
with the theory of the fixity of the earth.
[03] There is in truth
a marked resemblance between the science of political economy, as
at present taught, and the science of astronomy, as taught previous
to the recognition of the Copernican theory. The devices by which
the current political economy endeavors to explain the social phenomena
that are now forcing themselves upon the attention of the civilized
world may well be compared to the elaborate system of cycles and epicycles
constructed by the learned to explain the celestial phenomena in a
manner according with the dogmas of authority and the rude impressions
and prejudices of the unlearned. And, just as the observations which
showed that this theory of cycles and epicycles could not explain
all the phenomena of the heavens cleared the way for the consideration
of the simpler theory that supplanted it, so will a recognition of
the inadequacy of the current theories to account for social phenomena
clear the way for the consideration of a theory that will give to
political economy all the simplicity and harmony which the Copernican
theory gave to the science of astronomy.
[04] But at this point
the parallel ceases. That "the fixed and steadfast earth" should be
really whirling through space with inconceivable velocity is repugnant
to the first apprehensions of men in every state and situation; but
the truth I wish to make clear is naturally perceived, and has been
recognized in the infancy of every people, being obscured only by
the complexities of the civilized state, the warpings of selfish interests,
and the false direction which the speculations of the learned have
taken. To recognize it, we have but to come back to first principles
and heed simple perceptions. Nothing can be clearer than the proposition
that the failure of wages to increase with increasing productive power
is due to the increase of rent.
[05] Three things unite
to production -- labor, capital, and land.
[06] Three parties divide
the produce -- the laborer, the capitalist, and the landowner.
[07] If, with an increase
of production the laborer gets no more and the capitalist no more,
it is a necessary inference that the landowner reaps the whole gain.
[08] And the facts agree
with the inference. Though neither wages nor interest anywhere increase
as material progress goes on, yet the invariable accompaniment and
mark of material progress is the increase of rent -- the rise of land
values.
[09] The increase of
rent explains why wages and interest do not increase. The cause which
gives to the landholder is the cause which denies to the laborer and
capitalist. That wages and interest are higher in new than in old
countries is not, as the standard economists say, because nature makes
a greater return to the application of labor and capital, but because
land is cheaper, and, therefore, as a smaller proportion of the return
is taken by rent, labor and capital can keep for their share a larger
proportion of what nature does return. It is not the total produce,
but the net produce, after rent has been taken from it, that determines
what can be divided as wages and interest. Hence, the rate of wages
and interest is everywhere fixed, not so much by the productiveness
of labor as by the value of land. Wherever the value of land is relatively
low, wages and interest are relatively high; wherever land is relatively
high, wages and interest are relatively low.
[10] If production had
not passed the simple stage in which all labor is directly applied
to the land and all wages are paid in its produce, the fact that when
the landowner takes a larger portion the laborer must put up with
a smaller portion could not be lost sight of.
[11] But 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, and that rent (the share of the
landholder) cannot be increased except at the expense of wages (the
share of the laborer) and interest (the share of capital). Just as
the portion of the crop, which in the simpler forms of industrial
organization the owner of agricultural land receives at the end of
the harvest as his rent, lessens the amount left to the cultivator
as wages and interest, so does the rental of land on which a manufacturing
or commercial city is built lessen the amount which can be divided
as wages and interest between the laborer and capital there engaged
in the production and exchange of wealth.
[12] In short, the value
of land depending wholly upon the power which its ownership gives
of appropriating wealth created by labor, the increase of land values
is always at the expense of the value of labor. And, hence, that the
increase of productive power does not increase wages, is because it
does increase the value of land. Rent swallows up the whole gain and
pauperism accompanies progress.
[13] It is unnecessary
to refer to facts. They will suggest themselves to the reader. It
is the general fact, observable everywhere, that as the value of land
increases, so does the contrast between wealth and want appear. It
is the universal fact, that where the value of land is highest, civilization
exhibits the greatest luxury side by side with the most piteous destitution.
To see human beings in the most abject, the most helpless and hopeless
condition, you must go, not to the unfenced prairies and the log cabins
of new clearings in the backwoods, where man singlehanded is commencing
the struggle with nature, and land is yet worth nothing, but to the
great cities, where the ownership of a little patch of ground is a
fortune.
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