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Social Problems
by Henry George 1883
Chapter 19
The First Great Reform
[01] DO what we may,
we can accomplish nothing real and lasting until we secure to all
the first of those equal and unalienable rights with which, as our
Declaration of Independence has it, man is endowed by his Creator
-- the equal and unalienable right to the use and benefit of natural
opportunities.
[02] There are people
who are always trying to find some mean between right and wrong --
people who, if they were to see a man about to be unjustly beheaded,
might insist that the proper thing to do would be to chop off his
feet. These are the people who, beginning to recognize the importance
of the land question, propose in Ireland and England such measures
as judicial valuations of rents and peasant proprietary, and in the
United States, the reservation to actual settlers of what is left
of the public lands, and the limitation of estates.
[03] Nothing whatever
can be accomplished by such timid, illogical measures. If we would
cure social disease we must go to the root.
[04] There is no use
in talking of reserving what there may be left of our public domain
to actual settlers. That would be merely a locking of the stable door
after the horse had been stolen, and even if it were not, would avail
nothing.
[05] There is no use
in talking about restricting the amount of land any one man may hold.
That, even if it were practicable, were idle, and would not meet the
difficulty. The ownership of an acre in a city may give more command
of the labor of others than the ownership of a hundred thousand acres
in a sparsely settled district, and it is utterly impossible by any
legal device to prevent the concentration of property so long as the
general causes which irresistibly tend to the concentration of property
remain untouched. So long as the wages tend to the point of a bare
living for the laborer we cannot stop the tendency of property of
all kinds to concentration, and this must be the tendency of wages
until equal rights in the soil of their country are secured to all.
We can no more abolish industrial slavery by limiting the size of
estates than we could abolish chattel slavery by putting a limit on
the number of slaves a single slaveholder might own. In the one case
as in the other, so far as such restrictions could be made operative
they would only increase the difficulties of abolition by enlarging
the class who would resist it.
[06] There is no escape
from it. If we would save the Republic before social inequality and
political demoralization have reached the point when no salvation
is possible, we must assert the principle of the Declaration of Independence,
acknowledge the equal and unalienable rights which inhere in man by
endowment of the Creator, and make land common property.
[07] If there seems
anything strange in the idea that all men have equal and unalienable
rights to the use of the earth, it is merely that habit can blind
us to the most obvious truths. Slavery, polygamy, cannibalism, the
flattening of children's heads, or the squeezing of their feet, seem
perfectly natural to those brought up where such institutions or customs
exist. But, as a matter of fact, nothing is more repugnant to the
natural perceptions of men than that land should be treated as subject
to individual ownership, like things produced by labor. It is only
among an insignificant fraction of the people who have lived on the
earth that the idea that the earth itself could be made private property
has ever obtained; nor has it ever obtained save as the result of
a long course of usurpation, tyranny and fraud. This idea reached
development among the Romans, whom it corrupted and destroyed. It
took many generations for it to make its way among our ancestors;
and it did not, in fact, reach full recognition until two centuries
ago, when, in the time of Charles II., the feudal dues were shaken
off by a landholders' parliament. We accepted it as we have accepted
the aristocratic organization of our army and navy, and many other
things, in which we have servilely followed European custom. Land
being plenty and population sparse, we did not realize what it would
mean when in two or three cities we should have the population of
the thirteen colonies. But it is time that we should begin to think
of it now, when we see ourselves confronted, in spite of our free
political institutions, with all the problems that menace Europe --
when, though our virgin soil is not yet quite fenced in, we have a
"working-class," a "criminal class,, and a "pauper class;" when there
are already thousands of so-called free citizens of the Republic who
cannot by the hardest toil make a living for their families, and when
we are, on the other hand, developing such monstrous fortunes as the
world has not seen since great estates were eating out the heart of
Rome.
[08] What more preposterous
than the treatment of land as individual property? In every essential
land differs from those things which being the product of human labor
are rightfully property. It is the creation of God; they are produced
by man. It is fixed in quantity; they may be increased illimitably.
It exists, though generations come and go; they in a little while
decay and pass again into the elements. What more preposterous than
that one tenant for a day of this rolling sphere should collect rent
for it from his co-tenants, or sell to them for a price what was here
ages before him and will be here ages after him ? What more preposterous
than that we, living in New York city in this year, 1883, should be
working for a lot of landlords who get the authority to live on our
labor from some English king, dead and gone these centuries? What
more preposterous than that we, the present population of the United
States, should presume to grant to our own people or to foreign capitalists
the right to strip of their earnings American citizens of the next
generation? What more utterly preposterous than these titles to land?
Although the whole people of the earth in one generation were to unite,
they could no more sell title to land against the next generation
than they could sell that generation. It is a self-evident truth,
as Thomas Jefferson said, that the earth belongs in usufruct to the
living.
[09] Nor can any defense
of private property in land be made on the ground of expediency. On
the contrary, look where you will, and it is evident that the private
ownership of land keeps land out of use; that the speculation it engenders
crowds population where it ought to be more diffused, diffuses it
where it ought to be closer together; compels those who wish to improve
to pay away a large part of their capital, or mortgage their labor
for years before they are permitted to improve; prevents men from
going to work for themselves who would gladly do so, crowding them
into deadly competition with each other for the wages of employers;
and enormously restricts the production of wealth while causing the
grossest inequality in its distribution.
[10] No assumption can
be more gratuitous than that constantly made that absolute ownership
of land is necessary to the improvement and proper use of land. What
is necessary to the best use of land is the security of improvements
-- the assurance that the labor and capital expended upon it shall
enjoy their reward. This is a very different thing from the absolute
ownership of land. Some of the finest buildings in New York are erected
upon leased ground. Nearly the whole of London and other English cities,
and great parts of Philadelphia and Baltimore, are so built. All sorts
of mines are opened and operated on leases. In California and Nevada
the most costly mining operations, involving the expenditure of immense
amounts of capital, were undertaken upon no better security than the
mining regulations, which gave no ownership of the land, but only
guaranteed possession as long as the mines were worked.
[11] If shafts can be
sunk and tunnels can be run, and the most costly machinery can be
put up on public land on mere security of possession, why could not
improvements of all kinds be made on that security? If individuals
will use and improve land belonging to other individuals, why would
they not use and improve land belonging to the whole people? What
is to prevent land owned by Trinity Church, by the Sailors' Snug Harbor,
by the Astors or Rhinelanders, or any other corporate or individual
owners, from being as well improved and used as now, if the ground-rents,
instead of going to corporations or individuals, went into the public
treasury?
[12] In point of fact,
if land were treated as the common property of the whole people, it
would be far more readily improved than now, for then the improver
would get the whole benefit of his improvements. Under the present
system, the price that must be paid for land operates as a powerful
deterrent to improvement. And when the improver has secured land either
by purchase or by lease, he is taxed upon his improvements, and heavily
taxed in various ways upon all that he uses. Were land treated as
the property of the whole people, the ground-rent accruing to the
community would suffice for public purposes, and all other taxation
might be dispensed with. The improver could more easily get land to
improve, and would retain for himself the full benefit of his improvements
exempt from taxation.
[13] To secure to all
citizens their equal right to the land on which they live, does not
mean, as some of the ignorant seem to suppose, that every one must
be given a farm, and city land be cut up into little pieces. It would
be impossible to secure the equal rights of all in that way, even
if such division were not in itself impossible. In a small and primitive
community of simple industries and habits, such as that Moses legislated
for, substantial equality may be secured by allotting to each family
an equal share of the land and making it unalienable. Or, as among
our rude ancestors in western Europe, or in such primitive society
as the village communities of Russia and India, substantial equality
may be secured by periodical allotment or cultivation in common. Or
in sparse populations, such as the early New England colonies, substantial
equality may be secured by giving to each family its town-lot and
its seed-lot, holding the rest of the land as town land or common.
But among a highly civilized and rapidly growing population, with
changing centers, with great cities and minute division of industry,
and a complex system of production and exchange, such rude devices
become ineffective and impossible.
[14] Must we therefore
consent to inequality -- must we therefore consent that some shall
monopolize what is the common heritage of all? Not at all. If two
men find a diamond, they do not march to a lapidary to have it cut
in two. If three sons inherit a ship, they do not proceed to saw her
into three pieces; nor yet do they agree that if this cannot be done
equal division is impossible. Nor yet is there no other way to secure
the rights of the owners of a railroad than by breaking up track,
engines, cars and depots into as many separate bits as there are stockholders.
And so it is not necessary, in order to secure equal rights to land,
to make an equal division of land. All that it is necessary to do
is to collect the ground-rents for the common benefit.
[15] Nor, to take ground-rents
for the common benefit, is it necessary that the state should actually
take possession of the land and rent it out from year to year, or
from term to term, as some ignorant people suppose. It can be done
in a much more simple and easy manner by means of the existing machinery
of taxation. All it is necessary to do is to abolish all other forms
of taxation until the weight of taxation rests upon the value of land
irrespective of improvements, and take the ground-rent for the public
benefit.
[16] In this simple
way, without increasing governmental machinery, but, on the contrary,
greatly simplifying it, we could make land common property. And in
doing this we could abolish all other taxation, and still have a great
and steadily increasing surplus -- a growing common fund, in the benefits
of which all might share, and in the management of which there would
be such a direct and general interest as to afford the strongest guaranties
against misappropriation or waste. Under this system no one could
afford to hold land he was not using, and land not in use would be
thrown open to those who wished to use it, at once relieving the labor
market and giving an enormous stimulus to production and improvement,
while land in use would be paid for according to its value, irrespective
of the improvements the user might make. On these he would not be
taxed. All that his labor could add to the common wealth, all that
his prudence could save, would be his own, instead of, as now, subjecting
him to fine. Thus would the sacred right of property be acknowledged
by securing to each the reward of his exertion.
[17] Practically, then,
the greatest, the most fundamental of all reforms, the reform which
will make all other reforms easier, and without which no other reform
will avail, is to be reached by concentrating all taxation into a
tax upon the value of land, and making that heavy enough to take as
near as may be the whole ground-rent for common purposes.
[18] To those who have
never studied the subject, it will seem ridiculous to propose as the
greatest and most far-reaching of all reforms a mere fiscal change.
But whoever has followed the train of thought through which in preceding
chapters I have endeavored to lead, will see that in this simple proposition
is involved the greatest of social revolutions -- a revolution compared
with which that which destroyed ancient monarchy in France, or that
which destroyed chattel slavery in our Southern States, were as nothing.
[19] In a book such
as this, intended for the casual reader, who lacks inclination to
follow the close reasoning necessary to show the full relation of
this seemingly simple reform to economic laws, I cannot exhibit its
full force, but I may point to some of the more obvious of its effects.
[20] To appropriate
ground-rent*
to public uses by means of taxation would permit the abolition of
all the taxation which now presses so heavily upon labor and capital.
This would enormously increase the production of wealth by the removal
of restrictions and by adding to the incentives to production.
[21] It would at the
same time enormously increase the production of wealth by throwing
open natural opportunities. It would utterly destroy land monopoly
by making the holding of land unprofitable to any but the user. There
would be no temptation to any one to hold land in expectation of future
increase in its value when that increase was certain to be demanded
in taxes. No one could afford to hold valuable land idle when the
taxes upon it would be as heavy as they would be were it put to the
fullest use. Thus speculation in land would be utterly destroyed,
and land not in use would become free to those who wished to use it.
[22] The enormous increase
in production which would result from thus throwing open the natural
means and opportunities of production, while at the same time removing
the taxation which now hampers, restricts and fines production, would
enormously augment the annual fund from which all incomes are drawn.
It would at the same time make the distribution of wealth much more
equal. That great part of this fund which is now taken by the owners
of land, not as a return for anything by which they add to production,
but because they have appropriated as their own the natural means
and opportunities of production, and which as material progress goes
on, and the value of land rises, is constantly becoming larger and
larger, would be virtually divided among all, by being utilized for
common purposes. The removal of restrictions upon labor, and the opening
of natural opportunities to labor, would make labor free to employ
itself. Labor, the producer of all wealth, could never become "a drug
in the market" while desire for any form of wealth was unsatisfied.
With the natural opportunities of employment thrown open to all, the
spectacle of willing men seeking vainly for employment could not be
witnessed; there could be no surplus of unemployed labor to beget
that cutthroat competition of laborers for employment which crowds
wages down to the cost of merely living. Instead of the one-sided
competition of workmen to find employment, employers would compete
with each other to obtain workmen. There would be no need of' combinations
to raise or maintain wages; for wages, instead of tending to the lowest
point at which laborers can live, would tend to the highest point
which employers could pay, and thus, instead of getting but a mere
fraction of his earnings, the workman would get the full return of
his labor, leaving to the skill, foresight and capital of the employer
those additional earnings that are justly their due.
[23] The equalization
in the distribution of wealth that would thus result would effect
immense economies and greatly add to productive power. The cost of
the idleness, pauperism and crime that spring from poverty would be
saved to the community; the increased mobility of labor, the increased
intelligence of the masses, that would result from this equalized
distribution of wealth, the greater incentive to invention and to
the use of improved processes that would result from the increase
in wages, would enormously increase production.
[24] To abolish all
taxes save a tax upon the value of land would at the same time greatly
simplify the machinery and expenses of government, and greatly reduce
government expenses. An army of Custom-House officers, and internal
revenue officials, and license collectors and assessors, clerks, accountants,
spies, detectives, and government employees of every description,
could be dispensed with. The corrupting effect of indirect taxation
would be taken out of our politics. The rings and combinations now
interested in keeping up taxation would cease to contribute money
for the debauching of voters and to beset the law-making power with
their lobbyists. We should get rid of the fraud and false swearing,
of the bribery and subornation which now attend the collection of
so much of our public revenues. We should get rid of the demoralization
that proceeds from laws which prohibit actions in themselves harmless,
punish men for crimes which the moral sense does not condemn, and
offer a constant premium to evasion. "Land lies out of doors." It
cannot be hid or carried off. Its value can be ascertained with greater
ease and exactness than the value of anything else, and taxes upon
that value can be collected with absolute certainty and at the minimum
of expense. To rely upon land values for the whole public revenue
would so simplify government, would so eliminate incentives to corruption,
that we could safely assume as governmental functions the management
of telegraphs and railroads, and safely apply the increasing surplus
to securing such common benefits and providing such public conveniences
as advancing civilization may call for.
[25] And in thinking
of what is possible in the way of the management of common concerns
for the common benefit, not only is the great simplification of government
which would result from the reform I have suggested to be considered,
but the higher moral tone that would be given to social life by the
equalization of conditions and the abolition of poverty. The greed
of wealth, which makes it a business motto that every man is to be
treated as though he were a rascal, and induces despair of getting
in places of public trust men who will not abuse them for selfish
ends, is but the reflection of the fear of want. Men trample over
each other from the frantic dread of being trampled upon, and the
admiration with which even the unscrupulous money-getter is regarded
springs from habits of thought engendered by the fierce struggle for
existence to which the most of us are obliged to give up our best
energies. But when no one feared want, when every one felt assured
of his ability to make an easy and independent living for himself
and his family, that popular admiration which now spurs even the rich
man still to add to his wealth would be given to other things than
the getting of money. We should learn to regard the man who strove
to get more than he could use, as a fool -- as indeed he is.
[26] He must have eyes
only for the mean and vile, who has mixed with men without realizing
that selfishness and greed and vice and crime are largely the result
of social conditions which bring out the bad qualities of human nature
and stunt the good; without realizing that there is even now among
men patriotism and virtue enough to secure us the best possible management
of public affairs if our social and political adjustments enabled
us to utilize those qualities. Who has not known poor men who might
safely be trusted with untold millions? Who has not met with rich
men who retained the most ardent sympathy with their fellows, the
warmest devotion to all that would benefit their kind? Look to-day
at our charities, hopeless of permanent good though they may be! They
at least show the existence of unselfish sympathies, capable, if rightly
directed, of the largest results.
[27] It is no mere fiscal
reform that I propose; it is a conforming of the most important social
adjustments to natural laws. To those who have never even thought
to the matter, it may seem irreverently presumptuous to say that it
is the evident intent of the Creator that land values should be the
subject of taxation; that rent should be utilized for the benefit
of the entire community. Yet to whoever does think of it, to say this
will appear no more presumptuous than to say that the Creator has
intended men to walk on their feet, and not on their hands. Man in
his social relations is as much included in the creative scheme as
man in his physical relations. Just as certainly as the fish was intended
to swim in the water, and the bird to fly through the air, and monkeys
to live in trees, and moles to burrow underground, was man intended
to live with his fellows. He is by nature a social animal. And the
creative scheme must embrace the life and development of society,
as truly as it embraces the life and development of the individual.
Our civilization cannot carry us beyond the domain of law. Railroads,
telegraphs and labor-saving machinery are no more accidents than are
flowers and trees.
[28] Man is driven by
his instincts and needs to form society. Society, thus formed, has
certain needs and functions for which revenue is required. These needs
and functions increase with social development, requiring a larger
and larger revenue. Now, experience and analogy, if not the instinctive
perceptions of the human mind, teach us that there is a natural way
of satisfying every natural want. And if human society is included
in nature, as it surely is, this must apply to social wants as well
as to the wants of the individual, and there must be a natural or
right method of taxation, as there is a natural or right method of
walking.
[29] We know, beyond
peradventure, that the natural or right way for a man to walk is on
his feet, and not on his hands. We know this of a surety -- because
the feet are adapted to walking, while the hands are not; because
in walking on the feet all the other organs of the body are free to
perform their proper functions, while in walking on the hands they
are not; because a man can walk on his feet with ease, convenience
and celerity, while no amount of training will enable him to walk
on his hands save awkwardly, slowly and painfully. In the same way
we may know that the natural or right way of raising the revenues
which are required by the needs of society is by the taxation of land
values. The value of land is in its nature and relations adapted to
purposes of taxation, just as the feet in their nature and relations
are adapted to the purposes of walking. The value of land**
only arises as in the integration of society the need for some public
or common revenue begins to be felt. It increases as the development
of society goes on, and as larger and larger revenues are therefore
required. Taxation upon land values does not lessen the individual
incentive to production and accumulation, as do other methods of taxation;
on the contrary, it leaves perfect freedom to productive forces, and
prevents restrictions upon production from arising. It does not foster
monopolies, and cause unjust inequalities in the distribution of wealth,
as do other taxes; on the contrary, it has the effect of breaking
down monopoly and equalizing the distribution of wealth. It can be
collected with greater certainty and economy than any other tax; it
does not beget the evasion, corruption and dishonesty that flow from
other taxes. In short, it conforms to every economic and moral requirement.
What can be more in accordance with justice than that the value of
land, which is not created by individual effort, but arises from the
existence and growth of society, should be taken by society for social
needs?
[30] In trying, in a
previous chapter, to imagine a world in which natural material and
opportunities were free as air, I said that such a world as we find
ourselves in is best for men who will use the intelligence with which
man has been gifted. So, evidently, it is. The very laws which cause
social injustice to result in inequality, suffering and degradation
are in their nature beneficent. All this evil is the wrong side of
good that might be.
[31] Man is more than
an animal. And the more we consider the constitution of this world
in which we find ourselves, the more clearly we see that its constitution
is such as to develop more than animal life. If the purpose for which
this world existed were merely to enable animal man to eat, drink
and comfortably clothe and house himself for his little day, some
such world as I have previously endeavored to imagine would be best.
But the purpose of this world, so far at least as man is concerned,
is evidently the development of moral and intellectual, even more
than of animal, powers. Whether we consider man himself or his relations
to nature external to him, the substantial truth of that bold declaration
of the Hebrew scriptures, that man has been created in the image of
God, forces itself upon the mind.
[32] If all the material
things needed by man could be produced equally well at all points
on the earth's surface, it might seem more convenient for man the
animal, but how would he have risen above the animal level? As we
see in the history of social development, commerce has been and is
the great civilizer and educator. The seemingly infinite diversities
in the capacity of different parts of the earth's surface lead to
that exchange of productions which is the most powerful agent in preventing
isolation, in breaking down prejudice, in increasing knowledge and
widening thought. These diversities of nature, which seemingly increase
with our knowledge of nature's powers like the diversities in the
aptitudes of individuals and communities, which similarly increase
with social development, call forth powers and give rise to pleasures
which could never arise had man been placed, like an ox, in a boundless
field of clover. The "international law of God" which we fight with
our tariffs -- so short-sighted are the selfish prejudices of men
-- is the law which stimulates mental and moral progress; the law
to which civilization is due.
[33] And so, when we
consider the phenomenon of rent, it reveals to us one of those beautiful
and beneficent adaptations, in which more than in anything else the
human mind recognizes evidences of Mind infinitely greater, and catches
glimpses of the Master Workman.
[34] This is the law
of rent: As individuals come together in communities, and society
grows, integrating more and more its individual members, and making
general interests and general conditions of more and more relative
importance, there arises, over and above the value which individuals
can create for themselves, a value which is created by the community
as a whole, and which, attaching to land, becomes tangible, definite
and capable of computation and appropriation. As society grows, so
grows this value, which springs from and represents in tangible form
what society as a whole contributes to production, as distinguished
from what is contributed by individual exertion. By virtue of natural
law in those aspects which it is the purpose of the science we call
political economy to discover -- as it is the purpose of the sciences
which we call chemistry and astronomy to discover other aspects of
natural law -- all social advance necessarily contributes to the increase
of this common value; to the growth of this common fund.
[35] Here is a provision
made by natural law for the increasing needs of social growth; here
is an adaptation of nature by virtue of which the natural progress
of society is a progress toward equality, not toward inequality; a
centripetal force tending to unity, growing out of and ever balancing
a centrifugal force tending to diversity. Here is a fund belonging
to society as a whole from which, without the degradation of alms,
private or public, provision can be made for the weak, the helpless,
the aged; from which provision can be made for the common wants of
all as a matter of common right to each, and by the utilization of
which society, as it advances, may pass, by natural methods and easy
stages, from a rude association for purposes of defense and police,
into a co¯perative association, in which combined power guided by
combined intelligence can give to each more than his own exertions
multiplied many fold could produce.
[36] By making land
private property, by permitting individuals to appropriate this fund
which nature plainly intended for the use of all, we throw the children's
bread to the dogs of Greed and Lust; we produce a primary inequality
which gives rise in every direction to other tendencies to inequality;
and from this perversion of the good gifts of the Creator, from this
ignoring and defying of his social laws, there arise in the very heart
of our civilization those horrible and monstrous things that betoken
social putrefaction.
footnotes
*I
use the term ground-rent because the proper economic term, rent, might
not be understood by those who are in the habit of using it in its
common sense, which applies to the income from buildings and improvements.
as well as land.
**Value,
it must always be remembered, is a totally different thing from utility.
From the confounding of these two different ideas much error and confusion
arise. No matter how useful it may be, nothing has a value until some
one is willing to give labor or the produce of labor for it.
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