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Who was Henry George?
Henry George (September 2, 1839 – October 29, 1897) was an American
political economist, and the most influential proponent of the "Single
Tax" on land. He is the author of "Progress and Poverty" written in
1879.
His life
Born in Philadelphia, George went to sea at age 16 before eventually
settling in California. After a failed attempt at gold mining he
started to work his way up through the newspaper industry, starting as
a printer and ending up an editor and proprietor. Some of his earliest
articles to gain him fame were on his opinion that Chinese immigration
should be restricted.
On a trip to New York George was struck by the apparent paradox that
the poor in that long-established city were much worse off than the
poor in less developed California. This paradox supplied the theme and
title for his 1879 book Progress and
Poverty, which was a huge success,
selling over 3 million copies. In it George made the argument that
nearly all of the wealth created by social and technological advances
in a free market economy is captured by land owners and monopolists via
economic rents, and that this concentration of unearned wealth is the
root cause of poverty. George considered it a great injustice to
restrict a man from using natural resources, and believed such
restrictions were equivalent to slavery, a concept known as wage
slavery. The appropriation of oil royalties by magnates of
petrol-rich
countries may be seen as an equivalent form of rent-seeking activity;
since natural resources are given freely by Nature, no single
individual should be allowed to earn revenues by monopolizing their
commerce. The same holds true about every other mineral and biological
raw resource.
George was in a position to discover this pattern, having experienced
poverty himself, knowing many different societies from his travels, and
living in California at a time of rapid growth. In particular he had
noticed that the construction of railroads in California was pushing up
land values and rents as fast as or faster than wages were rising.
His Economic Theory
George developed some of the crucial features of his own theory of
economics in a critique of an illustration used by
Frédéric Bastiat in order to explain the nature of
interest and profit.
Bastiat had asked his readers to consider James and William, both
carpenters. James has built himself a plane, and has lent it to William
for a year. Would James be satisfied with the return of an equally good
plane a year later? Plainly not! He'd expect a board along with it, as
interest. The key to a theory of interest is to understand why. Bastiat
said that James had given William over that year "the power, inherent
in the instrument, to increase the productivity of his labor," and
wants compensation for that increased productivity.
George didn't accept this explanation. He wrote, "I am inclined to
think that if all wealth consisted of such things as planes, and all
production was such as that of carpenters -- that is to say, if wealth
consisted but of the inert matter of the universe, and production of
working up this inert matter into different shapes, that interest would
be but the robbery of industry, and could not long exist." But some
wealth is inherently fruitful, like a pair of breeding cattle, or a vat
of grape juice soon to ferment into wine, or ... land. Planes and other
sorts of inert matter (and the most lent item of all -- money itself)
earns interest indirectly, only by being part of the same social
"circle of exchange" with fruitful forms of wealth such as those.
His policy proposals
Although best known for advocating the replacement of other taxes by
land taxes, Henry George formulated a comprehensive set of economic
policies. Much like the modern Open Source movement, George was highly
critical of restrictive patents and copyrights. George advocated
replacement of patents with government supported incentives for
invention and scientific investigation and dismantling of monopolies
when possible – and taxation or regulation of natural monopolies.
George advocated a combination of unfettered free markets and extensive
social programs made possible by taxes on land and monopolies. Modern
day economists like Nobel Prize winner Milton Friedman admit that Henry
George's Land tax is potentially beneficial because, unlike other
taxes, land taxes tend not to affect the prices of consumer products.
Modern day environmentalists have resonated with the idea of the earth
as the common property of humanity – and some have endorsed the idea of
substantial taxes or fees on pollution. Others, notably U.S. economist
Nicolaus Tideman and U.S. activist Alanna Hartzok, continue to promote
the essential Georgist idea of land value taxation.
Death and subsequent influence
In 1886 George ran for mayor of New York, and polled second (ahead of
Theodore Roosevelt). He ran again in 1897, but died 4 days before the
election. An estimated 100,000 people attended his funeral.
According to his grand-daughter Agnes de Mille, Progress and Poverty
and its successors made Henry George the third most famous man in the
USA, behind only Mark Twain and Thomas Edison. He was also popular as a
speaker, even making several speaking trips abroad to places such as
Ireland and Scotland where access to land was (and still is) a major
political issue. His ideas were taken up to some degree in South
Africa, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Australia – where state governments
still levy a land value tax, albeit low and with many exemptions. An
attempt by the Liberal Government of the day to implement his ideas in
1909 as part of the People's Budget caused a crisis in Britain which
led indirectly to reform of the House of Lords. Henry George was
familiar with the work of Karl Marx –
and predicted that if Marx's
ideas were tried the likely result would be a dictatorship.
Henry George's popularity declined in the 20th century; however, there
are still many Georgist organisations in existence, and many people who
do remain famous were heavily influenced by him, such as George Bernard
Shaw, Leo Tolstoy, Sun Yat Sen, Herbert Simon, and David Lloyd George.
A follower of George, Lizzie Magie, created the board game Monopoly in
1904 to demonstrate his theories.
Notable is also Silvio Gesell's Freiwirtschaft,
in which Gesell combined
Henry George's ideas about land ownership and rents with his own theory
about the money system and interest rates and his successive
development of Freigeld.
In his last book, Martin Luther King referenced Henry George in support
of a guaranteed minimum income. In the 2004 Presidential campaign,
Ralph Nader mentioned Henry George in his platform. Congressman Dennis
Kucinich has also positively mentioned Henry George in speeches.
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