Georgism

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Georgism is the common name for the economic view which holds that the economic rent which landlords derive from land ownership—including from all natural resources, the commons, and urban locations—should be taxed directly for use by the state.

Liberal economic theory has tended throughout its history to oppose rent-seeking, particularly by landowners, as inefficient; this view is evident throughout the works of Adam Smith and other classical political economists. However, the name "Georgism" refers specifically to a view popularized by the work of reformer Henry George (1839–1897) in the late 19th-century which holds that a single land-value tax would eliminate most social i

History

Henry George

Theory

Criticism

Quotes

And while professors thus disagree, the ideas that there is a necessary conflict between capital and labor, that machinery is an evil, that competition must be restrained and interest abolished, that wealth may be created by the issue of money, that it is the duty of government to furnish capital or to furnish work, are rapidly making way among the great body of the people, who keenly feel a hurt and are sharply conscious of a wrong. Such ideas, which bring great masses of men, the repositories of ultimate political power, under the leadership of charlatans and demagogues, are fraught with danger....

— Henry George, Progress and Poverty, Introduction[1]

To raise wages in a particular occupation or occupations, which is all that any combination of workmen yet made has been equal to attempting, is manifestly a task the difficulty of which progressively increases. For the higher are wages of any particular kind raised above their normal level with other wages, the stronger are the tendencies to bring them back.... So that practically, ... that which trades’ unions, even when supporting each other, can do in the way of raising wages is comparatively little, and this little, moreover, is confined to their own sphere, and does not affect the lower stratum of unorganized laborers, whose condition most needs alleviation and ultimately determines that of all above them. The only way by which wages could be raised to any extent and with any permanence by this method would be by a general combination, such as was aimed at by the Internationals, which should include laborers of all kinds. But such a combination may be set down as practically impossible, for the difficulties of combination, great enough in the most highly paid and smallest trades, become greater and greater as we descend in the industrial scale.

Nor... must it be forgotten who are the real parties pitted against each other. It is not labor and capital. It is laborers on the one side and the owners of land on the other. If the contest were between labor and capital, it would be on much more equal terms. For the power of capital to stand out is only some little greater than that of labor. Capital not only ceases to earn anything when not used, but it goes to waste—for in nearly all its forms it can be maintained only by constant reproduction. But land will not starve like laborers or go to waste like capital—its owners can wait. They may be inconvenienced, it is true, but what is inconvenience to them, is destruction to capital and starvation to labor.

— Progress and Poverty, Book VI: The Remedy. Ch. 1, Section III.[1]

Notes

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 George, Henry (23 Jan 2024). "Progress and Poverty, Volumes I and II: An Inquiry into the Cause of Industrial Depressions and of Increase of Want with Increase of Wealth". Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 30 Jan 2024.