Regarding "Speakers for Georgism," I don't know whether
you would consider the following to be supportive, because it
advocates distributing *all* income from natural capital to the
earth's residents, while also including within natural capital "intellectual
property inherited from previous generations. But, here is our
position at Tom Paine Institute, with historical background, beginning
with the views on "Property" by John Locke. I am also
sending along an Attachment of a Minute on the subject by our local
Environmental and Social Concerns Committee of the Eugene Friends
Meeting.
Natural Capital: Key to Economic Justice
The super-rich get their income from a near-monopoly of capital, not
from "a job." Therefore, if we are to have economic justice
we must have justice in the distribution of capital, and in the income
from it. In order to accomplish this, we must distinguish between (1)
natural capital (the income from which should be fairly equally shared
by all earthly residents) and (2) all capital generated by private
parties over and beyond our common heritage of natural capital.This
privately generated capital, and the income from it, should accrue to
those who generated it. But this division has not taken place in
Western civilization. The result is that this civilization has not yet
achieved economic justice. What follows is an historical account of an
opportunity lost three hundred years ago, and again two hundred years
ago, and of how we might still achieve it.
John Locke, the influential 17th century British philosopher,
acknowledged that what economists now call "natural capital"
(all land and its resources) was rightly our common heritage. However,
he argued, it is not practical to require approval for any proposed
use of it from every co-owner-resident of the earth. There had to be a
fair and practical way for someone who wanted to use some part of it
to go ahead and do so without securing such an impossible universal
agreement. Locke argued, first, that anyone had a natural right to
take of the earth's natural capital so long as there remained "enough
and as good left in common for others." He also argued that a
person who put personal effort and labor into what was thus taken
thereby transformed it from its previous status of common property
into the personal private property of the person who had, as we now
say, "improved" it. As Tom Paine was later to point out
(Agrarian Justice, 1797), we can imagine that when land was plentiful
and human population sparse such a practice would indeed have been
considered both practical and fair. Since by putting labor into a part
of natural capital the latter became joined with the improvements, the
product would, it would seem, have had to have a single owner. Either
that would have to be all persons in common, as before, or the person
who had improved it.
There being at the time an abundance of land, it is understandable
that the latter option was accepted, especially since no one could
presume to speak for all persons in common. However, by Locke's time
those initial conditions no longer prevailed. In fact, it had been
centuries since assuming private ownership of a piece of natural
capital still left "enough and as good" in common for
others. By Locke's time, most of the common-heritage capital in the
Western world had already been claimed as private property. Yet Locke
still advocated the continuance of the original practice. He made a
few weak comments about there still being unclaimed land in the world,
but he never did address his own requirement that any further taking
of it would have to leave "as good" in common for others. In
short, Locke didn't solve the problem which he himself stated so
clearly.
By the time Adam Smith came along a century later the enormous
momentum which established practice had given to free-enterprise
capitalism was accelerating rapidly. Within countries, wealth became
so rapidly concentrated in the hands of an elite few that they were
exploring outlets for their exploits outside national borders. The
result was European colonialism. Being basically a moral philosopher,
Adam Smith actually argued against colonialism and its corporate
operators by urging greater distribution of entrepreneurial
opportunities among the populous. But, since he gave no answer to
Locke's ownership dilemma, he did nothing to reverse the trend of
persons and corporate bodies claiming common- heritage as private
property by simply adding a bit of "improvement" to a piece
of it. This problem was solved a century after Locke and about two
decades after Adam Smith published his The Wealth of Nations in 1776.
Again, it was solved by Thomas Paine, the American patriot, and the
solution spelled out in his 1797 pamphlet, Agrarian Justice. He took
on the challenge when he returned to Europe after the American
Revolution and was reminded of the dire poverty there amid great
affluence.
Paine recognized that there should be a continuing separation
between (1) the natural capital itself (which should remain common
property) and (2) any improvements made on any part of it (which
should be the private property of persons making the improvements).
His solution called for holding all of our common heritage of natural
capital in some kind of trust. This would assure its being retained as
common heritage down through the centuries. Then, in order to permit
individual use of it, he suggested leasing it out for such use, while
still retaining common-heritage ownership. Finally, he suggested
distributing the income from such leasing among the residents of a
country (and, presumably, eventually the earth), thereby assuring each
of the joint owners of natural capital a fair share of income from it.
That income could then be used by farmers to lease farmland, by
artisans to buy tools and buildings or to finance operations, and by
everyone to cover living expenses. These common-heritage dividends
were to go to rich and poor alike, since they were not to be
considered charity, but payment on a right which was due to everyone.
Unfortunately, Paine's solution was ignored. Those who had benefited
from the centuries-old practice, and one which was legitimated a
century earlier by the highly respected John Locke, had by that time
become too powerful, having gained control of whatever political
process would have been necessary to implement Paine's proposal. What
we at Tom Paine Institute have mostly added to Paine's proposal is the
following. We are suggesting that our common heritage of capital
should include, in addition to land and its resources, technology ("intellectual
property") inherited from previous generations Some of this
inherited technology is already incorporated into land values,
especially urban land values. Thus, income from that incorporated
technology would accrue to our common heritage in the course of users
paying to lease it. Additionally, we feel that the vast amount of
inherited intellectual property on which foundation all modern
technology is built should also be considered common heritage.
Therefore, high-tech industries presently reaping huge profits in
today's increasingly technological global marketplace should be paying
to a common-heritage trust for use of whatever common-heritage
technology they depend on for their operations. That trust would then
distribute that income along with income from leasing common-heritage
land. Income from selling non-renewable resources should not be
distributed, however, but used to provide to future generations
technology which they can use to substitute for those non-renewable
resources which will not be passed on because they will have been used
up or rendered unusable. As for future technological developments, at
present, royalties are paid to those who first discovered it for a
limited period of time (in the United States, for about 17 years),
after which the it is available free to anyone who has the resources
to exploit it, which is usually the already rich. We suggest that,
after the initial period granted the inventor, royalties should be
paid to a common-heritage trust. In our day the concept of natural
capital must be expanded to include the entire biosphere, including
not only land and its resources, but the waters of the earth, the
atmosphere surrounding it, and beyond that into our solar system.
For the foreseeable future it seems unnecessary to be concerned
about galactic travel and its impact. Including the entire biosphere
within our common heritage, brings up pollution considerations. The
biosphere can adapt to a certain amounts of pollution and other
impacts. These amounts should be identified and permitted; but not
beyond these. Thus, industries should be permitted to lease degrees of
impact much as they would lease land and technology. Since there is a
limit on the amount available for lease, the market would determine
the value of it. And just as getting the optimum income from leasing
land would result in some land always being available for lease by
newcomers, thus optimum income from leasing impact on the biosphere
would result in some allowable impact at all times remaining in an
unleased state. If at any time all of either became leased out, then
that would be an indication that the trust was charging something
short of market value, and the charges should be raised. The trustees
of the trust would have the responsibility for obtaining the maximum
income for general distribution, except that many parts of our common
heritage would remain available for the general public without charge:
public parks, fresh air, water fountains, etc. The impact of economic
enterprises on individual and social life presents more complex
problems. In some areas there would be allowable impact here also,
such as regards pure economic interests. A certain amount of
generalized discomfort might be considered the price to be paid for a
system which generally benefited everyone. These are more complex
issues, beyond the scope of this essay.
The various problems associated with this plan, such as how
governments would be financed if income from land was no longer
available to them, and how to get "from here to there," etc.
require book-length treatment See
http://csf.colorado.edu/sustainable-justice/Smith.html Also:
http://csf.colorado.edu/sustainable-justice (being revamped) Alfred F.
Andersen, Tom Paine Institute, Eugene, Oregon; 541-461-9381
andersen@efn.org