France Returns to the Soil |
[Reprinted from Land and Freedom, January-February 1941]
|
Marshal Petain has said: "The only wealth you
possess is your labor. ...France will become again
what she should never have ceased to be, an essentially
agricultural nation. Like the giant of mythology, she will
recover all her strength by contact with the soil."
To realize this return to the soil, we meet again the
demagogical measures which because of their appearance
of justice and patriotism have been tried in every country
where the leaders have aimed to substitute "governmental
direction for the play of individual action, and the attempt
to secure by restriction what can better be secured by freedom" (Progress and Poverty}. Why should these measures,
which have failed everywhere else to bring practical results, have more chance of realization in France?
Here are some of the regulations that have been imposed
since the proclamation of the new Constitution: The price
of wheat is fixed (100 kilograms. 214 francs). The hiring
of foreign manual labor is limited. Gangs of young people
are being organized to work on farms. Industrial establishments must dismiss workers formerly employed in agriculture, in order that they may be returned to the farms.
In addition to the numerous regulations (there are 700
decrees!) a vast program of public works has been undertaken totalling $350 millions (18,000 million francs). The
program includes draining and irrigation projects, construction of railroads, telegraph and telephone lines, 2500
bridges, the setting up of electric power stations and the
electrification of the lines Paris-Lyon, Brive-Montauban
and Bordeaux-Nimes.
Besides these official decrees, there are many unofficial
proposals in the severely censored press. The following,
in Le Progres de I'AIlier, is typical: "There should be no
difficulty in providing dwellings. A law, declaring every
house deserted for more than five years and every field
deserted for more than three years, to be common property
and assigned to a new proprietor, would take care of the
situation and would not be objectionable." Paris Soir has
this to offer: "For the clearing of seven million hectares
(171/2 million acres) twice the area of the Netherlands
ploughs and man-power are not always enough. A great
many fields are arid, and workers should not desert the
rich fields to take care of the poor ones. The sheep would
make an efficient and gratuitous agricultural worker. After
the flock has enriched the soil, the plough can turn it and
the sower fertilize it. One shepherd and 500 sheep can do
more for the clearing of the soil than ten ploughmen and
a trainload of chemicals!"
We could continue to enumerate all the decrees and proposals; but enough has been given to show the spirit that
prevails. All these measures are well-intentioned and derive
from the urgent necessity of contending with work stoppage
and poverty. A glance at the facts will show the urgency
of present conditions. France, which is considered a rich
and fertile land, is suffering in a high degree from general
depopulation, the density being 200 inhabitants to the square
mile. Her neighbors have a much greater density per square
mile 360 in Italy, 600 in the Netherlands, 660 in Belgium,
and 1130 in Western Germany. Especially serious is the
desertion of the rural districts, as illustrated by the following: A village in the fertile plain of Forez had, in 1896,
326 houses and 1250 inhabitants; today it has only 210
houses and 710 inhabitants, the number of cultivators falling from 190 to 136. No wonder the traveller meets everywhere deserted houses and fallow bramble-covered fields! No wonder there are three million square miles to clear!
The facts are undeniable. And the necessity to contend
with poverty is also undeniable. But are the proposed
measures really adequate? Has there been any attempt to
elucidate the causes of France's present woes? Let us
point out the objectionable features of some of the decrees
and proposals.
When the State fixes the price of wheat, who is paying
the difference between the fixed price and the world-market
price? How can the taxpayer, charged with this excess
over the world-market price, benefit financially?
When an employer hires a foreign worker, it is either
because that worker is cheaper than native labor, or because
he possesses knowledge and capacities unknown to the
native. In either case, the restriction now imposed upon
foreign labor brings a rise in the price of commodities, and
an extra burden on the consumer. The same is true of
the disbanding of industrial workers and their reemploy-
ment in former occupations. If the employer needed them,
he would hire them without official enforcement. If his
business does not need these workers, then the obligation
to employ them is a palliative, which will probably result
in the bankrupting of many enterprises.
As for the deserted houses and fields what is the probability that the newcomer will succeed on the soil where the
last occupant failed? And certainly the supporter of the
sheep proposal is quite right when he says that the rich
fields should not be neglected in order to work on the poor
fields. (As for this sheep proposal, incidentally just between us neither 500 sheep nor one sheep are gratuitous
in France!)
I have only suggested the flaws in the present measures.
The chief objection is that none of them goes to the root of
the difficulty. Before any reform can be attempted, the
causes must be examined. There are Georgeists who assert
that speculation and the speculative withdrawal of land is
the sole cause of all the evils. As I see it, the burdensome
taxes that are now imposed are also causing much of the
difficulty.
The land prices alone cannot be responsible for the idleness of the land. The price of agricultural land inside the
margin of production averages 3000 francs per hectacre
($30 per acre). Such prices are not so much a hindrance
as are the unjust tax burdens imposed on the use of land.
The taxes increase relatively in inverse proportion, to the
income that is, increasing as the income decreases, thus
falling much more heavily on the poor than on the rich.
There is a tax of 5% on the under-assessed value of agricultural land, but the salutary effects of this are greatly
offset by the huge burden of indirect taxes.
Every French estate today is a living illustration of the
discouraging effects of the present taxation methods on
production, as emphasized by Henry George: "The manner
in which equal amounts of taxation may be imposed may
very differently affect the production of wealth. ...Taxation which falls upon labor as it is exerted, wealth as it
is used as capital, land as it is cultivated, will manifestly
tend to discourage production. ...The present method of
taxation operates upon exchange like artificial deserts and
mountains. It operates upon energy, and industry, and
skill, and thrift, like a fine upon those qualities." Causes
other than land speculation led" Henry George to formulate
his remedy for poverty in the following words: "Abolish
all taxation save that upon land values."
There are official decrees in France today that graze the
truth. For instance, in October 1940, the government
abolished the custom duties on horses, cattle, poultry, meat,
dairy products, grain, and many vegetables. In November,
the following was decreed: "Inheritances up to half a
million francs are totally exempted from taxation, when
there are more than two minor children to inherit."
I ask: When the Minister of Finances has acknowledged
that custom duties are a handicap to the welfare of the
people, why not suppress all the other duties, which have
the same effect? If the propriety of abolishing taxes on
small inheritances is seen, why not also look to the other
taxes, especially the indirect taxes?
In 1940, forty-two million consumers paid 43,800 million
francs in indirect taxes, as compared with the 1937 figures
of 37,100 millions. The four and a half million taxpayers
paid 14,000 millions in direct taxes in 1940, as compared
with the 1937 figure of 37,100 millions. Is the increase
of 244% in the direct taxes, as compared with the increase
of only 18% in the indirect taxes, an indication that the
bad effect of indirect taxation has at last been recognized?
One thing is certain: A change for the better cannot be
expected unless the government imposes a tax on land value,
restoring the real land value, and gradually abolishing all
other taxes.
|