.
| The Basic
Causes of Unemployment |
| [A paper delivered at
the 1979 Joint Georgist Conference, San Francisco, California] |
The basic causes of unemployment are government made laws. There are
two types of laws which cause unemployment. One concerns methods of
Revenue Collection; the other concerns the issue of government-granted
privileges to able bodied people in the form of licenses, quotas,
registrations, zonings, land titles etc., which limit or restrict the
expansion of nearly every industry, trade and profession. This allows
the holders of these privileges to prevent investment in capital, and
prevent the employment of people in many productive activities.
Two examples are given of the effect of a special license causing
unemployment: the taxicab industry and the milk industry in Sydney,
N.S.W. The worth of the privilege as apart from the true capital
investment is shown, together with the resulting cost to the community
in higher prices and reduced service, and the reduction in employment
opportunities.
The most widespread and greatest privilege which tends to cause
unemployment is the license or title to hold land; land tends to be held
partly out of use unless there is a firm incentive to use it. Site
taxation is a just revenue collection method which acts as such an
incentive and causes full employment and prosperity, in contrast to the
effects of other revenue collection methods.
The second cause of unemployment is the deterrent effect of types of
taxation which extract tax merely because money is being seen to change
hands.
A parallel is drawn between fines which are imposed to deter unsocial
or criminal activity, and money extracted by governments in relation to
normal honest economic transactions. Undoubtedly such transactions are
deterred, yet it is by such transactions that people seek to employ each
other. Income Taxes and Sales Taxes undoubtedly prevent some
transactions taking place, they thus stop sales of goods and services
and cause unemployment.
The obvious cure for unemployment is twofold:
- a. Remove all laws which give special privilege to able bodied
people.
- b. Steadily increase site taxation, and reduce income and sales
taxes etc.
c. Unemployment, or more correctly, the lack of opportunity to be
employed, occurs in nearly all so-called free enterprise countries,
often to a continuously grave extent. In Australia we have had a few
periods when unemployment was low, but in general we are like the rest
of the world with continuing unemployment. It is clear that this is not
just a floating population of people changing jobs, and it cannot be
blamed on advances in technology such as automation and computers.
Many causes have been suggested, some quite false, but there is only
one basic cause. This basic cause is that government maintains laws
which quite obviously restrict employment and prevent the expansion of
industry and the use of resources.
In other words government is causing unemployment by law.
In Australia, we have a cry for government to "create jobs",
and politicians promise to do that; but what is really necessary is for
government to cease preventing people from being employed.
Why do governments make such laws? Because they get elected by people
who want, or condone such laws. It is a matter of education.
There are two main types of law which cause unemployment. One concerns
the method of collecting revenue, and the other concerns the issuing of
licenses which permit a limited amount of people and of capital to be
used in some industry, but which in fact prevents other people from
working or investing in it. These laws prevent normal expansion taking
place which would employ those currently unemployed.
Let's have a look at these licenses first, although they go under all
sorts of names such as registrations, licenses, quotas, zonings etc.,
sometimes they are incognito or disguised.
I offer two simple examples, and these are not any worse in causing
unemployment than hundreds of other cases.
Taxi!
In Sydney the Department of Transport issues registrations for taxi
cabs. Such vehicles are inspected regularly for suitability, safety,
cleanliness etc. to maintain service to the public, which is quite
reasonable. However, that does not mean that anyone, who can provide a
vehicle which meets all requirements, may operate a taxi. If you seek to
register such a vehicle, you are told "Sorry, Mate, all
registrations have been taken up".
But if you really want to operate a taxi service, you can do it by
persuading someone who already holds a registration to transfer it to
you, the market value of such a transfer being currently about $30,000.
Now why should any one offer that, over and above all the cost of
purchasing a suitably equipped vehicle (probably $10,000). That $30,000
could be invested in some loan or bond and get say $2,500 per year
interest.
So the privilege of holding the registration of a taxi must also be
worth about $2,500, that is apart from the return for the investment in
equipment, and after all expenses and driver's wages have been paid.
What is this income for? and where does it come from? It must be a
percentage of the fares, which are thus that much higher than they need
be. The extra income is a result of the government granting special
privilege to some by restricting the expansion of the industry. The
income is at the expense of the remainder of the community who have to
pay higher fares, and suffer from a poorer service. In addition it is
estimated that some 300 extra taxis could be run and could get a good
return on capital investment, and these would employ probably a further
400 people. The drivers already in the industry do not benefit from the
restrictions; they have no better security, and their wages are kept low
by the continual competition by the vast numbers of unemployed. If
their industry and all other similar industries were permitted to employ
a further five percent of people, this downward pressure on wages would
not occur. It is only the privileged holder of the registration that
appears to benefit, the rest of the community suffers - but remember as
far as all the other industries are concerned, the taxi registration
holder is just one of the community who suffers from these laws of
privilege. Actually everyone is worse off.
My next example is a quite different industry.
Milk!
Until a few years ago dairy farmers in N.S.W. were all able to sell
milk in Sydney. Then a law was passed which granted only farmers in a
certain area around Sydney the right to sell milk there. Farmers outside
the area (and prospective farmers within the area), were now excluded
from the opportunity to sell milk. So some farmers on our North Coast
went out of business, that is they became unemployed by law. Those
farmers within the area were granted a quota which allowed them to
produce and sell a limited gallonage of milk (except under some very
special circumstances). In other words, expansion of the industry was
prevented - in spite of a slowly growing population. The community is
disadvantaged because the price of milk has risen. The employed workers
in the industry do not benefit, and unemployment has been increased. And
note, the milk quotas can be transferred, but they do so at a price of
thousands of dollars for this government granted privilege of getting
extra income without giving extra service. It is the government-granted
privilege which causes unemployment, high prices and poorer standards of
living.
Those were only two examples. The evil practice affects nearly every
trade, industry, business, profession or calling.
Nearly every organisation of able-bodied people seeks to have
government issue some license or registration which limits the
competitive expansion of that trade (there are perhaps some exceptions
such as government services). There are all sorts of licenses which
superficially guarantee qualifications or safety, but which in addition
give privilege. Governments recognize all sorts of customs and
traditions in many professions such as doctors, lawyers etc., and in
trade unions, such as "demarcation", and even picketting,
which is the use of violence.
The main reason for the continuing failure of our so-called free
enterprise system is that it is not free at all. It is a restricted
enterprise system. I would avoid calling it a privileged enterprise
system because that leaves out half of the equation. You can't have
privilege without causing disadvantage. In the long run always, and even
sometimes in the short term also, the disadvantage and distress outweigh
the benefits of privilege. That is what has been learned and forgotten
many times through history. I would therefore prefer to call our system
a disadvantaged enterprise system.
Land
But what is by far the biggest privilege issued by government? What
privilege overshadows all the others? It is the license to hold land for
ever at the expense of the remainder of the community. The amount of
land is limited by nature, just as taxis and milk quotas are limited
artificially.
Titles to land are merely licenses issued by government which give
exclusive opportunity to the title holder and exclude the remainder.
Although the area of land is limited, its worth is not, for it can be
increased by public works and services.
Just as with taxis, and milk, the license for land can be transferred
at a price.
The holding of land is the holding of opportunity for employment. If
you hold no land, you are deprived of a basic opportunity to be
employed, and you have to offer to work for someone who holds such a
site advantage. The holders of sites can and often do let land be idle,
or operate it with far below the optimum amount of capital and labour
(unless they can get a high tribute for the use of the land). Again
privilege prevents both capital investment and employment.
Of course the simple way to remove this privilege and disadvantage is
to levy steadily increasing site taxation, which removes the privilege
by the holder having to pay the community according to the market value
of the privilege service, opportunity and benefits which go with the
site, and which also removes the disadvantages because of the strong
incentive which site taxes give towards the reasonably full and
efficient use of all sites, which then requires the full use of people.
Site taxes cause prosperity and full employment and they allow the
reduction of other taxes.
Taxes
I have already started talking about site tax as a revenue collection
which removes unemployment.
Before I talk of other taxes, I want you to consider how we discourage
crimes. If some one shop lifts, or parks in a forbidden place, we have a
system which detects such behaviour and aims to discourage it by
imposing a punishment. One of the widely used deterrent penalties is to
extract a money payment under threat of something worse (jail). Does
this fine deter repetition? If parking fines are small some people will
still occasionally park illegally, but as the penalty is increased more
and more are deterred. Fines do deter.
Now, I ask you what is the largest amounts of money which government
extracts under threat of force? Are they not fines? What are the
horrible crimes which people are committing which incur such penalties?
But more importantly, do they act as deterrents? What is the difference
between a tax and a fine? Consider Income Tax and Sales Tax.
Firstly, the "crimes" consist of the quite moral and economic
transactions of using money to buy and sell goods and services. In the
main, that is how we employ each other (while agreeing that some people
get some privileged income).
If we fine people for employing each other, will it deter them? Of
course it will. If the fines are small we may still tend to continue on
the "criminal" activity of employing each other and earning
our living. But as the level of punishment increases, a few transactions
stop; and with increasing levels of tax more and more transactions
cease. Government then finds it has less transactions to tax, so it
raises taxes even morel It also finds that fewer transactions mean more
unemployed, and it has to provide extra social services and doles; and
it knows that even further taxes will be even worse deterrents. So at
that stage it probably starts to issue more money and debases the
currency which only leads to more problems. So any tax which confiscates
money just because money is seen to be changing hands must tend to
reduce transactions and to cause unemployment. The main taxes are Income
Tax and Sales Tax, but among others in Australia we also have a Pay Roll
Tax which actually taxes (fines) people for employing others, yet
government is surprised at unemployment. Yet a tax which does not cause
unemployment is available!
The basic causes-of unemployment are therefore twofold:
- 1. Government granted privileges which allow some people to rob
others, by a method requiring that industry and employment is
restricted by licenses etc.
- 2. A taxation system which taxes and deters production and effort
by fining people for normal economic transactions.
The cure for unemployment is therefore also twofold:
- a. Remove all laws giving special privilege to able-bodied
people.
- b. Steadily increase site value taxation (a tax on privilege),
and reduce all taxes on economic transactions.
Of course we have some site value .taxation in Australia, particularly
in N.S.W., and Queensland, but there have been changes in the last ten
years or so which have reduced the intensity of site taxation, while
income tax has been severely increased. I think it is rather more than
coincidence to observe that although we had a rather good record for
little unemployment from 1960 to 1970, our unemployment and inflation
rates have risen alarmingly in this decade. Basically the trouble is
that people elect governments which promise to increase privilege and
handouts. They are virtually calling for other people to be robbed. Our
economists and moralists have failed to teach them that robbery is an
uneconomic transaction; it produces less satisfaction and more distress
overall.
Our reform-type politicians are calling for more robbery to finance
social welfare. They are seeking to increase privilege rather than
remove it, and are continually causing poverty rather than progress.
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