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A Lying Land Campaign: The Socialist
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| [Reprinted from the
Socialist Standard, September 1912] |
The Cause of the Shindy
At a time when the toilers are engaged in a bitter struggle with the
employers, the Liberals are busy diverting attention to the "wicked
landlords" and their "unearned increment". The dockers
being "done down" by a Devonport, are told to tax land values.
The miners, vainly seeking 5s. a day, are urged to support the Single
Tax idea. The railway men, cursing Conciliation, are advised to levy the
ducal landlords.
The Land Tax campaign serves the Liberal manufacturers well. Labour
unrest is exploited to turn the minds of the workers away from the real
question to the old bogey of taxing land. The policy of smothering men's
bitter feelings against the Devonports, Thomas's and Hugh Bells, has,
however, a more palpable and material driving force behind it. Hence we
note from the Liberal Press that a wealthy and influential committee has
been formed to boom the Land Tax campaign.
Mr Joseph Fels, the well-known soap manufacturer, has contributed £30,000,
and many others have given largely. Mr Josiah Wedgwood, the Liberal
pottery manufacturer, is one of the leading spirits in the movement.
Hirelings are sent about the country at great expense, preaching the
virtues of the Single Tax.
But why this enormous expenditure? Once the worker grasps the true
facts of the question of taxation, the campaign and its real meaning
become plain. The upkeep of this system of society calls for hundreds of
millions a year to support the services that must be run to ensure the
safety of our masters.
The cost of the Army, Navy, Police, and bureaucracy is ever rising, and
the manufacturers and business men - chiefly organised in the Liberal
party - are crying out about their heavy burden of taxation. Wishing to
divide the cost of those forces and institutions necessary to keep the
workers down, they propose to tax land or land values. The landowners,
on the other hand, have no desire to be taxed, further, hence their
bitter wail.
An Axe to Grind
This time-honoured squabble as to who should pay is but one between
robbers over the cost of the robbery. That does not, however, prevent
our Liberal masters, inveigling the workers into the fight. They first
of all say that the toilers pay the taxes, and now say that if only
workers and commercial men join hands to make the landlords pay, both
toilers' and traders' taxes will be lightened.
Once the workers are drawn into the controversy a double purpose is
served. First, they stop fighting the industrial exploiters - the active
enemies; secondly, their assistance is secured in shifting the
industrial magnates' "burdens" on to the landlords.
The same specious promises are being made about this that are made
about every other reform passed by the Liberals. Each of them, like the
Single Tax, was going to remove the poverty, unemployment, and
destitution from the country. The Budget of 1909 was praised to the
skies by the Liberal and Labour Parties, and its author paraded the
country picturing its effects upon the condition of the masses. It was
going to crush the mighty monopoly of the land, and this, the mother of
us all, was going to be brought within the reach of the people. The
power of "our old nobility" was going to be broken, "now
and for ever".
As we said at the time, even if more land is brought into the open
market, by land taxes or anything else, those who can offer most for the
land obtain it. The 1909 Budget was to end the extortionate prices
charged, and this is how it did, according to our Liberal contemporary,
the
Daily Chronicle, (25.10.10):-
"Since the Land Taxes the price of land has actually risen.
Obviously, then, they have not caused the land to fall in value".
A Peep Behind the Scenes
An even after another two years working Liberal
Reynolds's tells us (11.8.12) that "the landowners are
doing better than ever.
The landowners have become richer, according to the Liberals
themselves. "But", say the latter, "we have made the
landlords contribute towards the cost of National Government".
True, but who gain? Not the working class, for owning no property to be
taxed, they are relieved of no taxation.
Who actually were to be relieved Mr Lloyd George himself showed in his
speech at Newcastle, 9.10.09:-
"Take the Rhondda Valley - it is one of the best
coalfields in South Wales. The landlords receive annually £200,000
in royalties. They receive £30,000 a year in ground rents. The
colliery proprietors there pay in rates £54,000 a year. The
landlords do not pay a penny . . . Industry is burdened and the
landlords do not contribute a penny towards the heavy and growing
rates of the district".
The mine-owners, like the rest of the industrial property-owners, are
to save their rates and taxes and the real estate owner is to pay. Firms
like the Cambrian Combine which made half a million out of the working
class in twelve years, are to grow richer, and the miners are lured into
the campaign to help them.
The halfpenny in the pound Budget tax, however, did not satisfy the
most militant of the masters. It didn't bring them enough relief from
taxes. And as for the working class, the more the land taxes yielded the
greater grew the volume of labour unrest. Two years after the "great
1909 Budget" its author declared (Cardiff, 29.12.11) that poverty,
privation, and oppression were more widespread and worse than they had
ever been before. So to fill the parasites' pockets and to stifle
wage-workers' demands, the Liberals are assiduously preaching the Single
Tax.
"Let the Landowner Pay"
Thirty years ago the purblind "prophet of San Francisco",
Henry George, popularised the Single Tax idea; but in advocating it he
showed its capitalist nature. "put one tax on the land, sufficient
to cover all national expenditure, and you can abolish every tax upon
the capitalist". That in short was his message. He was a keen
supporter of the private and class ownership of all the means and
instruments fir producing wealth. He held that it was a shame for the
poor railway-owners and mine-owners and factory-owners to have to pay
for the soldiers and police they use to blackleg upon and murder the
workers during strikes. "Let the landowner pay!" was his cry,
and it was one which is being echoed by the Hemmerdes, the Neilsons, the
Outhwaites, and the Lloyd Georges to-day.
They state that 2d. in the pound upon "the value of land will
enable every other tax to be abolished". They tell the workers that
the Single Tax will cure the evils which exist, but to the propertied
class they sing a different tune.
The United Committee for the Taxation of Land Values, the leading
Single Tax advocates, have issued a leaflet (No. 17) entitled "Why
the Shopkeepers should support the Taxation of Land Values", and
after a long appeal to the pocket interest of these people it winds up
thus: "Taxation of Land Values means: Lower Rates and Taxes. More
customers and more Profits".
Marx well wrote to a New York friend who sent him George's
Progress and Poverty:-
"The whole thing is simply an attempt to rescue the
rule of capitalism - in fact to rear it anew on a firmer basis than
its present one. This cloven hoof, together with the donkey's ears,
peeps unmistakably out of the declamation of Henry George".
Tried and Found Wanting
Turn to the Pacific Slope, the pet example of Henry George's followers,
and you will see the fallacies of the Single Taxer. Mr Joseph Hyder,
Secretary of the Land Nationalisation Society, writing to England's
chief Liberal paper, the
Manchester Guardian, on October 9th, 1911, gives the case of two
Canadian towns where most of the rates have been shifted on to "land
values".
Burnaby, near Vancouver City, adopted the system some years ago, and
whereas in 1908 land and buildings together were valued at $1,707,000,
in 1910 the land alone was declared at $10,000,000. In the year 1911 it
nearly doubled. "It would seem from this", says Mr. Hyder, "that
the land speculators have been a great deal busier than the builders,
notwithstanding they have had to pay the whole of the local rates".
Vancouver City in 1910 began to levy the whole of the local rates upon
land values. But the landlords, says this land reformer, are a long way
"from being taxed out of existence". In spite of the
increasing taxes upon them land values mounted from $2,500,000 in 1887
to $99,000,000 in 1910. And land speculation of the extremest kind, the
writer goes on, has not been prevented.
Mr Hyder makes an appeal for State ownership of land. Henry George and
his modern imitators agree to leave the landlord his land, with the
condition that he pays taxes upon it.
From a working-class view-point both policies are futile. Tax land
values as much as you like, the taxes will be levied to build
Dreadnoughts and increase the weapons against the workers. Relief from
taxation will be gained by the industrial exploiters, who will thereby
become a richer and stronger enemy of our class.
If, on the other hand, "the State" takes over the land, then
it will still be as far from the workers' pockets as ever. It will still
go to the highest bidder, who will not be the toiler, but the
capitalist. However great the workers' demand for land may be, it cannot
be made effective, cannot be backed with the necessary money.
The Public Ownership Parliamentary Council on August 1st issued a
manifesto advocating the gradual purchase of land. The members of the
Council include Single Tax opponents and millionaires like Sir Charles
Henry and Baron de Forest, Liberal apologists like Mr. Chiozza Money,
and Labour misleaders like Messrs. P. Snowden and J. Pointer.
The manifesto calls for purchase from existing landowners upon the
basis of the National Land Valuation, the land to be paid for in
redeemable bonds - the interest to be paid out of the annual revenue of
the land acquired. Hence the only difference would be that the rent is
to be paid to the State instead of to private owners. The proceeds would
go to the master class, who control the State. Part would be paid in
interest to the landgrabbers and their descendants, the rest to relieve
the employers from taxation.
Even to-day plenty of land is State owned in England, Ireland, India,
Russia, and many other places, but the self-same evils afflict the
workers under it as under other forms of ownership. Historically it is
true, as Marx says in 'The Modern Theory of Colonization', that the
expropriation of the producers from the soil formed the basis of the
workers' wage-slavery. But as Marx also shows, the development of
industry since that time has increased the wealth and power of the
capitalist class enormously; so that even where so-called free land
exists the toilers are as bad off. For they cannot provide the plant,
machinery, and other materials to work the soil in a world of fierce
competition. They cannot compete against the mighty capitalists.
The Labour Party have done their best to boom this fraudulent land
campaign. Of their Members of Parliament 37 signed the Land and Taxation
Reform Memorial to the Government (18.5.11), and their names included
George Lansbury, Keir Hardie, George Barnes, Will Thorne, Philip
Snowden, F.W. Jowett, and Will Crooks. It opened thus:-
"We the undersigned Members of Parliament desire to
place on record our grateful appreciation of the efforts of the Prime
Minister, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and the other Ministers of
the Cabinet, in placing upon the Statute Book of the country, the
Budget of 1909-10, which for the first time recognises the principle
of the separate valuation of land and thus provides a more equitable
distribution of the burdens of the State in securing to each the
results of his own labour and in opening up the land to those who can
make the best use of it".
The memorial goes on to "respectfully urge" the Government to
substitute for other taxes a higher tax on land.
The Liberals have scattered copies of this appeal far and wide amongst
the workers at bye-elections, among the miners of Hanley, Carmarthen,
and Midlothian, and they use the Labour signatories as bait wherewith to
lure the workers to vote for the Single Taxers.
The Socialist Party of Great Britain frankly and fearlessly oppose all
these land reformers. We hold that there is no essential difference,
from the toiler's point of view, between the absentee landlord and the
absentee shareholder. The "unearned increment" that capitalist
and landlord share between them is gained by the robbery of the working
class in the field, factory, mill, mine, and workshop, and there is no
argument against the plundering landlord that does not apply to the
ever-plundering capitalist. As long as the employing class own the means
of production the toilers will battle in vain for a large share of the
world's wealth. The only remedy is for the workers to own and work in
common the land, factories, railways, etc.
The path to power is contained in the policy of the Socialist Party.
Join it and work for its triumph.
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