Fairchild,
Fred Rogers |
Fred Fairchild was a member of the economics faculty at Yale
University. He was also a founder (1946) and board member of the
Foundation for Economic Education, Irvinton-on-Hudson, New York. In
May of 1943, at the annual meeting of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
he argued that the U.S. must abandon "grandiose notions of
policing, feeding, reconstructing the world," give up "certain
parts of the Atlantic Charter and the Four Freedoms which imply
performing, indefinitely, costly services for the rest of the world
and doing it for nothing." He died in 1959.
The taxing power is among the
most powerful and far-reaching of the attributes of sovereignty.
Even when applied only for the purposes of securing government
income, its indirect effects may be, indeed, certainly will be, very
great. When consciously used for the accomplishment of other ends
its power can scarcely be exaggerated..
[From: Elementary Economics (New
York: The Macmillan Company, 1930 edition), p.372.] |
Faltermayer,
Edmund K. |
Edmund Faltermayer also wrote on personal finance, industrial
competitiveness and the health-care crisis for Fortune. Though he
retired from Fortunes full-time staff in 1994, he
continued as a contributing editor until shortly before he died in
2003, at age 75.
To discourage sprawl, many
experts have long urged the property taxes be levied on land
exclusively, or that communities at least tax the land component at
a higher percentage of assessed value than buildings, as the city of
Pittsburgh has done for several decades. To keep over-all revenues
the same, communities would have to compensate for the total or
partial untaxing of buildings by raising taxes on all land, whether
built upon or not, and this would tend to produce two beneficial
results:
On the one hand, owners of existing buildings would incur no
increase in taxes, or less of an increase in taxes than at present,
for renovating them.
On the other hand, the taxes on vacant land would rise, forcing
speculators to build on it, or sell to others who would.
A good deal of research is needed on how American municipalities
might switch entirely to a site-value form of taxation, or at least
move partly in that direction. But it is clear that such a reform
would tend to promote compact, intensively developed metropolitan
areas that would be easy to service and get around in with more of
the nearby countryside kept open for scenic and recreational
purposes. Because we have failed to revamp the property tax, we have
been promoting exactly the opposite effects.
[Associate Editor of Fortune
Magazine; from Redoing America, Harper & Row, 1968.]
|
Feldstein,
Martin

ENLARGE
|
The classic example of an
unshiftable tax is the general tax on pure rental income. Since
Ricardo, economists have believed that the annual net rental income
of unimproved land falls by the amount of the annual tax and its
price by the capitalized value of this tax. This paper shows that
these conclusions are false, that the tax on pure land rents is at
least partly shifted, and that the price of land may be increased by
the imposition of a tax. Implications are suggested for the analysis
of the corporate income tax and the taxation of natural resources.
[From: "The Surprising Incidence of a
Tax on Pure Rent: A New Answer to an Old Question," The
Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 85, No. 2 (Apr., 1977), pp.
349-360. Quoted in Land & Liberty, November 12, 1994]
|
Fels,
Joseph

ENLARGE
|
Joseph Fels devoted much of his share of profits from the
Fels Naptha Soup Co. to ending land monopoly. He sought to
demonstrate the validity of Henry George's analysis by establishing
experimental communities where all public revenue would come from
the rental value of land. Fels wrote:
The fundamental evil, the great
God-denying crime of society, is the iniquitous system under which
men are permitted to put into their pockets the community-made
values of land, while organized society confiscates for public
purposes a part of the wealth created by individuals.
[19--] |
Fichte,
Johann G.
(1762-1814)

ENLARGE
|
Johann Gottlieb Fichte developed a systematic version of
transcendental idealism, which he called Wissenschaftslehre (or Doctrine
of Scientific Knowledge). He based his system upon the concept
of subjectivity. From 1794 to 1799 he taught at the University of
Jena, where he applied his philosophy to an elaborate transcendental
system that embraced the philosophy of science, ethics, philosophy
of law (i.e., of right) and religion.
Only the products of his hands
are therefore the absolute property of the agriculturist. They
belong to him substance and all, whereas of the lands he has only an
accidence.
[From: Science of Rights
(1889), Part II, Book 3, Sec. I (On Property in Land)] |
Fitch,
Robert

ENLARGE
|
Best of all, a differential tax
-- one that is higher on land than on buildings -- does away with
the usual disadvantage of taxes. Almost invariably, if you tax
something the capitalists will produce less of it and charge you
more for it. But land is different. Most of it was produced once and
for all by God. ...If you tax cigarettes the price will go up; if
you tax the land you lower its price. It's no coincidence, then,
that the one large city in the country with such a tax, Pittsburgh,
has the lowest housing prices of any major city in America.
[From: the Nation, October 29, 1990]
|
Ford,
Henry
(1863-1947)

ENLARGE
|
Ford was quoted in Liberty magazine in an article by Donald
Wilheim, saying:
We ought to tax all idle land
the way Henry George said -- tax it heavily, so that its owners
would have to make it productive. |
Forrester,
Jay W.

ENLARGE
|
Jay W. Forrester is Germeshausen Professor Emeritus and Senior
Lecturer at the Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. He began his career as an electrical engineer working
on servomechanisms and large-scale digital computers. While Director
of the MIT Digital Computer Laboratory from 1946 to 1951, he was
responsible for the design and construction of Whirlwind I, one of
the first high-speed digital computers.
The tax on improvements rather
than on land favors old buildings whose aging is an ultimate part of
the urban decline process.
[Source of quote not known]
...the complex system is even
more deceptive than merely hiding causes. In the complex system,
when we look for a cause near in time and space to a symptom, we
usually find what appears to be a plausible cause. But it is usually
not the cause. The complex system presents apparent causes that are
in fact coincident symptoms. The high degree of time correlation
between variables in complex systems can lead us to make
cause-and-effect associations between variables that are simply
moving together as part of the total dynamic behavior of the system.
Conditioned by our training in simple systems, we apply the same
intuition to complex systems and are led into error. As a result we
treat symptoms, not causes. The outcome lies between ineffective and
detrimental.
[From: Urban Dynamics (1969),
Pegasus Communications, pp. 8-9] |
Fortune
Magazine |
The editors of Fortune Magazine, August 8, 1983,
observed:
Higher land taxes, especially
when accompanied by reduced taxes on structures, look like an idea
businessmen ought to embrace and promote. The benefits in the form
of more jobs and increasingly compact development are not only
lasting, but flow to the whole community. |
Fox,
Homer |
Land value taxation spurs
development because a landlord can hardly sit and hold vacant land.
The tax forces the rehabilitation of boarded-up buildings and the
construction of new ones on vacant land, thus creating jobs.
[Visiting professor, Wayne State University,
Detroit, MI, 1990] |
Fox,
Matthew

ENLARGE
|
Matthew Fox is a theologian, educator and former Dominican
priest. He also the founder and president of the University of
Creation Spirituality and codirector of The Naropa Institute's
master's program in Creation Spirituality, both in Oakland,
California.
A land tax would tax all land
but not improvements on the land and in this way would encourage
initiative and jobs, rather than discourage them. It would run the
land speculator and the absentee landlord out of town.
A land tax would encourage farmers who actually farm instead of
those who speculate and it would increase productivity, ingenuity
and the creation of jobs. It would also lessen bureaucratic
interference since basically it is simplifying the law code.
[From: A Spirituality Named
Compassion: Uniting Mystical Awareness with Social Justice]

ENLARGE
|
Franklin,
Benjamin

ENLARGE
|
Our legislators are all
landowners, and they are not yet persuaded that all taxes are
finally paid by the land ... therefore, we have been forced into the
mode of indirect taxes. ...All the property that is necessary to a
man for the conservation of the individual and the propagation of
the species, is his natural right which none may justly deprive him
of; but all property superfluous to such purposes is the property of
the public.
[source not identified] |
Franklin,
Benjamin |
All the property that is
necessary to a man for the conservation of the individual and the
propagation of the species, is his natural right which none may
justly deprive him of; but lal property superflous to such purposes
is the property of the public.
[source not identified] |
Franklin,
Benjamin |
But notwithstanding this
increase (of population), so vast is the territory of North America,
that it will require many ages to settle it fully; and, till it is
fully settled, labor will never be cheap here, where no man
continues long a laborer for others, but gets a plantation of his
own; no man continues long a journeyman to a trade, but goes among
these new settlers, and sets up for himself.
[From: Observations Concerning for
Increase of Mankind (1751), Sec. 8, Works, Vol. II, p.
225] |
Frazier,
Douglas |
Frazier, U.S. leader of the United Auto Workers, told the
National Conference on Alternate State and Local Policies held over
the Independence Day celebration in 1979:
One day, we are going to ask
ourselves, did anyone make the oil and minerals and then put them in
the ground? We will then realize that they belong to all of us. |
Freeman,
Edward A.

ENLARGE
|
And now the final stroke was put
to a change which had been gradually going on for some generations.
The folkland, the common land of the nation, was now changed, fully
and forever, into terra Regis, the land of the king.
[From: The Norman Conquest
(1867), Vol. IV, Chap. 17, p. 15] |
Friedman,
Milton

ENLARGE
|
Nobel Prize winning economist Milton Friedman has
written:
Land should be taxed as much as
possible, and improvements as little as possible.
In an interview in Human Events, November 18, 1979,
Milton Friedman said:
"There's a sense in which
all taxes are antagonistic to free enterprise -- and yet we need
taxes. ...So the question is, which are the least bad taxes? In my
opinion the least bad tax is the property tax on the unimproved
value of land, the Henry George argument of many, many years ago."
|
Friedman,
Milton |
The least bad tax is the
property tax on the unimproved value of the land, the Henry George
argument of many years ago. [Professor
of Economics, University of Chicago, in address to the Americanism
Education League]
And, from a letter writen to William Newcomb (President,
Media Foundation for Land Economics) in 1979:
In Ricardo's words, the original
and indestructible qualities of the land d not by any means account
for all of the current rent from the land; land can be produced, its
qualities can be improved, all through investment for which there is
no incentive if the whole of the yield for improving the
productivity of land or from producing the land were to go to the
government.
On the other side of the issue, there are many other resources, of
which human labor is one of the most important, which are, to put it
in technical economic jargon, in inelastic supply so that a tax on
the return from such services is unlikely to affect the amount of
such services made available for market use. The most obvious are
such items as the skill of a Muhammed Ali or of a Frank Sinatra.
These are natural resources too, and they are limited in supply and
derive their value from their scarcity.
I realize that in almost all other respects the views of the
Georgists and of my own are very much the same. I am more than glad
to join with them in common ojbectives, but I could not ally myself
with the Georgist movement in any sense which suggested that I
agreed with its fundamental underlying premises.
The following quote from Professor Friedman is also
attributed to correspondence with William Newcomb. However, this
statement is repeated here from secondary sources which do not
indicate the date of the letter or any additional comments:
I share your view that taxes
would best be placed on the land, and not on improvements. |
Froude,
James A.

ENLARGE
|
To treat land, with the present
privileges attached to the possession of it, as an article of sale,
to be passed from hand to hand in the market like other commodities,
is an arrangement not likely to be permanent either in Ireland or
elsewhere.
[From: Nineteenth Century,
September, 1880, p. 369] |
Froude,
James A. |
Seeing that men are born into
the world without their own wills, and being in the world they must
live upon the earth's surface, or they cannot live at all, no
individual or set of individuals can hold over land that personal
and irresponsible right which is allowed them in things of less
universal necessity.
[From: History of Ireland (1872 and
1984), Book, I, Chap. 2, Sec. 6, p. 131] |
Froude,
James A. |
Land is not, and cannot be,
property in the sense in which movable things are property. Every
human being born into this planet must live upon the land if he
lives at all. He did not ask to be born, and being born, room must
be found for him. The land in any country is really the property of
the nation which occupies it.
[From: Ireland, Nineteenth Century
(September, 1880), p. 362] |
Fuller,
Buckminster

ENLARGE
|
He [Fuller] feels, as did
George, that the truly effective revolution would not lower the
upper end of the socio-economic spectrum as much as raise the bottom
up.
[quote from a letter by Ann Mintz, secretary
to Buckminster Fuller, February 21, 1978] |
Gaffney,
Mason

ENLARGE
|
George's blend of radicalism and
conservatism can puzzle one, until it is seen as a reconciliaton of
the two. The system is internally consistent, but defies
conventional stereotypes.
[From: New Palgrave Dictionary of
Economic Thought, 1987] |
Gaffney,
Mason |
The Neoclassical economists'
view of their proper role is rather like that in The Realtor's Oath,
which includes a vow "To protect the individual right of real
estate ownership." The word "individual" is construed
broadly to include corporations, estates, trusts, anonymous offshore
funds, schools, government agencies, institutions, partnerships,
cooperatives, Archbishops, families (including criminal families)
and so on, but "individual" sounds more all-American and
subsumes them all. This is a potent chant that stirs people to
extremes of self-righteousness and siege mentality when challenged.
[from: The Corruption of Economics,
1994] |
Galbraith,
John Kenneth

ENLARGE
|
If a tax were imposed equal to
the annual use value of real property ex its improvement, so that it
would now have no net earnings and hence no capital value of its own
-- progress would be orderly and its fruits would be equitably
shared.
[From the book, The Affluent Society,
p.44] |
Gandhi,
Mahatma

ENLARGE
|
There is enough for everybody's
need, but not enough for their greed. |
George,
David Lloyd

ENLARGE
|
The land question in the towns
bears upon (over-crowding). It is all very well to produce "Housing
of Working Class" bills. They will never be effective until you
tackle the taxation of land values.
[From: a speech not more specifically
identified] |
George,
David Lloyd |
To prove a legal title to land
one must trace it back to the man who stole it.
|
George,
David Lloyd |
A"The great criticism
against rating is not merely that it lacks uniformity and is unfair
between the parties, but that it is unfair to the class of property
that you tax and rate. This is the greatest grievance of all - that
it taxes improvements. The more a landlord improves his property the
higher he is rated; the more he neglects his property the less he is
rated.
If he allows his cottages to fall into decay and become
empty, his rates are less; but if he is a good, sound landlord, who
repairs ruinous cottages and builds new ones, up go his rates. The
man who trusts to obsolete machinery in his business can keep his
rates low; but the man who puts in new machinery and improves his
buildings has to pay a higher contribution to the rates."
[Mr. Lloyd George, in the House of
Commons, 28th April 1913]
"You cannot build houses without
land; you cannot lay down trams for the purpose of spreading the
population over a wider area without land. As long as the landlords
allowed to charge prohibitive prices for a bit of land, even land,
without contributing anything to local resources, so long will this
terrible congestion remain in our towns. That is the first great
trust to deal with, and for another reason --resources of local
taxation are almost exhausted. It is essential that you should get
some new resources for this purpose. What better resources can you
get than this wealth created by the community, and how better can it
be used than for the benefit of the community? ...It is all very
well to produce Housing of the Working Classes Bills. They will
never be effective until you tackle the taxation of land-values."
[Mr. Lloyd George, at Newcastle, 4th
March 1903]
"Who ordained that a few should have
the land of Britain as a perquisite; who made 10,000 people owners
of the soil and the rest of us trespassers in the land of our birth;
who is it? Who is responsible for the scheme of things whereby one
man is engaged through life in grinding labour, to win a bare and
precarious subsistence for himself . . . and another man who does
not toil receives every hour of the day, every hour of the night
whilst he slumbers, more than his poor neighbour receives in a whole
year of toil? Where did the table of the law come from? Whose finger
inscribed it?"
[Mr. Lloyd George, at Newcastle, 30th
September 1909]
"Search out every problem, look into
these questions thoroughly, and the more thoroughly you look into
them you will find that the land is at the root of most of them.
Housing, wages, food, health, the development of a virile,
independent, manly, Imperial race - you must have a free land system
as an essential condition of these. To use a gardening phrase, our
social and economic condition is root-bound by the feudal system. It
has no room to develop, but its roots are breaking through. Well,
let's burst it!"
[Mr. Lloyd George, at Aberdeen, 29th
November 1912]
"We want to do something to bring
the land within the grasp of the people. We want to put an end to
the system whereby the land of this country is retailed by the
ounce, so that there should not be an extra grain of breathing
spaces. . . .The resources of the land are frozen by the old feudal
system. I am looking forward to the spring-time, when the thaw will
set in, and when the people and the children of the people shall
enter into the inheritance that has been given them from on high."
[Mr. Lloyd George, at Liverpool, 21st
December 1909]
|
George,
Henry
(1839-1897)

ENLARGE
|
More than any other figure during the late nineteenth
century, Henry George, author of the book Progress and
Poverty, dedicated his life to the cause of collecting the
rental value of land (sometimes referred to as ground rent
or economic rent) and the ending monopoly privilege
associated with land ownership. George told his readers:
What man has produced belongs to
the individual producer; what God has created belongs equally to all
men ... therefore abolish all taxation save on the value of land.
|
George,
Henry |
Here are two men of equal
incomes -- that of the one derived from the exertion of his labour,
that of the other from the rent of land. Is it just that they should
equally contribute to the expenses of the State? Evidently not. The
income of the one represents wealth he creates and adds to the
general wealth of the State; the income of the other represents
merely wealth that he takes from the general stock, returning
nothing.
[From: Progress and Poverty (1879)] |
Sadly, as many or more
persons with strong scholarly or public reputation could be found
who argue against the idea that the earth is the birthright of
each of us, equally, and against the proposal to achieve equality
of opportunity by means of a reliance on the rental value of
locations for public revenue.
Many of the same persons would also disagree that moral
principles are integral to the treatment of the earth as a form of
property distinct from what we produce with our labor and what
capital goods we possess. From one of the original oil tycoons,
John Paul Getty, came some very dark humor, as Getty turned a
Biblical quotation attributed to Jesus Christ into the following:
"The meek shall Inherit the
earth -- but not the mineral rights."
|
Giffen,
Robert |
The soil of a nation is
primarily the property of the whole nation -- the common inheritance
of all.
[From: Essays on Finance (1871),
First Series, Chap. X, p. 249] |
Giffen,
Robert |
Land-owning is, beyond all other
things, in the nature of a monopoly.
[From: Essays on Finance (1871),
First Series, Chap. X, p. 239] |
Giffen,
Robert |
It is certain, however, that a
large part of the improvement is due to the increasing value of
advantageous sites, an unearned increase of value such as Mr. Mill
speaks of, and therefore a kind of profit which the State may
restrict with least harm.
[From: Essays on Finance (1871),
First Series, Chap. X, p. 244] |
Gilder,
George

ENLARGE
|
As the late Henry George
eloquently maintained in his classic "Progress and Poverty,"
landowning in itself is not a productive activity. Yet most of the
tax benefits assigned to real estate in recent years have been
redeemed chiefly by inflationary capital gains and condominium
conversions.
[from a column published in the Wall
Street Journal, 29 May 1986] |
Gladstone,
Mary |
Yesterday I began 'Progress and
Poverty', supposed to be the most upsetting, revolutionary book of
the age. At present Maggie and I both agree with it, and most
brilliantly written it is -- we had long discussions. He (W.E.
Gladstone, her father) is reading it too.
[Reprinted from: Mary Gladstone,
Diary and Letters, London, 17 August, 1883] |
Gladstone,
Mary |
Finished 'Progress and Poverty'
with feelings of deep admiration -- felt desperately impressed, and
he is ia Christian.
[Reprinted from: Mary Gladstone,
Diary and Letters, Hawarden, 30 August, 1883] |
Gladstone,
William

ENLARGE
|
I fully admit this; I have
stated it long ago in Midlothian -- I hold it without the smallest
doubt; if a time came when the British nation could think that the
land ought to be nationalized, and that it were wise to do it, they
have a perfect right to do it beyond all doubt and question.
[From: A speech delivered at Hawarde,
23 September, 1889, reported in the Times, 24 September,
1889, p. 10, column 3]
|
Gladstone,
William |
Those persons who possess large
portions of the space of the earth are not altogether in the same
position as possessors of mere personalty, for personalty does not
impose the same limitations on the action and industry and the
well-being to the community in the same ratio as does the possession
of land, and therefore I hold that compulsory appropriation, if for
an adequate public object, is a thing in itself admirable, and even
sound in principle.
[From a speech delivered at West Calder, 27
November, 1879. Reprinted in The Times, 28 November, 1879,
p. 10, column 2] |
Goddard,
Haynes C. |
There does exist a very
appropriate financial mechanism for compensation to property owners.
it is the land value increment tax, formerly known as a betterment
tax. The idea is old, simple and widely considered fair. An increase
in land value, as opposed to changes in the property value resulting
from improvements erected on land, is basically an increase in site
value. The land owners typically has done nothing to produce the
incremental value. this increase usually results from population
growth, economic growth and the infrastructural investments made by
local governments, such as roads, water supply and sewerage. These
increments are unearned by the property owner and could be taxed
away without affecting resource allocation. That is, such taxation
would not impair the potential for the land market to assign land to
its 'highest and best' use."
[Reprinted from the New York Times,
22 May 1995, a letter by Haynes C. Goddard, Professor of Economics
at the University of Cincinnati] |
Godwin,
William

ENLARGE
|
Humanity weeps over the
distreses of the peasantry of all civilized nations; and when she
turns from the spectacle to behold the luxury of their lords, gross,
imperial and prodigal, her sensations are certainly not less acute.
this spectacle is the school in which mankind have been educated.
they have been accustomed to the sight of injustice, oppression and
iniquity, till their feelings have been made callous, and their
understanding incapable of apprehending the nature of true virtue.
[From: Political Justice (1793),
Book VIII, Chap. 2]
|
Godwin,
William
|
It is territorial monopoly that
obliges men unwillingly to see vast tracts of land lying waste or
negligently and imperfectly cultivated, while they are subjected to
the miseries of want.
[From: Political Justice (1793),
Book VIII, Chap. 3]
|
Goethe,
Johann Wolfgang

ENLARGE
|
The great ones of the world have
taken this earth of ours to themselves; they live in the midst of
splender and superfluity. The smallest nook of the land is already a
possession; none may touch it or meddle with it.
[From: Wilhelm Meister] |
Goldman,
E.F.
(historian) |
For some years prior to 1952, I
was working on a history of American reform and over and over again
my research ran into this fact: an enormous number of men and women,
strikingly different people, men and women who were to lead 20th
century America in a dozen fields of humane activity wrote or told
someone that their whole thinking had been redirected by reading
Progress and Poverty in their formative years. In this respect no
other book came anywhere near comparable influence and I would like
to add this word of tribute to a volume which magically catalyzed
the best yearnings of our fathers and grandfathers.
|
Gompers,
Samuel
(1850-1924)

ENLARGE
|
Gompers, a leader of the U.S. labor movement, declared:
I believe in the Single Tax. I
count it a great privilege to have been a friend of Henry George and
to have been one of those who helped to make him understood in New
York and elsewhere... |
Goodman,
George
(aka Adam Smith)

ENLARGE
|
Every improvement in the
circumstances of the society tends, either directly or indirectly,
to raise the real rent of land, to increase the real wealth of the
landlord, his power of purchasing the labours or the produce of the
labour of other people.
[ from: Good Government magazine,
October 1999, p.6] |
Gossen,
Hermann Heinrich |
Hermann Gossen (1810-1859) never held an academic position and
resigned from a career in the Prussian Civil Service in order to
complete work on his book. "I believe," he wrote of it, "that
my discoveries enable me to point out to man with unfailing
certainty the path that he must follow in order to accomplish
completely the purpose of his life."
The state could acquire land
advantageously because it would be able to borrow the purchase money
at low rates of interest. If collective ownership of land were
introduced, society instead of private individuals would get the
advantage of any future increase in land values.
[from: Entwicklung der Gesetze der
menschlichen Verkehrs und der darausfliessenden Regeln fur
menschliches Handeln, Brunswick, 1854.] |
Gracchus,
Tiberius
(B.C. 162-133)

ENLARGE
|
This Roman statesman complained:
The private soldiers fight and
die to advance the wealth and luxury of the great and they are
called masters of the world, while they have not a foot of ground in
their possession.
[From: Plutarch's Life of Tiberius
Gracchus. Pliny the Elder (23-79), a Roman naturalist, added
that land monopoly ruined Rome.
|
.
Graham,
Franklin D. |
The real unearned income is that
which accrues to an individual without his having done anything
which contributes to production. Of the several types of such income
the most important is that which issues from the site value of land.
the recipient of such an income does nothing to earn it; he merely
sits tight while the growth of the community about the land to which
he holds title brings him unmerited gain. This gain is at the
expense of all true producers whether they be laborers, enterprisers
or investors in industrial equipment. The taxation of this gain can
do nothing to deprive the community of any service since the donee
is rendering none. The land will be there for the use of society
whether the return from it be taxed or free. Society creates the
value and should secure it by taxation.
[From: Henry George News, February
1955. Franklin D. Graham was, at the time, a Professor of Economics
at Princeton University] |
Greeley,
Horace

ENLARGE
|
Whenever the ownership of the
soil is so engrossed by a small part of the community that the far
larger part are compelled to pay whatever the few may see fit to
exact for the privilege of occupying and cultivating the Earth,
there is something very much like slavery.
[From: "Slavery at Home," in Hints
Toward Reform (1845), pp. 354-5]
We admit and insist on the legal
right of the owner of wild lands to keep them uninhabited forever,
but we do not consider it morally right that he should do so when
land becomes scarce and subsistence for the landless scanty and
precarious. . . . yes, . . . something will be done, in spite of any
stupid clamor that can be raised about 'Infidelity' and
'Agrarianism,' to secure future generations against the faithful
evils of Monopoly of Land by the few.
[From: New York Weekly Tribune, Aug.
4, 1845]
|
Greeley,
Horace |
In short, the terrestrial Man,
possessing the well known properties of matter, as well as the
spirit, can only in truth enjoy the rights of "Life, Liberty
and the pursuit of Happiness," by being guaranteed some place
in which to enjoy them.
[From: Land Reform, Hints Toward Reform,
(1850), p.312] |
Greeley,
Horace |
He who has no clear inherent
right to live somewhere has no right to live at all.
[From: Land Reform, Hints Toward Reform,
(1850), p. 312] |
Greeley,
Horace |
Man ... having a right to
liberty, he must have consequently the right to go somewhere on
earth and do what is essential to his continued existence, not by
the purchased permission of some other man, but by virtue of his
manhood.
[From: Land Reform, Hints Toward Reform,
(1850), p. 312] |
Griffin,
Walter B.

ENLARGE
|
Behind every radical movement
you will find Single Taxers. Woodrow Wilson is surrounded by them.
[Walter Griffin (1876-1937) was the designer
of Canberra, Australia, and member of the Chicago Single Tax Club]
|
Grotius,
Hugo

ENLARGE
|
Vacant and uncultivated lands
which are found in the territory of a State should be awarded to
foreigners if they demand them. And in fact they have the right to
seize them; for we should not regard as property that which is not
cultivated.
[From: Rights of War and Peace,
Book II, Chap. 2, Sec. 17] |
Hapgood,
David |
A tax on the earnings of labor
seems unjust by comparison (with a land tax) because it deprives the
individual of what is rightfully his, the fruits of his own efforts.
The same is true of a tax on the return to capital, to the extent
that capital represents the unspent return of past labor and
initiative.
Equally important -- and here orthodox economics agrees with George
-- a natural resources rental charge is the rare tax that improves
rather than distorts people's incentives. Tax labor, and people work
less. Tax savings, and savings diminish. But tax land, and the
supply remains the same, while the owner is forced to put it to more
productive use.
[From: New Republic (1986)]
|
Hall,
Peter |
When the site values are taxed
... the incentive is always to develop so as to realise the gains
that are being taxed. Indeed this is one of the most important
points which have consistently been made by the advocates of
site-value rating.
[From: Land Values: The Report of
the Proceedings of a Colloquium Held in London on March 13 and 14,
1965, under the Auspices of the Acton Society Trust]
|
Harris,
W. Carlton |
Land is of fundamental
importance as the basis of man's economic and socia life. Not only
does mankind live upon it, but it is the source of all material
wealth. So self-evident is this fact that its elaboration is
unnecessary.
[From: "Real Estate and Real
Estate Problems," The Annals of the American Academy of
Political and Social Science, Part I, Vol. CXLVIII, No. 237,
March, 1930, p.1.]
|
Harris,
W. Carlton |
The Ricardian doctrine of rent,
namely, that rent is a differential surplus largely, or in the
whole, unearned, has led to the promulgation of certain theories of
land tax which usually go under the name of the "single tax."
In detail, these plans vary all the way from proposals to tax the
future unearned ncome of land, to proposals to absorb the past
unearned income, which would practically amount to confiscation and
would lead to systems of land nationalization.
[From: "Real Estate and Real
Estate Problems," The Annals of the American Academy of
Political and Social Science, Part I, Vol. CXLVIII, No. 237,
March, 1930, pp.5-6. ]
|
Harrison,
Fred

ENLARGE
|
The forces that shaped the
modern state, and therefore the character of the power that it
exercises, were disputes over land and its rent. The struggle over
public value may be tracked at several levels. One is cross-border
conflict over territory. ...The outcome was the privatisation of
rent..
[ From: Ricardo's Law (2006),
p. 278] |
Heilbrun,
James |
Site value -- the value of
unimproved land -- has long been regarded [by economists] as a
particularly fit object for taxation.
[Professor of Economics, Fordham University;
from his textbook, Urban Economics & Public Policy,
1987] |
Henderson,
Arthur

ENLARGE
|
In 1903, Arthur Henderson was elected Member of Parliament (MP)
following a by-election. In 1908, when Hardie resigned as Leader of
the Labour Party, Henderson was elected to replace him. In 1914, the
then-Labour leader, Ramsay MacDonald resigned in protest over the
war, and Henderson returned. In 1915, following Prime Minister
Asquith's decision to create a coalition government, he became the
first member of the Labour Party to become a member of the Cabinet,
as President of the Board of Education. When David Lloyd George
became Prime Minister in 1916t, Henderson became a member of the
small War Cabinet. He resigned in August 1917 when his idea for an
international conference on the war was voted down by the rest of
the cabinet; shortly afterwards he resigned as Labour leader.
Henderson lost his seat in 1918 but was returned to Parliament in
1919 after winning a by-election. He became Labour's chief whip,
only to lose his seat in the 1922 general election. Again, he
returned to Parliament via a by-election but lost this seat in the
1923 general election. Yet again he was returned to Parliament
months later after winning a by-election. He was appointed Home
Secretary in the first ever Labour government (led by MacDonald).
This government was defeated in 1924.
Henderson was re-elected in 1924 and was urged by others to
challenge Ramsay MacDonald for the party leadership. Worried about
factionalism in the Labour Party, he published a pamphlet called
Labour and the Nation, in which he attempted to clarify the
Labour's goals.
In 1929, Labour formed another minority government, and MacDonald
appointed Henderson as Foreign Secretary, a position Henderson used
to try to reduce the tensions that had been building up in Europe
since the end of the War. Diplomatic relations were re-established
with the USSR and the League of Nations was given Britain's full
support.
During the Great Depression, Henderson joined with others in the
Cabinet opposing cuts in unemployment benefits. He resigned in
protest. In 1931, MacDonald attempted to form an emergency National
Government to tackle the crisis. The Labour Party repudiated this
government, and the National Executive expelled MacDonald and all
other Labour members who supported him (Henderson cast the only vote
against this). Henderson now became leader of the party. With the
economic and political situation still uncertain, the National
Government decided to call a general election, and in the largest
landslide in British political history, it won an overwhelming
majority. Yet again Henderson lost his seat. The following year he
relinquished the party leadership.
Henderson returned to Parliament after winning yet another a
by-election and spent the rest of his life trying to halt the
gathering storm of war. He chaired the Geneva Disarmament Conference
and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1934. He died aged 72 in
1935.
"The Labour Party says that
if the great landowners of this country desire to put fences round
the most productive soil in the world
they must pay for the
pleasure of doing so. Accordingly, it is proposed to have the land
valued, and to ask the owner to pay a tax on that valuation. I think
that by the pressure of the taxation and rating of land-values the
owners would soon find that the land held out of use was not so
necessary to their pleasure as they thought. I venture to suggest
that they would quickly commence to seek buyers or tenants. The
plentiful supply of land that would come on the market would enable
farmers to obtain their holdings at a reasonable price or rent
instead of having to enter into possession on the inflated values
with which you are acquainted. I assert, without fear of
contradiction, that nothing would give a greater stimulus to
the agricultural industry than the freeing of the land. More farms
would be opened up; more opportunities of employment would offer for
the agricultural worker; the countryside would become a hive of
industry instead of a grave of disappointed hopes. The root of the
rural problem is where all roots are to be found - in the Land."
[Mr. Arthur Henderson, at Cromer,
17th March 1922] |
Henderson,
Arthur
|
"The taxation of
land-values would not impose any further burden upon the
agricultural industry. . . .The landowner would have to pay it. He
could not pass it on to the farmer, and he could not make the
agricultural worker pay it by means of a reduction in his standard
of life. I challenge anyone to say that a tax on economic rent is
paid by anyone else than the receiver of the rent. But the Labour
Party would go further than that. The present system of assessment
and rating produces an inequality of burdens which are injurious to
agriculture. Improvements are positively discouraged. The burden of
rates is often heaviest where it can least well be borne. A farmer
who improves his land or erects an additional building for the
housing of his live stock finds immediately that his assessment is
raised. The Labour Party holds that it is suicidal for the nation to
penalise by increased taxation occupiers of land who effect
improvements which add to its value. We propose a drastic revision
of the entire system of assessment and rating in order that the
taxation of land may be used to unrate the improvements made by the
occupier. "
[Mr. Arthur Henderson, at Cromer,
17th March, 1922] |
Henderson,
Arthur
|
"Under our present system
improvements are penalized. If a shopkeeper extends his premises, or
a farmer increases the value of his farm by erecting improved
buildings or draining the land, the rates are immediately increased.
That is a tax on private enterprise with which I do not
agree. Private enterprise of a character not subversive of the
public good I would encourage. It little becomes the wealthy
landlords who oppose the shifting of the burden of the rates from
houses, factories, shops, and machinery on to the value of the land,
to criticise the speech I made at Newport. Why f I recently attached
my name to a Bill for the taking of rates off machinery. Is that an
attack on private enterprise? "
[Mr. Arthur Henderson, at Newcastle
By-election, January 1923] |
Henderson,
Arthur
|
"The principle and policy
of the United Committee have no more sincere supporter than myself.
The taxation of land-values has been a vital need ever since the
private ownership of land formed an integral part of the social
system, but the aftermath of a great war has brought us problems
which have dragged its urgent necessity more into the light and
indicated the essential truths of the doctrine taught by Henry
George."
[Mr. Arthur Henderson, Letter to
the International Conference on the Taxation of Land-values at
Oxford, August 1923] |
Henderson,
Arthur
|
"The taxation of
land-values with, of course, the exemption of improvements, does not
receive my support merely as a plan for raising additional revenue.
It is designed to achieve far greater results. It seeks to open the
way to the natural resources from which all wealth springs. The
labour is here, and with it the wilt to work, but the land still
lies locked in the grip of a tenacious and unrelenting monopoly,
while unemployment and poverty haunt us with a terrifying
persistence."
[Mr. Arthur Henderson, ib.] |
Hill,
Edward

ENLARGE
and
Nowak,
Jeremy

ENLARGE
|
The following excerpt is from an article appearing in the
Brookings Review, "Nothing to Lose: Only Radical
Strategies Can Hep America's Most Distressed Cities".
As a first step, cities should
abolish all business taxes that inhibit the location of startup
firms or discourage investment in productivity-enhancing equipment
or practices... Cities should also replace the business property tax
with a tax on the market value of land, coupling the land tax with a
broader use of business improvement districts or tax increment
finance districts to pay for major infrastructure investments. Land
taxes ... have several advantages over property taxes in keeping a
city's economy competitive. They discourage speculative land
banking. They encourage businesses to place as much capital on
property as is economically justifiable because non-land forms of
real property are not taxes. ...
Local personal taxes commonly take three forms: sales taxes, wage
or income taxes, and property taxes, the latter being the most
common. A residential property tax has two components -- a land tax
and a sax on the value of the structure. The land component of the
residential property tax should be assessed on an equal basis with
the business land tax, again providing incentives to develop in
neighborhoods with low land values, as well as preventing
speculative land banking.
[Edward Hill is a senior research
scholar at Cleveland State University's Levin College of Urban
Affairs. Jeremy Nowak is president of the Reinvestment Fund located
in Philadelphia.]
|
Hobson,
John A.
(1858-1940)

ENLARGE
|
During his long writing career, Hobson criticizing classical
economics, holding that economic theory was bound up with the
ethical problems of social welfare and should be a guide to reform.
He is frequently referred to as a precursor of John Maynard Keynes.
Hobson advocated partial socialization, and in Imperialism
(1902) he interpreted imperialism as a product of the economic
excesses of capitalism. His other works include The Evolution of
Modern Capitalism (1894), The Economics of Distribution
(1900), The Economics of Unemployment (1922), and Confessions
of an Economic Heretic,/i> (1938).
The part played by rent in the
problems of poverty can scarcely be overestimated.
[From: Problems of Poverty
(1891), p.10] |
Holmes,
Rev. John Naynes
(1879-1964) |
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP) was co-founded by Rev. Holmes, who wrote:
Progress and Poverty was the
most closely knit, fascinating and convincing specimen of
argumentation that I believe, ever sprang from the mind of man. |
Holmes,
Rev. John Naynes |
My reading of Henry George's
immortal masterpiece "Progress and Poverty" marked an
epoch in my life. All my thought upon the social question and all my
work for social reform began with the reading of this book. The
passing years have only added to my conviction that Henry George is
one of the greatest of all modern statesmen and prophets. His
eloquence, his character, his life must ever remain among the
imperishable treasures of the race. |
Howe,
Frederic C.

ENLARGE
|
While United States Commissioner of Immigration, in a
speech before the Pittsburgh Commercial Club, March 15, 1916:
Pittsburgh has set the pace for
all America in her tax system -- reducing taxes on improvements and
increasing taxes on land values -- the greatest single step any
American city has taken in city building. |
Howe,
Frederic C.
|
The rich men I knew were not
thrifty; they asked others to be thrifty for them. They did not
save; others saved for them. They admonished others to virtues of
meekness, humility, and duty, but they observed none of their own
admonitions.
They got an underhold on society, got it through monopoly and made
other people work for them. They capitalized something that every
one had to have or controlled a service that every one had to use.
They got rich easily, often quickly, and kept the wealth they had
acquired. ...Many men who got rich out of land had done so against
their will, or by accident.
[From: The Confessions of a
Reformer (1925), pp.222-223] |
Howells,
William Dean
(1837-1920)

ENLARGE
|
Howells novel details the attempt to establish a new magazine
in New York City during America's Gilded Age. Historian Arthur
Schlesinger, Jr. described this work as "the first memorable
novel about New York City." Among the subjects explored are the
New York streetcar riot of 1889 and the execution of the Haymarket
anarchists in Chicago.
Some spaces, probably held by
the owners for that rise in value which the industry of others
providentially gives to the land of the wise and good, it left
vacant comparatively far down the road, and built up others at
remoter points.

ENLARGE
[From: A Hazard of New Fortunes,
Part IV, Chap. 3] |
Hughes,
Thomas |
The first thing which the
democracy will write upon the slate will be the nationalization of
the land.
[From: An address at the Church
Congress of 1888]
|
Hugo,
Victor

ENLARGE
|
Democratize property, not by
abolishing, but by universalizing it, so that every citizen without
exception may be a landowner, an easier task than it may be
supposed; in short, know how to produce wealth andhow to distribute
it, and you will possess at once material greatness and moral
greatness, and you will be worthy to be called France.
[From: Les Miserables, Saint Denis,
Book I., Chap. 4]
|
Hume,
David

ENLARGE
|
The possession alone, and first
possession, is supposed to convey property, when nobody else has any
preceding claim and pretension. Many of the reasonings of lawyers
are of this analogical nature, and depend on very slight connections
of the imagination.
[From: Enquiry Concerning the
Principles of Morals, Sec. III, Part 2, Essays, Vol. II,
p. 190] |
Hseng,
Hsiao |
Tseng Hsiao was at the time of the following statement in 1989
Director of the China Research Institute of Land Economics.
The principle of equitable
distribution of land rights requires no taxation on labour and
capital. Furthermore, site rent has to be taxed for public revenue
because land has monopoly power. There is a difference between
ordinary products and land. The latter is a gift of nature, which is
limited and cannot be increased by human beings; its revenue has to
be shared among all citizens in society.
[The source of the statement is not known. It
is reprinted from Land & Liberty, July-August 1989] |
Huxley,
Aldous
(1894-1963)

ENLARGE
|
In the preface
to his Brave New World (p. viii), Huxley wrote:
If I were now to rewrite the
book, I would offer a third alternative ... the possibility of
sanity ... Economics would be decentralist and Henry Georgian.
|
Hydeman,
Albert (Jr.) |
Is there a sensible alternative
to the property tax? Such an alternative would have to do the
following things: Realign the tax burden from those least able to
pay to those most able to pay, simplify and reduce the cost of
community growth and development.
I think there is such an alternative. It's known as the land value
tax. We are now taxing improvements -- buildings -- at the same rate
we tax land. I think that's a mistake.
We're discouraging pe | |