Fundamental Laws Affecting Human Society |
[A radio address delivered over station WOR. Reprinted from Land and Freedom,
November-December 1936]
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There are fundamental economic laws affecting human society
just as there are fundamental physical laws by which the universe
is governed. Newton's apple did not fall by chance, neither does
dire poverty exist in the midst of plenty by mere chance.
One fundamental economic law is that gregarious man can exist
only by applying his labor to the raw materials of this earth and he
can live in society only by the cooperation of others of his kind. He
cannot live on what nature provides, like the beasts of the field or the
birds of the air. Since the earth is the sole source of the raw materials
necessary for man's existence, it follows that to live man must have
access to the land. This was true of Robinson Crusoe; it is true of
the United States of America. Any human law denying the right in
access to the land to any human being perpetrates and perpetuates
an injustice against a portion of mankind.
A second fundamental economic law is that there are primarily
but two elements in production land, the source of everything, and
human labor, the activating agent. The two basic factors in the
production of wealth therefore are land and labor. Capital is that
part of wealth that is used for the production of more wealth. But
capital is relatively unimportant. So long as there is labor to be
applied to land there will always be capital. To confuse capital
with land, or to say that land value is capital or that it is sound economics to permit capital to be invested in land values, indicates ignorance of true economic principles.
An individual can, by himself, make a house; but he cannot, by
himself, make land valuable. Land values only appear with population; and they rise as the population grows and fall as it diminishes.
It follows inexorably then that land values fundamentally and right-
fully belong, not to any individuals of a community, but to the whole
community by which they are created. The community should
therefore collect the full rental value of its land areas year by year
and use this revenue to exercise the functions of government.
Students of the problem hold that this sum would be sufficient for all
the legitimate expenses of government and there would be no need
to tax industry and the products of labor to support the machinery
of modern society.
This is the meat of the philosophy of Henry George, outlined over
50 years ago in his world-famous book, Progress and Poverty. The
principles there laid down, more generally understood and properly
applied, would be the first and greatest step toward wiping poverty
from the face of the earth and equalizing opportunity for all men so
that none need want in the midst of the greatest abundance the world
has ever known.
And just as for the mother to withhold the provision
that fills her breast with the birth of the child is to
endanger physical health, so for society to refuse to take
for social uses the provision intended for it is to breed
social disease. THE CONDITION OF LABOR.
It is related that when Michael Faraday explained
the electric current to William E. Gladstone, then
Chancellor of the Exchequer, the statesman asked, "What
is it good for?" Faraday's reply was, "Well, maybe
some day you can tax it."
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