Review of Land Economics by Richard T. Ely & George S. Wehrwein |
[Reprinted from Land and Freedom, September-October 1940]
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Any book that considers the economic issue of the land question
is of interest to Georgeists whether or not its author understands
that "the ownership of land is the great fundamental fact which
ultimately determines the social, the political, and consequently the
intellectual and moral condition of a people." It is with this thought
that Land Economics is here reviewed.
In the preface we find that "Land Economics may be defined as
the utilization of the earth's surface, or space, as conditioned by
property and other institutions, and which includes the use of natural
forces and productive powers above or below that space over which
the owner has property rights." The index notes four references to
George. The bibliography has placed Progress and Poverty under
"Conservation of Natural Resources."
Students who have read Progress and Poverty do not all become
Georgeists, but they usually agree that the Malthusian theory, which
attributes want to the decrease of the productive power of land, is
completely answered in the second Book. But the noted professors
insist that Henry George "failed to overthrow the law itself."
Private property is justified "only on the social theory of property,
namely, that it is established and maintained for social purposes.
Under this theory, agricultural land is retained as private property
because it is believed that the nation enjoys the greatest well-being
under private ownership. Whenever social welfare is better served by
shifting from private to public land, the state has the power to make
this change. It has the power to make the right of the individual to
the land less absolute."
The reviewer wonders what Ely and Wehrwein would say if this
"social theory of property" were at some future date used to defend
a Georgeist society.
The authors illustrate their lack of understanding of Henry
George's concept of private property in land. He was not interested,
as claimed by these economists, in "excluding land from the realm
of legal private property." Georgeists are only interested in the public collection of the economic rent. Perhaps the noted professors
merely overlooked mentioning this difference. Or perhaps the confiscation of the milk and honey of vested interests would not permit
them to note any difference in consequences.
"Competition for the land has driven the price up to the full
capitalized value of its income. In fact, many times above this value,
through speculation and other factors." How has this admission
slipped in?
Two mentions are made of why Henry George wrote Progress
and Poverty.
"Henry George acquired his philosophy of the taxation of land in
the atmosphere of land-frauds and wild speculation in urban and
agricultural lands of California where both Mexican and American
land policies had favored concentration of ownership, and the bona
fide settler found great difficulty in acquiring land."
The second mention also deals with the environmental factor that
influenced George. It is an apparent attempt to belittle his contribution to economic theory.
"He lived during the post-Civil War
period when speculation, 'land-grabbing', corruption, and fraud were
rife, but he over-simplified the remedy for the ills of society by
attacking 'the unearned increment' in the land only."
Is it possible that a good word about George is permitted to enter
the book? The authors quote from Lewis Mumford's The Brown Decades
[A Study of the Arts in America, 1865-1895]:
"But George's awareness of the political importance of the land,
his clear perception in 1879 of dangers that were to be fully demonstrated by 1890, and the stir that he made in the torpid political and
economic thought of his day by introducing into it a vital idea
all this cannot be discounted. Henry George challenged the complacencies of bourgeois economics in the terms that the bourgeois
economist could partly understand. Less than fifteen years after
George's 'Progress and Poverty' was published. Professor Fredrick
Turner pointed out some of the social and economic implications of
the passing of the frontier. From this point on, any one who ignored
the role of the land, either in American history or in our current
institutional life, was guilty of convenient forgetfulness: the fact
was established."
Nowhere in this book did the reviewer find any suggestion of a
constructive land policy for lessening poverty amid advancing wealth.
But all phases of the science which deals with the earth's surface are
discussed and amply illustrated. The size of families, immigration,
birth and death rates, and other factors of the study of the population statistics are pursued. "Temperature and Sunshine"; "Rainfall and Evaporation"; "Topography"; Agricultural, conservational,
arid, forest, urban, recreational lands and water, mineral and power
resources these are only a few of the items that would interest even
a Georgeist in this book.
"Land Economics" tells you how it is possible to satisfy men's
needs, but never mentions why they are not properly housed, clothed
and fed. The noted professors would find the solution in Progress
and Poverty if they would reexamine this book without any prejudices.
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