.
| The Single
Tax, A Key to Industrial Freedom and Social Justice |
| [An article
originally published in Atlantic Monthly. Reprinted by the Joseph
Fels Fund of America, Cincinnati, Ohio, date not known -- early 20th
century] |
'The earth is the common
property of all men.
Those who make private property of the
gift of God pretend in vain to be innocent. For in thus retaining
the substance of the poor they are the murderers of those who die
every day for the want of it.' - Pope Gregory the Great
A GENERATION has now passed since Henry George infused new life into
the bones of political economy by writings which, if slow to win
acceptance in the universities, made an immediate and profound
impression upon the popular mind. Whatever may be thought of the
Single-Tax doctrine, - it be regarded as the key to industrial freedom
or as the worst of heresies, -- the multiplication of its adherents,
and its progress in actual legislation, have removed it from the realm
of questions purely academic and make pertinent a restatement of its
aims and accomplishments.
Briefly stated, the Single Tax is a method of raising money for the
necessary expenses of government by taking the rent, or the annual
yield of land-values, alone, abolishing all other forms of taxation,
direct or indirect. It may be described as government without
taxation, for, if the Georgian contention is true, the rent of land
belongs not to the individual who would be required to surrender it,
but to the community as a whole.
On what just basis can I claim exclusive right to a part of the
limited surface of the earth? No man made the land,' said Mill. 'It is
the original inheritance of the whole species.' No matter how far we
delve into the past, we can find no just title to the private
ownership of land. A Vermont judge, when asked to return a fugitive
slave to the man who claimed ownership, replied, 'Show me a bill of
sale from the Almighty and I will deliver him.' The same reasoning may
be applied to land titles with equal force. Blackstone admits that
'there is no foundation in nature, or in natural law, why a set of
words upon parchment should convey the dominion of land.' 'Whilst
another man has no land,' says Emerson, 'my title to mine, your title
to yours, is at once vitiated.' And Herbert Spencer maintains that
land-titles all rest on force, fraud, or cunning. When Edward I sent
his commission to inquire into the existing judicial franchises in
1278, Earl Warenne flung a rusty sword on the table and cried, 'This,
Sirs, is my warrant. By the sword our fathers won their lands when
they came over with the Conqueror, and by the sword we will keep
them.'
Man is a land animal, and access to land is essential to human life.
If the earth were to be divided among all men living to-day, in shares
of equal value, the next child born would have a just complaint
against a bargain which ignored his inherent right to an equal share.
Jefferson recognized the force of this argument when he declared that
'the earth belongs in usufruct the living.' Land is the universal
mother, capable of feeding, clothing, and sheltering all her children,
but turned by perverse human laws into an unnatural parent, absurdly
indulgent to some of her offspring and merciless to others. Land is
the source of all wealth; from it human labor extracts 'the sum of all
things which tend to satisfy the physical, intellectual, and spiritual
needs of mankind'; and being the reservoir of wealth, it must not be
confounded with wealth, to which it bears the same relation that the
fabled goose bore to its golden eggs. Concede the exclusive use of the
land to a part of the human race, and the remainder can live only on
the sufferance of the proprietors.
In the early home of the English race the free man was distinguished
from the dependent by the ownership of land. But even under feudalism
the possession of land was conditioned upon a return of some kind to
the sovereign, as representative of the people. Personal property in
England was not taxed until 1188, when Henry II levied the Saladin
Tithe for a crusade fund. In the law of eminent domain we still
acknowledge that the ownership of land should be conditional on of
society at large. Speaking in the House of Commons, Cobden described
the transition by which the landlord managed to evade his just
burdens. 'For a period of one hundred and fifty years after the
Conquest the whole revenue of the country was derived from the land';
but it was gradually shifted until, by 1845, land contributed but one
twenty-fifth. 'Thus,' he declared, 'the land, which anciently paid the
whole of taxation, pays now only a fraction
notwithstanding the
immense increase that has taken place in the value of rentals. The
people fared better under the_ despotic monarchs than when the powers
of the State had fallen into the hands of a landed oligarchy, who
first exempted themselves from taxation, and next claimed compensation
for themselves by a Corn Law for their heavy and peculiar burdens.'
In the early days of settlement in the United States, when land was
plenty, there was little or no poverty. Despite a lack of capital,
subsistence was to be won from the earth, and it was easy for the
laborer, dissatisfied with his wages, to become his own employer. But
this happy condition did not last. In 1873 an English observer echoed
the warnings of Henry George. He called attention to the fact that the
country was 'flinging to the winds its splendid patrimony and
recklessly selling and alloting to railway companies or land-jobbers
what might be the national revenues of the future. What repentance
awaits that country,' he exclaimed, 'for having given to some of the
railways grants of 25,600 acres per mile of road, and for assigning to
the Northern Pacific Company alone 58,000,000 acres!' It is estimated
that from 250,000,000 to 350,000,000 acres of the public domain have
been 'granted to the Pacific railways or illegally appropriated by
persons and corporations in conspiracy with the agents of the
government.'
Repentance has been late in coming, it has taken a secure hold on the
country at last, in the conservation movement, which aims to check the
prodigal waste of the natural resources of the government. We have
awakened to the folly of permitting the alienation of the rich mineral
deposits, the valuable forests and water-power sites which still fall
within the public domain.
Well may the conservationist ask himself if the bounties of nature
were stored during the ages for the special benefit of the Morgans,
Rockefellers, and Carnegies, their heirs and assigns. Does their
insight and financial genius sufficiently compensate us for the
surrender of suck a disproportionate share of the common inheritance?
And if not, do their princely charitable bequests square the account?
When we 'look about us upon the accumulating misery which the most
highly organized charity and -the richest endowments have proved
themselves power less to stay, we can but ask ourselves if the doctors
have correctly diagnosed the case. Charity is like a drug which, taken
habitually, weakens the moral fibre. It warps the judgment of him who
gives and him who receives. In the Middle Ages men bought indulgences
from the Pope. Today they buy them from their conscience with a dole
to charity. It was the contemplation of such a state of things that
led Maeterlinck to ask if, after all, charity were aught but the
'insolent flame of permanent Injustice.'
Large sums are readily obtained to fight consumption, to build
hospitals, to further temperance, to care for the victims of a city's
vice. But show that consumption results from land monopoly in slum
conditions, and from tariff monopoly, which makes the price of warm
clothing prohibitive; point out that intemperance is largely the
result of poverty and taxation; reveal the landlord (whose name may
head the list of charities) drawing life rentals from resorts of vice;
demand the repeal of privilege in any of its manifold forms, and its
beneficiaries raise a loud cry of spoliation and declare that vested
interests must not be disturbed.
The rich are slow to see that they are in truth the great recipients
of charity. Blinded by custom, we detect no irony in the fact that the
laboring class is synonymous with the poor, and the idle class with
the rich. Yet all wealth is created by labor. Spectacular as are the
gifts of the multi-millionaires, they represent but a small fraction
of the contributions which unjust laws permit them to exact from the
laboring masses. 'Give no bounties, make equal laws, secure life and
property,' said Emerson. 'Open the doors of opportunity to talent and
virtue and they will do themselves justice, and property will not be
in bad hands.' It is difficult for those of us who have been born into
the more or less privileged strata of society to see with the eyes of
the disinherited. We are ready to accept conditions as inevitable, and
to console ourselves with the belief that the poor are ordained to be
always with us. We hear a great deal about the dignity of work, and
are readily persuaded that poverty is the result, and not the cause,
of ignorance and shiftlessness.
The toad beneath the harrow knows
Precisely where each sharp tooth goes;
The butterfly upon the road
Preaches contentment to the toad.
That whatever a man creates by his own labor belongs exclusively to
him, and cannot justly be claimed by any one else, is regarded by
Single-Taxers as a self-evident truth, and by its acceptance they
become the champions of property in its true sense, and the implacable
foes of privilege. They recognize three factors in the production of
wealth: land, labor, and capital (or wealth set apart to aid in the
production of more wealth); and between these three factors the
product must be divided. The share of land is rent, that of labor,
wages, and that of capital, interest. Confusion may arise from failure
to make clear the meaning of the term rent. In common parlance no
distinction is drawn between the sum paid for the use of land and that
paid for the use of factories, houses, machinery, and so forth. The
distinction is, however, all-important. The return received in the
form of rent from all things created by labor is in reality either
wages for the labor expended, or interest on the capital employed, and
may be said to be earned. But the rent arising from land, known as
economic rent, can be credited to no individual effort and if in fact
the measure of social activity. It exists 'wherever any particular
portion of land affords superior opportunities, or advantages of
fertility or situation, over that which is freely open for any one to
use.'
The flood of humanity which flows and ebbs daily through a great
city's thoroughfares gives to those localities exceptional
opportunities in the way of trade, and men are willing to pay large
sums to do business there. Imagine every building swept away by some
catastrophe; so long as the population remained alive, the rental
value of the land would persist. In Baltimore and San Francisco,
land-values rose after fire had done its worst. It is not due to the
genius or industry of the Astors or the house of Bedford that land in
the heart of New York and London sells at the rate of $15,000,000 an
acre. From their roots safely imbedded in the soil, they flourish like
the lilies of the field, although they toil not. They need do no work
nor risk a cent of capital; in other words, they need not contribute
in any way to the production of wealth, and yet they have the power to
use wealth in excessive abundance.
Greatly concentrated land-values are to be found in railway
franchises and exclusive rights of way for telephone, telegraph,
pipe-lines, and so forth, in docks, the control of water-power sites,
oil, gas, and mineral deposits. The annual mineral output of the
United States amounts to $2,069,289,196 according to the US.
Geological Survey for 1908. Frederic C. Howe points out that a royalty
of twenty-five per cent on this natural monopoly alone; would yield
$517,322,299, or almost as much as the sum collected through the
customs and internal revenue. It is estimated that the ownership and
control by the railways of the anthracite coal deposits in
Pennsylvania makes it possible to take from the consumer from one to
two hundred million dollars a year above a reasonable cost of
producing the yearly output. The stupendous income from natural
monopoly, now absorbed by private interests, can be easily imagined.
As land-values fluctuate in precise agreement with social
development, there are losses as well as gains to be taken into
consideration. When Edward I massacred the inhabitants of Berwick,
'the greatest merchant city of northern Britain sank from that time
into a petty seaport.' Every one is familiar with the ups and downs of
special localities in our modern cities. But it remains true that,
taking a community as a whole, so long as it is developing, and
evolving a higher state of civilization, so long will the land
continue to yield an increasing rent. We are not here concerned with
the landlord as a laborer or capitalist. He may improve his land by
building offices or factories upon it, and for their use receive what
is commonly called rent, but only that part of the sum which
represents desirability of situation is rent in the economic sense.
It may be urged that the returns which the landlord receives in the
shape of rent are the reward of skill and foresight in investment, and
that great rewards are only fair where the chances of failure are
great. And we are often told that if society takes the increase of
value on land, it ought to make good the decrease of value which is a
kindred phenomenon. Single-Taxers believe that speculation in land is
as inexcusable as speculation in air or light would be; and indeed it
involves them both. Speculation will cease as soon as the landlord is
obliged to turn over to the economic rent, a sum which will vary with
the varying fortunes of the locality. At the same time he will reap
the full reward of his industry and not be mulcted by taxation as at
present. Withholding land from use, in anticipation of increased
values, leads to the intolerable trinity of idle land, idle rich, and
idle poor.
It is a question not merely of expediency, but of life and death,
'The land question,' said Cardinal Manning, 'means hunger, thirst,
nakedness, notice to quit, labor spent in toil of years seized upon,
the breaking up of homes, the misery, sickness, deaths of parents,
children, wives, the despair and wildness which spring up in the
hearts of the poor, when legal force, like a sharp harrow, goes over
the most sensitive and vital right of mankind.' Famine travels in the
wake of land monopoly at no less inevitably than in that of war. The
difference is that while war chokes production, land monopoly snatches
the food that has been produced form the hands of the starving. A
witness of the Irish famine wrote from that rent-racked country: 'A
calm, still horror was over the land. Go where you would, in the heart
of the town or the suburb, there was the stillness and heavy,
pall-like feeling of the chamber of death. You stood in the presence
of a dread, silent, vast dissolution. An Unseen ruin was creeping
round you. Human passion there was none, but inhuman and unearthly
quiet.' And yet, during that same year, over $200,000,000 worth of
food was shipped out of Ireland to pay the rent which the landlords
were able to exact. And during the next sixteen years the Irish
emigrants to this country are estimated to have sent home not less
than $65,000,000, to be absorbed in the same way. Like the Irish
famine of 1847, the recurring famines of China and India are due to
the grinding force of land monopoly, and not to the niggardliness of
nature.
Every improvement made by a city in comfort or beauty is reflected in
higher rents. 'There was a block of traffic in Oxford Street,' said
Arnold Bennett. 'To avoid the block people actually began to travel
under the cellars and drains, and the result was a rise of rents in
Shepherd's Bush!' Every tunnel under the Hudson River, every new
bridge, and all added facilities of travel, serve but to increase the
revenues of the suburban land-owners and the transportation companies.
Indeed land-owners frequently receive damages for public works that
increase the value of their property. Fortunately, this custom is
coming into disrepute as light is let in upon the land question.
Mill gave the name of 'unearned increment' to the increase of value
which normally accrues to the land in every growing community, as it
is not earned by the landlords into whose pockets society permits it
to be diverted. Manhattan Island was bought from the Indians for $28,
and the land of New York City is now valued at more than
$3,500,000,000. The phenomenal increase in land-values is daily
reported in the columns of the newspapers. Mr. Joseph Fels, an ardent
disciple of Henry George, offers a personal, if modest, example. A few
years ago he bought eleven and one half acres of land in West
Philadelphia for $37,500. The city moved in that direction and three
thousand houses were built in the vicinity. As a result, and without
improving his property, Mr. Fels saw its value leap in successive
stages to $125,000, He does not, however, pretend that this growing
value is justly his, or due to his skill or foresight. 'The unearned
increment,' he says, 'in justice and right, belongs not to me, but to
the community. I have done nothing to make that value. My part has
been to hold the land out of best use. Yet the profit is mine legally,
and I have some consolation from the thought that I intend to expend
it in such a way that conditions may be changed, to the end that
neither I nor any other man shall have the power to make money out of
the work and sweat of others, I shall do my part in this work by
devoting money and efforts to disseminating the truth concerning what
some of our opponents speak of slightingly as "the single tax,"
which some refer to lovingly as the economic philosophy of Henry
George, and which I call plain justice.'
John Moody gives the estimated wealth of the nation in 1907 as about
$120,000,000,000, and figures that about one half is what might be
called created wealth. The balance he calls spontaneous wealth, or
unearned increment. Here we have a social fund upon which no
individual has a just claim, and amply sufficient for the needs of
government. Why not use it for that purpose and remit the tribute
exacted from labor and capital by taxation?
'Why tribute? Why should we pay tribute? If Caessar can hide the sun
from us with a blanket, or put the moon in his pocket, we will pay him
tribute for light; else, sirs, no more tribute, pray you now.'
What that tribute is becomes apparent whenever we trace the action of
our tax laws. Having alienated the fund for government needs which
nature provides, other sources of revenue had to be found and taxes
levied that would raise the most money with the least outcry. Hence
arose the indirect taxation which has found its fullest flower in that
luxuriant but poisonous growth - the protective tariff. The Roman
taxes were farmed out to syndicates which at least paid the expenses
of collection out of their spoils. But the beneficiary of the
protective system, absorbs his tribute without expense, shifting the
heavy burden of collection upon the government, which receives but a
small part of the general contribution. And from the amount collected
by the government must be deducted the actual cost of customhouses and
a huge force of clerks and spies withdrawn from productive employment,
to say nothing of the moral cost of creating an artificial crime and
fostering international jealousies.
The well-to-do make a great outcry over double taxation, and rightly,
but few concern themselves with the multiple taxation of the poor. For
it is upon the poor that the bulk of taxation falls, the rich having
ways of shifting a large part of the burden upon those beneath. A tax
has been likened to a hot copper which is quickly passed from one hand
to another until it reaches the last man in the line, who gets burned.
Thomas G. Shearman estimated that 'taxes are so arranged as to take
from the poorer classes 75 to 80 per cent of their annual earnings
while exacting from the rich only 3 to 10 per cent.' When Mr.
Rockefeller gives $10,000,000, to Chicago University he is the
ostensible donor; the real contributors are the unknown thousands who
must pay tribute to Mr. Rockefeller on account of his monopolies as
gigantic landlord and tariff beneficiary. 'As the laws are to-day,'
says Lawson Purdy, 'no wealthy man, who has legal advice, need pay any
direct taxes on personal property.' Those who cannot hide or afford
expert legal services must pay. Glance at the problems which keep pace
with the growth of material prosperity, the familiar picture of
concentrated wealth and abject poverty side by side. We cannot see the
palaces of the rich without being conscious of the neighboring slums,
where human beings live crowded together in miserable hovels, unable
even to enjoy the light and air to which no man as yet claims
exclusive title, and which are supplied by nature in boundless
profusion.. What does the slum landlord give his tenants m return for
the rent he exacts for squalid buildings in surroundings that breed
disease and death? He gives the privilege of occupying a site made
valuable by the pressing needs of society, and increased in value
artificially by land held idle for speculative gains. But if the
social value were reclaimed for public purposes, idle land would be
forced into use and the owners of tenements would have to offer better
homes. Competition would keep rents within bounds, and laborers,
released from taxation, would have more to spend on the decencies and
comforts of life. And the landlord, no longer taxed on every
improvement, would have some incentive to add to the attractiveness of
his property.
If, by taking economic rent for public purposes, we release idle
land, and at the same time encourage industry by the removal of taxes,
we are respecting the rights of property with scrupulous nicety; and
we shall create a demand for labor which will solve the menacing
problem of unemployment. The vice and crime which spring from' slums
as naturally as disease, and are in fact disease; will be checked at
their source. Remove from the breasts of the criminals, who prey upon
society, the ever-present feeling that society is arrayed against
them, and that laws are made and administered for the rich, and who
can say what forces of regeneration will spring into action?
Nor is there any other solution than freedom from taxation for the
bitter and wasteful struggle between labor and capital. Their needs
are in fact the same, for capital has no other office than to
facilitate labor in the production of added wealth. The issue is
confused because the capitalist is often a monopolist as well. The
common enemy of both capital and labor is monopoly, and when it is
abolished, each will receive its reward in interest and wages. The
increased demand for labor will make wages higher, and labor unions
will be unnecessary; and the fear of deadly competition being removed,
the immigration problem will cease to be a problem at all, and workers
from other lands will be welcomed to aid in the production of wealth
the natural limits of which have never been descried.
The abolition of tariffs and the recognition of the right to the use
of the earth which all its inhabitants possess, will at last lay the
spectre of war, and lead to the abandonment of an armed peace which is
only less crushing and brutalizing than war itself. It will be no
small gain to be rid of the military class with its 'natural drift
toward lawlessness and violence.' The drones created and maintained by
the army and navy establishment and the bureaucracy of tax departments
will be freed for productive labor. In fact, there is no social
question occupying men's and absorbing their energies that will not be
modified by the liberation of the land. Political corruption, which
usually starts from the headquarters of monopoly, will cease from lack
of temptation.
The remedy is not a visionary one. Forty years ago John Macdonell, in
his book on the Land Question, said: 'We vex the poor with indirect
taxes, we squeeze the rich, we ransack heaven and earth to find some
new impost palatable or tolerable, and all the time, these hardships
going on, neglected or misapplied there have lain at our feet a
multitude of resources ample enough for all just common wants, growing
as they grow, and so marked out that we may say they form Nature's
budget. ... To no transcendental motives does the project appeal. It
demands no miraculous draught of administrative talents or public
virtues. It is simple and intelligible. It is nothing but giving the
body politic the blood which it has secreted.'
It is not uncommon to hear persons who admit the force of the
abstract argument declare that private monopoly in land hew been
sanctioned so long by custom that to abolish it would lead to
unwarranted confiscation, They point to the fact that many innocent
persons have invested in land at the high prices which a monopoly
system creates, and they demand compensation for the vested interest
attacked. The same arguments that served in the agitation over slavery
are heard again, and England's compensation of slave-owners is held up
for our admiration. The fact is that in the case of land monopoly, as
in that of slavery, there are conflicting demands to be settled.
Nobody suggested that the slaves be compensated for their loss of
wages, and no one to-day suggests that the people whose substance has
flowed so long into the landlord's coffers be compensated for their
arrears of tribute. But may they not as justly seek compensation as
those whom it is proposed to deprive of their monopoly?
The abolition of any legalized wrong involves hardship to those who
are profiting by it, and the longer it is postponed, the greater the
penalty which justice exacts. To take the people's money to purchase
for them something which in nature belongs to them is too absurd, and
it is safe to say that it will not be attempted in this instance. The
process doubtless will be to concentrate taxation gradually on
land-values, relieving industry at the same time. This method,
involving delay, does not mete out full justice, but it is at least in
line with human progress. 'Compromise is man's law, to do right is
God's.'
To those who have seen a vision of better times to come, any step in
the right direction, however feeble, however hesitating, brings
courage and hope. Such is the legislation embodied in the Lloyd George
Budget of 1909, with its tax of a halfpenny in the pound on the value
of land (with some exceptions), and twenty per cent on the unearned
increment. The amount of justice done is slight, but the recognition
of the principle is of supreme importance, and the popular education
accomplished by the political campaign has been far-reaching in its
results. The potential power in the movement to free the land was
thoroughly apprehended by the great landowning class, and hence the
desperate resistance made by the House of Lords (or the House of
Landlords, as it has been aptly termed). The lords failed to heed
Cobden's warning to land-owners against forcing the subject of
taxation upon the attention of the middle or industrial classes. '
Great as I believe the grievance of the protective system,' he said,
'mighty as I consider the fraud and injustice of the Corn Laws, I
verily believe you will find as black a record against the land-owners
as even the Corn Law itself. I warn them against ripping up the
subject of taxation.'
Whether or not it is a characteristic of human nature, it is an
undoubted fact that laws are commonly made in the interests of the
law-makers. Sometimes this is done crudely and openly, for the
personal gain of a legislator, as in the case of much tariff
legislation; more frequently it is accomplished by general
legislation, unconsciously dictated by class interest. The three
hundred and sixty peers who voted to reject the Lloyd George Budget
own almost one seventh of the land surface of the United Kingdom, an
area equal in extent to sixteen English counties.
III
Progress and Poverty was published in 1879. The author claimed
no originality for the doctrines he expounded regarding the rights of
land-ownership; but in exploding the commonly accepted Malthusian
theory, that population tends to increase faster than the means of
subsistence, he removed forever the stigma which rested upon political
economy. The 'dismal science' was a figment of the Malthusian
imagination. With the realization that a livelihood is within the
reach of all who are given access to their birthright, that poverty
and all its attendant evils "re the results of bad laws, and not
decreed by an inscrutable Providence, arose a new hope for social
regeneration. We need not fear the shock of a too sudden arrival of
the millennium. To a friendly critic, who accused Henry George of too
expansive an optimism, he replied, 'You say you do not see in the
single tax a panacea for poverty. Nor yet do I. The panacea for
poverty is freedom. What I see in the single tax if the means of
securing that industrial freedom which will make possible other
triumphs of freedom.'
Seeing the cause of so much human misery, and believing that they are
possessed of a remedy, Single-Taxers are naturally optimistic. And
their optimism is strengthened when they look back over the record of
a single generation. South Australia was the first to respond to the
new idea, and in 1886 adopted a land-value tax which was later
extended to municipalities. In Queensland the exemption of
improvements from taxation was begun in 1891, and has been gradually
extended, until in 1905 a Conservative government made the exemption
complete. More than ten per cent of the annual value of land now goes
to the community. New Zealand began to tax unimproved land-values at
the same time, and nearly one half of the total taxes now come from
this source. In 1896 New South Wales followed suit, and, with the
cooperation of the land-owners in some instances, has gone further
than any other state, at least twenty per cent of the annual
land-values being taken for public uses. Western Australia imposes a
tax on land-values for state purposes, besides giving rural districts
power to exempt improvements. Tasmania has had a tax on the unimproved
capital value of land for many years. Victoria is the only Australian
state which has held back, and it has suffered in consequence, losing
population to states where industry is more justly rewarded. None of
the 90,500 square miles of Papua (a dependency of the Commonwealth)
can be alienated, land being held on lease with periodical
reassessment.
In the German Empire, Prussia was the first to give its
municipalities the power to tax land-values, and most of the other
states have followed suit, and the power has been widely used. There
are fifteen hundred villages supported from the produce of communal
lands, without taxation, and in some of them the inhabitants actually
receive a dividend. The German dependency of Kiautchou in China is
under the partial sway of the single tax, and the minister for the
Colonies hopes to extend the system to all the other German colonies.
Two Swiss cantons tax land-values for state and municipal purposes,
and one of them has no other taxes. Orson, in Sweden, has no taxation,
and yet provides a street railway free for all, a library, and public
schools, and pays its own taxes to the central government. The money
comes from a communal forest which encircles the town.
The United States has been slow to adopt the ideas which its citizens
have done so much to popularize throughout the world. Progress and
Poverty has been translated into all the European languages. Not
long before his death Tolstoi wrote, 'The injustice of the seizure of
the land as property has long ago been recognized by thinking people,
but only since the teaching of Henry George has it become clear by
what means this injustice can be abolished. At the present time the
abolition of property in land everywhere demands its solution as
insistently as, fifty years ago, the problem of slavery demanded
solution in Russia and in America. The supposed rights in landed
property are the foundation not only of economic misery, but also of
political disorder, and, above all, of the moral depravity of the
people.'
In May, 1913, an international Single-Tax Congress was held at Ronda,
Spain, at which were present delegates from the chief European
countries as well as from the Spanish-American states, where the
movement has entered the field of practical politics. But nowhere are
experiments along single-tax lines more striking than in Western
Canada, where the taxation of land-values is firmly established and
rapidly extending. A large number of municipalities depend entirely
upon this form of taxation for local revenues and the provincial
governments are moving in the same direction. Under this policy the
growth and prosperity of such cities as Vancouver, Edmonton, and
Victoria have challenged world-wide attention and are attracting a
year ly emigration from the United States of between 100,000 and
200,000 of our most industrious and wide-awake citizens. An increasing
pressure is thus being exerted from across the Canadian border.
The Minnesota report on taxation, issued in 1912, predicts that
'within the next ten or twenty years the Single-Tax principle will be
adopted by every taxing district in Western Canada.'
The Canadian practice has been to reduce the tax-rate on personal
property and improvements from year to year, increasing
proportionately the rate on unimproved land-values; and the Tax
Commissioner of Houston, Texas, has followed this example, without
waiting for specific legal authorization. But the first state in the
Union to adopt legislation of this character was Pennsylvania. The new
statute, passed in May, 1918, obliges cities of the second class
(Pittsburgh and Scranton) to reduce the rate on buildings to ninety
per cent of that on land and to continue by reductions of ten per cent
every three years until a fifty per cent reduction is reached. A
similar bill for New York City is pending before the legislature. It
proposes to reduce the rate on buildings to one half the rate on land
within five consecutive years.
It is not possible within the limits of this paper to give a complete
summary of the modifications in the tax systems of the world since
Henry George made his searching inquiry into the right of private
property in land, but enough has been indicated to show the vitality
of the issue which he raised. The moral fervor which possessed him has
been communicated to his followers in an ever-widening circle, his
ideas confront alike the legislator and the sociologist, and must be
reckoned with.
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