.
Economics & Social Justice in
Australia
INTERMEDIATE KIT |
CONTENTS
- Introduction
- Real Environmental Stewardship
- Urban Decay or Renewal?
- Land is not Capital!
- Wealth -- and Its Misappropriation
- Tax -- a Creator and a Destroyer
- Privacy! Liberty!
- The Folly of Most Third World Air
- Land Reform -- Real and Illusory
- Capitalism and Socialism
- Henry George and Social Justice
- Taking It From Here
INTRODUCTION<
"The rich grind the poor
into abjectness and then complain that they are abject. They goad them
to famine, then hang them if they steal a sheep." -
Shelley (1792 - 1822)
We're going to continue to move in a spiral, rather than on a
narrow-focused reductionist path. That is, to keep you with a vision of
this big picture, we'll carry on moving around and around this great
body of Geonomics, observing a number of its many aspects. With the
wider perspective in view, we'll then start to grapple with the details.
This Intermediate Kit revisits some of the topics covered in the
Introductory Kit, but it also introduces some new subjects.
In a sense, there'll always be new aspects to discover with Geonomics.
Economics is unfortunately a dirty word these days in many circles,
which is a tragedy because it's really an awesome and endless source of
insights. Some of the many fields related to economics which we'll visit
are:
- philosophy
- prosperity
- the environment
- ethics
- politics
- technology
- history
- sociology
But - incredibly - who bothers to study economics today besides
professionals? Yet is there anything more important to understand than
economics - the great attempt to find out what makes our world go around
- except the great Journey to understand our very selves?
All the facets you gaze upon are not of equal size or luminosity, and
there's one area that clearly outshines all the rest. If this is the
only facet upon which you gaze and understand, then the energy you've
spent on Geonomics will have been amply rewarded. This facet is, in many
ways, the keystone of the arch of economics. We refer to the mystery -
some would say the madness - of unemployment.
The existence of unemployment should strike one as being quite
absurd. On the one hand there are millions of people - many
highly-skilled - wanting to work, some desperately so. And on the other
hand there is work aplenty to do - to care for the elderly, to clean up
the environment, to build better housing, to improve our teacher-student
ratio, to expand our infrastructure etc. etc. And yet, these two things
can't presently come together to satisfy each other.
So we're spiraling around, looking at all sorts of interesting aspects,
but not haphazardly. For we're deliberately preparing ourselves to reach
the top of the spiral, to find the great economic key which will impact
on just about every other aspect. For if you solve unemployment then you
unlock one of the mighty doors to prosperity, and if you abolish the
great curse of poverty then you'll find that there are powerful and
positive impacts on all the other problems concerning the environment,
social problems, war, education and more.
Sounds mad, doesn't it? That we should claim to have an answer to
something on which politicians can never deliver, over which think tanks
continue to scratch their heads, that highly-educated academics cannot
answer. Now just visualise all these important people striding back and
forth, heads down and deep in thought over the Riddle of Unemployment.
The wonderful irony is that they're looking at the solution! In fact,
they're standing on it - it's the Earth itself! The Earth Belongs to
Everyone! And, factoring into our economic theories the
distinguishing features between land and capital, the laws of economics
are turned the right way up and now stand out by themselves!
So, with that tantalising clue as to where we're ultimately headed in
the Advanced Kit, let's do a bit of spiraling.
"A fine is a tax for doing
wrong. A tax is a fine for doing well." - Anon.
REAL ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP
"We shall never understand
the natural environment until we see it as a living organism. Land can
be healthy or sick, fertile or barren, rich or poor, lovingly nurtured
or bled white. Our present attitudes and laws governing the ownership
and use of land represent an abuse of the concept of private
property.... Today you can murder land for private profit. You can
leave the corpse for all to see and nobody calls the cops."
- Paul Brooks, in The Pursuit of Wilderness (1971)
Henry George laid down the principles of sane environmental policies
half a century before the world's attention began to focus on the
natural environment. To paraphrase his deep and far-reaching
environmental philosophy: "The use of Earth's scarce natural
resources should be strictly and equitably rationed by a system of
resource rentals."
NEOCLASSICAL ECONOMICS VS. GEONOMICS
Due to the current dominance of neoclassical economics, the environment
has been so recklessly plundered largely because of the blurred
distinction between private property and that of our natural
environment, the Global Commons. Put simply, private property is that
which is created by labour, whereas the Global Commons is that which is
provided by nature. They require totally different economic treatments.
We assert that the gifts of Nature should not be treated as mere
commodities, to be bought, sold, speculated upon and abused for
profiteering!
Geonomics removes taxes from wages and other private property and
increases taxes and user fees on common property. Reducing taxes on
labour increases purchasing capacity, and reducing taxes on capital
encourages efficiency. Shifting taxes on to land and natural resources
curbs speculation and private profiteering in our common property, and
clearly is a practical way of conserving and fairly sharing the Global
Commons.
GREEN TAXES AREN'T GREEN ENOUGH!
We applaud wholeheartedly green tax reforms which have started to
increase taxes and fees on:
- Emissions into the air, water and soil
- Oils and minerals
- Lands used for timber and grazing
- Oceans and freshwater resources
However, to be consistent and environmentally responsible, we
argue that green tax reforms should also increase taxes and fees in 3
other areas:
- Satellite orbital zones and aircraft flight paths
- The electromagnetic spectrum
.. these are scarce resources
that have been enormously undervalued up until now. Almost
everywhere they have been sold off to the highest cash bidder
(usually to plutocrats with political influence) instead of
governments having implemented a scheme of regularly-reviewed
resource rentals. This looting of the Global Commons by the Kerry
Packers of this world forces governments to burden us with taxes on:
· honestly-earned wages and salaries · productive and
sustainable capital and investments · sales, especially of
basic necessities But the third outstanding green tax reform is the
great current blind spot of environmental lobbyists, being a tax on
none other than:
- Land sites according to land value
In the Introductory Kit, we touched on a number of the
environmental impacts of land value taxation (LVT). The following is a
brief outline only - these kits can only hope to outline the enormous
implications of Geonomics.
THE GREAT - AND UNSEEN - GREEN TAX
LVT, as we've seen, strongly encourages land to be put to its optimum
use as an occupant must pay the full LVT whether the land is being fully
utilised or not. Land speculation, whereby a speculator or "developer"
can simply sit on a large parcel of land and wait for population and
infrastructure to build up its value, would become unprofitable. Parks
and well-used public spaces would certainly remain, but not underused
tracts of land. In other words, LVT is a recipe for the reining in of
urban sprawl.
The resultant compact, less wasteful urban landscape will have a
multitude of environmental mega-benefits. Extensive public transport
will become feasible in a smaller area, as will cycling and walking. And
we have already seen how public investment in fields such as public
transport will become affordable when increased land values are "recycled"
or recovered through LVT. Furthermore, a compact Geonomic cityscape
won't require the enormous consumption of resources as when roads,
pipelines and other infrastructure have to bypass kilometres of unused
and underused land to reach the outer limits of the suburban sprawl.
Remember, too, the environmental costs of long and wasteful commuting
journeys from distant suburbs.
Cities won't sprawl over valuable farmland, and marginal farmland won't
sprawl over what should be national parks or wilderness. With
agricultural land, there's a technical adjustment of LVT whereby the
basis of assessment is on the maximum sustainable yield, strongly
encouraging organic farming practices. In some circumstances, there's
also a good case for the requirement of what's called an Ecology
Security Deposit and/or restoration insurance from farmers.
Geonomics is firmly in agreement with those environmental groups which
call for the elimination of subsidies in areas which are environmentally
or socially harmful, unnecessary, or inequitable in such areas as:
- resource extraction
- non-sustainable energy production
- commerce and industry
- forestry and non-sustainable agriculture
Subsidies are, essentially, negative taxes - and in these
instances (above) they are having the opposite effect to green
taxes!
MONITOR THE PLANET, NOT THE PEOPLE!
Remember too that LVT eliminates the government surveillance over
people, their activities and their assets. What LVT and other
conventional eco-taxes does do is to monitor Our One Earth as any
responsible form of stewardship should, ensuring our scarce natural
resources are not polluted, wasted, undersold or privately
misappropriated.
The bottom line of our present economic system is that not everything
which counts (our Earth) can be counted (in $ terms), and not everything
that can be counted ("progress"), counts. Presently, it's the
market which determines the "worth" of, say, our water
resources, our genetic integrity or the last remaining habitat of an
endangered species. The only moderating factor to this is the blunt
instrument of occasional government intervention, when public outcry
forces it to save what's left of our (and future generations') Global
Commons.
But there is a means of determining the worth of all of these
intangible benefits - patches of the Global Commons which confer
aesthetic, recreational, life-enhancing, spiritual, climate-preserving,
biodiversity-saving benefits.
VALUING THE INVALUABLE
To summarise an intricate but elegant principle and process, the LVT
assessment process used to determine the rent payable on residential,
industrial and agricultural land can - and must - be adapted to
relatively-untouched areas of the Global Commons facing commercial
exploitation. The assessors attempt to factor in all these less tangible
benefits of a natural resource into their valuation of its worth to the
community and to posterity. As always, these assessments are open for
public scrutiny and comment. In the end, only if a prospective developer
is prepared to pay the
full cost of utilising this resource will such extraction or
development go ahead, taking into account the proposed environmental
restoration. So a beautiful patch of rainforest might well be lost, but
only if its commercial value is extremely high (e.g. because it's
sitting on top of a huge lode of platinum).
But will local residents will lose out? Not really, because the loss of
this local amenity will, of course, be taken into account in the next
LVT assessment. And the huge resource rentals payable for this
commercial extraction will go into their rightful place - the community
coffers.
WHERE A GUESS IS BETTER THAN NONE AT ALL!
But how does anybody - professional assessor or not - possibly put a
value on something so hard-to-value as water quality or biodiversity or
recreational use? The answer is that the valuation can't be an
accounting-style series of clear calculations, but a series of value
judgments that are, in the end, quantified. It's a guess, but the best
possible guess. And the best possible guess is better than a wild guess.
And a wild guess is better than no guess at all. And no guess at all is
pretty much what we have at the moment, as the outcome of our present
neoclassical system is that such natural benefits are often rated as
next-to-worthless, and almost given away!
Chief Seattle of the Pacific
Northwest indigenous tribe, the Dwamish, tried to resist peacefully
the loss of their land to white settlers. In 1855 he is said to have
written a letter (although various versions of this letter exist) to
President Franklin Pierce saying, "How can you buy or sell
the sky - the warmth of the land? The idea is strange to us
.
Every part of this earth is sacred to us."
URBAN DECAY OR RENEWAL?
"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." - David Lloyd
George, (1863 - 1945), British Prime Minister (1917 - 1922)
Want another classic example of the madness of our current neoclassical
economic system? Melbourne's Dockland Project is such, in the sense that
it took so long to happen. Look at what we had - a vast expanse of idle
land and derelict buildings sitting right next to the central business
district for decades. The Docklands area was a waste of
enormously-valuable real estate because of our failure to collect the
LVT, which would have otherwise financially obliged the owners to put
the land to its full potential or to have passed on the land titles to
those who would do so.
HOW TO ENCOURAGE SLUMS
But examples abound of needless urban decay - poorly maintained
housing, fields in urban areas with nothing on them except thistles,
outdated infrastructure, old and unused warehouses with rusted roofs and
broken windows etc. Once again, we lack LVT to get things (and
unemployed people) moving. And at present, even if you do put land to
use, you're going to be hit with taxes if you make an income or profit,
even though you're employing people and are of benefit to society by
offering your goods and services. What we
should be doing is taxing bads, not goods. Bads here is the
array of wasted resources that leads to decay, and goods are the honest
endeavours of people working in a free and a fair market. Or put it this
way: tax waste, not work. Or pay for what you take, not what you make.
Some may object that we do have some sort of state land tax as
well as the property taxes of local governments!" However, "property"
is a woolly word which, in our current understanding, can mean land
and/or capital - two very different things. Where property taxes are
actually LVT (often termed site value rating at local government level)
they are equitable and beneficial, but the problem is they are minuscule
and misapplied in a number of ways. But where property taxes are (more
commonly) a tax on land and improvements (such as buildings),
the effect is entirely different. When the owner does, for example,
build a house or renovate a derelict building, up will go his/her
property taxes!
What society needs is a tax system which encourages land to be put to
its optimum use, and for productive labour to be free of punitive
taxation. Instead we have a system in which it is profitable for
landowners to sit and wait for their land value to appreciate, while
honest enterprise is treated as a cash cow by our tax system.
MONEY MOTIVATES!
Our conditioning has somehow led us to accept this economic and social
madness. We might travel to work and glance at an empty block of land
worth millions of dollars, yet not think twice about it. Once we arrive
at work, however, our mind-set is - curiously -very different. Hey! -
the new printing press or forklift truck has arrived, worth a hundred
thousand dollars! How long do you think management will let this
valuable piece of machinery lie idle on the factory floor?
The same profit motive that compels someone to tear off the shrink-wrap
at once and get their new equipment working can also be applied to the
occupancy of land. To drive the point home so that your
all-taxes-are-the-same programming is forever deleted, take an everyday
example of a valuable block of land a person might occupy. The land's
value has been built up by the community as a result of the surrounding
amenities, so the occupier is rightly subject to a certain amount of
LVT. Knowing the assessed LVT, the land will put people to work rather
than weeds. Or, if the land is really valuable, it might have a modern,
efficient multi-story building on it rather than an old single-story
building or a car park.
"The burden of taxation
should be so shifted as to put the weight upon the unearned rise in
the value of land itself, rather than upon the improvements."
- Theodore Roosevelt, (1858 - 1919), US president 1901 - 1909
LAND IS NOT CAPITAL!
"Invest in land - they
ain't makin' any more." - Will Rogers, (1879 - 1935),
American humorist-philosopher
This is the place to further examine the three economic factors of
production. An understanding of these economic concepts will not only
give a grounding in economic theory but will enable you to realise how
completely the so-called science of economics has been hijacked and
corrupted by neoclassical economics.
1. LAND We are putting aside, for the moment, the philosophical
thoughts about owning land to instead look at how land behaves in purely
economic terms. For economic purposes, land has a wider meaning than
that which is usually assigned to it by lay persons. It can be defined
as the available natural resources and forces of nature. Hence
land here includes flora & fauna, rivers & oceans, air, the
electromagnetic spectra and mineral wealth. But "ordinary"
land - loosely regarded as the surface of the earth - has distinctive
features, particularly urban land with its locational value (as opposed
to rural land with a largely agricultural value).
2. LABOUR
3. CAPITAL This can be a confusing term. Capital is defined as
the product of the application of labour to land, or else can be simply
understood to be stored-up wealth or, in a sense, stored-up labour.
Capital equipment refers to the physical articles of material wealth
which have been produced, not to be immediately consumed, but to be used
to physically aid in the production of more material wealth. This
excludes pseudo-wealth: those things described as agreements or
contractual securities and obligations.
THE NEOCLASSICAL DISAPPEARING TRICK
These 3 factors of production are commonly cited in chapter 1 of
mainstream economic texts, although their definition of land is often
vague. And then - hey, presto! - in chapter 2, land has somehow
disappeared off the radar screen, and we have slipped into labour and
capital as being the only factors of production. The merging of land
into capital is the characteristic sleight of hand of neoclassical
economics. We'll return to this folly later in our critique of
capitalism and socialism.
There are
three major differences between land and capital. Again, we're
not talking about ethics, but about concrete, measurable economic
features. If you ever want a litmus test to determine whether an
economist really knows what he's talking about, just ask him, "What
are the differences in the economic behaviour of land and capital?"
If he seems to be bamboozling you with esoteric jargon, then you can
take it that the guy's a fake, for the differences are clear and quite
distinct, as you will here see.
AS SIMPLE AS 1 - 2 - 3!
1.
Land is limited in supply. Capital is not. Reread Will Rogers'
quote above - they ain't making land any more. Very important in
economic terms, and there are few examples of other things that are
limited in supply. Great works of art by dead painters is one
illustration and, just as art collectors may bid up the price for a
Monet or a van Gogh to ridiculous extremes, so too may land prices
skyrocket. Why did central Tokyo land in the late 1980's hit US$4
billion per acre? Because those requiring it couldn't make their own.
Such behaviour can never occur with capital, because capital can be
created.
This unbreakable bargaining power of land-holders within our current
economic system is one reason why Geonomists frequently attach the word
"monopolist" to land-holders. To be pedantic but also strictly
correct, we have said that land is "limited" rather than "fixed"
in supply because of the effect of the possibility of land reclamation
and multi-story buildings (not that those possibilities gave much relief
in central Tokyo or elsewhere).
2. There will always be an irreplaceable human demand for land
..
while the Law of Gravity exists, anyway. You're going to need at least
enough land on which to stand, and a bit more if you can't sleep on your
feet. Capital is different because if the seller of capital asks too
high a price from me, then I'll settle for a different supplier, or a
substitute or - failing these options - simply do without. But I can't
do without land (until the dawn of The Age of the Jetsons). I think I
can handle living without an original Monet or van Gogh in my lounge
room.
Combine the limited supply of land with a never-ending human demand,
and the monopolistic screws are turned tighter. Furthermore, take into
account that the limited supply of land is being demanded by an
ever-increasing number of planetary inhabitants, and you'll grasp why
ordinary folk are being squeezed into devoting more and more working
years to saving for their increasingly-expensive block of land. In fact,
you now know more about the factors of production - the very basics
of economics - than many of our esteemed professors of neoclassical
economics!
3. The value of land is built up by the community whereas the value
of capital is created by its makers. Land generally appreciates over
time whereas capital nearly always depreciates over its useful economic
life.
The type of land we are examining here is the all-important (because so
expensive and necessary) urban land, and the value that is appreciating
is its locational (not agricultural) value. We say that the value of
land is not generally due to any effort of the owner for two
main reasons - population and infrastructure. The growing population
will make the limited supply of land relatively more scarce and will bid
up its price. Also, a growing population accessible to your site is
generally desirable - more skills and services available, companionship,
economies of scale etc. Infrastructure, by its very nature, provides all
sorts of land-value-enhancing amenities, such as roads, schools, power,
water, hospitals, libraries etc. To return to our point, in no way is
the value of capital enhanced by others. That of land is.
THE MONOPOLISTIC HAND AROUND THE THROAT
Let's examine further why we insist these distinctions between land and
capital are so important. Now the price of monopolised things is
unrelated to their costs of production - that of land dramatically so,
for land is not produced and its cost of production is zero. Rather, the
price extorted depends on what the buyer can afford to pay over and
above the wherewithal to survive- hence, the origin of the term "rack-renting".
Non-corrupt governments everywhere intervene to prevent monopolistic
practices, but why not do so with land, which is an essential need for
all?
We've heard the philosophical justification for sharing the Earth
equitably through LVT, but now you know the basic economic reasons. LVT
takes the annually-assessed rental value of land, created by the
community, and returns it to the community, thereby preventing
extortionate monopolistic price-gouging. And remember: collecting the
LVT enables us to slash and ultimately eliminate all taxes on labour and
capital.
"It is quite true that land
monopoly is not the only monopoly which exists, but it is by far the
greatest of monopolies - it is a perpetual monopoly, and it is the
mother of all other forms of monopoly." - Winston
Churchill, (1874 - 1965)
WEALTH -- AND ITS MISAPPRIATION
"Whenever, in any country,
the proprietor ceases to be the improver, political economy has
nothing to say in defense of landed property. When the "sacredness"
of property is talked of, it should be remembered that any such
sacredness does not belong in the same degree to landed property."
- John Locke, (1632 - 1704), English philosopher
We've just seen how returns from land are, by nature, monopolistic and,
by rights, should be returned to the community. But how do we calculate
this amount?
WHO GETS THE COCONUTS?
It's perhaps best illustrated by the Robinson Crusoe scenario, where he
finds himself alone on a desert island. Rob naturally settles on the
best available land which, for argument's sake, can produce 20 coconuts
per acre per month. Along comes Man Friday, who gets the second-best
land producing 18 coconuts per acre. This best, freely-available land of
Friday is called the
marginal land and, as we'll see, determines both the level of
wages and that of rent.
For how much could Rob rent out his land - 2 coconuts or 20 coconuts
per acre? Friday would only be prepared to pay 2, because he can already
get 18 from his. So here's our first definition, that of the Law of
Rent: The application of labour and capital equipment being equal,
the rent of land is determined by the difference between the value of
its produce and that of the least productive land in use. So if Man
Saturday comes along (the next day?!) and finds that the best available
land can only produce 15 coconuts per acre, Rob could rent his land out
to Saturday for 5 coconuts per acre, and Friday for 2.
What then determines the level of wages? When Friday came along and
could work land yielding 18 coconuts per acre in a month, then he
wouldn't accept wages offered by Rob for less than 18 coconuts. But when
Saturday arrived, suddenly Friday could only command 15 per month,
because Rob knows that the going rate (that applicable to Saturday at
the margin) is only 15. So here we have the Law of Wages, which is the
corollary of the law of rent: Wages are the reward that labour can
obtain on marginal land, i.e. the most productive land available to it
without paying rent.
Of course it all gets more complicated by technology, trade unions,
immigration, the existence of a pool of unemployed, personal
preferences, levels of education etc., but these strong underlying laws
always hold. But let's now tie up the factors of production. Rent is the
return to land, wages are the return to labour, and interest is the
return to capital. The law of interest can be stated thus: Interest
is the return that the use of capital equipment can obtain on marginal
land, i.e. the most productive land available to it without paying rent.
PROGRESS AND POVERTY, SIDE BY SIDE
So here's the alarming paradox of progress marching side by side with
poverty. Those who have grabbed the best land get richer and richer
(from increasing rent) while the tenants and wage-earners get poorer and
poorer for having to accept lower and lower wages as the margin is
pushed out to less productive land). Henry George, in his classic
Progress and Poverty drove home this point, but took about 600
pages to deal with all the complications and fine details not examined
here. It's no wonder that the unmasking of this great paradox - the
title of his book - hit the 19th century world like a great revelation.
And it's no wonder that vested interests, through the neoclassical
economics that they fostered, knew they had to shut him up. And, by
successfully silencing him, it's no wonder that, despite all efforts,
increasing and ever more alarming disparities of wealth are the norm
world-wide.
But, anyway, how many coconut-basketsful of LVT should we collect?
Chuck away all those calculators, guys, for the answer is simple: Collect
the rent, the whole rent, and nothing but the rent. Assuming that
everyone has to do the same amount of work to produce their differing
yields of coconuts, when Friday came along then we'd collect 2 coconuts
per acre from Rob. This would leave 18 coconuts in each of their hands,
and 2 coconuts of rent or LVT collected. When Saturday arrived we'd
collect 5 from Rob and 3 from Friday, which would leave 15 coconuts in
everyone's hands and 8 coconuts of rent collected. Result: everybody
effectively shares equally in the bounty of Our One Earth, and we have a
natural, non-punitive form of revenue raising with which to fund
infrastructure.
We've already seen how speculators can presently hold on to idle
parcels of land, waiting for unearned increases in their value to accrue
to them. But here's another curse of land speculation: by locking up
productive land, it forces newcomers out to less productive land. By "pushing
back the margin", the evil of speculation simultaneously raises
rents and lowers wages. LVT makes it impossible for speculators to enjoy
unearned income.
NOT JUST COCONUTS
Let's broaden our understanding of rent by looking at some current
real-world examples. To tackle traffic congestion, governments often
limit the number of taxis by issuing licences. Because transmission
bandwidths are limited (and sometimes because of political influence), a
limited number of TV operating licences is issued. To prevent
overfishing, fishing licences are issued. History shows us that, because
of relative scarcity or changing circumstances, such licences often
become enormously valuable and are resold in the open market for huge
sums. This excess is what is meant by economic rent, and plutocrats,
big-time speculators and businesspeople dealing with such licences or
privileges are called rent-seekers.
We can now see that the term "economic rent" encompasses a
wide range of resources, and can be defined as
the excess over a competitive rate of return attributable to owning
an asset or resource whose supply is limited, at least in the short run.
Note the underlined words, for they indicate sort of some monopoly
privilege, as we have seen.
TOTALLY SELLING OUT
The problems above have exact parallels with the land problem. The
monopolistic privileges have often been sold off once and for all to the
highest cash bidder (or perhaps given away or even stolen) instead of
being auctioned and then regularly (annually?) assessed to determine the
economic rent that belongs to the community.
A limited resource is usually a gift of Nature. The windfall profits
arising from the granting of timber and mining rights are other
instances of uncollected economic rent. Otherwise, economic rent mainly
arises as the result of monopolies, duopolies, oligopolies and cartels.
The solution is either to regularly assess and collect the economic
rent, or to prevent natural monopolies (such as "public"
utilities) from falling into private hands in the first place.
"The tax on land values is
the
taking by the community, for the use of the community, of that value
which is the creation of the community" - Henry
George, (1839 -1897)
TAX -- A CREATOR AND A DESTROYER
"A citizen can hardly
distinguish between a tax and a fine, except that a fine is generally
lighter." - G.K. Chesterton, (1874 - 1936), English
critic, novelist and poet
Human nature is a most curious thing. Australians are taxed in various
ways for around half their average total earnings, yet few ever
seriously study the nature of these taxes and their different effects.
Perhaps they can be forgiven because of the way we tend to use one word,
tax, for a wide range of clearly different things. (If I was a
conspiracy theorist, I'd accuse neoclassical economics of deliberately
confounding the language.) A tax may be:
-
· a simple revenue-raising device · a user
fee · a fine or deterrent (perhaps with an element of
political or social ideology) · a means of redistributing
wealth (a transfer payment) · a resource rental · or
often a mix of the above.
And, just as the nature of taxes varies greatly, so too do their
effects. We've already seen some of the impacts of taxes, but here we're
going to expand our knowledge to drive home a point and counter the
effect of a lifetime of steady conditioning.
There's a simple rule of thumb which will guide us here - taxes on land
(in its wider sense of natural resources) are desirable and do not
inhibit wages or production, and taxes on labour and capital punish
both. Remember this catchy little slogan? - pay for what you take,
not what you make.
WHERE'S ROBIN HOOD WHEN YOU NEED HIM?
The history of taxation reveals that taxation has increasingly been
diverted from land to capital to today's mixture of capital and labour.
Fascinating studies have shown that the prosperity of the average
English labourer with a family of five actually peaked around 1495. This
was the age of "Merrie England" when taxes were almost
entirely on land, and land prices were low. But then the infamous
enclosures of the commons accelerated, with land taxes increasingly
being replaced by taxes on capital and labour. In 1495, the wages of the
average English labourer were around 2.9 times the cost of living, but
this relatively affluent state was rapidly turned around as taxes were
shifted off land. By the mid 1600's wages were almost down to the
breadline as common land had been almost entirely enclosed by the Crown
and the "nobility".
Other examples of the destructive power of taxation abound. In the
Middle Ages, merchants and the emerging middle class were slugged.
Duties were levied on traded goods everywhere, stifling trade and
enterprise and giving rise to the inefficiencies of smuggling and
organised crime. Wealth taxes in France were based on the number of
windows in a person's house, resulting in houses being boarded up. The
same taxes were imposed in the Arab world on the number of palm trees
that a person owned - you can guess the result.
A MEDIEVAL MENTALITY
Before we modern, educated citizens start chuckling too loudly at our
forebears, we should look at our own tax system. What does the GST do to
sales (and, by implication, production and employment)? How is a
person's motivation to work affected by income taxes? What effect do
payroll taxes have on the number of people on the payroll?
But the right taxes can have constructive results. The reason why some
Geonomists advocate taxes on social undesirables such as tobacco and
alcohol is because they are not really arbitrary taxes, but an attempt
make people who choose to abuse their health pay for their future health
costs.
TAXES AIN'T JUST TAXES!
Green taxes have long been supported by Geonomists. Full resource
rentals imposed on such things as timber extraction or commercial
fishing prevent undervaluation, wastage and overexploitation. "Polluter
pays" pricing policies preserve the planet from plunderers (sorry).
In fact, the whole range of carbon taxes are forms of LVT in the sense
of being charges for use and abuse of air, water and other natural
resources.
The electromagnetic spectrum also falls within the wide definition of
land. To sell it off for good to the highest cash bidder is to set up an
exploitative and economically inefficient monopoly. The spectrum belongs
to the people who increase its value as much as they increase that of
land. Government should act as its custodian, auctioning off for rent
the various segments of the bandwidth. To prevent changing economic
circumstances or technological developments from dropping big chunks of
economic rent into the laps of bandwidth lessees, rents should be
regularly and appropriately reviewed and raised. That Kerry Packer's
broadcasting licences have appreciated by well over a billion dollars
shows the foolishness of failing to distinguish, for tax purposes,
between land and capital. And perhaps shows the political influence of a
powerful rent-seeker.
"
. the 15th century
and the first quarter of the 16th were the golden age of the English
labourer, if we are to interpret the wages which he earned by the cost
of the necessities of life. At no time were wages
so high, and
at no time was food so cheap. Attempts were constantly made to reduce
these wages by Acts of Parliament
. But these efforts were
futile
." - Professor Thorold Rogers, in "Six
Centuries of Work and Wages"
PRIVACY! LIBERTY!
"It is not enough that men
should vote; it is not enough that they should be theoretically equal
before the law. They must have liberty to avail themselves of the
opportunities and means of life; they must stand on equal terms with
reference to the bounty of nature." - Henry George,
(1839 -1897)
We all-too-meekly accept being legally robbed of the fruits of labour
and capital, because we have been stooged into believing that there is
no other way to pay for responsible government expenditure. Having
established that beachhead, our governments then steadily make further
inroads into earned income as well as into other human rights. After
having been dispossessed of our share of the Global Commons, it would
seem pretty inconsequential to complain about taxation eroding privacy,
but it's worth looking into.
WADING THROUGH THE MIRE
But just how trifling is the fact that a mass of laws, too many and
complex for anyone to fully get a handle on, forces us to account for
much of our "personal" activities? Our private lives are open
to scrutiny following all sorts of disclosure. "But we have to pay
our taxes," Peabody bleats as he obediently discloses every detail
the tax system demands of his earnings, assets and investments. "We
don't need to understand all this tax legislation," the dutiful
drone on, "as we can simply employ accountants and sometimes tax
lawyers to do it for us." "It's part of our duty as
responsible citizens," Elroy explains as he files away his complete
audit trails of financial transactions & statements required for tax
purposes.
And we have to obey the law, don't we? The Tax Commissioner has powers
of investigation in some circumstances greater than the police - in fact
he is the law, with masses of legislation to support him and his
sleuths. But as he's unlikely to kick in our bedroom door in the middle
of the night, his other low-key invasions of privacy don't get much of a
mention in the media.
And now GST dumps on us the onus and cost of
collecting it. And the massive compliance costs of Business
Activity Statements alone now display all-too-clearly the time and
resources spent by taxpayers that would otherwise go into production.
BIG BENEFACTOR, NOT BIG BROTHER
While humans are being closely monitored, natural resources are not -
the inverse of Geonomics. Only recently have we been getting some laws
prohibiting or restricting certain types of pollution, but land and
other natural resources are still being treated as mere commodities
liable to being owned outright and treated as truly
private private property. But natural resources don't behave as
ordinary commodities, because many of them are scarce and some are
necessary for human existence. At least we can be thankful that sunlight
is abundant and renewable, for if it could be limited then
someone would try to bottle it up and make a fortune on it.
Geonomics does not intrude into people's lives. Unlike the current
assessors of misguided property tax, LVT assessors would never need to
inspect and assess buildings and improvements, and rarely if ever would
they need to set foot on the land itself, hence assuring complete
privacy for most people. But Geonomics would monitor the direct usage of
natural resources in order to determine the full and fair LVT and
resource rentals. Usage of this sort obviously should not be kept
private.
"We would rather die on our
feet than live on our knees." - Franklin D. Roosevelt,
(1882 - 1945)
THE FOLLY OF MOST THIRD WORLD AID
"Philanthropy is
commendable, but it must not cause the philanthropist to overlook the
circumstances of economic injustice which make philanthropy necessary."
- Martin Luther King, (1929 - 1968), civil rights leader and Nobel
Peace Prize laureate
When you're confronted by those images of mournful young eyes which
gaze pleadingly at you from an emaciated body, it's pretty hard to
resist reaching for your wallet. Well, I hope that's made you sleep a
lot more contently at night, but I'm afraid the grinding poverty of much
of the Third World will grind on just the same.
THE GREAT PLANETARY CURSE
'Twas ever thus, within an economic system that, deliberately or not,
supports the mother of all monopolies - land monopoly. Landlords get
rich in their sleep because of what happens around, not on their land.
The vice-like grip of land privileges crosses all national and cultural
boundaries, and this writer has spent years tramping around places like
Iran, Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Bolivia, Yemen and Uganda, and had this
bitter fact confirmed everywhere.
Here is the type of thing I saw again and again. Landless peasants are
living on the breadline, working for their relatively wealthy landlords.
Some philanthropic organisation funds the building of a well, so that
the women don't have to spend so many hours each day tramping to fetch
it. Guess what happens to their rents when the well is completed? With
amazing certainty, rents rise in proportion to the benefits of access to
that well. It's the same deal with the provision of roads, schools,
clinics, irrigation schemes, bridges etc. Net result: the living
standards of the landless change little, but that of the landlords are
considerably enriched. Someone wasn't kidding when he said,
"Third World aid is the giving by the poor people of rich
countries to the rich people of poor countries."
THE FEEL-GOOD FACTOR
Of course, this is not to deny outright the goodwill and even the
occasional good result of aid programs. Indisputably, emergency aid that
puts food into starving hands will always be a blessing. Also, where
there is a high percentage of land ownership, benefits obviously accrue
to more people. But to which people? Some will undoubtedly benefit more
than others, and some won't benefit at all. Furthermore, when you factor
in the political corruption of many Third World governments, the
benefits are more unevenly distributed.
THE ROOT, NOT THE FLOWER
Again, land monopoly and all its privileges would be destroyed by LVT.
Whereas landlords had been able to sit back and leave much of their land
to be idle or inefficiently used, LVT would force them either to put it
to its optimum use or to effectively stand aside to allow others to do
so. The boot would then be on the other foot, as vast amounts of land
will be thrown onto the market and labourers would be offered a fair
wage.
Nor would any landowner - small or large - benefit, in net terms, more
than another when a domestic or foreign government finances local
development . Land rendered more productive or desirable would pay
proportionally more LVT. And, of course, that LVT would not end up in
any private pocket but would be the natural source of that society's
revenue, benefiting one and all. We'll take this up a theoretical notch
in the very next module "Land Reform - Real and Illusory".
"There are a thousand
hacking at the branches of evil, to one who is striking at the root."
- Henry David Thoreau (1817 - 1862), American essayist and poet
LAND REFORM -- REAL AND ILLUSORY
"The teaching of Henry
George will be the basis of our program of reform
The (land tax)
as the only means of supporting the government is an infinitely just,
reasonable and equitably distributed tax, and on it we will found our
new system. The centuries of heavy and irregular taxation for the
benefit of the Manchus have shown China the injustice of any other
system of taxation." - Dr. Sun Yat Sen (1866 - 1925),
democrat, reformer and acknowledged "father of the Chinese
republic"
In the last module we've just seen how LVT would place the benefits of
aid and development fairly and squarely in the hands of the people, not
just the landowners. "But, hang on!" comes the objection, "There
are other types of land reform besides LVT." This, as the module
title suggests, is our subject - how other types of land reform have
never delivered and never will.
VIVA LA REVOLUCIÓN!
Certainly there have been endless attempts at land reform. "Viva
la revolución!" has been the cry all through Latin America,
for instance, but the lot of the average peasant has changed little,
even with the best will in the world behind land reform.
Here's the problem. So-called land reform has always been seen as land
redistribution, based on the
same form of outright land ownership. But there are
three cogent reasons why land redistribution, as remarked above, does
not work and never will.
Firstly, to redistribute land means to divide it up. But land is so
vastly different as to make this task utterly impractical, what with
wilderness, marginal agricultural land, good agricultural land, outer
suburban land and prime real estate in the heart of the cities. Where's
Solomon to wisely divide it all up, with the added problem of buildings
and improvements that some people have built and others haven't? Would A
have to get 100 square kilometres of desert to match B's parcel of two
square metres opposite the GPO?
Secondly, even if the different values were measured at a given
moment, they would immediately begin to change, and would continue to do
so. Even if everyone might start with a parcel of land equal in value to
everyone else's, those values would at once begin to shift. In the first
year a dam is built here, a school is closed down there, and roads are
built everywhere. Appreciation and depreciation would continue year
after year, and in no time everyone's "equal" parcels would
have ceased to be such. A great way to operate a casino, but what sort
of way to run a society?
Thirdly, even if you could wave a magic wand and somehow take into
account the different and ever-changing values of land, what about new
entrants like the newborn of the next and future generations? And what
do immigrants get?
Besides the Big Three reasons above, there are two minor ones worth
mentioning.
- After the land "reform," would selling, speculating and
profiteering go on as before, or would all have to stick to their
allocated plots for the rest of their lives?
- It would require a really squeaky-clean government for the "casino"
of changing land values not to turn into a den of political
influence and corruption. Most likely, development would be skewed
towards the land of the politically empowered. Or maybe the
kleptocracy would get the tip-off to buy land where development is
going to take place.
REAL REFORM, NOT REVOLUTION
None of the problems above would exist with LVT, the implementation of
which would be far less revolutionary than that of historical land
reforms. We need land reform here in
Australia, of course - but in the Third World where poverty is
so great, matters are urgent. What good has foreign aid done over all
these years, when you look at the disparities of wealth in recipient
countries? Why do governments even today (as in Zimbabwe) still go down
the path of land reform whereby land is doled out to a handful of
government supporters?
We all know the proverb: Give a man a fish and he'll be fed for a
day, but teach a man to fish and he'll feed himself for a lifetime.
One would assume that Western governments, the World Bank and the IMF
also knew it, but they continue to hand out fish instead.
"The mere abolition of rent
would not remove injustice, since it would confer a capricious
advantage upon the occupiers of the best sites and the most fertile
land. It is necessary that there should be rent, but it should be paid
to the estate or to some body which performs public services; or, if
the total rental were more than is required for such purposes, it
might be paid into a common fund and divided equally among the
population." - Bertrand Russell (1872 - 1970), Welsh
philosopher, mathematician and author
CAPITALISM AND SOCIALISM
"Under capitalism man
exploits man, under socialism the reverse is true." -
Polish proverb
There are defenders of capitalism who attack Geonomics (Georgist
economics) for being socialist. Similarly, socialists and communists
criticise Geonomics for being capitalist - in fact, Marx called Henry
George "capitalism's last ditch". Who is right?
"Capitalism" is a woolly word, meaning different things to
different people. Geonomists wouldn't criticise capitalism per se, but
rather decry "land monopoly capitalism".
WHEN TOO MUCH IS BARELY ENOUGH
Whatever is wrong with the acquisition of capital? Who would not want
to afford a roof over one's head, adequate food and clothing, some means
of transportation, a decent education, and to go travelling and see the
world? I've put this question innumerable times to self-declared
opponents of capitalism - many of them very well read - and have never
received any sort of adequate rebuttal. The response is usually along
the lines of:
"Well, some capital like that is OK, but nobody should have too
much capital". In the final analysis, "too much"
capital means any amount more than the speaker's!
The flaw here, as we see it, is that socialists do not make the vital
distinction between earned and unearned wealth when they attack the
owners of capital. Was this accumulated capital honestly earned in a
free and a fair market? Was there no monopolistic privilege? Was there
the creation of real wealth or was there merely the gaining of
speculative profits?
NO WEALTH-ENVY FROM US!
As we see it, if someone is a rich "capitalist" who has
accumulated a fortune, say, by being a great inventor, author,
sportsperson or a plain hard worker who lives frugally, then "God
bless him!" If they then want to live in a big house and drive a
big car, then "Good luck to 'em!" They've provided services
that actually benefit society in a truly free and fair market, and
they'd pay their way in the form of LVT. We need more such capitalists!
The other capitalists are a different kettle of fish. Reaping where you
don't sow is not in the Geonomic bible, and the full retention of the
economic rent for the benefit of society would leave absolutely nothing
for the cigar-chomping, would-be robber barons. But let's not forget the
subtle forms of speculation and unearned wealth as practiced even by
well-meaning citizens by speculating in one form or another.
Unfortunately, the "quick bucks" culture is not promoted only
in investment circles. Even the nightly news promotes, and even
glorifies, speculative profits without ever questioning where the wealth
comes from.
SORRY, BUT IT'S A DUD
Socialism may well be inspired by noble ideals, but in terms of
economic policy it has been an unmitigated failure. Not that it is
necessarily undemocratic, but a command economy requires a large
bureaucracy with its attendant inefficiencies and corrupting
centralisation of power. Rent-seeking speculators have little chance to
do their stuff, true, but neither do ordinary people. There is no
economic incentive to work harder or better and, in any case, the
markets that might quickly adopt new products and processes don't exist.
Another blunder of socialism (and especially communism) is the failure
to examine the source of property - the dictate that all property should
be socialised fails to differentiate between what is earned and what is
unearned. Again, Geonomics says that any confiscation of privately
created wealth, whether by taxation or by private monopoly, is plain
theft.
NO ROYALISTS, ARE WE!
In general, Geonomists support a
free and fair market with governments mainly stepping in
to prevent unacceptable environmental damage (which eco-taxes would
largely prevent) and unfair trading practices (particularly the
formation of monopolies and cartels). In this sense we could be called
libertarians of a sort, but often apply the distinguishing (and
pejorative!) label of royalist to conventional libertarians who
effectively condone the privileges of land monopoly capitalism.
It should be pretty clear by now that Geonomics doesn't fit on the
conventional left-right spectrum. It's the Third Way - and the only
sustainable one at that.
"George's blend of
radicalism and conservatism can puzzle one, until it is seen as a
reconciliation of the two. The system is internally consistent, but
defies conventional stereotypes." - Professor Mason
Gaffney, US academic (New Palgrave Dictionary of Economic Thought)
HENRY GEORGE AND SOCIAL JUSTICE
"Solving the land question
means the solving of all social questions
Possession of land by
people who do not use it is immoral - just like the possession of
slaves." - Leo Tolstoy, (1828 - 1910)
It was the power of the passion of George which led many of his
supporters to believe he was somehow inspired and, in fact, George
himself related an amazing inner experience he had when finishing his
classic Progress and Poverty.
THE RELIGION OF SOCIAL JUSTICE
But you don't have to be at all religious to catch on to Geonomics, and
we should stress that there's certainly no dogma in it, religious or
economic. But, while we all inevitably delve into economic theory at one
stage or another, what really puts fire into our bellies and keeps us
going in the face of so many obstacles is the whole issue of social
justice. It was this concern that fueled George's passionate mission
more than anything else, and it rubs off on many of those who understand
the fundamental economic principles he elucidated.
If you've read this far, you don't need to be told of the increasing
disparities of wealth on this planet, both in developing and so-called
developed nations. It's not the reality of social injustice that
motivates most Georgists, but rather the conviction that it's all so
unnecessary! Here's a very brief recap on why:
- Speculators can sit on large parcels of land and wait for the
community to build up its value. Land Value Taxation (LVT) would
prevent speculation, induce the land to be put to its best possible
use, and instead divert the increased land value to the community
coffers. Valuable natural resources, which often fall into private
hands, would again become part of the common wealth.
- Current taxation is largely legalised robbery. But the rich, who
often made their fortunes by misappropriating what should be the
community's economic rent, have the means to set up tax shelters.
LVT, in sharp contrast, is impossible to evade.
- At the moment, whoever is lucky (or powerful) enough to own land
earns greater and greater rent while the base earnings are forced
down as population growth pushes the point of marginal land out
further and further.
- Our tax system rewards sloth and speculation while punishing
industry, thrift, savings and honesty. Many public works,
infrastructure and beautification projects are presently
unaffordable because their value ends up in landowners' pockets
rather than being recycled back to the community through LVT.
- Land monopoly is the "mother of all monopolies". Those
without land still need it, and have to work on the terms of those
who have laid their hands on it first.
- Involuntary unemployment is totally unnecessary. There are so
many productive things that need to be done by those who presently
are prevented from doing them. Additionally, many wage earners have
their bargaining power and earning potential reduced by the threat
of unemployment.
- In the late 19th and early 20th century, a number of the most
influential American plutocrats applied their considerable resources
to stifle the work (and especially the ideas) of Henry George, and
bankrolled the installation of neoclassical economics. In academic
and professional circles today there's nothing much conspiratorial -
only ignorance and an unwillingness to admit that their "dismal
science" has consistently failed to deliver any viable
alternative. George's economic analysis has never been seriously or
scientifically challenged, let alone undermined - and still holds as
true today as it did one hundred years ago.
- The principles of our social justice proposals are radical and
yet elegant: You don't get taxed on what you earn. What you rightly
owe to society is based on what society does for you - in other
words, on the physical and social infrastructure available to you.
Nothing more, nothing less.
- In the Third World, where land ownership is often concentrated in
the hands of a few families, things are worse. Vast tracts of land
remain unused because, without the pressure of LVT forcing site
holders to turn their sites to productive use in order to cover the
cost of the LVT, the landowning families can afford to wait until
the desperately poor work on the terms dictated to them.
- We'll have our birthrights restored! Geonomics effectively makes
us co-owners of all the Global Commons. And land will be effectively
free of a purchase price, as land price currently is the "capitalisation"
of annual land values into private pockets. The great burden facing
all entrants to this planet - having to save huge amounts to pay for
what should be our inheritance - will no longer exist!
As the reader may have concluded, it is not possible to stick
purely to social justice issues, keeping the economics out of it. The
two issues are inextricably linked, so that understanding the solution
to social injustice necessarily entails some more-than-basic knowledge
of economics.
THE REAL THING'S A TURN-ON!
But economics, to many people, seems so dry, money-minded and
mathematical as to be a real turn-off. Yet these same people will often
rail against injustice. Maybe it's because the problem is obvious but
the solution is hard to figure out. It is the same with a number of
environmental activists - they won't hesitate to stand in front of a
bulldozer, but much less often will they attempt to understand the
underlying economics that has led to the pillaging of the Global Commons
in the first place.
It's rather analogous to the tale of the guy who, blind drunk at night,
is looking for his keys under a lamp post. A passer-by asks, "Are
you sure you lost them here?" The drunk slurs a reply, "No - I
lost them in the alley over the road, but there's no light there."
The drunk is the environmental activist (or an ordinary citizen angered
by injustice), his keys are the solution, the area under the street
light is the easy-but-ineffectual answer (like hugging a tree or raising
taxes on the rich), but the keys really lie in the difficult area of
economics.
"Our primary social
adjustment is a denial of justice. In allowing one man to own the land
on which and from which other men must live, we have made his bondsmen
in a degree which increases as material progress goes son. It is this
that turns the blessings of material progress into a curse."
- Henry George, (1839 -1897)
TAKING IT FROM HERE ...
"The fields and the whole
soil
should be public property, that is the property of him who
holds the right of the commonwealth: and let him let them at a yearly
rent to the citizens, whether townsmen or countrymen, and with this
exception let them all be free or exempt from every kind of taxation
in time of peace." - Baruch Spinoza, (1632 - 1677),
Dutch philosopher
Economics can, after all, be free of jargon and technicalities. The
latter often cover up (or display) the ignorance of those who use such
stuff, from fools and frauds to conventional economists. Even in the
Advanced Kit, where we deal with more technical areas, we will continue
to use clear, plain English. The contents of this kit are:
- History: the Rise and Fall of Feudalism
- History: the New Slavery
- History: Henry George and the Land Value Tax
- War - Who's the Real Villain!
- Tax Evasion
- Why LVT Cannot Be Passed on to the Tenant
- When the Law is Actually Respected
- Banking and Interest · Banks and the Money Supply
- Currency Speculation and the Tobin Tax
- Boom & Bust Cycles
- Who Will Own the Land?
- Indigenous Land Rights
- Lies, Damned Lies and
.
- Local and Global Geonomics
- Free Trade or Protection?
- Unemployment - the Pieces of the Puzzle
We are not only more than happy to help you with your
understanding, but also we are not after your money! We can afford to
give the kit to those genuinely interested in a far better world, but
we're desperate for grass roots support, though - the need is great, but
apathy seems to rule and our numbers are still few. If you have any
questions about which you'd like to talk, here are some who have offered
to discuss things with you:
Melbourne:
* Karl Williams: (03) 9754 8356 or karlwilliams99@hotmail.com
* Bryan Kavanagh: (03) 9803 5607 or bryank@earthsharing.org.au
* Maurie Fabrikant: (03) 9512 4869 or fabmel@optusnet.com.au
Sydney:
* Neil Gilchrist: (02) 9630 8239 or neil@RADical.com.au
* Richard Giles: (02) 9744 8815
Brisbane:
* Phil Day: (07) 3870 3562
* David Spain: (07) 5574 0755 or davids@fan.net.au
Adelaide:
* Tony O'Brien: (08) 8297 5539 or aob@senet.com.au
Perth:
* John Massam: (08) 9343 9532 or john.massam@multiline.com.au
* Richard Hart: (09) 367 5386
Hobart:
* Leo Foley: (03) 6228 6486 or foleyl@tafe.tas.edu.au
If you are keen to journey on, here are some further steps. If you
haven't already done so, you can order complimentary copies of the next
3 issues of our bimonthly magazine Progress. Contact our office
at 27 Hardware St., Melbourne [(03) 9670 2754], or
[prosper@vicnet.net.au]. Also, you're always welcome at our premises.
They sport a range of comfy facilities less than a block from the GPO -
hours are Monday to Friday from 10.00 a.m. to mid-afternoon (it's best
to first ring the office to ensure it will be open).
For those with Internet access, we recommend a bit of surfing around
the two websites set up by Melbourne Geonomists:
* The EarthSharing site at www.earthsharing.org.au
* The tax reform site at www.taxreform.com.au
From here, links exist to a multitude of other Australian and overseas
sites.
Don't forget that you can be listed to be notified of the next round of
our classes "Understanding Economics and Human Rights".
For those would rather get their teeth into a book at this stage, we
recommend:
- Elementary Economics by George Charles, a veteran
Melbourne Geonomist. He wrote this 90-page overview for his classes
at the University of the Third Age.
- Social Problems by Henry George. A wonderfully readable
book, more philosophical than economic.
- The Corruption of Economics by Prof. Mason Gaffney of
California and Fred Harrison of England. It's a powerful exposé
of how neoclassical economics was installed to get Georgist
economics out of the public eye. It's my personal tip - once you
read it, you will never be the same. 260 pages
"Henry George is one of the
great names among the world's social philosophers. It would require
less than the fingers of the two hands to enumerate those who, from
Plato down, rank with him.... No man, no graduate of a higher
educational institution, has a right to regard himself as educated in
social thought unless he has some firsthand acquaintance with the
theoretical contribution of this great American thinker."
- John Dewey (1859 - 1952), American philosopher and educator
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