Encyclopedia, Difference between revisions of "Henry George" - New World

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[[Image:Henry george.jpg|thumb|Henry George|160px|right|Henry George]]
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'''Henry George''' (born September 2, 1839 – died October 29, 1897) was an [[United States|American]] reformist and political economist, famous for his advocacy of the "[[single tax]]" on [[Land (economics)|land]].
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== Life ==
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'''Henry George''' was born in Philadelphia, [[Pennsylvania]], into a lower-middle class family. He left the school in his mid-teens to be able to travel around the world. In April 1855, in the age of fifteen, he visited [[India]] and [[Australia]]. The two countries, especially the life of the people there, left strong impression on George, what will later be visible in the formulation on his theories. 
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After returning home to Philadelphia, he worked some time as an apprentice typesetter, but eventually decided to move and settle in [[California]]. He dreamed of getting rich in [[Placer mining|gold mining]], but his plans did not work out as he wanted. He found a job as a typesetter. In 1861 he married Australian-born Annie Corsina Fox, and the couple had two sons. The family was in debts and lived in poverty. George accepted a job as a [[journalist]] and started to work his way up through the [[newspaper]] industry. He worked as a printer, then a writer for the ''San Francisco Times''. After that he became a reporter for the ''San Francisco Daily Evening Post'', ending up an editor and proprietor. His articles dealt with the treatment of the Chinese immigrants, ownership of the land, and railroad industry.
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With time George was able to build a reputation as a journalist, and soon engaged in local politics. He shifted his loyalty from Lincoln’s [[Republicans]] to [[Democrats]], and involved with social activism. He criticized railroad industry and corruption in government. He ran as a Democratic candidate for the state legislature, but failed and started to work as a state inspector of gas meters.
  
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In 1871 he published a pamphlet, ''Our Land and Land Policy'', in which he presented for the first time his theory of rent as the primary cause of poverty. In 1879 he wrote his masterwork ''Progress and Poverty'', with which he became world-famous.
  
{{not verified}}
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In 1880 George and his family moved to [[New York City]], where he started to write and lecture. He became acquainted with the Irish nationalist community, and was invited to [[Ireland]] and [[United Kingdom|England]] by radical ''Irish World'' to study land problem. He spent there one year, from 1881 to 1882, and formed friendship with figures such as [[Michael Davitt]] and other leaders of the Irish Land League. He met also many English socialists and radicals, like H. M. Hyndman and Helen Taylor. The visit was a total success, and George got a strong support to run for the mayor of the [[New York City]] in 1886. He ended up second, behind [[Abram S. Hewitt]] and ahead of [[Theodore Roosevelt]]. Some speculated that George lost race to a fraud.
  
[[Image:Henry george.jpg|thumb|Henry George|160px|right|Henry George]]
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Next several years George spent in teaching and writing. Among his works fro this period are ''Protection or Free Trade'' (1886); ''A Condition of Labor: An Open Letter to the Pope'' (1891), and ''A Perplexed Philosopher'' (1892). He visited [[United Kingdom|Britain]] again in 1888 and 1889, and [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]] in 1890. He was known as a great lecturer.
  
'''Henry George''' ([[September 2]], [[1839]] – [[October 29]], [[1897]]) was an American political economist and the most influential proponent of the "[[Single Tax]]" on [[Land (economics)|land]]. He is the author of ''[[Progress and Poverty]]'', written in 1879.
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In 1897 he was persuaded to run again for the mayor of the [[New York City]], but suffered [[stroke]] and died just 4 days before the election. An estimated 100,000 people attended his funeral.
  
== Biographical Summary ==  
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==Work==
Born in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]], George went to sea, before the mast, at age 15 in April 1855 on the Hindoo. He returned to Philadelphia after 14 months at sea to become an apprentice typesetter before settling in [[California]].  After a failed attempt at [[Placer mining|gold mining]] he started to work his way up through the [[newspaper]] industry, starting as a printer and ending up an editor and proprietor. Some of his earliest articles to gain him fame were on his opinion that Chinese immigration should be [http://www.econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/Lalor/llCy213.html restricted]. He later retracted those early writings.
 
  
On a trip to [[New York City]] George was struck by the apparent paradox that the poor in that long-established city were much worse off than the poor in less developed California. This paradox supplied the theme and title for his 1879 book ''Progress and Poverty'', which was a huge success, selling over 3 million copies. In it George made the argument that a sizeable portion of the wealth created by social and technological advances in a [[free market]] economy is captured by land owners and [[monopoly|monopolists]] via [[economic rent]]s, and that this concentration of unearned wealth is the root cause of [[poverty]]. George considered it a great injustice that private profit was being earned from restricting access to natural resources while productive activity was burdened with heavy taxes, and held that such a system was equivalent to [[slavery]] - a concept somewhat similar to [[wage slavery]]. The appropriation of oil royalties by magnates of petrol-rich countries may be seen as an equivalent form of [[rent-seeking]] activity: since natural resources are given freely by Nature rather than being products of human labor or entrepreneurship, no single individual should be allowed to acquire unearned revenues by monopolizing their commerce. The same holds true about every other mineral and biological raw resource.
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George was perplexed by the apparent paradox that the poor in the long-established city of New York lived much worse than the poor in less developed California. This paradox supplied the theme and title for his 1879 book ''Progress and Poverty''. In it George made the argument that a sizeable portion of the wealth created by social and technological advances in a [[free market]] economy is captured by land owners and [[monopoly|monopolists]] via [[economic rent]]s, and that this concentration of unearned wealth is the root cause of [[poverty]]. George considered it a great injustice that private profit was being earned from restricting access to natural resources while productive activity was burdened with heavy taxes, and held that such a system was equivalent to [[slavery]] - a concept somewhat similar to [[wage slavery]]. The appropriation of oil royalties by magnates of petrol-rich countries may be seen as an equivalent form of [[rent-seeking]] activity: since natural resources are given freely by Nature rather than being products of human labor or entrepreneurship, no single individual should be allowed to acquire unearned revenues by monopolizing their commerce. The same holds true about every other mineral and biological raw resource.
  
 
George was in a position to discover this pattern, having experienced poverty himself, knowing many different societies from his travels, and living in California at a time of rapid growth.  In particular he had noticed that the construction of [[railroad]]s in California was pushing up land values and rents as fast or faster than wages were rising.
 
George was in a position to discover this pattern, having experienced poverty himself, knowing many different societies from his travels, and living in California at a time of rapid growth.  In particular he had noticed that the construction of [[railroad]]s in California was pushing up land values and rents as fast or faster than wages were rising.
  
== Policy proposals ==
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Although best known for advocating the replacement of other taxes by ‘’land value taxes’’, Henry George also formulated a comprehensive set of economic policies. George was highly critical of restrictive [[patent]]s and [[copyright]]s (though he amended his views on the latter when it was explained to him that copyrights do not constrain independent reinvention in the manner of patents). George advocated replacement of patents with government-supported incentives for invention and scientific investigation and dismantling of monopolies when possible – and taxation or regulation of [[Natural monopoly|natural monopolies]]. Overall, he advocated a combination of unfettered [[free market]]s and significant [[social program]]s made possible by economically efficient taxes on land rent and monopolies.  
Although best known for advocating the replacement of other [[tax]]es by [[land value tax]]es, Henry George formulated a [[georgism|comprehensive set of economic policies]]. George was highly critical of restrictive [[patent]]s and [[copyright]]s (though he amended his views on the latter when it was explained to him that copyrights do not constrain independent reinvention in the manner of patents). George advocated replacement of patents with government supported incentives for invention and scientific investigation and dismantling of monopolies when possible – and taxation or regulation of [[Natural monopoly|natural monopolies]]. Overall, he advocated a combination of unfettered [[free market]]s and significant [[social program]]s made possible by economically efficient taxes on land rent and monopolies. Modern economists like the [[1976]] [[Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel|Nobel Memorial Prize]] winner [[Milton Friedman]] agree that Henry George's land tax is potentially beneficial because unlike other taxes, land taxes impose no excess burden on the economy, and thus stimulate more rapid economic growth. Modern day [[environmentalism|environmentalists]] have resonated with the idea of the earth as the common property of humanity – and some have endorsed the idea of [[ecological tax reform]], including substantial taxes or fees on [[pollution]] as a replacement for "command and control" regulation.
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George also tried to explain the nature of [[interest]] and [[profit]]. He wrote:
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:“I am inclined to think that if all [[wealth]] consisted of such things as planes, and all production was such as that of carpenters — that is to say, if wealth consisted but of the inert matter of the universe, and production of working up this inert matter into different shapes, that interest would be but the robbery of industry, and could not long exist."
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George's theory drew its share of critiques. [[Austrian school]] economist [[Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk]] expressed a negative judgment on George's ideas. Another spirited response came from British biologist [[T.H. Huxley]] in his article "Capital - the Mother of Labour," published in 1890 in the journal ''The Nineteenth Century''.  Huxley used the principles of energy science to undermine George's theory, arguing that, energetically speaking, labor is unproductive. George's theory of interest is nowadays dismissed even by some otherwise Georgist authors, who see it as mistaken and irrelevant to his ideas about land and free trade.
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==Legacy==
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George’s ideas are taken up to some degree in [[South Africa]], [[Taiwan]], [[Hong Kong]], and [[Australia]] – where state governments still levy a [[land value tax]], albeit low and with many exemptions. An attempt by the Liberal Government of the day to implement his ideas in 1909 as part of the People's Budget caused a crisis in [[United Kingdom|Britain]] which led indirectly to reform of the [[House of Lords]].
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In his Freiwirtschaft [[Silvio Gesell]] combined Henry George's ideas about land ownership and rents with his own theory about the money system and interest rates and his successive development of [[Freigeld]]. In his last book, [[Martin Luther King]] referenced Henry George in support of a [[guaranteed minimum income]]. Many other people who do remain famous were heavily influenced by George, such as [[George Bernard Shaw]], [[Leo Tolstoy]], [[Sun Yat Sen]], [[Herbert Simon]].
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Henry George was familiar with the work of [[Karl Marx]] – and predicted that if Marx's ideas were tried the likely result would be a dictatorship
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George’s ideas are still widely used today. Modern day [[environmentalism|environmentalists]] have resonated with the idea of the earth as the common property of humanity – and some have endorsed the idea of [[ecological tax reform]], including substantial taxes or fees on [[pollution]] as a replacement for "command and control" regulation.
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Henry George's popularity declined in the 20th century; however, there are still many [[Georgism|Georgist]] organizations in existence. A follower of George, [[Lizzie Magie]], created a board game called [[The Landlord's Game]] in 1904 to demonstrate his theories. After further development this game led to the modern board game, [[Monopoly (game)|Monopoly]].
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==Publications==
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* George, Henry. 1930 (original published in 1891). ''The condition of labor: An open letter to Pope Leo XIII''. Henry George Foundation of Great Britain
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* George, Henry. 1931 (original published in 1887). ''Justice the object, taxation the means''. United Committee for the Taxation of Land Values.
  
== Death and subsequent influence ==
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* George, Henry. 1936. ''Why the landowner cannot shift the tax on land values''. United Committee for the Taxation of Land Values, Ltd.  
In 1886 George ran for mayor of [[New York City]], and polled second (ahead of [[Theodore Roosevelt]]). He ran again in 1897, but died 4 days before the election. An estimated 100,000 people attended his [[funeral]].
 
  
According to his grand-daughter [[Agnes de Mille]], ''Progress and Poverty'' and its successors made Henry George the third most famous man in the USA, behind only [[Mark Twain]] and [[Thomas Edison]]. [http://www.henrygeorgefoundation.us/] He was also popular as a speaker, even making several speaking trips abroad to places such as [[Ireland]] and [[Scotland]] where access to land was (and still is) a major political issue.  His ideas were taken up to some degree in [[South Africa]], [[Republic of China|Taiwan]], [[Hong Kong]], and [[Australia]] – where state governments still levy a [[land value tax]], albeit low and with many exemptions.  An attempt by the Liberal Government of the day to implement his ideas in 1909 as part of the [[People's Budget]] caused a crisis in [[United Kingdom|Britain]] which led indirectly to reform of the [[House of Lords]]. Henry George was familiar with the work of [[Karl Marx]] – and predicted that if Marx's ideas were tried the likely result would be a dictatorship.
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* George, Henry. 1950. ''Blood & coal''. Dorrance
  
Henry George's popularity declined in the 20th century; however, there are still many [[Georgism|Georgist]] organizations in existence, and many people who do remain famous were heavily influenced by him, such as [[George Bernard Shaw]], [[Leo Tolstoy]], [[Sun Yat Sen]], [[Herbert Simon]] [http://www.nobel.se/economics/laureates/1978/simon-autobio.html], and [[David Lloyd George]].  A follower of George, [[Lizzie Magie]], created a board game called [[The Landlord's Game]] in 1904 to demonstrate his theories. After further development this game led to the modern board game, [[Monopoly (game)|Monopoly]].
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* George, Henry. 1988 (original published in 1892). ''A Perplexed Philosopher: An Examination of Herbert Spencer's Utterances on the Land Question''. Robert Schalkenbach Foundation. ISBN 0911312803
  
Notable is also [[Silvio Gesell]]'s [[Freiwirtschaft]], in which Gesell combined Henry George's ideas about land ownership and rents with his own theory about the money system and interest rates and his successive development of [[Freigeld]].
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* George, Henry. 1992. ''The Science of Political Economy: A Reconstruction of Its Principles in Clear and Systematic Form''. Robert Schalkenbach Foundation. ISBN 091131251X
  
In his last book, [[Martin Luther King]] referenced Henry George in support of a [[guaranteed minimum income]].[http://www.progress.org/dividend/cdking.html] In the [[U.S. presidential election, 2004|2004 Presidential campaign]], [[Ralph Nader]] mentioned Henry George in his platform.[http://www.votenader.org/issues/index.php?cid=7] Congressman [[Dennis Kucinich]] has positively mentioned Henry George in speeches. [http://www.monetary.org]
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* George, Henry. 2004. ''The Law of Human Progress''. Athena Books. ISBN 1414700334
  
The Henry George Foundation of America[http://www.henrygeorgefoundation.us/], a 501 (c) 4 non-profit foundation, was founded in 1926 by some of the leading lights of the progressive Democratic Party in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Mayors Scully and McNair, City Assessor Percy Williams, State Senator and Allegheny County Democratic Chairman Bernard B. McGinnis, and Councilman George Evans (driving force behind Buhl Planetarium). Its national office is now located in Philadelphia, where Henry George was born.
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* George, Henry. 2005 (original published in 1881). ''The Irish Land Question: What It Involves and How Alone It can be Settled''. Adamant Media. ISBN 1402162790
  
The Center for the Study of Economics[http://www.urbantools.org/about-cse], a 501 (c) 3 non-profit educational foundation, was established in 1980 as the sister organization of the Henry George Foundation of America. Its mission is to research land value taxation, to assist governments in implementation and to study the effect of land based property taxation where used. It suggests implementation where appropriate but does not support political candidates or become involved in the electoral process. The Center also gathers and disseminates articles, studies and monographs on the subject of land based taxation.
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* George, Henry. 2005 (original published in 1884). ''Social Problems''. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1402198140
  
The Henry George Foundation of America and The Center for the Study of Economics played instrumental roles in helping nearly 20 Pennsylvania cities transform their local property tax into a revenue source which taxes land value more and improvement value less. As a pilot for a North American Land Value Tax Project, these organizations have created the Maryland Land Value Tax Project[http://www.marylandlandtax.org/] has a means of allowing citizens, elected officials and policy analysts to estimate the net property tax change effects of an incremental implementation of Henry George's land value tax.
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* George, Henry. 2006. ''The Carer''. Vanguard Press. ISBN 1843862824
  
== George's theory of interest ==
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* George, Henry. 2006 (original published in 1871). ''Progress and Poverty''. Cosimo Classics. ISBN 1596059516
George developed what he saw as a crucial feature of his own theory of economics in a critique of an illustration used by [[Frédéric Bastiat]] in order to explain the nature of [[interest]] and [[profit]].  
 
  
Bastiat had asked his readers to consider James and William, both carpenters. James has built himself a plane, and has lent it to William for a year. Would James be satisfied with the return of an equally good plane a year later? Plainly not! He'd expect a board along with it, as interest. The key to a theory of interest is to understand why. Bastiat said that James had given William over that year "the power, inherent in the instrument, to increase the productivity of his labor," and wants compensation for that increased productivity.  
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* George, Henry. 2006 (original published in 1886). ''Protection Or Free Trade''. Obscure Press. ISBN 1846645735
  
George didn't accept this explanation. He wrote, "I am inclined to think that if all [[wealth]] consisted of such things as planes, and all production was such as that of carpenters — that is to say, if wealth consisted but of the inert matter of the universe, and production of working up this inert matter into different shapes, that interest would be but the robbery of industry, and could not long exist." But some wealth is inherently fruitful, like a pair of breeding cattle, or a vat of grape juice soon to ferment into wine, or ... land. Planes and other sorts of inert matter (and the most lent item of all — money itself) earns interest indirectly, only by being part of the same social "circle of exchange" with fruitful forms of wealth such as those.
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==References==
  
George's theory drew its share of critiques. [[Austrian school]] economist [[Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk]], for example, expressed a negative judgment on George's discussion of the carpenter's plane:
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* Andelson, Robert V. 2004. ''Critics of Henry George: Studies in Economic Reform and Social Justice''. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 1405118296
  
:In the first place, it is impossible to support his distinction of the branches of production into two classes, in one of which the vital forces of nature are supposed to constitute a special element which functions side by side with labour, and in the other of which this is not true. [...] The natural sciences have long since proved to us that the cooperation of nature is universal. [...] The muscular movements of the person using the plane would be of little use, if they did not have the assistance of the natural forces and properties of the plane iron.
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* Barker, Charles A. 1991. ''Henry George''. Robert Schalkenbach Foundation. ISBN 0911312854
  
Another spirited response came from British biologist [[T.H. Huxley]] in his article "Capital - the Mother of Labour," published in 1890 in the journal ''The Nineteenth Century''. Huxley used the principles of energy science to undermine George's theory, arguing that, energetically speaking, labor is unproductive.
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* George, Henry Jr. 2004 (original published in 1900). ''The Life Of Henry George''. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410214559
  
George's theory of interest is nowadays dismissed even by some otherwise Georgist authors, who see it as mistaken and irrelevent to his ideas about land and free trade.
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* Rose, Henry. 1891. ''New political economy: The social teaching of Thomas Carlyle, John Ruskin & Henry George; with observations on Joseph Mazzini''. Spiers
  
==Bibliography==
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* Wenzer, Kenneth C. 2002. ''Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, Volume 20: Henry George's Writing's on the United Kingdom''. Elsevier Limited. ISBN 0762307935
*''[[Wikisource:Progress and Poverty]]'' 1879
 
*''[http://www.econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/George/grgPP.html Progress and Poverty]'' (1912, first published 1879. Definitive, free, searchable  on Econlib.)
 
*''[http://www.grundskyld.dk/1-LandQuestion.html The Land Question 1881]''
 
*''[http://www.schalkenbach.org/library/george.henry/spcont.html Social Problems]'' 1883
 
*''[http://www.mises.org/studyguide.aspx?action=author&Id=169 Protection or Free Trade]'' 1886
 
* {{cite journal
 
  | last = George
 
  | first = Henry
 
  | authorlink = Henry George
 
  | title = The New Party
 
  | journal = The North American review
 
  | volume = 145
 
  | number = 368
 
  | pages = 1-8
 
  | date = July 1887
 
  | publisher = University of Northern Iowa
 
  | url = http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/moa/moa-cgi?notisid=ABQ7578-0145-3 }}
 
*''[http://www.econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/George/grgPFT.html Protection or Free Trade]'' (1905, first published 1886. Definitive, free, searchable on Econlib.)
 
*''[http://www.grundskyld.dk/0-Perplexed.html A Perplexed Philosopher'' 1892]
 
*''[http://www.henrygeorge.org/science/speindex.html The Science of Political Economy]'' 1898
 
  
==See also==
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* Wenzer, Kenneth C. 2003. ''Henry George: Collected Journalistic Writings''. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0765610663
*[[Georgism]]
 
*[[Spaceship Earth]]
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.henrygeorgefoundation.us/ The Henry George Foundation of America]
 
*[http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/spe/rbk/faids/george.html Henry George Papers, New York Public Library]
 
*[http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/bios/George.html Biography of Henry George. Library of Economics and Liberty (Econlib)]
 
*[http://www.econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/George/grgPP.html Progress and Poverty, by Henry George, complete, free, definitive edition (1912, first published 1879), Library of Economics and Liberty (Econlib)]
 
*[http://www.econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/George/grgPFT.html Protection or Free Trade, by Henry George, complete, free, definitive edition (1905, first published 1886), Library of Economics and Liberty (Econlib)]
 
*[http://www.urbantools.org/ The Center for the Study of Economics]
 
*[http://www.marylandlandtax.org/ The Maryland Land Value Tax Project]
 
*[http://www.henrygeorge.org/ The Henry George Institute]
 
*[http://www.schalkenbach.org/ Robert S. Schalkenbach Foundation]
 
*[http://www.schalkenbach.org/library/george.henry/ Online Works of Henry George]
 
*[http://www.henrygeorge.org/ Understanding Economics]
 
*[http://www.wealthandwant.com/ Wealth and Want]
 
*[http://www.prosper.org.au/ Prosper Australia]
 
*[http://www.dollarsandsense.org/archives/2006/0306gluckman.html A Henry George Primer] from [[Dollars & Sense]]
 
*[http://fax.libs.uga.edu/HB171xG348c/ The Complete Works of Henry George]. Publisher: New York, Doubleday, Page & company, 1904. Description: 10 v. fronts (v. 1-9) ports. 21 cm.. (searchable facsimile at the University of Georgia Libraries; [[DjVu]] & [http://fax.libs.uga.edu/HB171xG348c/1f/ layered PDF] format)
 
*[http://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/georgecripov.html The Crime of Poverty by Henry George]
 
  
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* [http://www.henrygeorgefoundation.us/ The Henry George Foundation of America] – Website of the Henry George Foundation
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* [http://www.henrygeorge.org/ The Henry George Institute] – Website of the Henry George Institute
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* [http://www.schalkenbach.org/who-was-henry.html Who Was Henry George?] – An article on George by Agnes George de Mille on the Robert Schalkenbach Foundation website
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* [http://www.henrygeorgeschool.org The Henry George School of Social Science] - Website of the Henry George School
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* [http://www.multiline.com.au/~georgist/econ1.htm Georgist Economic Philosophy] – Website of the Georgist Movement
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* [http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/spe/rbk/faids/george.html Henry George Papers] – Biography and bibliography on the New York Public Library website
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*[http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/bios/George.html Biography of Henry George] – Short biography on the Library of Economics and Liberty website
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*[http://www.econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/George/grgPP.html ''Progress and Poverty'', by Henry George] - Complete, free, definitive edition (1912, first published 1879), on the Econlib website
 +
 +
*[http://www.econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/George/grgPFT.html ''Protection or Free Trade'', by Henry George] - Complete, free, definitive edition (1905, first published 1886), on the Econlib website
 +
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*[http://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/georgecripov.html ''The Crime of Poverty'' by Henry George] - Complete, free, definitive edition (published 1889)
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*[http://www.urbantools.org/ The Center for the Study of Economics] – Lobby group that promotes the adoption of Land Value Taxation
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*[http://fax.libs.uga.edu/HB171xG348c/ ''The Complete Works of Henry George''] – Online edition of the book
  
 
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Revision as of 01:10, 19 November 2006


Henry George (born September 2, 1839 – died October 29, 1897) was an American reformist and political economist, famous for his advocacy of the "single tax" on land.

Life

Henry George was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, into a lower-middle class family. He left the school in his mid-teens to be able to travel around the world. In April 1855, in the age of fifteen, he visited India and Australia. The two countries, especially the life of the people there, left strong impression on George, what will later be visible in the formulation on his theories.

After returning home to Philadelphia, he worked some time as an apprentice typesetter, but eventually decided to move and settle in California. He dreamed of getting rich in gold mining, but his plans did not work out as he wanted. He found a job as a typesetter. In 1861 he married Australian-born Annie Corsina Fox, and the couple had two sons. The family was in debts and lived in poverty. George accepted a job as a journalist and started to work his way up through the newspaper industry. He worked as a printer, then a writer for the San Francisco Times. After that he became a reporter for the San Francisco Daily Evening Post, ending up an editor and proprietor. His articles dealt with the treatment of the Chinese immigrants, ownership of the land, and railroad industry.

With time George was able to build a reputation as a journalist, and soon engaged in local politics. He shifted his loyalty from Lincoln’s Republicans to Democrats, and involved with social activism. He criticized railroad industry and corruption in government. He ran as a Democratic candidate for the state legislature, but failed and started to work as a state inspector of gas meters.

In 1871 he published a pamphlet, Our Land and Land Policy, in which he presented for the first time his theory of rent as the primary cause of poverty. In 1879 he wrote his masterwork Progress and Poverty, with which he became world-famous.

In 1880 George and his family moved to New York City, where he started to write and lecture. He became acquainted with the Irish nationalist community, and was invited to Ireland and England by radical Irish World to study land problem. He spent there one year, from 1881 to 1882, and formed friendship with figures such as Michael Davitt and other leaders of the Irish Land League. He met also many English socialists and radicals, like H. M. Hyndman and Helen Taylor. The visit was a total success, and George got a strong support to run for the mayor of the New York City in 1886. He ended up second, behind Abram S. Hewitt and ahead of Theodore Roosevelt. Some speculated that George lost race to a fraud.

Next several years George spent in teaching and writing. Among his works fro this period are Protection or Free Trade (1886); A Condition of Labor: An Open Letter to the Pope (1891), and A Perplexed Philosopher (1892). He visited Britain again in 1888 and 1889, and Australia and New Zealand in 1890. He was known as a great lecturer.

In 1897 he was persuaded to run again for the mayor of the New York City, but suffered stroke and died just 4 days before the election. An estimated 100,000 people attended his funeral.

Work

George was perplexed by the apparent paradox that the poor in the long-established city of New York lived much worse than the poor in less developed California. This paradox supplied the theme and title for his 1879 book Progress and Poverty. In it George made the argument that a sizeable portion of the wealth created by social and technological advances in a free market economy is captured by land owners and monopolists via economic rents, and that this concentration of unearned wealth is the root cause of poverty. George considered it a great injustice that private profit was being earned from restricting access to natural resources while productive activity was burdened with heavy taxes, and held that such a system was equivalent to slavery - a concept somewhat similar to wage slavery. The appropriation of oil royalties by magnates of petrol-rich countries may be seen as an equivalent form of rent-seeking activity: since natural resources are given freely by Nature rather than being products of human labor or entrepreneurship, no single individual should be allowed to acquire unearned revenues by monopolizing their commerce. The same holds true about every other mineral and biological raw resource.

George was in a position to discover this pattern, having experienced poverty himself, knowing many different societies from his travels, and living in California at a time of rapid growth. In particular he had noticed that the construction of railroads in California was pushing up land values and rents as fast or faster than wages were rising.

Although best known for advocating the replacement of other taxes by ‘’land value taxes’’, Henry George also formulated a comprehensive set of economic policies. George was highly critical of restrictive patents and copyrights (though he amended his views on the latter when it was explained to him that copyrights do not constrain independent reinvention in the manner of patents). George advocated replacement of patents with government-supported incentives for invention and scientific investigation and dismantling of monopolies when possible – and taxation or regulation of natural monopolies. Overall, he advocated a combination of unfettered free markets and significant social programs made possible by economically efficient taxes on land rent and monopolies.

George also tried to explain the nature of interest and profit. He wrote:

“I am inclined to think that if all wealth consisted of such things as planes, and all production was such as that of carpenters — that is to say, if wealth consisted but of the inert matter of the universe, and production of working up this inert matter into different shapes, that interest would be but the robbery of industry, and could not long exist."

George's theory drew its share of critiques. Austrian school economist Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk expressed a negative judgment on George's ideas. Another spirited response came from British biologist T.H. Huxley in his article "Capital - the Mother of Labour," published in 1890 in the journal The Nineteenth Century. Huxley used the principles of energy science to undermine George's theory, arguing that, energetically speaking, labor is unproductive. George's theory of interest is nowadays dismissed even by some otherwise Georgist authors, who see it as mistaken and irrelevant to his ideas about land and free trade.

Legacy

George’s ideas are taken up to some degree in South Africa, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Australia – where state governments still levy a land value tax, albeit low and with many exemptions. An attempt by the Liberal Government of the day to implement his ideas in 1909 as part of the People's Budget caused a crisis in Britain which led indirectly to reform of the House of Lords.

In his Freiwirtschaft Silvio Gesell combined Henry George's ideas about land ownership and rents with his own theory about the money system and interest rates and his successive development of Freigeld. In his last book, Martin Luther King referenced Henry George in support of a guaranteed minimum income. Many other people who do remain famous were heavily influenced by George, such as George Bernard Shaw, Leo Tolstoy, Sun Yat Sen, Herbert Simon.

Henry George was familiar with the work of Karl Marx – and predicted that if Marx's ideas were tried the likely result would be a dictatorship

George’s ideas are still widely used today. Modern day environmentalists have resonated with the idea of the earth as the common property of humanity – and some have endorsed the idea of ecological tax reform, including substantial taxes or fees on pollution as a replacement for "command and control" regulation.

Henry George's popularity declined in the 20th century; however, there are still many Georgist organizations in existence. A follower of George, Lizzie Magie, created a board game called The Landlord's Game in 1904 to demonstrate his theories. After further development this game led to the modern board game, Monopoly.

Publications

  • George, Henry. 1930 (original published in 1891). The condition of labor: An open letter to Pope Leo XIII. Henry George Foundation of Great Britain
  • George, Henry. 1931 (original published in 1887). Justice the object, taxation the means. United Committee for the Taxation of Land Values.
  • George, Henry. 1936. Why the landowner cannot shift the tax on land values. United Committee for the Taxation of Land Values, Ltd.
  • George, Henry. 1950. Blood & coal. Dorrance
  • George, Henry. 1988 (original published in 1892). A Perplexed Philosopher: An Examination of Herbert Spencer's Utterances on the Land Question. Robert Schalkenbach Foundation. ISBN 0911312803
  • George, Henry. 1992. The Science of Political Economy: A Reconstruction of Its Principles in Clear and Systematic Form. Robert Schalkenbach Foundation. ISBN 091131251X
  • George, Henry. 2004. The Law of Human Progress. Athena Books. ISBN 1414700334
  • George, Henry. 2005 (original published in 1881). The Irish Land Question: What It Involves and How Alone It can be Settled. Adamant Media. ISBN 1402162790
  • George, Henry. 2005 (original published in 1884). Social Problems. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1402198140
  • George, Henry. 2006 (original published in 1871). Progress and Poverty. Cosimo Classics. ISBN 1596059516
  • George, Henry. 2006 (original published in 1886). Protection Or Free Trade. Obscure Press. ISBN 1846645735

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Andelson, Robert V. 2004. Critics of Henry George: Studies in Economic Reform and Social Justice. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 1405118296
  • Barker, Charles A. 1991. Henry George. Robert Schalkenbach Foundation. ISBN 0911312854
  • George, Henry Jr. 2004 (original published in 1900). The Life Of Henry George. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410214559
  • Rose, Henry. 1891. New political economy: The social teaching of Thomas Carlyle, John Ruskin & Henry George; with observations on Joseph Mazzini. Spiers
  • Wenzer, Kenneth C. 2002. Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, Volume 20: Henry George's Writing's on the United Kingdom. Elsevier Limited. ISBN 0762307935
  • Wenzer, Kenneth C. 2003. Henry George: Collected Journalistic Writings. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0765610663

External links

  • Who Was Henry George? – An article on George by Agnes George de Mille on the Robert Schalkenbach Foundation website

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