Agriculture
as the example of something universal
I
merely wish to correct that impression which leads so many people to
talk and write as though rent and land tenures related solely to
agriculture and to agricultural communities. Nothing could be more
erroneous. Land is necessary to all production, no matter what be the
kind or form; land is the standing-place, the workshop, the
storehouse of labor; it is to the human being the only means by which
he can obtain access to the material universe or utilize its powers.
Without land man cannot exist. To whom the ownership of land is
given, to him is given the virtual ownership of the men who must live
upon it.
Henry George: The
Land Question (1881)
... When the agent of the Irish landlord takes from the Irish
cottier
for rent his pigs, his poultry, or his potatoes, or the money that he
gains by the sale of these things, it is clear enough that this rent
comes from the earnings of labor, and diminishes what the laborer
gets. But is not this in reality just as clear when a dozen middlemen
stand between laborer and landlord? Is it not just as clear when,
instead of being paid monthly or quarterly or yearly, rent is paid in
a lumped sum called purchase-money? Whence come the incomes which the
owners of land in mining districts, in manufacturing districts, or in
commercial districts, receive for the use of their land? Manifestly,
they must come from the earnings of labor – there is no other
source from which they can come. From what are the revenues of
Trinity Church corporation drawn, if not from the earnings of labor?
What is the source of the income of the Astors, if it is not the
labor of laboring-men, women, and children? When a man makes a
fortune by the rise of real estate, as in New York and elsewhere many
men have done within the past few months, what does it mean? It means
that he may have fine clothes, costly food, a grand house luxuriously
furnished, etc. Now, these things are not the spontaneous fruits of
the soil; neither do they fall from heaven, nor are they cast up by
the sea. They are products of labor–can be produced only by
labor. And hence, if men who do no labor get them, it must
necessarily be at the expense of those who do labor. ...
What is the difference? The Irish peasant cultivator hires his
little farm from a landlord, and pays rent directly. The English
agricultural laborer hires himself to an employing farmer who hires
the land, and who out of the produce pays to the one his wages and to
the other his rent. In both cases competition forces the laborer down
to a bare living as a net return for his work, and only stops at that
point because, when men do not get enough to live on, they die and
cease to compete. And, in the same way, competition forces the
employing farmer to give up to the landlord all that he has left
after paying wages, save the ordinary returns of capital – for the
profits of the English farmer do not, on the average, I understand,
exceed five or six per cent. And in other businesses, such as
manufacturing, competition in the same way forces down wages to the
minimum of a bare living, while rent goes up and up. Thus is it clear
that no change in methods or improvements in the processes of
industry lessens the landlord's power of claiming the lion's
share. ...
... I
merely wish to correct that impression which leads so many people to
talk and write as though rent and land tenures related solely to
agriculture and to agricultural communities. Nothing could be
more
erroneous. Land is necessary to all production, no matter what be the
kind or form; land is the standing-place, the workshop, the
storehouse of labor; it is to the human being the only means by which
he can obtain access to the material universe or utilize its powers.
Without land man cannot exist. To whom the ownership of land is
given, to him is given the virtual ownership of the men who must live
upon it. When this necessity is absolute, then does he necessarily
become their absolute master. And just as this point is
neared – that is to say, just as competition increases the demand
for land – just in that degree does the power of taking a larger
and larger share of the earnings of labor increase. It is this power
that gives land its value; this is the power that enables the owner
of valuable land to reap where he has not sown–to appropriate to
himself wealth which he has had no share in producing. Rent is always
the devourer of wages. The owner of city land takes, in the rents
he receives for his land, the earnings of labor just as clearly as does
the owner of farming land. And whether he be working in a garret ten
stories above the street, or in a mining drift thousands of feet
below the earth's surface, it is the competition for the use of land
that ultimately determines what proportion of the produce of his
labor the laborer will get for himself. This is the reason why modern
progress does not tend to extirpate poverty; this is the reason why,
with all the inventions and improvements and economies which so
enormously increase productive power, wages everywhere tend to the
minimum of a bare living. The cause that in Ireland produces poverty
and distress–the ownership by some of the people of the land on
which and from which the whole people must live – everywhere else
produces the same results. It is this that produces the hideous
squalor of London and Glasgow slums; it is this that makes want
jostle luxury in the streets of rich New York, that forces little
children to monotonous and stunting toil in Massachusetts mills, and
that fills the highways of our newest States with tramps.
... read the whole article
|
To
share this page with a friend: right click, choose "send," and
add your comments.
|
|
Red
links have not been visited; .
Green
links are pages you've seen |
Essential Documents
pertinent to this theme:
|
|