Conservatives for Georgism and a Social Market Economy:
On
Attracting Conservatives and Libertarians to the Philosophy of Henry
George
Addressed
to the West Coast tax reform organization Common Ground OR-WA
Written April
10th-15th, 2014
Introduction
Classical
liberals, conservatives, libertarians of the left and right, and
students of Austrian and Chicago School economics in the State of
Oregon could be convinced of amending the Oregon State Constitution
to allow communities to experiment with increasing property taxes by
over 3% per year (while decreasing the tax rate on improvements to
land and keeping taxes on land itself steady), by being shown arguments
in favor of other things Georgists support which have been made by
classical liberals, conservatives, libertarians of the left and
right, and students of Austrian and Chicago School economics.
Such
individuals include classical liberals Adam Smith, Thomas Paine, and
Thomas Jefferson; Austrian School economist Friedrich Hayek;
Libertarian Party presidential nominee Gary Johnson; conservative
columnists Jonah Goldberg of the National Review, Charles Murray of
the American Enterprise Institute, and Dan Mitchell of the Cato
Institute; libertarian columnists Matthew Feeney and professor Matt
Zwolinski; former Reagan advisers Bruce Bartlett, Art Laffer, and
Milton Friedman (and his son David D. Friedman); economist Ed Dolan,
Alberto Mingardi of EconLog, Don Arthur of Club Troppo, classical
liberal Josh McCabe, and libertarian Guinevere Liberty Nell.
Arguments
favorable to the Georgist view include arguments supporting proposals
for a (flat) negative income tax; statements made by the nation's
ideological founders criticizing unlimited taxation and landed
property; and proposals for a Universal or Unconditional Basic Income
/ Basic Income Guarantee / Guaranteed Minimum Income, and/or
Citizens' Income / Citizens' Dividend / Sovereign Wealth Fund.
Matthew
Feeney of the libertarian magazine Reason wrote favorably of the
Swiss proposal for a social dividend. Feeney
wrote, “Instead of treating those who, often through no fault of
their own, have fallen on hard times, like children who are incapable
of making the rights choices about the food they eat or the drugs
they may or may not choose to take, why not just give them cash?”
Classical
Liberals
But
America's history of classical liberal support of limited taxation
and limited private property in land dates back to before
Henry George was even born; back to the very foundings and
foundations of the United States and modern Western theory of
political economy. President Thomas Jefferson said, “Wherever,
in any country, there are idle lands and unemployed poor, it is clear
that the laws of property have been so far extended as to violate
natural right.” Economist Adam Smith said, “As soon as land
becomes private property, the landlord demands a share of almost all
the produce.”
Thomas
Paine said, “Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the
improvement only, and not the earth itself, that is individual
property. Every proprietor owes to the community, a ground rent for
the land which he holds.” In his 1797 pamphlet “Agrarian
Justice”, Paine advocated financing a social insurance system for
people of all ages, financed by a 10 percent tax on inherited
property. In today's terms, Paine's proposal would give some
unspecified amount to each individual each year before the age of 21,
$17,500 annually to each individual at the age of 21, and $11,800
annually to everyone over 50.
David
D. Friedman and Matt Zwolinski have expressed agreement with Thomas
Paine's idea that each individual living today suffers from past
injustices relating to the inequities of the property rights system.
In December 2013, former Reagan adviser Bruce Bartlett wrote that,
for Friedman and Zwolinski, a universal income might be an
appropriate reparations payment, giving a grant to young people in
“compensation for the loss of their natural inheritance in land”,
which was “seized by the state and given or sold to particular
individuals for their exclusive [private] use.”
Professor
Matt Zwolinski, writing for Bleeding Heart Libertarians, commented on
the “quasi-Nozickian” argument “that a BIG [Basic Income
Guarantee] could serve as a mind of rough-and-ready compensation for
past injustice”. Zwolinski wrote that “David Friedman and David
Henderson both took issue with this argument … [b]ut … The
federal government was directly responsible and/or culpably complicit
in the commission of a long series of gross injustices, and many
currently existing Americans continue to suffer the effects of those
injustices. The government owes those who were harmed by its
wrongdoing some form of redress, and I think there are plausible
grounds for using a BIG to make that redress.”
Friedrich
Hayek
In
his book “Law, Legislation and Liberty”, economist Friedrich A.
Hayek endorsed a minimum income, writing that “The assurance of a
certain minimum income for everyone, or a sort of floor below which
nobody need fall even when he is unable to provide for himself,
appears not only to be a wholly legitimate protection against a risk
common to all, but a necessary part of the Great Society in which the
individual no longer has specific claims on the members of the
particular small group into which he was born.”
Matt
Zwolinski wrote that “Don Arthur has a[n] … essay casting doubt
on whether Hayek actually supported a basic income at all … Arthur
claims that Hayek's minimum income was conditional in two ways:
first, it was a means-tested policy intended only for people who lack
the financial resources to support themselves, and second, it was
conditional on a willingness to work.” However, Arthur notes that
Hayek quoted approvingly a passage which read in part “no man,
whatever be his vices or even his crimes, shall die of hunger or cold
… because the gift of mere subsistence may be subjected to
conditions which no one will voluntarily accept”.
On the other hand,
Hayek has called securing “an adequate and uniform minimum standard
for all human beings everywhere” “impossible”, and has argued
that the Great Society dream of guaranteed minimum income for all
goes against the classical liberal notion of the purpose of
government [but of course the statements of Smith, Paine, and
Jefferson might show that idea to be faulty]. Hayek also wrote that
“[i]t is unfortunate that the endeavor to secure a uniform minimum
for all who cannot provide for themselves has become connected with
the wholly different aims of securing a 'just' distribution of
incomes”.
Kevin Vallier
explores Hayek's views more deeply in a May 2012 article for Bleeding
Heart Libertarians entitled “F.A. Hayek: Enemy of Social Justice
and Friend of Universal Basic Income?”
Richard
Nixon
In an August 1969
proposal called the family assistance plan, which had been developed
by Daniel Patrick Moynihan, President Richard Nixon revived the
negative income tax, which had been recommended by a commission
appointed by President Lyndon Johnson. Unfortunately, Nixon favored
enacting the negative income tax on top of the existing welfare
system, rather than in order to replace it as Milton
Friedman desired, which resulted in Friedman abandoning the plan as
altered by the Nixon administration.
The family
assistance plan proposal was opposed by liberals and conservatives
alike in the Senate Finance Committee in April 1970. The plan was
killed by liberals because “they didn't believe it was liberal
enough”, according to Bruce Bartlett, even though it was originally
Democrat Sargent Shriver who originally suggested the proposal to
President Johnson. Bartlett wrote that Moynihan was forced to admit
the plan's failure in 1978.
Milton
Friedman
Milton Friedman,
later an advisor for President Ronald Reagan, said “[i]n my
opinion, the least bad tax is the property tax on the unimproved
value of land, the Henry George argument of many, many years ago”.
In
Friedman's 1962 book “Capitalism and Freedom”, he advanced an
argument for a “negative income tax”. Bruce Bartlett wrote in
“Rethinking the Idea of a Basic Income for All” that in
Friedman's proposal, “if the standard deduction and personal
exemption exceeded one's gross income, one would receive a subsidy
equal to what would have been paid if one had comparable positive
taxable income.” In
1968, Milton Friedman appeared on PBS's “Firing Line with William
F. Buckley” to defend the negative income tax against Buckley's
concerns about non-working poor taking advantage of guaranteed
income.
According
to Bruce Bartlett, Friedman's view was that “the concept of
progressivity ought to work in both
directions”, and that the negative income tax should be “based in
the existing tax code”. Former New Mexico Governor and 2012
Libertarian Party presidential nominee Gary Johnson gas spoken in
favor of the negative income tax. Johnson has also spoken in favor of
a national value-added general sales tax, arguing that it is not
regressive.
Art
Laffer
Art
Laffer, yet another former economics advisor for President Reagan,
said that “all taxes are bad”. He became well-known for the
Laffer curve; for observing that taxes on an action tend to
discourage the very action which is being taxed, and that earning and
keeping money are effectively discouraged by taxes on income and
earnings. It would benefit Georgists to make the concession that
Laffer was right, acknowledge that “all taxes are bad”, and
concede this point to conservatives, libertarians, etc..
However,
it might also help to explain to conservatives that there is a
difference between a tax as a taking of wealth versus
a so-called tax as a collection of urban land rent, which is not
earned wealth resulting from human labor, but an intangible value
which is, to a large degree, created and protected by government.
[Thanks to Chicago Single Tax proponent Adam Jon Monroe for this
point.]
Charles
Murray
Libertarian
conservative social science scholar Charles Murray of the American
Enterprise Institute wrote in favor of a universal grant of $10,000
per year; both as a complete replacement
for the existing welfare system, including Medicare and Social
Security. Murray wrote a book called “In Our Hands”, proposing
having the federal government give $10,000 to every non-incarcerated
adult over 21. Murray was buiding on work done by Milton Friedman and
Friedrich Hayek. Jonah Goldberg, writing about Charles Murray's
proposal, wrote in “Escaping the Rat's Maze of the Welfare State”
that “[o]n n the left, the idea has been popular for generations as
a way to instantaneously alleviate poverty and to defeat … income
inequality.”
Goldberg
continued, “The libertarians want to liquidate much of the welfare
state and convert it into cash payments. The left's version is that
the money would, for the most part, augment the welfare state.”
Goldberg noted two obvious potential libertarian objections to the
UBI / GMI: 1) “cost”, and 2) the “competence assumption”
problem (the lack of belief that 'the intended beneficiaries of
government anti-poverty programs always “behave rationally enough
to advance their own self-interest.'”). Additionally, Goldberg
wrote that “some anti-poverty programs create incentives that make
bad decisions seem rational … [b]ut many poor people have just had
rotten luck. There's good reason to believe that, with a little help,
they can work their way up the economic ladder.”
Conclusions
About Taxation
Georgists
seeking to convert conservatives to supporting Sovereign Wealth Funds
and Citizens' Income or Citizens' Dividend would do well to argue
that transitioning to a system of taxing land only (and not the
improvements to it, which include income and earnings; trade,
consumption, and sales; and savings, which is taxed through
inflation and excessive Quantitative Easing) would involve gradually
decreasing taxes on individual income. [This is in regards to Oregon
only, which has eliminated the general sales tax, but whose state and
local government are based more on individual income than any other
state in the country, as of 2007. Most states have not have abolished
the general sales tax.].
Georgists
seeking to convince libertarians, conservatives, classical liberals,
and capitalists in Oregon that amending the Oregon State Constitution
to allow for communities to experiment with increasing property taxes
by over 3% per year (while decreasing the tax rate on improvements to
land and keeping taxes on land itself steady) would benefit taxpayers
in rural areas, should emphasize conservatives', libertarians', and
classical liberals' support for income guarantees.
These
income guarantees should be promoted based on the fact that
the State - being by its very
nature monopolistic, coercive, territorial institution which always
abuses its tremendous purchasing power - owes everyone some
compensation; specifically for
losing their right to equal inheritance of land as a means for
potential socioeconomic equality through the production and trade
which they perform on that land (or at least they would, if such
behavior were only taxed less, or not at all).
Georgists might
have success converting the aforementioned types of ideologues by
advocating for the implementation of a negative income tax in concert
with a Universal Basic Income or Guaranteed Minimum Income, creating
revenue pools for Sovereign Wealth Funds and Citizens' Dividend /
Citizens' Income programs, from which to draw funds for the
disbursement of the difference between the income of a person living
below the poverty level and the standard minimum deduction (or 50% of
that figure, as Milton Friedman proposed), thereby giving people no
net incentive to stay on welfare if and when they find opportunities
to become capable to work their way off welfare.
Georgists should
explain to conservatives that the Single Tax would provide for a tax
on the extraction of natural resources, as Alaska has done with the
Alaska Permanent Fund (which has been running for 50 years, and which
has survived numerous Republican administrations). The negative
income tax could be used for the same purpose as the Single Tax
(during the transition away from taxing income in general); that is,
creating a pool of general funds for use by any and all individuals
in the general public (whether by everyone, or by everyone who
requests such funds).
A combination
sovereign wealth fund / community land trust based on prevention of
clear-cutting in Oregon's logging industry might be a way to create
these funds, and perhaps even to secure state protection of what are
now federal lands.
I
would urge Common Ground OR-WA to explain to rural Republicans in
Oregon that changing the State Constitution to abolish limits on tax
increases on total land value to allow property taxes to increase by
more than 3% per year (while decreasing the tax rate on improvements
to land and keeping taxes on land itself steady) by additionally
explaining that the intent of lifting this cap is to raise taxes on
land in order to de-necessitate individual income taxes and
replace the entire welfare state with an efficient, viable,
trustworthy voucher system (and
perhaps also an online social credit network). This proposal would
certainly be palatable to rural Republicans in the state, whom are
known to demand the abolition of one tax as a concession for
introducing a new tax or augmenting an existing tax.
If
Common Ground OR-WA does not favor the negative income tax, then I
would urge the organization to support raising overall revenues from
land taxation in order to approximate its effects, and then to
eventually eliminate the general income tax. I believe that this
should be done while retaining whatever existing corporate income
taxes, capital gains taxes, and gift and estate taxes are on the
books in the state. I would recommend that this be done as a
temporary experiment, which will hopefully help demonstrate that
taxing land more than income is generally beneficial to the effective
progressivity and fiscal solvency of the tax structure.
But
eventually, all of those taxes should be eliminated - in a gradual,
across-the-board manner - rather than allowing various factions to
bicker about which of these taxes (in addition to luxury taxes,
licensing fees, and interest, the tax on saving money) should be
lowered, and when, and which first, and which in which order, and
whether to even eliminate them at all.
Corporate
income taxes, capital gains taxes, and the estate and gift taxes
should not be targeted as the first tax to cut for the same reason
that states which eliminate the general sales tax often retain luxury
taxes / sales taxes on expensive items. This is because the
conservative proponents of corporate income, capital gains, estate,
and gift taxes argue that these taxes are “duplicative”, being
that they are taxes on income which has already been earned and
taxed. How “duplicative” would these taxes be if general income
outside of these taxes were not taxed at all
(at least in the first stage of eliminating income taxes altogether)?
However,
declining to unyieldingly advocate for the eventual abolition of
taxes on luxury items, gifts, estates, corporate income, and capital
gains could risk ignoring several important possibilities. The first
is that strategic collective purchasing may help make luxury items
available to large quantities of people (thus rendering them not
exactly luxury items.
The
second possibility is that taxing gifts and estates at too high a
rate could make it financially difficult for parents to share with
dependent children, and ensure that they have a place to live,
without the State or some collective or company getting involved. The
third possibility is that taxing corporate income could negatively
affect cooperative corporations
and corporations in which unions have been awarded large quantities
of shares and control.
More
Recommendations and Suggestions
It
is important to understand the conservative and libertarian mindsets:
the State, centralized government, and monopolies all tend to
concentrate political and economic power towards themselves and
intervene in the market, picking winners and losers, and sometimes
even enacting price controls.
Conservatives
and libertarians believe that corporations - but also importantly
other enterprises, business associations, trust funds, non-profit
charities, religious organizations, and other non-governmental
organizations - should be considered when government needs to save
resources by outsourcing responsibilities to outside of the public
sector, rather than public-private partnerships.
They
believe that these types of organizations should be given the
opportunity to serve their purposes, and not hindered from doing so
by bureaucracy, replacing the government's role in providing services
for free and goods at affordable prices, and providing goods and
services to people more directly and efficiently than public agencies
like state and federal departments (which are customarily run by
elected officials, and by appointed officials who are appointed by
elected officials).
I
would urge Georgists in general – and the members of Common Ground
OR-WA in particular - to accept that this kind of thinking is valid,
rather than worthy of antipathy, ridicule, or fear. After all,
cooperative corporations
are corporations too, and they are outside the public sector. Social
purpose venture enterprises; mutual, cooperative, and fair trade
enterprises; and green and environmentally sustainable businesses are
enterprises too; and the alliances they create are business
associations too.
Furthermore,
community land trusts are trust funds too, and they are also
non-profit corporations. Charities that actually help their intended
recipients are charities too. And interfaith organizations are
religious organizations too.
Non-governmental
and quasi-governmental agencies of all the aforementioned varieties
should be considered in seeking common ground between Georgists and
conservatives. But non-political agencies
should also be considered. In the United Kingdom, the government has
created non-ministerial government departments (NGMDs), deeming
certain policy matters inappropriate for direct political oversight.
The
British government has taken steps to de-politicize that oversight by
protecting the status of the agencies from political interference. In
so doing, it has sought to de-politicize standards regulation of the
following policy matters:
- statistics, the treasury, cartography, qualifications and examinations, and charity;
- land registry, rail regulation, education, and children's services;
- food safety, water services regulation, forestry, gas and electricity;
- trade, savings, investment. competition and markets, serious fraud; and
- crime, prosecution, and the judiciary.
I
would also urge Georgists and conservatives alike to consider the
possibility that such standardization and regulation could be
performed by independent entrepreneurs' alliances like the American
Independent Business Alliance (A.M.I.B.A.), the anarchist syndicate
and autonomous union I.W.W., the International Organization for
Standardization (I.S.O.), and/or confederations of mutuals,
cooperatives, non-profits, and freelancers' unions.
Additionally, I
would urge Georgists to explain to libertarians and conservatives
that tripartism - the government's supervision of negotiation and/or
the joint creation of policy by organized labor and capital - is not
necessarily undesirable. Communities may be governed voluntarily –
and be reconciled with individual liberty and consent - insofar as
people come to communities voluntarily, the freedom of travel is not
unnecessarily inihibited, and society promotes collaboration on
regulation of industrial policy by all sectors of industrial
relations (workers, consumers, taxpayers, distributors, shareholders,
non-associating but nonetheless affected stakeholders, etc.).
I would urge
Georgists to concede to conservatives and libertarians that the
monopolistic State cannot compete on the market without destroying
it, and also to concede – and also remind conservatives and
libertarians, if they have forgotten - that the State's being
monopolistic means that it cannot be trusted to act against the
interests of monopoly. This is not just in regards to government, but
to assist in the monopolization, oligarchy, and concentration of
power within the corporate world, and even within the organized labor
movement (as in State-recognized union monopoly on the representation
of organized labor within a workplace and/or territory).
Since the State
cannot be trusted to abolish itself in the interest of creating a
society of diverse and independent persons, peoples, and companies,
those very people and companies must perform that antitrust
themselves; they must compel economies of scale (actors with enormous
purchasing power) to play by the rules of the market. Economies of
scale - whether sellers or buyers - must only participate in trade
only if their purchasing power is not so great that it distorts the
natural calculation of price and upsets the equilibrium of supply and
demand, through diminishing other actors' abilities to influence the
evaluation of goods and services.
However, Georgists
should convince conservatives that economies of scale have to be
allowed to exist with large enough purchasing power so as to be able
to utilize purchasing or selling power in order to diminish the power
of monopolies and oligarchies in purchasing and sales. But once
again, Georgists should always concede to libertarians that if done
by government, this must be done via the most minimally
monopolistic, oligarchical, territorialistic, geographically
centralized, hierarchical, coercive, aggressive, and violent manners
necessary to defeat and prevent the concentration of political and
economic power.
Georgists
should convince libertarians and conservatives that the reason
government needs to tax income and everything else it taxes is
because it needs to increase purchasing power against the power of
large sellers. Specifically, government needs to increase its power
to obtain and distribute goods and services cheaply and efficiently
to taxpayers/consumers, such as education, health services, etc..
In order to
“compete on the markets” with the multinational corporations
which wield enormous selling power in those markets, purchasing
organizations must become large and powerful enough to sufficiently
counteract sellers' demand for high prices so as to distribute goods
and services to those who need them.
When
minimal-government libertarians and conservatives make arguments in
favor of corporate power, Georgists should remind libertarians and
conservatives that corporations would not exist in the first place
without the State's monopoly power to grant limited liability, and to
charter, license, permit, zone, and protect through policing or
through the licensure of private security guards.
I would hope that
Georgists would understand, and concede to conservatives and
libertarians, that the State inserted its monopoly power into these
practices. However, this does not mean that business and private
property owners owe something back, and owe it to the State;
rather, it means that they should, as Senator Elizabeth Warren said,
“pay it forward to the next guy who comes along.”
[emphasis mine].
“Paying it
forward” might make entail giving tax incentives to private,
corporate, and foreign interests which own firms; incentives which
are conditional upon them planning and allowing for the ownership and
management of their companies to pass into the hands of some
combination of workers, consumers, shareholders, and other affected
people. [Here, “companies” includes governments, which according
to the U.S. Code are legally regarded as corporations.]
Whether through
competition, collaboration, or some tenuous and tentative combination
thereof, government should foster a political environment featuring a
diverse array of viewpoints on how standards should be made, and how
regulation should be performed, and by whom (i.e., regulatory
collaboration and regulatory competition). This way, what is common
ground versus what inspires conflict and diffidence, may be
discerned without the presence of power and finance oligarchy to
demand compromise through concessions of each party's most valued
principles and goals.
An
alliance between Single Tax proponents and fiscal conservatives must
bring together – and focus coordination of efforts between -
alienated and forgotten segments of economic society and industrial
relations, such as:
- taxpayers, shareholders, and non-owner managers;
- independent entrepreneurs, workers, and artisans;
- social purpose ventures and fair trade enterprises;
- employee-owned businesses and egalitarian labor-managed firms (E.L.M.F.s);
- purchasing and distributors' cooperatives;
- consumer cooperatives, and consumer protection, interest, and advocacy agencies;
- autonomous unions, syndicates, freelancers' unions, and guilds;
- mutuals / worker-consumer cooperatives (including credit unions)
- mutual aid societies, charity organizations and non-profits and not-for-profits;
- voluntary local community government and agencies thereof;
- non-governmental and quasi-governmental organizations;
- affected stakeholders whom society perceives as outcastes;
- coalitions of all of these aforementioned organizations;
and
many others.
These
types of organizations must focus their efforts on achieving formal
political representation for the Third Sector - the
sector of non-profits, volunteerism, cooperation, mutuality,
reciprocity, and balance in economic and political power - as an
alternative to the collusion of the public and private sector to
sponsor the outsourcing of responsibilities to provide public goods
and services to limited liability corporate entities that serve
private (ostensibly “independent”) interests.
In
doing this, it will be crucial to emphasize the principle “cost the
limit of price”; that is, the idea that mutuals, cooperatives, and
ELMFs are non-profit (and therefore fiscally sustainable models for
governmental agencies) because they reinvest all would-be profits
back into the companies in order to provide for better benefits for
workers, better deals for consumers, and the elimination and
internalization of unjustifiable costs of transacting with the firm.
Such
enterprises should be run on worker-consumer purchasing cooperative
models. This would serve to prevent the diminution of the needs of
working people - in all stages of production and distribution - to be
compensated, in comparison with the needs of consumers to pay at low
prices and the needs of sellers to sell high. Within these firms,
privatization, corporatization, limited liability, external
investment, and externalization and outsourcing of responsibilities
must be kept to a minimum or eliminated completely.
Such
enterprises should be run by boards designed to balance the interests
of organized labor and organized capital, but they should also
promote the involvement and formal representation of people who are
now politically uninvolved but whom are affected by decisions made in
government; namely, mutualist anarchists, anarcho-syndicalists,
leftists disillusioned by the Democratic Party, and market-anarchists
and libertarians.
I
believe that all of this can and should be done within the context of
a market system rather than a socialist one; specifically, a
left-wing market-anarchist system (and a system of completed,
perfected markets liberated and freed from oligarchy) or a
social-purpose-oriented market economy, with the intent of abolishing
income and sales taxes, the welfare State, and the State erection of
corporate power and privilege.
I
favor this market system - a system of ubiquitous markets,
competition in search of best practices, and enterprise - as an
alternative to a State socialist system featuring price controls.
However, experimentation with artificial markets would not be out of
the picture in the quest for the perfection and completion of the
market system. Neither would achieving community-wide collaboration -
from all sectors of economic and industrial society - on
standardization and regulation, in order to make price
recommendations on goods and services.
Additionally,
I support focusing on markets and decentralized government because
rural Republicans would seek to maximize their degree of influence on
their own local government. Understanding how Statism is
intrinsically destructive to the market is crucial for understanding
the relationships between central government and power monopoly, and
between local government and the power of many. Georgists would do
well to emphasize their support of local community government in
order to build common ground with conservatives, libertarians, and
classical liberals who resent imperialism and distant political
control.
I
would also recommend local control because I would warn Georgists
that perceiving the economy in an all-encompassing state-wide manner
could obscure the differences between urban and suburban vs.
rural
economies: a policy that works in a major city will often not work in
the rural areas of the state, and it will usually be greeted with
antipathy, even if it claims to achieve some higher standard of
quality of life for rural people.
This
is sometimes because such people achieve higher
standards than those set by the State all by themselves,
and other times alternative
standards because
they see other standards they can't achieve as unrealistic
expectations of unnecessary material comforts of modern life, which
they would have made the conscious choice to forsake by continuing to
live in the country instead of moving to a more urban environment.
When such rural denizens have valid points on these matters, it would
benefit Georgists to concede those points to them.
Georgists
would do best finding common ground with conservatives and
libertarians by promoting citizens' dividends deriving from shares in
community sovereign wealth funds, in connection with the negative
income tax (as part of a transition out of individual income taxes
entirely, and towards the Single Tax system).
I
would recommend that Georgists do so within a framework of a
completed and perfected competitive market system that requires
social purpose of enterprise and incorporation as a condition of
receiving business and corporate charters (as well as permits,
licenses, zoning, and of course subsidies). Such a system would
feature a greater number and a wider variety of organizations and
firms buying and selling in markets for public and market goods
alike. This includes the markets for the regulation of standards in
socioeconomic justice and fairness themselves (i.e., standards
regarding quality of government-provided goods and services),
standards regarding taxation, et cetera.
It
would be beneficial for Georgists to emphasize, before recommending
any political solution, the necessity of ensuring that there is
evidence for consumer demand for such a solution (i.e.,
taxpayer demand, since we are talking about the consumers of goods
and services customarily provided by government, but also demand by
non-contributing recipients of such services). Partnering with people
and firms interested and involved in the fair trade and conscious
consumer movements will be essential; as will convincing
conservatives that exploitation of people, environment, and resources
is economically inefficient and harmful, especially if and when there
is money in the solution.
It
will also be necessary to emphasize that a business with sufficient
social purpose should not be expected to pay taxes, nor expect its
consumers to pay taxes on sales. Additionally, mutuality and
reciprocity between ownership / management and workers / consumers
should feature each of these parties being invested in one another's
success. This is to say that firms should view purchasing as an
investment, and reward devoted consumers appropriately with savings,
special deals, consumer protection rights, company stock, and/or some
other form of consumer credit.
I
would suggest that as long as Georgists are open to the idea that all
income taxes are improvements to land (and, moreover, earnings,
rather than the property of the State, to be taxed away as much as it
pleases) which should therefore be protected to taxation - and
continue to maintain and show that land taxation is a viable
replacement - then they will be capable of convincing conservatives
and leftists alike of the benefits of transitioning towards the
Single Tax on the unimproved value of land.
To
a leftist, abolition of individual income taxes would ensure that
working people keep “the full product of their labor”, and to a
conservative it would ensure that working people keep “all the
fruits of their labor”.
Georgists
would do best to pitch the citizens' dividend / sovereign wealth fund
in connection with the negative income tax in a transition to the
Single Tax, in the context of the ideas that the welfare State is
broken; that it should be completely replaced with an efficient,
fiscally solvent voucher system that we can trust; that individual
liberty, autonomy and prosperity are maximized when individuals
(acting independently and/or collectively), acting in their
own interests, are allowed to make their own decisions in the
marketplace; and that this alone is what results in the common
good being achieved.
Now,
during a time of Democratic Party dominance, is the perfect time to
build an alliance between conservatives and libertarians, and
leftists, progressives, and liberals, disillusioned by Democrats. We
should wonder how Democrats – who are now promoting minimum wage
increases and emphasizing the problem of income inequality – would
react if they saw former Reagan advisers and libertarians of the left
and right alike getting together to demand more
than the Democrats claim to want.
Wouldn't
Democrats be confounded
and appalled to see Noam
Chomsky praising Adam Smith (as he has done), Gary Johnson and Ralph
Nader coming together to endorse the Single Tax and to educate the
public on the philosophy of Henry George, and the Tea Party coming
around those ideas of Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson (ideas on
landed property and taxation) which are reminiscent of George's?
By
demanding a citizens' dividend, sovereign wealth funds, a flatter yet
more effectively progressive tax on income, and a guaranteed minimum
income or universal basic income – and demanding it of the
people themselves, not from the State
– conservatives and leftists could reclaim the the moral high
ground from the Democratic Party, working together to achieve a more
equitable, fiscally efficient, effective form of government and
economic system.
Health
Care, Housing, and Homelessness
Finally,
Georgists should seek to convince conservatives of the viability and
practicality of the Single Tax (and the other proposals endorsed
herein) by arguing that it would help diminish the power of all kinds
of monopolies and oligopolies to participate and intervene in
markets, thereby distorting price calculation and denying buyers and
consumers the right to communicate price signals in an equitably
influential manner. These markets include the markets for land
ownership, speculation in land, and mortgage-backed securities.
They
also include markets for the distribution of goods and services
customarily provided by government (or at least when provided to the
poor), such as health services, as well as housing and other forms of
relief from homelesness. Focusing on this could help tap into the
conservative resentment of the State's destruction of private charity
and its monopoly over “welfare” (i.e.,
well-being).
However,
in order to consistently oppose monopoly, I would urge members of
Common Ground OR-WA who support single-payer universal health care to
rethink their position, and consider that it is impractical and
unlikely to occur. Not only that, but I would remind them that
single-payer is a monopoly on purchasing - i.e.,
a monopsony – and that
it is the abolition
of the private market for health insurance. This practice is known as
“market abolitionism”; or “anagorism”, meaning “without
open marketplaces”.
I
would caution single payer proponents them that to give the State a
monopoly over health insurance purchase could only serve to further
increase costs, politicize health policy, and risk corruption in the
health industry as soon as political administration falls into the
hands of another party.
Keeping
in mind that, in a social market economy, “private” would have a
very different meaning, I would caution single-payer proponents that
abolishing the market for private health insurance would politicize
health policy and corrupt the health industry, because Republican
control of a health insurance monopsony might be catastrophic and
result in cuts justified as “austerity measures”. It would also
increase the health costs incurred by taxpayers, because some people
might demand that medically unnecessary and/or cosmetic procedures
which they do not need are their natural rights, and demand others to
pay for such procedures and insurance coverage thereof.
Instead
of using the State
and its monopsony to balance the immense selling power of large
health insurance sellers, I would recommend that Common Ground
members build alliances with and between consumer-driven health care
cooperatives (while such cooperatives remain technically separate
entities), and focus on tightly coordinating their efforts with the
public.
This
would be done in order to concentrate purchasing power in the hands
of non-profit, voluntary
non-governmental or quasi-governmental agencies; so as to reduce
health costs for their paying customers and non-paying impoverished
beneficiaries (without necessitating a welfare State) while also
ensuring that prices stay high
enough to ensure that health workers are sufficiently compensated. It
would also be done in order to streamline distribution and to promote
collaboration on industry policy across all stages of production and
all sectors of industrial relations.
This
model, if successful, might also prove to be an effective solution
for other goods and services typically provided with the help of the
welfare State, such as housing, and public utilities like energy.
Keeping
in mind that the State of Oregon is currently number one in the
nation for homelessness and residential foreclosures, I believe that
homelessness and the issues surrounding land, mortgages, and housing
should be dealt with as a single issue. Georgists must (ahem)
capitalize
on public awareness (resulting from the Occupy Wall Street movement)
of the fact that empty houses outnumber homeless people in America by
more than 20-to-1.
From
the perspective of rural Republicans who are being asked to foot the
bill for tax increases and tolerate the expansion of public
infrastructure into their communities (raising their property values
but also their property taxes), a downtown Portland full of
non-working homeless people, undeveloped property, and unoccupied
buildings is no signal of good things to come from modernizing the
quality of life in the rest of the state.
Georgists
seeking to attract conservatives to their cause in the State of
Oregon must show rural Republicans a Portland full of homeless people
who are willing to work (at least, those whom are neither disabled
nor sick), and can earn and spend their own money responsibly, in
order to render moot any questions about whether such homeless people
are incompetent (or at least any more incompetent than rural
Republicans, who have denied themselves the local government they so
badly need, know themselves to be).
I
would recommend that Georgists seek to solve the housing and
homelessness problem by allowing homeless people (rather than
requiring them, as in “work-for-welfare” or “workfare”) to
work in exchange for goods and services. For homeless families, this
might involve having the most physically able member of the family
perform labor (while
learning some valuable skill)
while his or her family receives whatever food, clothing,
non-emergency health care and supplies, and temporary child care for
the day, that they urgently need.
This
could be accomplished through coordinating with charities coalitions,
homeless advocacy groups (such as Join and Transition Projects, Inc.
in Portland); veterans' groups; retirees' groups, and retirement
homes, communities, and villages (such as Foster Village in
Portland); community gardening organizations; university gardening
apprenticeship programs (such as the Oregon State University
Extension's Beginning Urban Farming Apprenticeship Program in
Portland); fraternal organizations for senior citizens (such as the
Masons, Shriners, Kiwanis, and Elks clubs); and staffing / consulting
/ human resources and job training firms that are willing to consider
employing people without testing their bodily fluids for marijuana
use.
The
purpose of all these organizations coordinating would be to teach
homeless people about how to maintain and improve land, and could
include education about homesteading and Oregon's laws regarding
homesteading. One important objective would be teaching the homeless
a marketable skill, building World War II -style “Victory Gardens”
(this time celebrating victory in the “War on Poverty” as a war
on poor people).
This
would allow the young and old alike to work together on the problems
of homelessness, housing, and land reform, taxation, and improvement;
allow seniors to pass on what they have learned; and allow working
and non-working young people to come together to demand more
opportunity in hiring (potentially calling for boycotts of staffing
agencies with unreasonably high expectations of the disadvantaged).
I
would recommend that when dealing with homelessness, Georgists
consistently emphasize the “hobo” as a traveling, working
person; one who needs
freedom of travel, realistic opportunities to work, the ability to
affordably learn marketable skills, and satisfaction of their most
urgent needs (without which they would not be able to work
comfortably).
Additionally,
Georgists should coordinate with homeless charities and coalitions
thereof to revive the defunct organization I.B.W.A. (the
International Brotherhood Welfare Association), the mutual aid
society which until 1922 was affiliated with the I.W.W. (Industrial
Workers of the World) and offered education, job training, and
religious services to traveling workers through “hobo colleges”.
In
the State of Utah, the Republican Party has given up on homelessness,
deciding to simply give
houses to homeless people,
because they observed that the expenses of caring for homeless
people's emergency needs are lesser
than the costs of providing them with taxpayer-subsidized housing.
Meanwhile, a Democrat
in the State of Hawaii recently sponsored a bill to provide
all-expense-paid plane tickets to homeless people in order to deport
them to the United States mainland.
Leftists
in Oregon and elsewhere must not allow the far-right Republicans of
Utah out-compete them in solving homelessness. Oregonians should look
towards not only the classical liberals of old and Reagan
conservatives; but to market-anarchists, libertarian, and Agorists;
for inspiration regarding finding and developing new models for urban
development, taxation, residential property protection, and provision
of welfare. The Free Detroit Project is just one example.
In
closing, I would like to ask: “Is it any wonder that a state that
has no sales tax - but the most government revenue deriving from
individual income in the country - has so much poverty, and
homelessness (as well as prostitution)? What do you expect to happen
when you impose such high barriers to earning and keeping money, and
almost completely knock down barriers to selling?”
The
result is that people will be effectively discouraged from working
through high income taxes, so they won't earn any money (at least in
any legitimate way where they would report it, and moreover not
be monetarily penalized for doing so).
The only thing left for them do – due to there being few barriers
to selling – is to sell whatever little they have left (and to,
once again, not report the resulting income). Once they have sold all
their material possessions, all they will have left to sell will be
themselves.
We
must remove financial barriers to transitioning from welfare to work,
promoting the various workers' organizations which are unique to
Portland (including artisans' enterprises, independent tech meetups,
and freelancers' unions), and provide better standards of living for
the public. The Single Tax, negative income tax, social market
economy, sovereign wealth fund, citizens' dividend, and guaranteed
minimum income accomplish this.
Happy
Tax Day!
For
more entries on enterprise, business, business alliance, and markets,
please
visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2010/10/enlightened-catallaxy-reciprocally.html
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2010/10/enlightened-catallaxy-reciprocally.html
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/agorist-protection-agencies-and.html
For
more entries on natural resources, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2010/10/case-examination-of-policy-for-natural.html
For
more entries on the social market economy and the third (voluntary)
sector, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/04/diagram-of-public-private-and-third.html
For
more entries on social services, public planning, and welfare, please
visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/taxpayer-funded-benefits-for.html
For
more entries on taxation, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/tax-cuts.html
For
more entries on theory of government, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-general-welfare-clause.html
For
more entries on unions and collective bargaining, please visit:
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