Modernizing Henry George

http://steadystate.org/modernizing-henry-george/

Herman Daly

Economists have traditionally considered nature to be infinite
relative to the economy, and therefore not scarce, and therefore
properly priced at zero. But the biosphere is now scarce, and becoming
more so every day as a result of growth of its large and dependent
subsystem, the macro-economy. As the macro-economy expands into the
ecosystem it displaces what was there before, namely habitat of other
species (and of indigenous and poor members of our own species).
Consequently, biodiversity decline is a salient index of the
increasing scarcity of nature, as is involuntary resettlement of
people to make way for dams, mines, soybeans, and cattle; and of
course increasing depletion and pollution. Sacrifice of nature’s
scarce services constitutes an increasing opportunity cost of growth,
and that in turn means that nature must be priced, either explicitly
or implicitly. But to whom should this price be paid? Nature would
prefer not to sell herself, but if forced to it by growth, would at
least like to divide equally among her children the revenue from the
forced sale of her previous gifts. From the point of view of
efficiency it does not matter who receives the price, as long as it is
counted and paid by the users. But from the point of view of equity it
matters a great deal who receives the price for nature’s increasingly
scarce services. Such payment is the ideal source of funds with which
to finance public goods, and to redistribute to the poor.

“Value added” belongs to whoever added it. But the original value of
that to which further value is added by labor and capital, the value
of scarce natural resources and natural services, should belong to
everyone. It is the original commonwealth. These “payments to nature”
should be the focus of redistributive efforts. Payment for what is now
too scarce to be treated as a free gift is measured and appropriated
by markets as a rent (payment in excess of necessary supply price).
Rent is unearned income to the recipient, but allocative efficiency
requires that it be paid by the user of the resource. Taxation of
value added by labor and capital is certainly legitimate. But it is
both more legitimate and less necessary after we have, as much as
possible, captured natural resource rents for public revenue.

The above seems to be the basic insight of early American economist
Henry George (1839-1897) who applied it specifically to rent on the
scarcity of desirable locations of land rather than to rents on
natural resource scarcity in general. Could we not extend Henry
George’s logic to resources in general? For resources the necessary
supply price is the cost of extraction — so any payment above cost of
extraction is rent. Since land has no cost of extraction all payment
for land is rent. If no rent is paid, land does not cease to exist.
Neoclassical economists accept this definition of rent but resist
Henry George’s ethical emphasis on rent as unearned income.

The modern form of the Georgist insight is to tax the rent from land,
and by extension from natural resources and services of nature, and to
use these funds for fighting poverty and for financing public goods.
Or we could simply create a trust fund from these rents, and disburse
the earnings from it to all citizens, as in the Alaska Permanent Fund.
Our present practice of taxing away a lot of the value added by
individuals from applying their own labor and capital creates
resentment, and discourages the supply of labor and capital. Taxing
away value that no one added, scarcity rents on nature’s contribution,
does not create as much resentment, and the resentment it does cause
is less justified. In fact, failing to tax away the scarcity rents to
nature and letting them accrue as unearned income to a landlord class
has long been a primary source of resentment and social conflict.
Furthermore, taxing land and resource rent does not diminish their
quantity. Soviet communists tried for a while to abolish the category
of rent because it represented unearned income — a part of “surplus
value” like profit and interest. They jumped to the conclusion that
therefore resources and land must be free. But that makes it
impossible to allocate resources efficiently. Better to follow Henry
George and retain rent as a necessary price for measuring opportunity
cost, but to then tax it away as unearned income to the landlords. The
more we tax away rent the less we have to tax the value added by human
labor and capital.

Charging scarcity rents on natural resources and redistributing them
to the commonwealth can be effected either by ecological tax reform,
or by quantitative cap-auction-trade systems. In differing ways each
would limit expansion of the scale of the economy into the biosphere,
thereby preserving biodiversity and also providing revenue to run the
commonwealth. I will not discuss their relative merits here, but
rather emphasize the advantage that both have over the currently
favored strategy. The currently favored strategy might be called
“efficiency first” in distinction to the “frugality first” principle
embodied in each of the policies mentioned above.

“Efficiency first” sounds good, especially when referred to as
“win-win” strategies, or more picturesquely as “picking the
low-hanging fruit.” But the problem of “efficiency first” is with what
comes second. An improvement in efficiency by itself is equivalent to
having an increased supply of the resource whose efficiency increased.
The price of that resource will decline. More uses for the now cheaper
resource will be made. We will end up consuming perhaps as much or
more of the resource than before, albeit more efficiently, as pointed
out in the nineteenth century words of economist William Stanley
Jevons:

   “It is wholly a confusion of ideas to suppose that the economical
[efficient] use of fuel is equivalent to a diminished consumption. The
very contrary is the truth.” (The Coal Question, 1866, p. 123)

We need frugality (diminished consumption) more than efficiency.
“Frugality first” induces efficiency as a secondary consequence, an
adaptation; efficiency first does not induce frugality — it makes
frugality less necessary, and it does not give rise to a scarcity rent
that can be redistributed. Let us put frugality first by reducing
physical throughput with ecological tax reform and/or
cap-auction-trade systems for basic resources, and by so doing both
avoid the Jevons effect and collect the scarcity rents on nature for
the commonwealth rather than the elite.

If we could directly limit population and per capita resource use
(scale of the macro-economy) to a level that nature could easily
sustain, then nature’s services could remain free. But if we insist
that population and per capita consumption must be free to grow, then
the rising cost of natural resources must indirectly limit growth, and
the question of who receives the increasing rent (who owns nature)
will become ever more pressing, and Henry George’s thinking ever more
relevant. Alternatively, our increasing takeover of nature will,
beyond some point, render moot the question of distribution of rents
by eliminating all potential claimants! When an overloaded ship sinks
all aboard drown — even if the overload is justly distributed and
efficiently allocated!


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-- 
Sandwichman

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