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... an American political economist , and the most influential proponent of the collection of the rental value of land as the sole income of the state.
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| Contents |
| 1 Henry George 2 His Proposals 3 Death and Subsequent Influence 4 Bibliography 5 External links |
Henry George ( 2nd September, 1839 – 29th October, 1897 )
The Georgist school of thought takes its identity from the work and insights of 19th century journalist, economist, and political leader
Henry George, who died in 1897 at the young age of 57. In his short life, however, he managed to spawn a school of economics of lasting impact, based on his prolific writing and speaking as well as his dedicated pursuit of economic justice
and political change. George’s most famous book, Progress and Poverty, has been in print ever since its initial publication in 1879. It had
by 1906 sold more copies than any book ever published except the Bible. Not only did he travel internationally throughout the English speaking world, strongly influencing policy in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United Kingdom, he was the
candidate for the mayor of the city of New York on two occasions, elections that he might have won had it not been for Tammany Hall corruption in
the first instance and his death four days before the polls opened in the second. Current mainstream
textbooks have reduced his program
to
advocacy of the “single tax,” often dismissing him as a crank, but his views were in fact far more complex. They constituted a total
world view synthesized from several streams of thought current during the nineteenth century.
| H. William Batt, Ph.D. |
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The general framework of George's social philosophy is rooted in the view of Thomas Jefferson that the root cause of social problems is an inequality of rights.
In 1886 George ran for mayor of New York, 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 .
Progress and Poverty, and his other writings, made Henry George the third most famous man in the USA, behind only Mark Twain and Thomas Edison . (http://www.schalkenbach.org/who-was-henry.html)
He was also popular as a speaker, 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 , Taiwan , Hong Kong , New Zealand, and Australia – where state governments still levy a Land Value Tax, albeit low and with many exemptions.
An attempt by the British Liberal Government of the day to implement a penny in the £ (0.4%) rate on land value in 1909 as part of the budget caused a crisis in Britain which led directly 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.
Henry George's popularity declined in the 20th century ; however, there are still many Georgist organisations in existence, and many people who remain famous were heavily influenced by him, such as George Bernard Shaw , Leo Tolstoy , Sun Yat Sen , and David Lloyd George. A follower of George, Lizzie Magie , created the board game Monopoly in 1904 to demonstrate his theories.
In his last book, Martin Luther King referenced Henry George in support of a guaranteed minimum income. (http://www.progress.org/dividend/cdking.html
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