|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewIn 1890, the famous American economist and social reformer, Henry George, arrived in Australia to begin a controversial 98-day public lecture tour. Following the international publicity generated by his book Progress and Poverty, with its challenges to conventional economics, he had made several lecture tours in Britain, attracting immense audiences. In Australia he visited 34 cities and towns and continued to promulgate vigorously and eloquently his radical program for the ownership, management and taxation of natural resources such as land, coal, and minerals. \nNature's Gifts provides, for the first time, a detailed account of this important and progressive lecture series. Equal rights to land; land taxation; land prices; land rents; land nationalisation; and free trade and protection remain issues which are highly relevant today. \nEngaging and insightful, this is a timely and critical study of the reforms proposed by Henry George and the possibility of establishing an efficient and equitable system for the ownership of natural resources. \n Full Product DetailsAuthor: John PullenPublisher: Federation Press Imprint: Desert Pea Press Weight: 0.380kg ISBN: 9781876861124ISBN 10: 1876861126 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 09 December 2014 Audience: Professional and scholarly , General/trade , Professional & Vocational , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsPreface Abbreviations Acknowledgments Sources Introduction: Overview of the Lecture Tour and Biographical Background Summary of the Itinerary PART 1 - Henry George's Lecture Tour in Australia 1. New South Wales: 6 March - 24 March 2. Victoria: 25 March - 8 April 3. New South Wales: 9 April - 16 April 4. South Australia: 17 April - 3 May 5. New South Wales: 4 May - 7 May 6. Queensland: 8 May - 25 May 7. Farewells: From Brisbane to Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide: 26 May - 11 June PART 2 - Australia and Henry George, 1890 and Now Nature's Gifts Unearned increments: The caused-by-society argument and the caused-by-nature argument The Single Tax Free trade, land rights and the Single Tax International implications The right of private property: Two principles or one? Private property or private possession The ethics of income tax: Natural resources and human resources Land nationalisation or land-value taxation Trade unions Town planning Spending the revenue: Collectively or distributively Spending the revenue: Local versus central government Political feasibility of land-value taxation Compensation or confiscation Realised and unrealised increments: The ability-to-pay problem Equal rights to the value of land and other natural resources The dispossessed and the disinherited Appendix A: Newspapers Consulted Appendix B: Biographical Notes Appendix C: Single Tax Conference at Sydney, March 1890 ReferencesIndex of NamesIndex of SubjectsReviewsPullen's day-by-day chronicle and thoughtful appraisal of Henry George's fourteen week Australian tour in 1890 provides much-needed further insight into a formative period in Australian political history. In his 1879 classic, Progress and Poverty, George argued: The ownership of land is the great fundamental fact which ultimately determines the social, the political and consequently the intellectual and moral condition of a people . While George's messianic crusade in support of shared equity in land via a tax on its incremental value may have been misplaced, his writings were highly influential over several decades. Pullen argues that George's visit was unparalleled in Australian history. It occupies 120 pages of the 200-page text, covering a succession of public welcomes, testimonials and presentations given by premiers, parliamentarians, mayors, clergymen and other dignitaries, together with the (not quite unanimous) enthusiastic responses of receptive audiences. ... Of particular value is Pullen's informed scrutiny of the foundational principles and of the common misunderstandings and misrepresentations of Georgism... Read full review... - John Holmes, Australian Journal of Politics and History, December 2015 Pullen's day-by-day chronicle and thoughtful appraisal of Henry George's fourteen- week Australian tour in 1890 provides much-needed further insight into a formative period in Australian political history. In his 1879 classic, Progress and Poverty, George argued: The ownership of land is the great fundamental fact which ultimately determines the social, the political and consequently the intellectual and moral condition of a people . While George's messianic crusade in support of shared equity in land via a tax on its incremental value may have been misplaced, his writings were highly influential over several decades. Pullen argues that George's visit was unparalleled in Australian history. It occupies 120 pages of the 200-page text, covering a succession of public welcomes, testimonials and presentations given by premiers, parliamentarians, mayors, clergymen and other dignitaries, together with the (not quite unanimous) enthusiastic responses of receptive audiences. ... Of particular value is Pullen's informed scrutiny of the foundational principles and of the common misunderstandings and misrepresentations of Georgism... Read full review... - John Holmes, Australian Journal of Politics and History, December 2015 Author InformationJohn Pullen studied at the University of Sydney (B.Ec.), University of Liverpool (England) (M.A.), and University of Newcastle (NSW) (Ph.D.). He taught Economics at the University of New England for 33 years, with special research and teaching interests in Urban Economics and the History of Economic Thought. Publications in these areas include 10 monographs as either author, co-author, or editor, and 67 articles and book chapters. Eight of the published articles deal with the theories and policies of Henry George, and have led to this current research into the extraordinary, but hitherto largely undocumented lecture tour of Australia by Henry George in 1890. John retired from teaching in 2006, and is currently engaged in research and publication as an Adjunct Associate Professor of the University of New England. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |