Henry George's fame in the fields of economics, politics and literature rests largely on his powerful book, Progress and Poverty, first published in 1879. The centenary of this event sparked a modest revival of interest in George's work among academic economists, including a special session devoted to him at the December 1979 American Economics Association meetings in Atlanta. Generally, however, his work has been neglected by twentieth‐century economists and, as Robert Heilbroner (1969) remarked, he is cast as a member of the economics “underworld”. If any economics undergraduate has heard his name it is usually through a passing reference in a first‐year textbook to the Single Tax Movement. The impression is then given by the text that George was a single‐issue fanatic. The student is told that a tax on land rents is theoretically interesting and that it would have no disincentive effects but that it is either impractical to separate land from improvements or that rents are not sufficiently important to warrant much attention to them as a major source of government finance.
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1 May 1986
Review Article|
May 01 1986
Natural Law and the Political Economy of Henry George Available to Purchase
Roger J. Sandilands
Roger J. Sandilands
University of Strathclyde
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7387
Print ISSN: 0144-3585
© MCB UP Limited
1986
Journal of Economic Studies (1986) 13 (5): 4–15.
Citation
Sandilands RJ (1986), "Natural Law and the Political Economy of Henry George". Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 13 No. 5 pp. 4–15, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb002635
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