THE GEORGIST NEWS

    WEB EDITION
    Volume Nine, Number Twelve, June 1, 2007
    Welcome to the June issue of The Georgist News.
    
    To solve an email quandary, I phoned tech support who proceeded to give
    me instructions for the most efficient way to -- tah-dah -- erase most
    of my saved email. If you like shorter newsletters, lucky you. Maybe
    less is more. You will read how people turn down jobs to avoid the
    housing bust, and cites of three poignant essays by Henry George, and
    where his name pops up in the media, still after all these years, and
    the results from the selection of a name for a new e-zine. Turn the
    page!
    
    CONTENTS:
    
     1. Movement Business: 2007 conference hotel deadline this month
     2. Good Press: Scots mainstream on Greens on land tax;
        LA on carbon tax
     3. News: Oil $ corrupts Alaska; home prices preclude moving;
        Florida to recede
     4. Numbers: Debt up, Down be homes, indicators, and confidence.
     5. Movement progress: Ask Henry anything.
     6. Letters to editor: Subsidies a geoist issue? GN's new name?
     7. Obituaries: Dr. George W. Dana
     8. Likable links: FLOW; Nican IHG; letters by HG on labor and Marx
     9. What You Can Do: Name that zine! Attend Freedom Fest
    10. At the Margin: Quips and Quotes
    11. Publication affairs: Contributors, About the Georgist News
    
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    1.  Movement Business: 2007 conference hotel deadline this month
        By Sue Walton, sns at swwalton.com, May 22, 2007
    
    Interested in attending the 2007 CGO Conference? The second deadline for
    registering is June 29th, 2007. Register by phone at 888-/262-9015 or
    847-/475-0391 or by fax at 775/-248-8630. Or go to the CGO website,
    www.progress.org/cgo  then click on "conferences." Also, hotel
    reservations must be received by June 29th, 2007. Our hotel is the
    Scranton Hilton, whose phone is 570/343-7000 or 800/445-8667. You must
    mention the CGO conference to get our special $89/night rate.
    
    The Executive Committee of the Council of Georgist Organizations is
    accepting proposals for seminars for its 2008 Conference. Proposals must
    be sent to Ted Gwartney no later than September 1, 2007. This is a firm
    deadline and can not be extended. It is Council policy not to repeat
    topics done within the last four years.
    
    ==================================================================
    
    2a.  Good Press:  Scots mainstream press on Greens' on land tax proposal
         By Douglas Fraser, The Herald, May 8, 2007
    
    Amid the council taxation debate, the Scottish Green Party wants to tax
    land value rather than property price for both homes and businesses. The
    tax shift is part of radical changes in planning law to spur owners to
    bring unused shops and brownfield sites into use.
    
    By Antony Akilade, Deputy Business Editor, the Sunday Herald
    
    The Greens propose a land value tax. As such, it compensates the
    community for the private gains made from public investment in the
    infrastructure and financial assistance to attract development.
    
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    2b.  Good Press:  SoCal wants a new tax on using nature
         By opinion editor, The Los Angeles Times, May 28, 2007
    
    While all the added costs under cap-and-trade go to companies,
    utilities, and traders, the added costs under a carbon tax would go to
    the government, which could use the revenues to offset other taxes. So
    while consumers would pay more for energy, they might pay less income
    tax, or some other tax. That could greatly cushion the overall economic
    effect.
    
    Editor's note: Al Gore urges this tax shift, most recently in the cover
    story of Time Magazine (May 28 via Heather Remoff). Dr. Fred Foldvary
    notes that a tax on carbon output works better than one on carbon
    inputs, since different engines and factories can use the same amount of
    fossil fuel but pollute by different amounts.
    
    Either way, when people pay a tax for using some part nature -- i.e. for
    emitting carbon into the atmosphere -- they begin to see the underlying
    principle of paying for what you take, not what you make. Then people
    can more easily hear Greens proposing to shift taxes from buildings to
    exclusive use of land.
    
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    3a.  News:  Petrol-dollars corrupt Alaskan politics
         By AP, May 4, 2007
    
    One current and two former Alaska legislators (Rep. Victor Kohring of
    Wasilla, Pete Kott of Eagle River and Bruce Weyhrauch of Juneau, all
    Republicans) pleaded not guilty to charges they accepted bribes to
    support legislation for an oil services company. An attorney for VECO
    Corp. said it was the company involved.
    
    The tax passed, but the contract for the pipeline negotiated by former
    Governor Frank Murkowski and BP PLC (BP), ConocoPhillips (COP) and Exxon
    Mobil Corp. (XOM) was never approved.
    
    Editor's note: While in this case the bribes included a job in Barbados,
    businesses routinely favor politicians with perks and campaign
    contributions. It's how the most important bills (permits, taxes, and
    subsidies) get passed.
    
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    3b.  News:  Recruits refuse jobs to not lose home site value
         By Amy Hoak, CBS Market Watch, May 11, 2007
    
    With homes in many markets around the country taking longer to sell and
    prices either flat or declining, employees being asked to relocate are
    starting to balk in greater numbers. Some companies are losing prized
    recruits or paying higher relocation costs for people who feared they'd
    lose money on the sale of their existing home. It's not unusual for a
    relocation package to cost as much as $100,000.
    
    Editor's note: People expect to make money from land. It's not even
    considered speculation any more. It's part of the American psyche -- and
    it's what any tax on land is up against.
    
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    3c.  News:  Writer predicts Florida recession will not spread
         By Dean Foust, Business Week, May 18, 2007 (via Ed Dodson)
    
    Jan Hatzius of Goldman Sachs believes the housing drag on GDP will only
    be 3-4 percentage points spread out over 2-3 years. Not enough to cause
    a recession because higher exports will help pick up the slack. But he
    predicts a recession in Florida with growth down six to eight percentage
    points.
    
    Florida has the largest amount of excess housing supply: twice the
    percentage of the nation as a whole. Inventories of unsold homes are as
    high as 30 months in some counties vs. a national average of 7.3 months.
    Homebuilders have cut the pace of new construction by half. That will
    trim two percentage points from Florida's economic growth; the residual
    cutbacks in related services will trim another two points.
    
    Nationally, Hatzius calculates that the average homeowner is paying 23%
    of their income on housing vs. 20% in the 1990s. Hence, he believes
    housing values nationally will have to fall 15% to get back to
    equilibrium. In Florida, the average mortgage eats up 31% of incomes vs.
    18% in the 1990s. Hence, Hatzius calculates that house prices have to
    fall more than 40% to get back to fair value. He expects a decline of
    10-15% this year and further declines thereafter. Hatzius figures
    falling home prices will trim consumption by another two percentage
    points, as consumers feel poorer.
    
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    4a.  Numbers for 2006:
         Each US household owes over half million in public debt
         By Dennis Cauchon, USA Today, May 29, 2007
    
    The federal government recorded a $1.3 trillion loss last year -- far
    more than the official $248 billion deficit -- when corporate-style
    accounting standards are used. Modern accounting requires that expenses
    be booked when a transaction occurs, even if the payment will be made
    later. The federal government does not follow the rule, so promises for
    Social Security, Medicare, and retirement programs for civil servants
    and military personnel don't show up when the government reports its
    financial condition. The loss -- equal to $11,434 per household -- is
    more than Americans paid in income taxes in 2006.
    
    Taxpayers are now on the hook for a record $59.1 trillion in
    liabilities, a 2.3% increase from 2006. That amount is equal to $516,348
    for every U.S. household. By comparison, U.S. households owe an average
    of $112,043 for mortgages, car loans, credit cards, and all other debt
    combined. The administration argues that their programs are not true
    liabilities because government can at any time back out of them.
    
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    4b.  Numbers for Q1:
         Existing homes price hit 16-year low (almost 18)
         By Alan Zibel, AP, May 15, 2007
    
    Sales of existing homes were down 6.6% from a year ago, even though they
    were up 2.4% the last quarter of 2006. The price of a national median
    existing single-family home was $212,300, down 1.8% from a year ago,
    when the median price was $216,100.
    
    Editor's note: These official figures align with the results of the
    Case-Shiller index which uniquely tracks multiple sales on the same
    property; it concluded prices fell 1.4% in the first quarter compared
    with a year earlier, the first year-over-year decline in national home
    prices since 1991 (Rex Nutting, MarketWatch, May 29, 2007). As soon as
    the Northwest, where prices still rise comfortably, and a few cities in
    the South catch up -- or down -- to the rest of the country, expect
    prices to fall farther.
    
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    4c.  Numbers for April:
         Prices inflate, Indicators drop
         By Martin Crutsinger, AP, May 15, 2007
    
    Consumer prices rose by 0.4% last month following a 0.6% jump in March;
    gasoline prices surged for a second straight month. Through the first
    four months of this year, consumer inflation is rising at an annual rate
    of 4.8%, almost double the 2.5% increase for all of 2006. Energy prices
    have been rising at an annual rate of 25.3% so far this year, compared
    with a gain of 2.9% for all of 2006. Food costs, which have been pushed
    higher by the increased demand for corn to use in ethanol production,
    were up at an annual rate of 6.7% in the first four months of this year
    compared with a 2.1% rise for all of 2006.
    
    Editor's note: Higher costs, mainly for food and energy, spread
    throughout the economy as central government and central bank continue
    to issue too many new notes -- which does workers no good. After
    adjusting for inflation, the average weekly earnings for non-supervisory
    workers fell by 0.5% in April compared to March.
    
    By Candice Choi, Associated Press, May 17, 2007
    
    The index of leading economic indicators dropped 0.5%, nearly reversing
    the previous month's gain of 0.6%, which came after two months of
    declines. The reading tries to forecast economic activity over the next
    three to six months by tracking ten economic activities. Two of them
    were positive in April: stock prices and real money supply. The negative
    ones, beginning with the largest, were building permits, weekly
    unemployment claims, manufacturers' new orders for non-defense capital
    goods, consumer expectations, vendor performance, average weekly
    manufacturing hours, and interest rate spread.
    
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    4d.  Numbers for April for housing:
         Lenders foreclose, Prices fall
         By Alan Zibel, AP, May 15, 2007
    
    Mortgage lenders foreclosed on 62% more U.S. homes in April than a year
    ago; 147,708, compared with 91,168. The April figure was 1% lower than
    in March, when foreclosures hit a two-year high.
    
    By Reuters, May 16, 2007
    
    The pace of home construction gained 2.5%; housing starts were at the
    highest pace since December 2006, but they were down 16% from a year
    ago. Building permits, which signal future construction plans, sank 8.9%
    to the lowest pace in nearly a decade.
    
    By Reuters, May 24, 2007
    
    Sales of new homes rose 16.2% in April, the sharpest climb in fourteen
    years, while prices fell a record 11%. The jump in sales was the biggest
    increase since a 16.4% surge in 1993 April. Only one region of the
    country, the Northeast, pumped up the number, by 43.1% from last April.
    The median sales price of a new home fell $28,500 to $229,100 from
    $257,600 in March. Builders are slashing prices to move their huge
    surplus of unsold homes.
    
    By Martin Crutsinger AP, May 25, 2007
    
    Sales of existing homes fell 2.6% in April from March, and 10.7% from a
    year ago. This was the slowest sales pace since 2003 June. Sales fell in
    all parts of the country. The number of unsold homes on the market
    climbed to a record of 4.2 million. It would take 8.4 months to exhaust
    that supply. Housing has depressed overall economic activity, which
    slowed to a growth rate of just 1.3% in the first three months of this
    year, the slowest economic growth rate in four years. The median price
    of a home sold fell 0.8% from a year ago to $220,900 -- the ninth
    straight month of decline. During the five boom years that ended last
    year. prices of homes rose 50%.
    
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    4e.  Numbers for May: Builders' confidence, good indicator, down
         By Lynn Adler, Reuters, May 15, 2007
    
    Home builder confidence dropped three points to 30 in May, matching the
    15-year low set last year in September, as lenders made it more
    difficult for borrowers to qualify for mortgages and order cancellations
    mounted. The index stood at 46 last May. Builder confidence has eroded
    each month since reaching 39 in February.
    
    Editor's note: For the last decade, builders' confidence has presaged
    economic performance in general rather accurately.
    
    ==================================================================
    
    5.  Movement progress: Ask Henry anything
        By Hanno Beck, April 29, 2007
    
    A reader wrote that the search engine "AskHenry" is great, but it doesn't
    include all the Georgist websites." Oh yes it does! So long as it is
    technically feasible, the Banneker Center policy has always been for
    www.askhenry.com to include all Georgist websites. The Banneker Center
    invested in a search functionality that gives a lot of speed and power;
    it's the same system that powers searches at eBay, for example.
    
    ===============================================================---
    
    6a.  Letter to editor: Subsidies a geoist issue?
         By Mary Lehmann, May 7, 2007
    
    About subsidies and how Georgist or not they may be, here's an excerpt
    from HG JR's biography (section 2, p.202) that is not in P and P:
    
        "Railroad subsidies, like protective duties, are condemned by the
        economic principle that the development of industry should be left
        free to take its natural direction.
    
        "They are condemned by the political principle that government
        should be reduced to its minimum -- that it becomes more corrupt
        and more tyrannical, and less under the control of the people,
        with every extension of its powers and duties.
    
        "They are condemned by the Democratic principle which forbids the
        enrichment of one citizen at the expense of another; and the
        giving to one citizen of advantages denied to another.
    
        "They are condemned by the experience of the whole country which
        shows that they have invariably led to waste, extravagance and
        rascality; that they inevitably become a source of corruption and
        a means of plundering the people.
    
        "The only method of preventing the abuse of subsidies is by
        prohibiting them altogether. This is absolutely required by the
        lengths to which the subsidy system in its various shapes has been
        carried -- by the effects which it is producing in lessening the
        comforts of the masses, stifling industry with taxation,
        monopolising land and corrupting the public service in all its
        branches."
    
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    6b.  Letter to editor: GN stands for what?
         By Alan Ridley, weprosper2 at hotmail.com May 3, 2007
    
    I like all the Good News. That might work as an alternative name for GN!
    
    ==================================================================
    
    7.  Obituaries: Dr. George W. Dana
        By Nadine Stoner, May 7, 2007
        (via Sue Walton and Wyn Achenbaum and The Oregonian, last Sept 19th)
    
    Dr. George W. Dana, 87, of Portland, OR died August 24, 2006 in his
    sleep at his home. Dana: joined Portland Clinic in 1951; taught
    pediatrics at OHSU; and was Medical Director of Reed College until
    retirement in 1987. Degrees: A.B. Harvard, 1940; M.D. Harvard
    Medical School, 1943. George Dana was the widower of the late Betsy
    Dana who died of pancreatic cancer in 1990. Betsy had started the
    World Federalists Registry as well as the Georgist Registry." (The
    Georgist Registry Report is still being published every other year
    in GroundSwell.)
    
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    8a.  Likable link:  Georgists cited at FLOW site
         By Michael Strong, CEO and Chief Visionary Officer FLOW, Inc.
         "Liberating the Entrepreneurial Spirit for Good", May 10, 2007
    
    This month we are running some Georgist-flavored material on our
    site. Most of it is by Peter Barnes, who counts as Georgist. But
    there is also an article I wrote, "Sustainability in a Bright Green
    Future," in which you and other Georgists are mentioned in a section
    on "green tax shift":
     www.flowidealism.org/Downloads/TFP-BrightGreenFuture.pdf
    
    As always, feel free to recommend improvements.
    
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    8b.  Likable link:  Latest from Nicaragua
         By Paul Martin, Director, Instituto Henry George, May 14, 2007
    
    The third "Comprender La Economia" course of the year began with 81
    students. Limited to 60 students in the facility we rent, we trucked
    in extra chairs. Our thanks to the HGS of NY for their continued
    support. The IHG "Maestria" course continues with 18 students. New
    teachers are needed as we have more solicitations for workshops than
    we can handle. Finally we acquired the long awaited building permit
    for the future IHG office and training center. We put an
    advertisement in the newspaper asking for estimates for the
    construction job.
    
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    8c.  Likable link:  The Condition of Labor up and accurate
         By Gavin Putnam, May 15, 2007
    
    I have marked the 116th anniversary of "Rerum Novarum" by correcting
    the HTML edition of HG's "The Condition of Labor" at
    http://grputland.com/classics/hg-col.htm (see the "Revision
    history").
    
    The entire text has now been proofread against the 2004 audio
    edition (thanks to http://associationforgoodgov.org.au/ for the
    CDs), and in the process, "diligently compared" with various text
    editions. While I did not see any point in producing a critical
    apparatus on all the trivial differences between editions -- and
    there were many such differences -- I did at least note the clear
    omissions; see the last three endnotes. This HTML version may be the
    most complete edition available.
    
    David Brooks adds: Congratulations. It makes interesting reading
    with all the notes and hyperlinks. The disks are available from
    Richard Giles, Secretary, Association for Good Government, P.O. Box
    251, Ulladulla, NSW, 2539 Australia. Listening to the disks is quite
    an experience.
    
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    8d.  Likable link:  Henry George's Letter at the Funeral of Karl Marx
         By Bruce Oatman, oatmanb at hra.nyc.gov, May 15, 2007
         (via Dave Wetzel)
    
    Henry George once dismissed Karl Marx as "the Prince of
    Muddleheads." Later, in a letter that was read at a memorial service
    for Marx at New York's Cooper Union on March 20, 1883, George was
    more flattering.
    
    I was led to the letter by a chance conversation with Liz Mestres,
    the director of the Brecht Forum in New York. She remembered having
    read George's tribute to Marx years before. After some digging, she
    found it in a compendium of comments at the time of Marx's death,
    Karl Marx Remembered, P.S. Foner, editor, published in 1983 by
    Synthesis Publications, San Francisco. The editor found the letter
    in the March 25, 1883 issue of a labor newspaper, 'Voice of the
    People', an organ of the group that sponsored the meeting.
    
    ==================================================================
    
    9a.  What You Can Do: Name that zine!
         By Jeff Smith
    
    Last month I asked you to help pick a name for a new geoist e-zine.
    Many of you voted, for which I am entirely grateful.
    
    However, an email malfunction erased all saved returns but one.
    Memory recalls the two most popular candidates plus some respectable
    runner-ups. If you were to choose no more than three from this list,
    which would they be? This should be the final narrowing. Thanks.
    
      Renting and Raving      Our Daily Rent      Our Common Wealth
      Our Space               Nature's Pay        Free Lunch
      Privilege Report
    
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    9b.  What You Can Do: Attend Freedom Fest
         By Fred Foldvary, fred at foldvary.net, May 18, 2007
    
    The FreedomFest conference will take place July 5-7 at Bally's Paris
    Resort, Las Vegas. Dr. Fred Foldvary of Santa Clara University will
    present a lecture on Saturday, July 7th, 11:00a.m. to 11:50 a.m.,
    "Why My Georgist Economics Predicts a Depression in 2008."
    
    The conference creator is Mark Skousen, a free market economist and
    author of a financial newsletter. Fred will also have copies of his
    forthcoming booklet on the real estate cycle.
    See www.freedomfest.com
    
    ==================================================================
    
    10.  At the Margin: Quips and Quotes
    
    Who first wrote, "More is given to us ... and, therefore, more is
    required of us." JFK? Nope, too obvious. It was (of course) Henry
    George, *Social Problems*, Chap. XXII, p.241, para. 1.
    - Dr. Mason Gaffney, UC Riverside
    
    "You are stuck with your debt if you can't budge it."
    - Anonymous
    
    "Every morning is the dawn of a new error."
    - Anonymous
    
    ==================================================================
    
    11.  Publication affairs: Contributing to this issue
    
    Wyn Achenbaum, David Brooks, Lindy Davies, Ed Dodson, Fred Foldvary,
    Mason Gaffney, Mary Lehmann, Paul Martin, Mark Monson, Bruce Oatman,
    Gavin Putnam, Heather Remoff, Alan Ridley, Nadine Stoner, Sue Walton.
    
              Editor: Jeffery J. Smith
    Assistant Editor: Caspar Davis
         Copy Editor: Enzo Piccone
           Archivist: Stewart Goldwater
               Owner: The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation
             Founder: Adam Monroe
    
    Send your news and other interesting material to the Georgist News
    at jjs at geonomics.org or gn at progress.org.
    The deadline for the next issue is June 25.
    
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                           About The Georgist News
    
    The Georgist News, a project of the Robert Schalkenbach Foundation,
    is an email newsletter brought to you free of charge. Its purpose is
    to keep you updated on the latest news, citations, events, and
    initiatives of relevance to people who, like Henry George, seek a
    world free from special privilege and the causes of poverty.
    
    Do you know someone who'd enjoy reading the GN? Please forward them
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    always, it's free. Thanks.
    
    The Georgist News is also available online at
       http://www.georgist.com/
    ==================================================================

    The Georgist News, Volume Nine, Number Twelve, June 1, 2007