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A Property Rights Paradox: George and Rothbard on the Conservation of Environmental Resources
Authors:Bruce  Yandle
Affiliation:(Bruce Yandle, Ph.D., is professor of economics. College of Industrial Management and Textile Science, Clemson University, Clemson, S.C. 29631. An essay presented in commemoration of the centenary of the publication of Henry George's Progress and Poverty.;)
Abstract:A bstract . Murray N. Rothbard is recognized as one of the most articulate modern critics of Henry George's land value tax. A leading libertarian thinker, Rothbard condemns George's recommendation that government act to affect private transactions in land, arguing that such interventions infringe on previously defined private property rights. However, Rothbard's social system has no explicit mechanism for accommodating the emergence of tradeable property rights to newly recognized environmental resources. In effect, Rothbard calls for controls on such resources—no trading. Henry George, on the other hand, provides for the evolution of new property rights and their emergence into private markets. The paradox here is that George's solution to the property rights question might accommodate the social yearnings of one of his most severe critics, Murray N. Rothbard.
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