inspired the
citizen's dividend and stated: "Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds." In continuity with the
classical economic and
liberal traditions, geolibertarians contend that land is an independent
factor of production, that it is the
common inheritance of all humanity and that the justice of
private property is derived from an individual's right to the fruits of their labor. Since land by
economic definition is not the product of human labor, its ownership cannot be justified by appealing to natural human rights. Geolibertarians recognize the individual civil right to secure exclusive
possession of land only on the condition that if the land has accrued economic rent, its full rental value be paid to the community deprived of equal access. This
non-distortionary system of taxation, it is argued, has the effects of returning the value that belongs to all members of society and encouraging landholders to use only as much land as they need, leaving unneeded land for others to occupy, use, and develop. A succinct summary of the geolibertarian philosophy is
Thomas Paine's assertion in his 1797 pamphlet
Agrarian Justice: "Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds". On the other hand,
John Locke wrote that
private land ownership should be praised as long as its product was not left to spoil and there was "enough, and as good left in common for others". When this
Lockean proviso is violated, the land earns rental value. Some geolibertarians argue that "enough, and as good left" is a practical impossibility in a city setting where location is paramount. This implies that in any urban social environment, Locke's proviso requires the collection and equal distribution of ground rent. Geolibertarians sometimes dispute the received interpretation of Locke's
homestead principle outlined in his
Second Treatise of Government as concerning the justice of initial acquisition of property in land, opting instead for a view ostensibly more compatible with the proviso which considers Locke to be describing the process by which property is created from land through the application of labor. This strict definition of private property as the fruit of a person's labor leads geolibertarians to advocate
free markets in capital goods, consumer goods, and services, as well as the protection of workers' rights to their full earnings. == Policy proposals ==