Progress and poverty; an inquiry into the cause of industrial depressions and of increase of want with increase of wealth; the remedy

by Henry George

Hardcover, 1954

Local notes

A digital version of a prior edition of this work is available via The Internet Archive at: https://archive.org/details/writingsofhenryg01geor

Call number

330.1

Publication

New York: Robert Schalkenbach Foundation

Description

Henry George (1839-97) was an American journalist and newspaper editor. In Progress and Poverty, his most famous work (1879), he seeks to explain the apparent paradox that the gulf between rich and poor in a developed city (or nation) is much less that that in a less developed community: 'Like a flash it came over me that there was the reason of advancing poverty with advancing wealth. With the growth of population, land grows in value, and the men who work it must pay more for the privilege.' His economic ideas were widely debated, and this volume also contains a response to the 1881 English edition of the book from Isaac B. Cooke, a cotton broker from Liverpool, and Andrew Mearns's The Bitter Cry of Outcast London (1883), a short but telling description of the reality of the poverty then to be found in the world's richest city.… (more)

DDC/MDS

330.1

Original publication date

1879

Physical description

xxix, 599 p.; 22 cm

Barcode

252

Other editions

Language

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