Yes, it's difficult to convince people that escalated land prices are the precise measure of a nation's economic illness. Australia's have reached $10 trillion. (ABS 5204.061) pic.twitter.com/tBUlGvb8uK
— Bryan Kavanagh (@bryankav123) March 8, 2026
PETER SMITH TALKS TO FRED HARRISON
STILL MAKES SENSE AFTER 150 YEARS

THORSTEIN VEBLEN

Thorstein Veblen had much to say about escalating land prices, particularly in the context of speculation, absentee ownership, and the broader dynamics of American capitalism. He viewed rising land values (especially in urban and real estate contexts) as a prime example of predatory, non-productive “vested interests” extracting unearned gains at the expense of industry and society.
Veblen critiqued how urban real estate speculation drove up land prices as a major avenue for wealth accumulation in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He described America’s rapid urbanization as essentially a “great real estate game” โ a zero-sum pursuit where promoters and absentee owners sought “something for nothing” through inflated land values, often fueled by credit, banking, and hype rather than productive effort. In his analysis, land rent and escalating real estate prices became intertwined with high finance. Banks financed speculation, turning real estate into the economy’s largest asset class and a key driver of inequality.
Public investments (like infrastructure) often boosted land values, but the gains were captured privately by speculators and absentee owners rather than benefiting the community. This theme appears prominently in works like Absentee Ownership and Business Enterprise in Recent Times (1923), where he extends his critique of absentee landlords and rentiers to modern corporate and financial forms.
He also touched on speculative inflation of values (including real estate) in The Theory of Business Enterprise (1904), linking it to credit expansion, rising prices during prosperity eras, and eventual crises when bubbles burst.
Veblen’s perspective echoes some ideas from Henry George (on unearned land rent) but emphasizes institutional and financial symbiosis more than single-tax solutions. Modern interpreters (like economist Michael Hudson) highlight Veblen’s foresight: he saw real estate speculation and rising land prices as symbiotic with finance, diverting resources from technological efficiency toward rent-seeking.
In short, Veblen didn’t just note escalating land prices โ he saw them as emblematic of dysfunctional “business” interests sabotaging productive industry for pecuniary gain.
STEVE KEEN MAKES SENSE ….
….. as the west has become bogged down in railing against Chinese “communism”.
It appears that China’s intensive productivity will defeat what’s left of the west’s productivity after its speculation in asset prices and war mongering?
Oh, but we respect ‘human rights’, ‘freedom’ and ‘private property’, and they don’t, don’t we?
Do we ……. really?
~~~~
A CITIZENS’ DIVIDEND
GEORGIST THEORY OF CHANGE
The Georgist theory of change, though valid, has proven a little lonely. It goes something like this: –
1. If we were to tax land rents–in the widest sense of the word ‘land’ (that is, all the economic rents of our natural resources), and un-tax incomes and purchases: –
2. then land prices must decline because land prices represent the private capitalisation of uncaptured rent;
then private mortgage debt will decline, because the land component, now more than 80% of the cost of a home, must decline (because of the point above);
then miners will also pay their fair 50% EBITDA share to the nation, i.e. before taxation, because that is what is required as rent from any other commercial ‘going concern’. (Why have they been exempted?);
then all prices will decline at least by the amount of taxation which has been reduced (as the extent of publicly-captured, publicly-generated rents rise), because, unlike rents, all taxes are passed off into prices;
then commercial ‘super-profits’ will decline, including the internet-based giants paying their proper share of the electromagnetic spectrum rents, because more of their rents/super-profits are being captured to the public purse.
3. Thereby, then the world will regain productivity, progress and prosperity, without poverty, because reinvigorated economies would also be able to deliver a dividend to all their citizens from surplus economic rents โ and thereโs plenty there! (Like 50% of the economy, ATCOR and EBCOR)
Why then have Georgists been unable to sell such a great story to the public? Could it be because they’ve been opposed by powerful vested financial interests, including banking, real estate and media?
It might prove valuable to revisit the Georgist theory of change when the US, UK and Australian real estate bubbles burst shortly then, because Georgism explains the boom-bust phenomenon precisely.
NOW, THAT HOUSE COST?
WHO WOULD’VE THOUGHT?
A GOOD ESSAY
On reddit

