Transcript Document

Competing Theories of Property
Rights: Which one deserves
protection?
Glenn Fox
Professor
Department of Food, Agricultural and Resource Economics
University of Guelph
Presentation at the 10th annual CIVITAS
National Conference
Ottawa, Ontario
May 6, 2006
From a recent open letter to the premier of Ontario
from Daniel Thomey, Port Hope, Ontario
“The Patents granted by the King of England
as early as 1797 in the County of
Northhumberland specifically states that
the described ‘land, woods and waters are
the property of the landowner “forever’”. .
deeds give ownership to the lands,
‘together with all woods, water ways and
water courses thereon laying’”
To a more recent case reported in Ontario Farmer
“His family has owned their beef and maple
syrup farm near the Ontario border since
1820, but when the town wanted water
from under their farm for virtually no
money, ‘we couldn’t do nothing about it’
said Bennett. ‘I always thought that we
owned it, but the government does’”
How did we get here from
there?
• Ideas have consequences
• A Brief History of Property Rights Theories
– Classical Liberalism (1700’s to late 1800’s)
– The Progressive Movement (1880 to 1937?)
• Utilitarianism
• Pragmatism
• Legal Positivism
– The Modern Libertarian Movement (1970+?)
How did we get here from
there?
– The theory of property rights that existed in
the 1700’s, when the County of
Northhumberland deeds were written, is
fundamentally different from the theories that
emerged in the late 1800’s
– Today, we have several competing theories of
rights
– Is it any wonder we are confused?
Classical Liberalism
Locke, Madison, Jefferson
– Self-ownership and homesteading, consent
as a requirement for transfer of property
– The primary function of the state is to protect
life, liberty and property
– Rights are not transitory
Utilitarianism
Jeremy Bentham, Ronald Coase, most
contemporary economists, sustainable
development, John Rawls, Richard Epstein
– The greatest good for the greatest number of people
– Rights, including property rights, are transitory
• Efficiency trumps rights
– Legislatures and courts determine what is efficient,
and, when transaction costs are high, re-allocate
property to higher valued uses
Pragmatism
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Richard Posner, our own
chief justice
– Post U.S. civil war ideology
– General normative rules caused the civil war
– “Therefore let there be no general normative rules”
• Except this one, of course
– Decide each case on its own merits
– Rights, including property rights, are transitory
• In any particular case, circumstances may warrant a reallocation of property
Legal Positivism
Post WWII development – as law followed
the social sciences in mimicking the
natural sciences
– Competition in the political process is like
competition in the market process
– The political process reveals the general will
– Rights, including property rights, are transitory
and determined by the legislature
Modern Libertarians
Rand, Rothbard, Nozick, Narveson
– Rehabilitation of classical liberal theory
• Extend and adapt to contemporary issues
– Self-ownership, homesteading, consent as a
requirement for transfer of property
– Rejection of utilitarianism, pragmatism and
legal positivism
– Rights are not transitory
Implications
•
•
•
•
There are at least five major theories of
property rights in circulation today
Key concepts are used quite differently in the
competing theories
The theories are incompatible
Most writers seem to be unaware that different
theories exist
– This makes for misunderstanding and conflict
– What does it mean to say “We want to protect
property rights”?
More Implications
•
•
•
•
It is time to have a rigorous and civil
comparative debate about these theories
We need to learn to recognize them when we
encounter them in the wild
Canada does not have a well established
intellectual tradition in this area
Until we have this debate, I don’ t think we will
be able to do much to make property rights
more secure