The concept of "property rights" is interesting. Property rights originally only applied to things that carried on their bodies. Then there developed
collective property rights of a tribe to hunting grounds, and in situations where people remain more stationary, the right to the shelters people had
built. The concept of land ownership appeared with the development of agriculture. Property rights were even applied to people in the form of serfdom
or slavery!
It was once common for the governments to grant monopoly rights to a certain form of trade. These rights to exclusive trade became commodified, and
could be sold, effectively becoming a form of property. This still exists in modern governments. The city of New York, for example, issues only a
limited number of taxi licenses, which can be sold by the owner to other individuals.
As you can imagine, the taxi businesses that currently hold these licenses have used their influence to prevent the city from issuing any new
licenses. When a business pays so much money for such an artificial commodity, it often tries to limit the expansion of supply so that the price of
its commodified privilege does not decline, in the same way that homeowners are concerned about declining property prices in their neighborhood.
Utility companies often hold monopoly rights, and since the company can be sold, these rights have become commodified. Many pollution credit exchange
schemes seek to commodify the right to pollute (I believe this is wrong, there should only be a flat CO2 tax).
Then, of course, with the industrial revolution, industrial capital became of importance: factories, machines, rail ways, planes.
Of course, this capital was often made by exploited workers. Several governments used policies to impoverish, starve, and imprison their citizens so
they would be forced to work in the factories, giving the factory owners a cheap supply of labor.
(forgive my Marxist interpretation of history )
The phenomena of "intellectual property rights" is a relatively recent one. And now private corporations own the right to use certain radio/microwave
frequencies! This just goes to show that the idea of "property rights" is really an artificial construct, and it is often just institutionalised
corruption.
[Edited on 16-2-2012 by AndersHoveland]
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