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Property
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==== Frédéric Bastiat: property is value ==== [[Frédéric Bastiat]] 's main treatise on property can be found in chapter 8 of his book "Economic Harmonies" (1850).<ref>{{cite book |title=Bastiat: Economic Harmonies }}</ref> In a radical departure from traditional property theory, he defines property, not as a physical object, but rather as a relationship between people concerning a thing. Thus, saying one owns a glass of water is merely verbal shorthand for "I may justly gift or trade this water to another person." In essence, what one owns is not the object but the object's value. By "value," Bastiat means "market value"; he emphasizes this is quite different from utility. "In our relations with one another, we are not owners of the utility of things, but their value, and value is the appraisal made of reciprocal services." Bastiat theorized that, as a result of technological progress and the division of labor, the stock of communal wealth increases over time; that the hours of work an unskilled laborer expends to buy e.g., 100 liters of wheat, decreases over time, thus amounting to "gratis" satisfaction.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://oll.libertyfund.org/?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php?title=79&chapter=35530&layout=html&Itemid=27 |title=Economic Harmonies (Boyers trans.) – Online Library of Liberty |access-date=14 May 2015}}</ref> Thus, private property continually destroys itself, becoming transformed into communal wealth. The increasing proportion of communal wealth to private property results in a tendency toward equality of humanity. "Since the human race began in greatest poverty, that is, when there were the most obstacles to overcome, all that has been achieved from one era to the next is due to the spirit of property." This transformation of private property into the communal domain, Bastiat points out, does not imply that personal property will ever totally disappear. On the contrary, this is because man, as he progresses, continually invents new and more sophisticated needs and desires.
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