How private property can serve the common good — A clear, thoughtful look at turning private wealth into broad social welfare through practical measures and evolving norms.
This volume argues that private property can be universal and socially responsible. It outlines the steps societies may take to spread ownership, while also describing how property increasingly serves the public interest as economic life evolves. Real-world examples and policy ideas illustrate how property relations can support education, industry, and civic welfare without sacrificing individual rights.
- Ways to universalise property through savings institutions, postal savings banks, and school savings programs.
- Policy suggestions like state insurance, building and loan institutions, and sound land policies to ease acquisition of property.
- How private property in monarchies and old estates has become more public through social use and accessibility.
- The balance between private contracts and the public necessity that guides law and policy.
Ideal for readers of economic policy, social philosophy, and property law who want practical context for how wealth and ownership can serve society.