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Cheating: The Human Project and Its Betrayal

Cheating: The Human Project and Its Betrayal


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About the Book

What if the poverty, inequality, and instability in modern life are not historical accidents, but the predictable results of a single act of fraud committed five thousand years ago that has never been fixed? This is the argument made by economist and forecaster Fred Harrison. By the time you finish reading, it's hard to disagree.

The fraud is elegant in its simplicity. When people live and work together, they create a surplus — a net income that belongs to no individual, arising from the community, shared land, and nature. Economists call it rent. For most of human prehistory, communities shared this surplus for the common good. Then, with the rise of agriculture and settled civilisations, chiefs and priests realised they could take rent for themselves. They did, leading to everything that followed: slavery, empires, the cyclical collapse of societies, and the deep poverty that coexists with great wealth — all stemming from that original betrayal.

This is not a book about ancient history; it's about today. Harrison shows that the fraud still exists in the financial systems of every modern state. Governments tax wages and businesses — activities that create wealth — while allowing the value of land and natural resources to remain in private hands. The result is an economy permanently tilted against working people, a property market that inflates in regular eighteen-year boom-and-bust cycles (Harrison predicted the 2008 crash years in advance and identifies 2028 as the next), and severe spatial inequality where the gap in healthy life expectancy between the wealthiest and poorest areas of Britain stretches to eighteen years — determined not by individual choices, but by where the rent flows.

The human cost is staggering. In Scotland, communities whose land was taken over centuries now face the highest drug death rate in Europe. In places like Blackpool, life is noticeably shorter and harder than in wealthy London boroughs. Harrison estimates 125,000 people in Britain die from preventable causes every year as a direct consequence of fiscal choices that could change. These are not distant statistics; they represent neighbours, parents, and children.

What makes this book so unsettling is its parallel story of how the fraud became invisible. Harrison explains how economists and policymakers who had identified the problem were sidelined or absorbed into a professional culture that removed rent from its discussions — producing a discipline able to debate inequality at great length, yet never quite pinpointing its cause.

But history is speeding up. Five urgent crises are now converging: political deadlock, ecological collapse, mass displacement, rising authoritarianism, and the newest and most alarming — artificial intelligence trained on a civilisation's worth of data, all shaped by a culture of cheating. An AI that adopts humanity's current values may see no reason to keep humanity around.

Harrison's solution, One World Rent, is as ambitious as the diagnosis. He proposes replacing taxes on wages with charges on the rental value of land and natural resources. Sharing rents across borders makes cooperation more profitable than conflict. Pooling global rents could fund the transition to a sustainable climate. The boom-bust cycle would vanish. Working people would be freed from fiscal punishment. The inequalities quietly harming people in post-industrial towns could finally begin to shrink.

Rigorous, compassionate, and fuelled by a controlled fury at what has been allowed to persist for so long, Cheating — The Human Project and Its Betrayal is one of the most ambitious works of political economy in a generation — a clear explanation of why the world is as it is, and a strong case that it doesn't have to remain this way.

The Human Project faced betrayal once. The question this book poses is whether we will allow it to be betrayed again.



Table of Contents:

Contents

 

Introduction

4+1 1

 

Part 1 We are Rent

Prologue: To Be, or Not 9

1 Act of Creation 19

2 Geometry of Life 39

3 Corruption 59

4 Cannibalism 77

5 Collapse 95

6 Genocide 113

 

Part 2 The Making of a Failed State

Prologue: Life and Death 131

7 Indictment 137

8 The Rentlords 157

9 Death by Democratic Cuts 177

10 The Bipolar State 197

 

Part 3 Manifesto for Humanity

Prologue: One World Rent 217

11 The Promised Land 223

12 A New World 241

13 Or: We all Die 259

About the Author 279

Index 281



About the Author :

Fred Harrison is a British author, journalist, and economist who has led a distinguished dual career for over 50 years. He first became an investigative journalist, famously securing the prison-cell confession of Moors murderer Ian Brady. This breakthrough, detailed in his book Genesis of the Moors Murders, solved the disappearance of two of Brady’s victims.

Alongside his groundbreaking journalism, he trained as an economist, earning a degree in PPE at Oxford University and then an MSc at the University of London. This led to his second career as a pioneering economic forecaster. He is credited with rediscovering and applying the theory of the 18-year property cycle. He used this to predict the 1992 recession and the 2008 global financial crisis years in advance of anyone else. His influential books, including The Power in the Land and Boom Bust, critique mainstream economics and explore the devastating impact of land speculation.

He edited Rent Unmasked (2016), which received the 2017 People’s Book Prize “Best Achievement Award for outstanding content/topic by an author that would/could or did lead to excellent benefit to the community.” As Director of the Land Research Trust, Harrison continues to advocate for systemic reform to create an entrepreneurial economy that serves everyone.



Review :

“Harrison is a genuinely heterodox thinker. Rent seeking, he argues is the great destroyer of civilisation. He is not wrong.” Martin Wolf, Financial Times


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Product Details
  • ISBN-13: 9781916517233
  • Publisher: Shepheard-Walwyn (Publishers) Ltd
  • Publisher Imprint: Shepheard-Walwyn (Publishers) Ltd
  • Height: 235 mm
  • No of Pages: 296
  • Sub Title: The Human Project and Its Betrayal
  • Width: 158 mm
  • ISBN-10: 1916517234
  • Publisher Date: 11 May 2026
  • Binding: Hardback
  • Language: English
  • Spine Width: 25 mm
  • Weight: 390 gr


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