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ATCOR: All Taxes Come Out of
Rents
Henry George: The Common Sense of Taxation (1881 article)
Mason Gaffney: Sounding the Revenue Potential of Land: Fifteen Lost Elements
Raising taxable rents by untaxing
capital and labor, production and exchange: the concept
of ATCOR (All Taxes Come Out of Rents) The
meaning and relevance of ATCOR is that when we lower
other taxes, the revenue base is not lost, but shifted to
land rents and values, which can then yield more taxes.
This is most obvious with taxes on buildings.
When we exempt buildings, and raise tax
rates on the land under them, we are still taxing the
same real estate; we are just taxing it in a different
way. This “different way” actually raises the
revenue capacity of real estate by a large factor, by
relieving it of the excess burden of taxing production
and capital. This is that “free
lunch” that Chicago economists wrongly preach
“There ain’t no such thing
as.” Historical experience with exempting buildings has shown that builders offer more for land, and sellers demand more, when the new buildings are to be untaxed. The effect on revenue is the same as taxing prospective new buildings before they are even built, even though the new buildings are not to be taxed at all. Net result: the revenue capacity of land, when it is substituted for other tax bases, is comparable to current revenues. Owing to efficiency effects, and renewal effects, it may well be higher. Read the whole article Bill Batt: The Fallacy of the "Three-Legged Stool" Metaphor
Tax experts, especially at the state level, ply
their trade by invoking one metaphor above all others:
the three-legged stool. It rests on the claim that
a sound and successful tax regime for any government
needs to rely on a three tax bases: income, property and
sales. This is repeated so often that it passes
today without much examination. ...
The power with which the three-legged stool analogy has underpinned tax policy is in fact rather disconcerting, because a close examination of its premises shows that they are very questionable. These benchmark measures of a tax regime are scrutinized here in order to cast doubt on the claims so often made on their behalf. ... Taxes on Labor and Capital, in contrast, are always shifted. Studies of so-called tax incidence seldom trace the flow of tax burdens beyond the first or second step of the shift. Textbooks and research studies will note that particular burdens -- for instance, a tax on the sale of goods -- will be partly borne by the vendor and partly also by the consumer. The vendor in turn sees that tax incorporated into the price he pays for the product at the wholesale level; the consumer sees his burden reflected in the relative cost of living of his tax jurisdiction -- which in turn affects the price of his home and his wages. The shift in taxes, as economic theory makes clear, are ultimately converted to rent, and that rent, as capitalized in land prices, is its final resting place. It is a truism of classical economics as carried through in the present day tradition of Georgist economics that all taxes come out of rent -- an adage that has come to be abbreviated as ATCOR. What this insight means is that all taxes not first imposed on Land and collected from the rent that rests thereon are instead passed through the economy from one party to another until they ultimately come to rest on Land, thereby increasing the price of real estate. The passing along of tax burdens not only creates distortions in economic transactions; it also constitutes an excess burden and an inefficiency that handicaps economic performance.
Contemporary economists and conventional tax
theorists well recognize that taxing Labor and Capital is
detrimental to economic vitality — politicians
thrive on repeating this ad
nauseam. Currently the Republican party
candidates seem best able to exploit resentment about the
negative impact of taxes. But they are not alone in
failing to appreciate the nature of tax shifting.
What all fail to realize is that there are notable
exceptions to the rule that taxes are oppressive: any tax
imposed on an inelastic base — that is, any form of
Land — constitutes no distortion or excess burden
whatsoever.
Far from spreading the burden of distribution over a wide array of tax bases, the ideal tax, then, should be imposed solely on those factors of production that form an inelastic base, i.e., that constitute forms of Land — whether they be locational sites, natural resources, the spectrum, time slots, or others as they may arise in the future. Land, in any of its forms, is totally inelastic. Will Rogers in his pithy way said it well, "Buy land. They ain't making any more of the stuff." Mark Twain said it too. ... Read the whole article Weld Carter: An Introduction to Henry George
Another area in which George applied these
inherent differences between land and products was the
field of taxation. To determine the incidence of
taxation, George had to know what was to be taxed,
products or the value of land. In each case he traced out
the effect from the essential nature of the thing to be
taxed: "...all taxes upon things of unfixed quantity
increase prices, and in the course of exchange are
shifted from seller to buyer, increasing as they go.
...If we impose a tax upon buildings, the users of
buildings must finally pay it, for the erection of
buildings will cease until building rents become high
enough to pay the regular profit and the tax besides.
...In this way all taxes which add to prices are shifted
from hand to hand, increasing as they go, until they
ultimately rest upon consumers, who thus pay much more
than is received by the government. Now, the way taxes
raise prices is by increasing the cost of production, and
checking supply. But land is not a thing of human
production, and taxes upon...[land value] cannot check
supply. Therefore, though a tax on...[land value] compels
the land owners to pay more, it gives them no power to
obtain more for the use of their land, as it in no way
tends to reduce the supply of land. On the contrary, by
compelling those who hold land on speculation to sell or
let for what they can get, a tax on land values tends to
increase the competition between owners, and thus to
reduce the price of land." ... read the
whole article
Thomas Flavin, writing in The Iconoclast, 1897
... Arriving at the appropriate revenue formulas
is the challenge. Recapturing land rent is likely best
achieved by setting the rates at levels that stabilize
the market price of landsites in the face of speculative
pressures. Because the collection of rents fosters
economic activity in the regions of highest value, it may
just be that market prices will remain stable even with
very high levies. The downward pressure on market prices
exerted by a tax is countered by the increased incentive
to improve parcel sites with the highest value. Many
economists as early as the French physiocrats have argued
that ultimately all tax revenues come from rents in any
case; that it is only a question of how much they are
shifted through to other sectors of the economy before
they are collected. Professor Mason Gaffney explains this
by noting that
After-tax interest rates are determined
in world markets and the local supply of capital funds is
highly elastic. So, local taxes on capital do not stick
to capital. Even national taxes on capital typically fail
to stick, because capital is a citizen of the world.
Local labor supplies are also pretty elastic, although
not so totally. Local taxes on labor, therefore, do not
stick to labor, either. Payroll taxes drive people out of
localities that impose them, for example. Ditto for sales
taxes. Customers move, or shift their purchases, to where
taxes are lower, or zero. Sellers shift, too, to the
extent they bear the tax. What else is left? Just land,
and land cannot emigrate or immigrate from the local
jurisdiction.(22)...
read the whole article
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