Some of what falls into the category of "small
business" is actually landlording, and often it is also
largely speculating on land value. We need to make
a clearer distinction in our common conversation, and in
how we set up our incentives. What do we want to reward?
What do we want to encourage? Conversely, what do we want
to discourage? What behavior do we specifically
not want to reward?
In the central business district of most towns, the
building owners are the same entities (or families) now
as they were 10, 20 and 30 years ago. The tenants may
have changed: over the years, there has probably been a
series of signs in the windows: "grand opening," "lost
our lease, everything must go," "under new management."
But the landlords remain the same, and the buildings
remain the same. If the local economy is healthy, and
local government invests in good schools and services and
maintains the infrastructure well, those landlords can
collect higher and higher rents on those buildings,
making it harder and harder for the tenant to afford to
locate in the prime locations. Eventually, the landlord
turns day to day responsibility over to a management
company, and retires to a more hospitable climate,
receiving the rent check there, and paying back to the
town a small amount in property taxes.
Every dollar that a commercial tenant spends on rent
is a dollar not available for wages, inventory or
specialized equipment. And when he does succeed in making
a profit, we tax that profit. We also tax his employees'
wages and if he is a retailer, the purchases his
customers make — in order to provide schools and
services and infrastructure which will allow the landlord
to charge him higher rent next time the lease is to be
renewed. (See pork for a
similarly perverse cycle.)
Many of us dream of opening our own businesses. Most
of those plans somehow involve having access to a prime,
or at least adequate, site on which to conduct that
business. Without it, and without it being affordable,
our business plan must remain a castle in the air.
And then there are the entrepreneurs who are ready to
retire. They take a look at their business, and, if they
are the owners of the site on which they have conducted
their business, they may reach the conclusion that they
can live just as comfortably by renting that site to
someone else, and "letting" that other person do the
work. We may be used to this, but is it just? Is there a
difference between being able to rent out one's building
and renting out a site? Is one equally entitled to
privatize, to keep as one's own treasure, the value of
the building and the value of the site? Or are they
fundamentally different in character? Most people who
have read Henry George's book
Progress and
Poverty acknowledge that the difference between
land and building, or capital, is an important
distinction, which needs to be acknowledged by how we tax
ourselves.
Look around you at the "small business" people you
know. Group together in your mind those who own the sites
on which they conduct their businesses — be that
retail, service, professional, whatever — and those
who are tenants. They may not be very different in how
hard they work, or the skill or training they bring to
their work, but their fortunes are likely to be quite
different. (And then consider the other group: the
landlords.) Is this the kind of society we want? Land
value taxation is the simple reform which will begin to
change this situation; other measures can do little or
nothing.
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty: 10. Effect of Remedy Upon Wealth
Production (in the unabridged P&P:
Part IX — Effects of the Remedy: Chapter 1 — Of
the effect upon the production of wealth)
The elder Mirabeau, we are told, ranked the
proposition of Quesnay, to substitute one single tax on
rent (the impôt unique) for all other
taxes, as a discovery equal in utility to the invention
of writing or the substitution of the use of money for
barter.
To whosoever will think over the matter, this saying
will appear an evidence of penetration rather than of
extravagance. The advantages which would be gained by
substituting for the numerous taxes by which the public
revenues are now raised, a single tax levied upon the
value of land, will appear more and more important the
more they are considered.
- This is the secret which would transform the little
village into the great city.*
- With all the burdens removed which now oppress
industry and hamper exchange, the production of wealth
would go on with a rapidity now undreamed of.
- This, in its turn, would lead to an increase in the
value of land — a new surplus which society might
take for general purposes.
- And released from the difficulties which attend the
collection of revenue in a way that begets corruption
and renders legislation the tool of special interests,
society could assume functions which the increasing
complexity of life makes it desirable to assume, but
which the prospect of political demoralization under
the present system now leads thoughtful men to shrink
from.
*At the beginning of
Book IX of the complete Progress & Poverty,
Henry George quotes from Themistocles: "I cannot play
upon any stringed instrument, but I can tell you how
of a little village to make a great and glorious
city."
Consider the effect upon the production of wealth.
To abolish the taxation which, acting and reacting,
now hampers every wheel of exchange and presses upon
every form of industry, would be like removing an immense
weight from a powerful spring. Imbued with fresh energy,
production would start into new life, and trade would
receive a stimulus which would be felt to the remotest
arteries. The present method of taxation operates upon
exchange like artificial deserts and mountains;
- it costs more to get goods through a custom house
than it does to carry them around the world.
- It operates upon energy, and industry, and skill,
and thrift, like a fine upon those qualities.
- If I have worked harder and built myself a good
house while you have been contented to live in a hovel,
the taxgatherer now comes annually to make me pay a
penalty for my energy and industry, by taxing me more
than you.
- If I have saved while you wasted, I am mulct, while
you are exempt.
- If a man build a ship we make him pay for his
temerity, as though he had done an injury to the
state;
- if a railroad be opened, down comes the tax
collector upon it, as though it were a public
nuisance;
- if a manufactory be erected we levy upon it an
annual sum which would go far toward making a handsome
profit.
- We say we want capital, but if any one accumulate
it, or bring it among us, we charge him for it as
though we were giving him a privilege.
- We punish with a tax the man who covers barren
fields with ripening grain,
- we fine him who puts up machinery, and him who
drains a swamp.
How heavily these taxes burden production only those
realize who have attempted to follow our system of
taxation through its ramifications, for, as I have before
said, the heaviest part of taxation is that which falls
in increased prices.
To abolish these taxes would be to lift the whole
enormous weight of taxation from productive industry. The
needle of the seamstress and the great manufactory; the
cart horse and the locomotive; the fishing boat and the
steamship; the farmer's plow and the merchant's stock,
would be alike untaxed. All would be free to make or to
save, to buy or to sell, unfined by taxes, unannoyed by
the taxgatherer. Instead of saying to the producer, as it
does now, "The more you add to the general wealth the
more shall you be taxed!" the state would say to the
producer, "Be as industrious, as thrifty, as enterprising
as you choose, you shall have your full reward! You shall
not be fined for making two blades of grass grow where
one grew before; you shall not be taxed for adding to the
aggregate wealth."
And will not the community gain by thus refusing to
kill the goose that lays the golden eggs; by thus
refraining from muzzling the ox that treadeth out the
corn; by thus leaving to industry, and thrift, and skill,
their natural reward, full and unimpaired? For there is
to the community also a natural reward. The law of
society is, each for all, as well as all for each. No one
can keep to himself the good he may do, any more than he
can keep the bad. Every productive enterprise, besides
its return to those who undertake it, yields collateral
advantages to others. If a man plant a fruit tree, his
gain is that he gathers the fruit in its time and season.
But in addition to his gain, there is a gain to the whole
community. Others than the owner are benefited by the
increased supply of fruit; the birds which it shelters
fly far and wide; the rain which it helps to attract
falls not alone on his field; and, even to the eye which
rests upon it from a distance, it brings a sense of
beauty. And so with everything else. The building of a
house, a factory, a ship, or a railroad, benefits others
besides those who get the direct profits.
Well may the community leave to the individual
producer all that prompts him to exertion; well may it
let the laborer have the full reward of his labor, and
the capitalist the full return of his capital. For the
more that labor and capital produce, the greater grows
the common wealth in which all may share. And in the
value or rent of land is this general gain expressed in a
definite and concrete form. Here is a fund which the
state may take while leaving to labor and capital their
full reward. With increased activity of production this
would commensurately increase.
And to shift the burden of taxation from production
and exchange to the value or rent of land would not
merely be to give new stimulus to the production of
wealth; it would be to open new opportunities. For under
this system no one would care to hold land unless to use
it, and land now withheld from use would everywhere be
thrown open to improvement.
The selling price of land would fall; land speculation
would receive its death blow; land monopolization would
no longer pay.* Millions and millions of acres from which
settlers are now shut out by high prices would be
abandoned by their present owners or sold to settlers
upon nominal terms. And this not merely on the frontiers,
but within what are now considered well settled
districts.
* The fact that a tax on the rental value
of land cannot be shifted by landowners to tenants,
though recognized by all competent economists, is
sometimes a stumbling block to persons untrained in
economics. The reason such a tax cannot be shifted is
that it cannot limit the supply of land. Landowners are
presumably, before the tax is laid, charging all the
rent they can get. There is nothing in a tax on the
rental value of land to make tenants willing to pay
more or to make land more difficult to hire. On the
contrary, more land will be on the market, because of
such a tax, rather than less, since the tax puts a
heavy penalty on holding land out of use and unimproved
for mere speculation. The competition of former vacant
land speculators to get their land used will make land
cheaper to rent rather than more expensive. And since
only the net rent remaining after the tax is subtracted
is capitalized into salable value, land will be very
much cheaper to buy. H.G.B.
And it must be remembered that this would apply, not
merely to agricultural land, but to all land. Mineral
land would be thrown open to use, just as agricultural
land; and in the heart of a city no one could afford to
keep land from its most profitable use, or on the
outskirts to demand more for it than the use to which it
could at the time be put would warrant. Everywhere that
land had attained a value, taxation, instead of
operating, as now, as a fine upon improvement, would
operate to force improvement. Whoever planted an orchard,
or sowed a field, or built a house, or erected a
manufactory, no matter how costly, would have no more to
pay in taxes than if he kept so much land idle.
- The monopolist of agricultural land would be taxed
as much as though his land were covered with houses and
barns, with crops and with stock.
- The owner of a vacant city lot would have to pay as
much for the privilege of keeping other people off of
it until he wanted to use it, as his neighbor who has a
fine house upon his lot.
- It would cost as much to keep a row of tumble-down
shanties upon valuable land as though it were covered
with a grand hotel or a pile of great warehouses filled
with costly goods.
Thus, the bonus that wherever labor is most productive
must now be paid before labor can be exerted would
disappear.
- The farmer would not have to pay out half his
means, or mortgage his labor for years, in order to
obtain land to cultivate;
- the builder of a city homestead would not have to
lay out as much for a small lot as for the house he
puts upon it*;
- the company that proposed to erect a manufactory
would not have to expend a great part of its capital
for a site.
- And what would be paid from year to year to the
state would be in lieu of all the taxes now levied upon
improvements, machinery, and stock.
*Many persons, and among them some
professional economists, have never succeeded in
getting a thorough comprehension of this point. Thus,
the editor has heard the objection advanced that the
greater cheapness of land is no advantage to the poor
man who is trying to save enough from his earnings to
buy a piece of land; for, it is said, the higher
taxes on the land after it is acquired, offset the
lower purchase price. What such objectors do not see
is that even if the lower price of land does no more
than balance the higher tax on it, (and this
overlooks, for one thing, the discouragement to
speculation in land), the reduction or removal of
other taxes is all clear gain. It is easier to save
in proportion as earnings and commodities are
relieved of taxation. It is easier to buy land,
because its selling price is lower, if the land is
taxed. And although the land, after its purchase,
continues to be taxed, not only can this tax be fully
paid out of the annual interest on the saving in the
purchase price, but also there is to be reckoned the
saving in taxes on buildings and other improvements
and in whatever other taxes are thus rendered
unnecessary. H.G.B.
Consider the effect of such a change upon the labor
market. Competition would no longer be one-sided, as now.
Instead of laborers competing with each other for
employment, and in their competition cutting down wages
to the point of bare subsistence, employers would
everywhere be competing for laborers, and wages would
rise to the fair earnings of labor. For into the labor
market would have entered the greatest of all competitors
for the employment of labor, a competitor whose demand
cannot be satisfied until want is satisfied — the
demand of labor itself. The employers of labor would not
have merely to bid against other employers, all feeling
the stimulus of greater trade and increased profits, but
against the ability of laborers to become their own
employers upon the natural opportunities freely opened to
them by the tax which prevented monopolization.
With natural opportunities thus free to labor;
- with capital and improvements exempt from tax, and
exchange released from restrictions, the spectacle of
willing men unable to turn their labor into the things
they are suffering for would become impossible;
- the recurring paroxysms which paralyze industry
would cease;
- every wheel of production would be set in
motion;
- demand would keep pace with supply, and supply with
demand;
- trade would increase in every direction, and wealth
augment on every hand. ... read the whole
chapter
H.G. Brown:
Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's
Progress & Poverty: 12.
Effect of Remedy Upon Various Economic Classes (in the
unabridged P&P:
Part IX: Effects of the Remedy — Chapter 3. Of the
effect upon individuals and classes)
When it is first proposed to put all taxes upon the
value of land, all landholders are likely to take the
alarm, and there will not be wanting appeals to the fears
of small farm and homestead owners, who will be told that
this is a proposition to rob them of their hard-earned
property. But a moment's reflection will show that this
proposition should commend itself to all whose interests
as landholders do not largely exceed their interests as
laborers or capitalists, or both. And further
consideration will show that though the large landholders
may lose relatively, yet even in their case there will be
an absolute gain. For, the increase in production will be
so great that labor and capital will gain very much more
than will be lost to private landownership, while in
these gains, and in the greater ones involved in a more
healthy social condition, the whole community, including
the landowners themselves, will share.
- It is manifest, of course, that the change I
propose will greatly benefit all those who live by
wages, whether of hand or of head -- laborers,
operatives, mechanics, clerks, professional men of all
sorts.
- It is manifest, also, that it will benefit all
those who live partly by wages and partly by the
earnings of their capital -- storekeepers, merchants,
manufacturers, employing or undertaking producers and
exchangers of all sorts from the peddler or drayman to
the railroad or steamship owner -- and
- it is likewise manifest that it will increase the
incomes of those whose incomes are drawn from the
earnings of capital.
Take, now, the case of the homestead owner -- the
mechanic, storekeeper, or professional man who has
secured himself a house and lot, where he lives, and
which he contemplates with satisfaction as a place from
which his family cannot be ejected in case of his death.
He will not be injured; on the contrary, he will be the
gainer. The selling value of his lot will diminish --
theoretically it will entirely disappear. But its
usefulness to him will not disappear. It will serve his
purpose as well as ever. While, as the value of all other
lots will diminish or disappear in the same ratio, he
retains the same security of always having a lot that he
had before. That is to say, he is a loser only as the man
who has bought himself a pair of boots may be said to be
a loser by a subsequent fall in the price of boots. His
boots will be just as useful to him, and the next pair of
boots he can get cheaper. So, to the homestead owner, his
lot will be as useful, and should he look forward to
getting a larger lot, or having his children, as they
grow up, get homesteads of their own, he will, even in
the matter of lots, be the gainer. And in the present,
other things considered, he will be much the gainer. For
though he will have more taxes to pay upon his land, he
will be released from taxes upon his house and
improvements, upon his furniture and personal property,
upon all that he and his family eat, drink and wear,
while his earnings will be largely increased by the rise
of wages, the constant employment, and the increased
briskness of trade. His only loss will be, if he wants to
sell his lot without getting another, and this will be a
small loss compared with the great gain. ...
In short, the working farmer is both a laborer and a
capitalist, as well as a landowner, and it is by his
labor and capital that his living is made. His loss would
be nominal; his gain would be real and great. In varying
degrees is this true of all landholders. Many landholders
are laborers of one sort or another. This measure would
make no one poorer but such as could be made a great deal
poorer without being really hurt. It would cut down great
fortunes, but it would impoverish no one.
Wealth would not only be enormously increased; it
would be equally distributed. I do not mean that each
individual would get the same amount of wealth. That
would not be equal distribution, so long as different
individuals have different powers and different desires.
But I mean that wealth would be distributed in accordance
with the degree in which the industry, skill, knowledge,
or prudence of each contributed to the common stock. The
great cause which concentrates wealth in the hands of
those who do not produce, and takes it from the hands of
those who do, would be gone. The inequalities that
continued to exist would be those of nature, not the
artificial inequalities produced by the denial of natural
law. The nonproducer would no longer roll in luxury while
the producer got but the barest necessities of animal
existence. ...
read the whole chapter
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
CAPITAL, which is not in itself a distinguishable
element, but which it must always be kept in mind
consists of wealth applied to the aid of labor in further
production, is not a primary factor. There can be
production without it, and there must have been
production without it, or it could not in the first place
have appeared. It is a secondary and compound factor,
coming after and resulting from the union of labor and
land in the production of wealth. It is in essence labor
raised by a second union with land to a third or higher
power. But it is to civilized life so necessary and
important as to be rightfully accorded in political
economy the place of a third factor in production.
— The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 17, The Production of
Wealth: The Third Factor of Production —
Capital • abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
IT is to be observed that capital of itself can do
nothing. It is always a subsidiary, never an initiatory,
factor. The initiatory factor is always labor. That is to
say, in the production of wealth labor always uses
capital, is never used by capital. This is not merely
literally true, when by the term capital we mean the
thing capital. It is also true when we personify the term
and mean by it not the thing capital, but the men who are
possessed of capital. The capitalist pure and simple, the
man who merely controls capital, has in his hands the
power of assisting labor to produce. But purely as
capitalist he cannot exercise that power. It can be
exercised only by labor. To utilize it he must himself
exercise at least some of the functions of labor, or he
must put his capital, on some terms, at the use of those
who do. — The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 17, The Production of
Wealth: The Third Factor of Production —
Capital • abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
THUS we must exclude from the category of capital
everything that may be included either as land or labor.
Doing so, there remain only things which are neither land
nor labor, but which have resulted from the union of
these two original factors of production. Nothing can be
properly capital that does not consist of these —
that is to say, nothing can be capital that is not
wealth. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 2: Wages and Capital: The Meaning
of the Terms
THUS, a government bond is not capital, nor yet is it the
representative of capital. The capital that was once
received for it by the government has been consumed
unproductively — blown away from the mouths of
cannon, used up in war ships, expended in keeping men
marching and drilling, killing and destroying. The bond
cannot represent capital that has been destroyed. It does
not represent capital at all. It is simply a solemn
declaration that the government will, some time or other,
take by taxation from the then existing stock of the
people, so much wealth, which it will turn over to the
holder of the bond; and that, in the meanwhile, it will,
from time to time, take, in the same way, enough to make
up to the holder the increase which so much capital as it
some day promises to give him would yield him were it
actually in his possession. The immense sums which are
thus taken from the produce of every modern country to
pay interest on public debts are not the earnings or
increase of capital — are not really interest in
the strict sense of the term, but are taxes levied on the
produce of labor and capital, leaving so much less for
wages and so much less for real interest. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book III, Chapter 4: The Laws of Distribution: Of
Spurious Capital and of Profits Often Mistaken For
Interest
CAPITAL, as we have seen, consists of wealth used for
the procurement of more wealth, as distinguished from
wealth used for the direct satisfaction of desire; or, as
I think it may be defined, of wealth in the course of
exchange.
Capital, therefore, increases the power of labor to
produce wealth: (1) By enabling labor to apply itself in
more effective ways, as by digging up clams with a spade
instead of the hand, or moving a vessel by shoveling coal
into a furnace, instead of tugging at an oar. (2) By
enabling labor to avail itself of the reproductive forces
of nature, as to obtain corn by sowing it, or animals by
breeding them. (3) By permitting the division of labor,
and thus, on the one hand, increasing the efficiency of
the human factor of wealth, by the utilization of special
capabilities, the acquisition of skill, and the reduction
of waste; and, on the other, calling in the powers of the
natural factor at their highest, by taking advantage of
the diversities of soil, climate and situation, so as to
obtain each particular species of wealth where nature is
most favorable to its production.
Capital does not supply the materials which labor works
up into wealth, as is erroneously taught; the materials
of wealth are supplied by nature. But such materials
partially worked up and in the course of exchange are
capital. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book I, Chapter 5: Wages and Capital: The Real
Functions of Capital
WITH profits this inquiry has manifestly nothing to
do. We want to find what it is that determines the
division of their joint produce between land, labor, and
capital, and profits is not a term that refers
exclusively to anyone of these three divisions. Of the
three parts into which profits are divided by political
economists — namely, compensation for risk, wages
of superintendence, and return for the use of capital
— the latter falls under the term interest, which
includes all the returns for the use of capital, and
excludes everything else; wages of superintendence falls
under the term wages, which includes all returns for
human exertion, and excludes everything else; and
compensation for risk has no place whatever, as risk is
eliminated when all the transactions of a community are
taken together. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book III, Chapter 1: The Laws of Distribution:
The Inquiry Narrowed to the Laws of Distribution —
The Necessary Relation of these Laws
INTEREST, as an abstract term in the distribution of
wealth, differs in meaning from the word as commonly
used, in this: That it includes all returns for the use
of capital, and not merely those that pass from borrower
to lender; and that it excludes compensation for risk,
which forms so great a part of what is commonly called
interest. Compensation for risk is evidently only an
equalization of return between different employments of
capital. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book III, Chapter 3: The Laws of Distribution: Of
Interest and the Cause of Interest
... go to "Gems from
George"
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
I. THE SINGLE TAX
DEFINED
The practical form in which Henry George puts the idea
of appropriating economic rent to common use is "To
abolish all taxation save that upon land values."
This is now generally known as "The Single Tax."2
Under its operation all classes of workers, whether
manufacturers, merchants, bankers, professional men,
clerks, mechanics, farmers, farm-hands, or other working
classes, would, as such, be wholly exempt. It is only as
men own land that they would be taxed, the tax of each
being in proportion, not to the area, but to value of his
land. And no one would be compelled to pay a higher tax
than others if his land were improved or used while
theirs was not, nor if his were better improved or better
used than theirs.3 The value of its improvements would
not be considered in estimating the value of a holding;
site value alone would govern.4 If a site rose in the
market the tax would proportionately increase; if that
fell, the tax would proportionately diminish.
The single tax may be concisely described as a tax
upon land alone, in the ratio of value, irrespective of
improvements or use. ...
Indirect taxation costs the real tax-payers much more
than the government receives, partly because the
middlemen through whose hands taxed commodities pass are
able to exact compound profits upon the tax,8 and partly
on account of extraordinary expenses of original
collection;9 it favors corruption in government by
concealing from the people the fact that they contribute
to the support of government; and it tends, by
obstructing production, to crush legitimate industry and
establish monopolies.10 The questions it raises are of
vastly more concern than is indicated by the sum total of
public expenditures.
8. A tax upon shoes, paid in the first
instance by shoe manufacturers, enters into
manufacturers' prices, and, together with the usual
rate of profit upon that amount of investment, is
recovered from wholesalers. The tax and the
manufacturers' profit upon it then constitute part of
the wholesale price and are collected from retailers.
The retailers in turn collect the tax with all
intermediate profits upon it, together with their
:usual rate of profit upon the whole, from final
purchasers -- the consumers of shoes. Thus what appears
on the surface to be a tax upon shoe manufacturers
proves upon examination to be an indirect tax upon shoe
consumers, who pay in an accumulation of profits upon
the tax considerably more than the government
receives.
The effect would be the same if a tax
upon their leather output were imposed upon tanners.
Tanners would add to the price of leather the amount of
the tax, plus their usual rate of profit upon a like
investment, and collect the whole, together with the
cost of hides, of transportation, of tanning and of
selling, from shoe manufacturers, who would collect
with their profit from retailers, who would collect
with their profit from shoe consumers. The principle
applies also when taxes are levied upon the stock or
the sales of merchants, or the money or credits of
bankers; merchants add the tax with the usual profit to
the prices of their goods, and bankers add it to their
interest and discounts.
For example; a tax of $100,000 upon the
output of manufacturers or importers would, at 10 per
cent as the manufacturing profit, cost wholesalers
$110,000; at a profit of 10 per cent to wholesalers it
would cost retailers $121,000, and at 20 percent profit
to retailers it would finally impose a tax burden of
$145,200 — being 45 per cent more than the
government would get. Upon most commodities the number
of profits exceeds three, so that indirect taxes may
frequently cost as much as 100 per cent, even when
imposed only upon what are commercially known as
finished goods; when imposed upon materials also, the
cost of collection might well run far above 200 percent
in addition to the first cost of maintaining the
machinery of taxation.
It must not be supposed, however, that
the recovery of indirect taxes from the ultimate
consumers of taxed goods is arbitrary. When shoe
manufacturers, or tanners, or merchants add taxes to
prices, or bankers add them to interest, it is not
because they might do otherwise but choose to do this;
it is because the exigencies of trade compel them.
Manufacturers, merchants, and other tradesmen who carry
on competitive businesses must on the average sell
their goods at cost plus the ordinary rate of profit,
or go out of business. It follows that any increase in
cost of production tends to increase the price of
products. Now, a tax upon the output of business men,
which they must pay as a condition of doing their
business, is as truly part of the cost of their output
as is the price of the materials they buy or the wages
of the men they hire. Therefore, such a tax upon
business men tends to increase the price of their
products. And this tendency is more or less marked as
the tax is more or less great and competition more or
less keen.
It is true that a moderate tax upon
monopolized products, such as trade-mark goods,
proprietary medicines, patented articles and copyright
publications is not necessarily shifted to consumers.
The monopoly manufacturer whose prices are not checked
by cost of production, and are therefore as a rule
higher than competitive prices would be, may find it
more profitable to bear the burden of a tax that leaves
him some profit, by preserving his entire custom, than
to drive off part of his custom by adding the tax to
his usual prices. This is true also of a moderate
import tax to the extent it falls upon goods that are
more cheaply transported from the place of production
to a foreign market where the import tax is imposed
than to a home market where the goods would be free of
such a tax — products, for instance, of a farm in
Canada near to a New York town, but far away from any
Canadian town. If the tax be less than the difference
in the cost of transportation the producer will bear
the burden of it; otherwise he will not. The ultimate
effect would be a reduction in the value of the
Canadian land. Examples which may be cited in
opposition to the principle that import taxes are
indirect, will upon examination prove to be of the
character here described. Business cannot be carried on
at a loss — not for long.
9. "To collect taxes, to prevent and
punish evasions, to check and countercheck revenue
drawn from so many distinct sources, now make up
probably three-fourths, perhaps seven-eighths, of the
business of government outside of the preservation of
order, the maintenance of the military arm, and the
administration of justice." — Progress and
Poverty, book iv, ch: v
10. For a brief and thorough exposition
of indirect taxation read George's "Protection or Free
Trade," ch. viii, on " Tariffs for Revenue."
Whoever calmly reflects and candidly decides upon the
merits of indirect taxation must reject it in all its
forms. But to do that is to make a great stride toward
accepting the single tax. For the single tax is a form of
direct taxation; it cannot be shifted.11 ...
3. THE SINGLE TAX FALLS IN
PROPORTION TO BENEFITS
To perceive that the single tax would justly measure the
value of government service we have only to realize that
the mass of individuals everywhere and now, in paying for
the land they use, actually pay for government service in
proportion to what they receive. He who would enjoy the
benefits of a government must use land within its
jurisdiction. He cannot carry land from where government
is poor to where it is good; neither can he carry it from
where the benefits of good government are few or enjoyed
with difficulty to where they are many and fully enjoyed.
He must rent or buy land where the benefits of government
are available, or forego them. And unless he buys or
rents where they are greatest and most available he must
forego them in degree. Consequently, if he would work or
live where the benefits of government are available, and
does not already own land there, he will be compelled to
rent or buy at a valuation which, other things being
equal, will depend upon the value of the government
service that the site he selects enables him to enjoy. 14
Thus does he pay for the service of government in
proportion to its value to him. But he does not pay the
public which provides the service; he is required to pay
land-owners.
14. Land values are lower in all
countries of poor government than in any country of
better government, other things being equal. They are
lower in cities of poor government, other things being
equal, than in cities of better government. Land values
are lower, for example, in Juarez, on the Mexican side
of the Rio Grande, where government is bad, than in El
Paso, the neighboring city on the American side, where
government is better. They are lower in the same city
under bad government than under improved government.
When Seth Low, after a reform campaign, was elected
mayor of Brooklyn, N.Y., rents advanced before he took
the oath of office, upon the bare expectation that he
would eradicate municipal abuses. Let the city
authorities anywhere pave a street, put water through
it and sewer it, or do any of these things, and lots in
the neighborhood rise in value. Everywhere that the
"good roads" agitation of wheel men has borne fruit in
better highways, the value of adjacent land has
increased. Instances of this effect as results of
public improvements might be collected in abundance.
Every man must be able to recall some within his own
experience.
And it is perfectly reasonable that it
should be so. Land and not other property must rise in
value with desired improvements in government, because,
while any tendency on the part of other kinds of
property to rise in value is checked by greater
production, land can not be reproduced.
Imagine an utterly lawless place, where
life and property are constantly threatened by
desperadoes. He must be either a very bold man or a
very avaricious one who will build a store in such a
community and stock it with goods; but suppose such a
man should appear. His store costs him more than the
same building would cost in a civilized community;
mechanics are not plentiful in such a place, and
materials are hard to get. The building is finally
erected, however, and stocked. And now what about this
merchant's prices for goods? Competition is weak,
because there are few men who will take the chances he
has taken, and he charges all that his customers will
pay. A hundred per cent, five hundred per cent, perhaps
one or two thousand per cent profit rewards him for his
pains and risk. His goods are dear, enormously dear
— dear enough to satisfy the most contemptuous
enemy of cheapness; and if any one should wish to buy
his store that would be dear too, for the difficulties
in the way of building continue. But land is
cheap! This is the type of community in which may
be found that land, so often mentioned and so seldom
seen, which "the owners actually can't give away, you
know!"
But suppose that government improves. An
efficient administration of justice rids the place of
desperadoes, and life and property are safe. What about
prices then? It would no longer require a bold or
desperately avaricious man to engage in selling goods
in that community, and competition would set in. High
profits would soon come down. Goods would be cheap
— as cheap as anywhere in the world, the cost of
transportation considered. Builders and building
materials could be had without difficulty, and stores
would be cheap, too. But land would be dear!
Improvement in government increases the value of that,
and of that alone.
Now, the economic principle pursuant to which
land-owners are thus able to charge their fellow-citizens
for the common benefits of their common government points
to the true method of taxation. With the exception of
such other monopoly property as is analogous to land
titles, and which in the purview of the single tax is
included with land for purposes of taxation, 15 land is
the only kind of property that is increased in value by
government; and the increase of value is in proportion,
other influences aside, to the public service which its
possession secures to the occupant. Therefore, by taxing
land in proportion to its value, and exempting all other
property, kindred monopolies excepted — that is to
say, by adopting the single tax — we should be
levying taxes according to benefits.16
15. Railroad franchises, for example, are
not usually thought of as land titles, but that is what
they are. By an act of sovereign authority they confer
rights of control for transportation purposes over
narrow strips of land between terminals and along
trading points. The value of this right of way is a
land value.
16. Each occupant would pay to his
landlord the value of the public benefits in the way of
highways, schools, courts, police and fire protection,
etc., that his site enabled him to enjoy. The landlord
would pay a tax proportioned to the pecuniary benefits
conferred upon him by the public in raising and
maintaining the value of his holding. And if occupant
and owner were the same, he would pay directly
according to the value of his land for all the public
benefits he enjoyed, both intangible and pecuniary.
And in no sense would this be class taxation. Indeed,
the cry of class taxation is a rather impudent one for
owners of valuable land to raise against the single tax,
when it is considered that under existing systems of
taxation they are exempt. 17 Even the poorest and the
most degraded classes in the community, besides paying
land-owners for such public benefits as come their way,
are compelled by indirect taxation to contribute to the
support of government. But landowners as a class go free.
They enjoy the protection of the courts, and of police
and fire departments, and they have the use of schools
and the benefit of highways and other public
improvements, all in common with the most favored, and
upon the same specific terms; yet, though they go through
the form of paying taxes, and if their holdings are of
considerable value pose as "the tax-payers" on
all important occasions, they, in effect and considered
as a class, pay no taxes, because government, by
increasing the value of their land, enables them to
recover back in higher rents and higher prices more than
their taxes amount to. Enjoying the same tangible
benefits of government that others do, many of them as
individuals and all of them as a class receive in
addition a tangible pecuniary benefit which government
confers upon no other property-owners. The value of their
property is enhanced in proportion to the benefits of
government which its occupants enjoy. To tax them alone,
therefore, is not to discriminate against them; it is to
charge them for what they get.18
17. While the landholders of the City of
Washington were paying something less than two per cent
annually in taxes, a Congressional Committee
(Report of the Select Committee to Investigate Tax
Assessments in the District of Columbia, composed of
Messrs. Johnson, of Ohio, Chairman, Wadsworth, of New
York, and Washington, of Tennessee. Made to the House
of Representatives, May 24, 1892. Report No.
1469), brought out the fact that the value of
their land had been increasing at a minimum rate of ten
per cent per annum. The Washington land-owners as a
class thus appear to have received back in higher land
values, actually and potentially, about ten dollars for
every two dollars that as land-owners they paid in
taxes. If any one supposes that this condition is
peculiar to Washington let him make similar estimates
for any progressive locality, and see if the
land-owners there are not favored in like manner.
But the point is not dependent upon
increase in the capitalized value of land. If the land
yields or will yield to its owner an income in the
nature of actual or potential ground rent, then to the
extent that this actual or possible income is dependent
upon government the landlord is in effect exempt from
taxation. No matter what tax he pays on account of his
ownership of land, the public gives it back to him to
that extent.
18. Take for illustration two towns, one
of excellent government and the other of inefficient
government, but in all other respects alike. Suppose
you are hunting for a place of residence and find a
suitable site in the town of good government. For
simplicity of illustration let us suppose that the land
there is not sold outright but is let upon ground rent.
You meet the owner of the lot you have selected and ask
him his terms. He replies:
"Two hundred and fifty dollars a
year."
"Two hundred and fifty dollars a year!"
you exclaim. "Why, I can get just as good a site in
that other town for a hundred dollars a year."
"Certainly you can," he will say. "But if
you build a house there and it catches fire it will
burn down; they have no fire department. If you go out
after dark you will be 'held up' and robbed; they have
no police force. If you ride out in the spring, your
carriage will stick in the mud up to the hubs, and if
you walk you may break your legs and will be lucky if
you don t break your neck; they have no street
pavements and their sidewalks are dangerously out of
repair. When the moon doesn't shine the streets are in
darkness, for they have no street lights. The water you
need for your house you must get from a well; there is
no water supply there. Now in our town it is different.
We have a splendid fire department, and the best police
force in the world. Our streets are macadamized, and
lighted with electricity; our sidewalks are always in
first class repair; we have a water system that equals
that of New York; and in every way the public benefits
in this town are unsurpassed. It is the best governed
town in all this region. Isn't it worth a hundred and
fifty dollars a year more for a building site here than
over in that poorly governed town?"
You recognize the advantages and agree to
the terms. But when your house is built and the
assessor visits you officially, what would be the
conversation if your sense of the fitness of things
were not warped by familiarity with false systems of
taxation? Would it not be something like what
follows?
"How much do you regard this house as
worth? " asks the assessor.
"What is that to you?" you inquire.
"I am the town assessor and am about to
appraise your property for taxation."
"Am I to be taxed by this town? What
for?"
"What for?" echoes the assessor in
surprise. "What for? Is not your house protected from
fire by our magnificent fire department? Are not you
protected from robbery by the best police force in the
world? Do not you have the use of macadamized
pavements, and good sidewalks, and electric street
lights, and a first class water supply? Don't you
suppose these things cost something? And don't you
think you ought to pay your share?"
"Yes," you answer, with more or less
calmness; "I do have the benefit of these things, and I
do think that I ought to pay my share toward supporting
them. But I have already paid my share for this year. I
have paid it to the owner of this lot. He charges me
two hundred and fifty dollars a year -- one hundred and
fifty dollars more than I should pay or he could get
but for those very benefits. He has collected
my share of this year's expense of maintaining town
improvements; you go and collect from him. If you do
not, but insist upon collecting from me, I shall be
paying twice for these things, once to him and once to
you; and he won't be paying at all, but will be making
money out of them, although he derives the same
benefits from them in all other respects that I do."
...
Note 71: Farmers, millers, bakers, ranchers, butchers,
fishermen, hunters, makers of food-producing implements,
food merchants, railroad men, sailors, draymen, coal
miners, metal miners, builders, bankers who by exchanging
commercial paper facilitate trade. together with clerks,
bookkeepers, foremen, journeymen, common laborers,
seeking for them instead of their seeking for work. To
specify the labor that would be profitably affected by
this demand would involve the cataloguing of all workmen,
all business men, and all professional men who either
directly or indirectly are connected with food
industries, and the naming of every grade of such labor,
from the newest apprentice to the largest supervising
employer.
Would not this be putting an end to "hard times"? For
what is the most striking manifestation of "hard times"?
Is it not "scarcity of work"? Is it not that there are
more men seeking work than there are jobs to do?
Certainly it is. And to say that, is not to limit "hard
times" to hired men. The real trouble with the
business man when he complains of "hard times" is that
people do not employ him as much as he expects to be
employed. Work is scarce with him, just as with those he
employs, or as he would phrase it, "business is
slack."
Let there be ten men and but nine jobs, and you have
"hard times." The tenth man will be out of work. He may
be a good union man who abhors a "scab" and will not take
work away from his brother workman. So he hunts for a job
which does not exist, until all his savings are gone.
Still he will not be a "scab," and he suffers
deprivation. But after a while hunger gets the better of
him, and he takes one of the nine jobs away from another
man by underbidding. He becomes a "scab." And who can
blame him? any one would rather be a "scab" than a
corpse. Then the man who has lost his place becomes a
"scab" too, and turns out some one else by underbidding.
And so it goes again and again until wages fall so low
that they but just support life. Then the poorhouse or a
charitable institution takes care of the tenth man, who
thereafter serves the purpose of preventing arise in
wages. Meanwhile, diminished purchasing power, due to low
wages, bears down upon business generally.
But let there be ten jobs and but nine men.
Conditions would instantly reverse, Instead of a man all
the time seeking for a job, a job would be all the time
seeking for a man; and wages would rise until they
equaled the value of the work for which they were paid.
And as wages rose purchasing power would rise, and
business in general would flourish.
If demand freely directed production, there
would always be ten jobs for nine men, and no longer only
nine jobs for ten men. It could not be otherwise while
any wants were unsatisfied. ... read the book
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894) — Appendix: FAQ
Q5. If the full rental value were taken would it
not produce too much revenue and encourage official
extravagance? If only what was needed for an economical
administration of government, would not land still have a
speculative value?
A. In the first part of your question you are thinking of
a vast centralized government as administering public
revenues. With the revenues raised locally, each locality
being assessed for its contribution to the state and the
nation, there would be no such danger. The
possibility of this danger would be still further reduced
by the fact that private business would then offer
greater pecuniary prizes than would public office,
wherefore public office would be sought for purer
purposes than as money-making opportunities. As to the
second part of your question, the speculative value of
land would be wiped out as soon as the tax on land values
was high enough and that on improvement values low enough
to make production more profitable than
speculation. And this point would be reached
long before the whole rental value was absorbed in
taxation.
Q46. How can it be possible that speculative land
values cause business depressions when, as any business
man will tell you, the whole item of land value —
whether ground rent or interest on purchase money —
is one of the smallest items in every
business?
A. You overlook the fact that the item of speculative
rent is the only item which the business man does not get
back again. The cost of his goods, the expense of clerk
hire, the rent of his building, the wear and tear of
implements, are all received back, in the course of
normal business, in the prices of his goods. Even his
ground rent, to the extent that it is normal (i.e., what
it would be if the supply of land were determined alone
by land in use, and not affected by the land that is held
out of use for higher values), comes back to him in the
sense that his aggregate profits are that much greater
than they would be where ground rent was less. But the
extra ground rent which he is obliged to pay, in
consequence of the abnormal scarcity of land, is a dead
weight; it does not come back to him. Therefore, even if
infinitesimal in amount, as compared with the other
expenses of his business — and that is by no means
admitted — it is the one expense which may break a
thriving business down. Besides, it is not alone the
ground rent paid by the business man for his location
that bears down upon his business prosperity; the weight
of abnormally high land values in general presses upon
business in general, and by obstructing the flow of trade
forces the weaker business units to the wall. It is not
altogether safe to deduce general economic principles
from the ledgers of particular business houses. ...
read the book
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural
Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation
(1917)
Q41. Why would the single tax be an improvement
upon present systems of taxation?
A. Because: (1) The taking for public uses of that value
which justly belongs to the public is not a tax; (2) it
would relieve all workers and capitalists of those taxes
by which they are now unjustly burdened, and (3) it would
make unprofitable the holding of land idle.
... read
the whole article
Fred Foldvary: Geo-Rent: A Plea to Public
Economists
“Land” includes all earthly space, not
just solid surfaces. Land includes water areas and the
electro-magnetic spectrum, but the most important
potential source of public revenue from land is real
estate sites.
The characteristics of land are well
known.
- Land has a fixed supply. The space within some
boundary can be neither expanded nor
contracted.
- Land is fixed not only in extent but also in
mobility, unlike people, who can migrate, or capital
goods, which are more or less mobile.
- Land cannot be imported. Even in the case of
buildings and other permanent structures, they differ
from land in that they are created by human enterprise,
and in that their creators decide where the structure
will be located.
- Finally, land is not something to be
discovered. Once people figured out that the earth was a
sphere, and its approximate size, they knew that the land
was “out there.” Entrepreneurship is vital in discovering the best
routes to land areas, it is vital in discovering the
potential value of those areas, but it is not vital in
discovering that the land is out there. That was known
all along. Read the entire
article
Fred E. Foldvary — The Ultimate Tax Reform: Public
Revenue from Land Rent
Some may wonder why anyone would own land if most of
the rent is taxed away. One would own land for the same
reason people rent land: in order to use it. Ownership
also gives the title holder rights of possession, the
ability to control the use of the site indefinitely.
Today there is also a speculative motive for owning
land, to profit from the increase in its price.
With most of the geo-rent tapped for public
revenue, the speculative motive would be dampened. That
would benefit the economy, since with a lower price of
land, funds that now go to buy land would instead go to
build more capital goods, hire more labor, or provide
better training.
The tax on the geo-rent would be borne by the owner,
not the tenant. If a landlord, who was already charging
what the market could bear, tried to pass on the tax, he
would face vacancies. Some say that since the tax would
be invisible to renters, the link between using public
services and paying for them would be broken. But
productive public services increase the geo-rent, so that
link is there. If government revenue is wasted, then
indeed this does not generate rent, and a land value tax
without corresponding benefits would reduce land value.
Pressure for a productive use of public revenue would
come from the landowners more than from the tenants. But
that is no different than the situation today; poor folks
pay little or no income tax and no property tax, and
typically they get government assistance. This is an
argument not against the use of rent, but in favor of
privatizing government programs. In the private sector,
the link between ownership and control is stronger.
...
Land value taxation would shift economic power back to
state and local governments. Land is suited to local
taxation because — unlike enterprise, capital, and
labor — it cannot be moved. Land is also the
logical source of local public finance because it does
not burden enterprise, so that entrepreneurs don’t
even want to run from it. Indeed, entrepreneurs welcome a
shift to land value taxation, not only because their
economic profits are not taxed if all taxation is on land
values, but also because land value taxation reduces the
price of land, so they do not need to borrow so much when
they invest funds in an enterprise. ... read the whole
document
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."
Here, then is another derivative difference
between land and products, according to George: taxation
on products causes an increase in the price of products;
taxation on the value of land causes a drop in the price
of land. ... read the
whole article
Mason Gaffney: Land
as a Distinctive Factor of Production
- a. Financing purchase ranges
from difficult to impossible.
Few assets are priced so high as land, relative to
cash flow. Financing a purchase of land therefore
presents an unusually high credit barrier to the builder,
new businessman or hopeful homeowner. Cash flow is
seldom adequate to cover interest on a full loan, let
alone the principal. The buyer must find the excess
elsewhere. A poor credit rating raises the interest
rate and increases the difficulties. Even a
middling credit rating is not good enough to open entry
to most businesses, and a weak one excludes a large
minority from homeownership.
- b. Land purchase is not
self-liquidating.
Because market agents expect land to last forever
they price it accordingly, high enough so the net cash
flow just covers interest on the price, with nothing left
over to pay for the principal. Thus the land buyer
will never normally (or "in equilibrium") pay for it from
its own cash flow, as he will pay for capital
assets. The debtor will never retire the loan from
the cash flow of the land, but only from other saving, or
from new windfalls not expected at time of
purchase. A new buyer with no equity, therefore, is
a bad credit risk and gets short shrift at the bank.
...
Those of poor credit ratings are peculiarly
handicapped in the market for land titles. This is
because the carrying cost of land is interest, and
because there is a structure of interest rates based on
borrowers' credit ratings.
...
Those with existing cores of rent-yielding land --
“existing nuclei” -- enjoy a continual flow
of discretionary funds they can use to buy more
land. The advantage of a head start snowballs over
time.
Buying with equity funds is only the
beginning. Land is the basis for extending
credit. The "sections" go to the banks for
accommodation to buy the "quarters." As Rainer
Schikele wrote, "The basis of credit is not marginal
productivity, but collateral security." A major factor
giving one a good credit rating is the prior ownership of
land. ....
Massed
control of land is the most natural base for monopolizing
markets because land is limited. Buying land always
does double duty: when A expands he ipso facto preempts opportunities from B.
For example, a chain of service stations with most of the
best comers in a town has market power, the more so if it
also holds a large share of oil sources, of refinery
sites, of "offset rights" to pollute air, transmission
rights of way, harbor sites, and other such limited
lands.
Preemption is not always just a by-product of
expansion; it may be the main point. For example,
in 1993 Builders' Emporium, a large chain of California
hardware stores with large parking lots in good
locations, closed down and sold out. The sites were
bought up by the largest grocery chain in southern
California, Vons Company. According to news
reports, this is "a shut-out strategy against
competitors." Vons will convert 6-8 Emporium stores
to Vons' markets, and "hold onto the others until
commercial rents rebound -- then market them to
non-rivals."
Salomon Bros. analyst Jonathan Ziegler, far from
being shocked, praises this as "ingenious." "You're
controlling who's in your market area." Ralphs,
another grocery chain, had been looking for sites and is
now shut out. The stores remain empty today; the
land idle. Read the whole
article
Nic Tideman: Using Tax Policy to
Promote Urban Growth
Urban growth is desired because it raises
peoples' incomes. In a market economy, incomes can be
divided into components derived from four factors of
production:
- the rent of land,
- the wages of labor,
- the interest received from owning capital,
and
- the profits of entrepreneurship (the
activity of choosing investments and organizing
production).
Thus a successful urban growth strategy in a
market economy must either increase the amounts of land,
labor, capital and entrepreneurship that are used in a
city or increase the payments that are made per unit of
each factor, or both.
The land that a city has is fixed (or if it
changes, it does so at the expense of other
administrative units). Therefore, with respect to land,
socially productive urban growth means adopting policies
that raise the productivity of land. Labor, on the other
hand, is reasonably mobile, and capital is highly mobile.
Entrepreneurship springs up and fades away with the rise
and fall of opportunities. Therefore, in a market
economy, the payments that must be made to attract these
factors are substantially outside the control of a city.
Thus the growth of a city with respect to labor, capital
and entrepreneurship is achieved primarily by making the
city a place that attracts more of these factors, taking
the rates of wages, interest and profits that must be
paid to attract them as given by market
forces.
Tax policy is critical for urban growth because
taxes on the earnings of labor, capital and
entrepreneurship drive these factors away. A city that
desires to grow should refrain from taxing wages,
interest or profits and concentrate its taxes on land,
which does not have the option of moving
away.
Certain other sources of public revenue, in
addition to the rent of land, have the characteristic of
not discouraging growth. These sources of revenue involve
either charging people for using scarce opportunities
that no one created, as with land, or charging people for
the costs that their actions impose on
others.
A city that wishes to grow should confine its
search for revenue to these sources. In this way it will
attract more labor, capital and entrepreneurship, thereby
raising the rent of land, which can be collected publicly
without discouraging growth.
Additions to the stock of capital are extremely
important for urban growth, because of the impact of
abundant capital on wages and rents. When capital is
abundant, labor and land are more productive, and the
more productive they are, the higher wages and rents are.
... ...
Every activity that is continued should pass a test of
providing adequate value for money. Most of the
worthwhile activities of local governments raise the
rental value of the land in the vicinity of the activity
by enough to pay a substantial fraction if not all of the
costs of the activity.
Thus the rental value of land is a natural
first source of financing for local public
expenditures.
Making the rental value of land a principal
source of local public revenue has both an equity
rationale and an efficiency rationale. The equity
argument for social collection of the rent of land is
founded on a recognition that the rental value of land
has three sources.
- Part of the rental value of
land is the gift of nature--the fertility of
soil, the value of good rivers and harbors, the
depletable value of minerals, and so on. This part of
the rental value of land should be collected publicly
because no individual has a just claim to more than a
proportionate share of it. Public collection is just
either if it is followed by an equal distribution to
all citizens or by spending on activities that provide
equal benefits to all.
- A second part of the rental
value of land comes from the provision of public
services. The local agencies that provide these
services can justly claim the increase in the rental
value of land that results from their
activities.
- A third part of the rental
value of any particular site arises from private
activities that are conducted in the vicinity of that
site. Social collection of this part of the
rental value of land is particularly appropriate if
this money is used to reward those private activities
according to how much they increase the rental value of
land.
The efficiency argument for social collection
of the rent of land has two parts.
- First, the rental value of
land has the rare quality of being a source of public
revenue that does not discourage productive
activity. If people are taxed according to their
labor earnings, they can be expected to work less, and
to tend to move from the places that tax them. If
people are taxed on their investments and savings, they
can be expected to save and invest less, and to find it
attractive to put their savings and investments in
other places where they will not be taxed as much. But
when the rental value of land is collected, no one will
reduce the amount of land in existence, and no one will
move his land elsewhere. Thus social collection of the
rent of land does not reduce the productivity of an
economy in the way that most other sources of public
revenue do.
- The second part of the
efficiency argument is that social collection of the
rent of land tends to make land more available to those
who want to start new enterprises. When the rent of land is not collected publicly,
those who have rights to land will tend to ignore the
possibility of releasing it to someone who might make
better use of it. On the other hand, if those
who have rights to land are required to make annual
payments equal to the market value of the rights they
hold, then these continuing payments will induce people
to ask themselves regularly whether they ought to
release the land to someone who can make better use of
it.
To achieve the potential efficiency of public
revenue from land, it is important that people not be
charged more for the use of land, just because they
happen to be using it particularly productively. The
rental value of land should be reassessed regularly, the
values that are determined should vary smoothly with
location, and they should be available for public
inspection so that all users of land can see that they
are being charged amounts commensurate with what their
neighbors are being charged.
Social collection of the rent of land also
facilitates the privatization of land. If every user of
land is charged annually according to the rental value of
the land that he or she holds, then it is possible to
undertake a just privatization of land simply by passing
out titles to the current users of land.
No one will be disadvantaged by not receiving
land. Future generations will not be deprived by not
having been awarded shares. And the community will have a
continuing income from the rent of land.
The efficiency that is entailed in
using the rent of land to finance public activities
applies to certain other sources of public revenue as
well:
1. Charges on any publicly granted privileges,
such as the exclusive right to use a portion of the
frequency spectrum for radio and TV broadcasts.
2. Payments for extractions of natural
resources. Such payments should be set at levels that
yield the greatest possible revenue of the resources,
in present value terms.
3. Taxes on pollution. Every individual or
enterprise that pollutes the air, water or ground
should be required to pay the estimated cost of the
pollution it generates. The effect of pollution on the
rental value of surrounding land is one possible
measure of its cost.
4. Taxes on any other activities that reduce
the rental value of surrounding land.
5. Taxes on activities such as driving or
parking in crowded streets, where one person's
activities reduce opportunities for others. The
administration of such charges may be so expensive that
it is not worth implementing them, but if the
administration can be handled sufficiently cheaply,
these charges are efficient to the extent that they
only charge people for costs imposed on
others.
6. Taxes on activities, such as the
consumption of alcohol, which impose costs on others
(e.g., higher traffic fatalities).
7. Charges for local public services, such as
water, electricity, sewer connections, etc. It is not
generally desirable to make every service completely
self-financing. Rather, what is desirable is that each
user be required to pay the marginal cost of the
service he receives. Extensions of service networks are
efficient when they increase publicly collected land
rents by enough to cover the costs not covered by user
charges.
8. A self-assessed tax on permanent
improvements to land, at a very low rate (perhaps 1/10
of 1% per year). With a self-assessed tax, each
possessor of land names a price at which he would be
willing to part with the land he possesses (and any
immovable improvements). He pays a tax proportional to
the value he names, and anyone who wishes to may take
over possession at that price. The value of such a tax
is that it makes it much easier to assemble land for
redevelopment, and to identify appropriate compensation
when land is taken for public purposes.
All of the above taxes are
positively beneficial and should be collected even if the
revenue is not needed for public purposes. Any excess can
be returned to the population on an equal per capita
basis. If these attractive sources of revenue do
not suffice to finance necessary public expenditures,
then the least damaging additional tax would probably be
a "poll tax," a uniform charge on all residents. If some
residents are regarded to be incapable of paying such a
tax, then the next most efficient tax is a proportional
tax on income up to some specified amount. Then there is
no disincentive effect for all persons who reach the tax
limit. The next most efficient tax is a proportional tax
on all income.
It is important not to tax the
profits of corporations. Capital moves from where
it is taxed to where it is not, until the same rate of
return is earned everywhere. If the city refrains from
taxing corporations they will invest more in St.
Petersburg. Wages will be higher, and the rent of land,
collected by the government, will be higher. The least
damaging tax on corporations is one that provides a
complete write-off of investments, with a carry-over of
tax credits to future years. Such a tax has the effect of
making the government a partner in all new investments.
With such a tax the government provides, through tax
credits, the same share of costs that it later receives
in revenues. However, the tax does diminish the incentive
for entrepreneurial activity, and it raises no revenue
when investment is expanding rapidly. Furthermore, the
efficiency of such a tax requires that everyone believe
that the tax rate will never change. Thus it is best not
to tax the profits of corporations at all. If the people
of St. Petersburg want to share in the profits of
corporations, then they should invest directly in the
corporations, either privately or publicly. The residents
of St. Petersburg would be best served by refraining from
taxing the profits of corporations. Creating a place
where profits are not taxed can be expected to attract so
much capital that the resulting rises in wages and in
government-collected rents will more than offset what
might have been collected by taxing profits.
The taxes that promote urban growth have at
least one of two features.
- The first feature that a growth-promoting
tax can have is that it can serve to allocate a
naturally occurring resource among competing potential
users. Charges for the use of land, for the use of the
frequency spectrum and for depleting natural resources
share this feature.
- The second feature that a growth-promoting
tax can have is that of being a charge for the costs
imposed on the city by the person who pays the tax.
This feature is shared by taxes on pollution, taxes on
other activities that reduce the value of surrounding
land, taxes on imposing congestion and other costs on
other residents of the city, charges for the marginal
cost of publicly provided services, and a self-assessed
tax on property, reflecting the hindrance to future
growth represented by existing
development.
A city that confines itself to these taxes
can expect to attract capital rapidly, and therefore to
experience rapid growth, raising the wages of its
citizens and the publicly-collected rent of its
land. ... Read
the whole article
Nic Tideman:
Market-Based Systems for Assigning Rental Value to
Land
The idea of renting a site to the highest bidder is
conceptually more complex than selling it to the highest
bidder, because different users can be expected to desire
to use a site for different spans of time. Suppose that
one person bids 1,000 rubles per year for 20 years and
another bids 1,100 rubles per year for 30 years. Which
bid is higher? To compare these bids, one must know what
someone else would pay for the use of the site twenty
years hence, and one must also know the appropriate
discount rate for the next thirty years. These
difficulties of comparing bids for different terms can be
avoided by renting sites just one year at a time. This
annual rent-setting procedure also guarantees future
generations that they will not be disadvantaged by being
bound by the terms of agreements in which they did not
participate, and which disposed of their heritage for a
small fraction of its value.
The idea of renting sites one year at a time may sound
unpromising at first. The efficient use of land generally
requires improvements that last for many years. How can
entrepreneurs be expected to improve land if they are
only permitted to rent it for one year at a time? The
answer is that entrepreneurs can be expected to make
durable improvements to land even under these
circumstances, provided that they have the opportunity to
continue to use the land they have improved, for a price
that is determined in a fair and impartial manner.
The risks associated with uncertainties are
customarily borne, for a price, by entrepreneurs.
Uncertainty in the future price of using land, like
uncertainty in the future price of any other input or
product, can be accommodated by entrepreneurs.
The kind of uncertainty that will significantly deter
potential investors is uncertainty associated with a
climate that invites tax increases or other rule changes
that extract additional money from investors, taking
advantage of the fact that investment in durable
improvements has occurred. To attract investment,
governments must do what they can to commit themselves
not to take confiscatory action once investment has
occurred. This commitment is accomplished by settled
rules, by public respect for property in a democratic
system, and by a system of public finance that provides
adequate revenue for necessary expenditures and curbs the
tendency of politicians to spend excessively. The future
rent of land can accordingly be uncertain without
discouraging investment, provided that the process used
to determine rent is settled and does not confiscate
capital.
The question at issue can thus be restated as, "What
process can be used to determine the rental value of
land, one year at a time, in such a way that the full
rent of land is collected, while at the same time
insuring that entrepreneurs are not required to pay extra
amounts by virtue of having made durable improvements to
land?" ...
What is new is the suggestion regarding how a society
can receive, in all future years, the full rental value
of land that it turns over to private management: Just
charge for each site, in each year, the amount people
offer for the use of similar land for that year when they
know that future rents will be determined in the same
way. By collecting all rent without burdening those who
improve land, this simple rule maintains land as the
heritage of all generations. ...
read the whole article
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