The German colony of Kiaochow, China, established in
1898, had a single tax on land value set at 6
percent.35 Its principal city, Tsing-tao, developed
into a fine modern city. The Germans lost the colony in
1914 at the outbreak of World War I, but their
experience influenced the Chinese revolutionary Sun
Yat-sen, who became head of the government of China. He
and his successors in the Nationalist Party were not
able to implement land value taxation in that country,
but when they moved to Taiwan in 1950 after the
communists took the mainland, Chiang-kai shek
implemented a land-to-the-tiller reform accompanied by
a tax on land value. Taiwan has since developed into a
major industrial power. Hong Kong and Singapore became
major commercial centers in large part because much of
their public finance is based on taxing land values, or
in the case of Hong Kong, from selling land leases,
with low taxes on trade and commerce.
Of course there are many reasons for the success of
economies such as Hong Kong’s, but the evidence
is that more economic freedom is widely associated with
greater growth and per-capita income, in accord with
the economic theory that the deadweight loss caused by
restricting and taxing production leads to lower
production. ... read
the whole document
Using geonomics, people have turned
some of the poorest lands into the richest economies.
Hong Kong is a barren rock owned by the public. The city
collects enough site-rent to keep taxes on effort way
down. Thus prices are low and investment and
income high, moving FORTUNE magazine to name Hong Kong
the world's best city for business.
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see also:
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0254/is_5_59/ai_70738932
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