Many of my friends pride themselves on conserving
water and energy, and endorse the idea of "living simply
so that others may simply live." I am often troubled,
however, that until we get our incentives right, so that
the big users of water and energy — not to mention
the big polluters — have the incentives to behave
similarly, my friends' individual efforts and sacrifice
are going to be to little effect. Similarly, I see
churches, synagogues and mosques being encouraged to
devote themselves to charitable efforts to help the poor,
rather than concentrating on seeking poverty's underlying
causes and working to eradicate the structural reasons we
have such widespread poverty and misery in a country
dedicated to the proposition that all of us are created
equal. (see fences and
bandages.)
We tax the wrong things — labor and capital
— and tax only lightly that which should be taxed
heavily — land value. The effects are widespread
and serious, and until we correct these distortions, we
can't expect our efforts to reduce poverty or sprawl to
do more than provide palliative care.
Incentive Taxation is another term often used for Land
Value Taxation, Site Value Taxation and Split-Rate
Taxation. It aligns the incentives with the ideals
we hold dear, ideals such as equality and equality of
opportunity!
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural
Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation
(1917)
Q50. How could the landowner escape the alleged
burden of an increase in his land tax?
A. Simply by assuming the legitimate role of a model
landlord, by putting his land to suitable use, in
providing for tenants at lowest possible price the best
accommodations and facilities appropriate to the
situation that money can buy.
... read
the whole article
Henry George: The
Common Sense of Taxation (1881 article)
Evidently this regard for the general good is the true
principle of taxation. The more it is examined the more
clearly it will be seen that there is no valid reason why
we should, in any case, attempt to tax all property. That
equality should be the rule and aim of taxation is true,
and this for the reason given in the Declaration of
Independence, that all men are created equal. But
equality does not require that all men should be taxed
alike, or that all things should be taxed alike. It
merely requires that whatever taxes are imposed shall be
equally imposed upon the persons or things in like
conditions or situations; it merely requires that no
citizen shall be given an advantage, or put at a
disadvantage, as compared with other citizens.
The true purposes of government are well stated in the
preamble to the Constitution of the United States, as
they are in the Declaration of Independence. To insure
the general peace, to promote the general welfare, to
secure to each individual the inalienable rights to life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness — these are
the proper ends of government, and are therefore the ends
which in every scheme of taxation should be kept in mind.
...
But while no limit can be properly fixed for the
amount of taxation, the method of taxation is of supreme
importance. A horse may be anchored by fastening to his
bridle a weight which he will not feel when carried in a
buggy behind him. The best ship may be made utterly
unseaworthy by the bad stowage of a cargo which properly
placed would make her the stiffer and more weatherly. So
enterprise may be palsied, industry crushed, accumulation
prevented, and a prosperous country turned into a desert,
by taxation which rightly levied would hardly be felt.
...
Nothing is clearer than that when a farmer who wants
more capital puts a mortgage on his farm, no new value is
thereby created. Yet, in most of our States, both the
farm and the mortgage are taxed; though so obvious is the
double taxation that in some of them the clumsy expedient
of making an exemption to the debtor is resorted to.
But it is manifest that property of this kind is not a
fit subject for taxation, and ought not to be considered
in making up the assessment rolls. It has, in itself, no
value. It is merely the representative, or token, of
value — the certificate of ownership, or the
obligation to pay value. It either represents other
property, or property yet to be brought into existence.
And, as nothing real can be drawn from that which is not
real, taxation upon property of this kind must ultimately
fall, either upon the property represented, in which case
there is double taxation, or upon those whose obligations
it expresses, in which case men are taxed, not upon what
they own, but upon what they owe; and all cumbrous
devices to prevent the unjust effects of such taxation,
like other complications of the revenue system, simply
give to the stronger and more unscrupulous opportunities
of throwing the burden upon the weaker and more
conscientious. Property of this kind ought not to be
taxed at all. Property in itself valuable is clearly that
with which any wise scheme of taxation should alone
deal.
To consider the nature of property of this kind is
again to see a clear distinction. That distinction is
not, as the lawyers have it, between movables and
immovables, between personal property and real estate.
The true distinction is between property which is, and
property which is not, the result of human labor; or, to
use the terms of political economy, between land and
wealth. For, in any precise use of the term, land is not
wealth, any more than labor is wealth. Land and labor are
the factors of production. Wealth is such result of their
union as retains the capacity of ministering to human
desire. A lot and the house which stands upon it are
alike property, alike have a tangible value, and are
alike classed as real estate. But there are between them
the most essential differences. The one is the free gift
of Nature, the other the result of human exertion; the
one exists from generation to generation, while men come
and go; the other is constantly tending to decay, and can
only be preserved by continual exertion. To the one, the
right of exclusive possession, which makes it individual
property, can, like the right of property in slaves, be
traced to nothing but municipal law; to the other, the
right of exclusive property springs clearly from those
natural relations which are among the primary perceptions
of the human mind. Nor are these mere abstract
distinctions. They are distinctions of the first
importance in determining what should and what should not
be taxed.
For, keeping in mind the fact that all wealth is the
result of human exertion, it is clearly seen that, having
in view the promotion of the general prosperity, it is
the height of absurdity to tax wealth for purposes of
revenue while there remains, unexhausted by taxation, any
value attaching to land. We may tax land values as much
as we please, without in the slightest degree lessening
the amount of land, or the capabilities of land, or the
inducement to use land. But we cannot tax wealth without
lessening the inducement to the production of wealth, and
decreasing the amount of wealth. We might take the whole
value of land in taxation, so as to make the ownership of
land worth nothing, and the land would still remain, and
be as useful as before. The effect would be to throw land
open to users free of price, and thus to increase its
capabilities, which are brought out by increased
population. But impose anything like such taxation upon
wealth, and the inducement to the production of wealth
would be gone. Movable wealth would be hidden or carried
off, immovable wealth would be suffered to go to decay,
and where was prosperity would soon be the silence of
desolation.
And the reason of this difference is clear. The
possession of wealth is the inducement to the exertion
necessary to the production and maintenance of wealth.
Men do not work for the pleasure of working, but to get
the things their work will give them. And to tax the
things that are produced by exertion is to lessen the
inducement to exertion. But over and above the benefit to
the possessor, which is the stimulating motive to the
production of wealth, there is a benefit to the
community, for no matter how selfish he may be, it is
utterly impossible for any one to entirely keep to
himself the benefit of any desirable thing he may
possess. These diffused benefits when localized give
value to land, and this may be taxed without in any wise
diminishing the incentive to production.
To illustrate: A man builds a fine house or large
factory in a poorly improved neighborhood. To tax this
building and its adjuncts is to make him pay for his
enterprise and expenditure — to take from him part
of his natural reward. But the improvement thus made has
given new beauty or life to the neighborhood, making it a
more desirable place than before for the erection of
other houses or factories, and additional value is given
to land all about. Now to tax improvements is not only to
deprive of his proper reward the man who has made the
improvement, but it is to deter others from making
similar improvements. But, instead of taxing
improvements, to tax these land values is to leave the
natural inducement to further improvement in full force,
and at the same time to keep down an obstacle to further
improvement, which, under the present system, improvement
itself tends to raise. For the advance of land values
which follows improvement, and even the expectation of
improvement, makes further improvement more costly.
See how unjust and short-sighted is this system. Here
is a man who, gathering what little capital he can, and
taking his family, starts West to find a place where he
can make himself a home. He must travel long distances;
for, though he will pass plenty of land nobody is using,
it is held at prices too high for him. Finally he will go
no further, and selects a place where, since the creation
of the world, the soil, so far as we know, has never felt
a plowshare. But here, too, in nine cases out of ten, he
will find the speculator has been ahead of him, for the
speculator moves quicker, and has superior means of
information to the emigrant. Before he can put this land
to the use for which nature intended it, and to which it
is for the general good that it should be put, he must
make terms with some man who in all probability never saw
the land, and never dreamed of using it, and who, it may
be, resides in some city, thousands of miles away. In
order to get permission to use this land, he must give up
a large part of the little capital which is seed-wheat to
him, and perhaps in addition mortgage his future labor
for years. Still he goes to work: he works himself, and
his wife works, and his children work — work like
horses, and live in the hardest and dreariest manner.
Such a man deserves encouragement, not discouragement;
but on him taxation falls with peculiar severity. Almost
everything that he has to buy — groceries,
clothing, tools — is largely raised in price by a
system of tariff taxation which cannot add to the price
of the grain or hogs or cattle that he has to sell. And
when the assessor comes around he is taxed on the
improvements he has made, although these improvements
have added not only to the value of surrounding land, but
even to the value of land in distant commercial centers.
Not merely this, but, as a general rule, his land,
irrespective of the improvements, will be assessed at a
higher rate than unimproved land around it, on the ground
that "productive property" ought to pay more than
"unproductive property" — a principle just the
reverse of the correct one, for the man who makes land
productive adds to the general prosperity, while the man
who keeps land unproductive stands in the way of the
general prosperity, is but a dog-in-the-manger, who
prevents others from using what he will not use
himself.
Or, take the case of the railroads. That railroads are
a public benefit no one will dispute. We want more
railroads, and want them to reduce their fares and
freight. Why then should we tax them? for taxes upon
railroads deter from railroad building, and compel higher
charges. Instead of taxing the railroads, is it not clear
that we should rather tax the increased value which they
give to land? To tax railroads is to check railroad
building, to reduce profits, and compel higher rates; to
tax the value they give to land is to increase railroad
business and permit lower rates. The elevated railroads,
for instance, have opened to the overcrowded population
of New York the wide, vacant spaces of the upper part of
the island. But this great public benefit is neutralized
by the rise in land values. Because these vacant lots can
be reached more cheaply and quickly, their owners demand
more for them, and so the public gain in one way is
offset in another, while the roads lose the business they
would get were not building checked by the high prices
demanded for lots. The increase of land values, which the
elevated roads have caused, is not merely no advantage to
them — it is an injury; and it is clearly a public
injury. The elevated railroads ought not to be taxed. The
more profit they make, with the better conscience can
they be asked to still further reduce fares. It is the
increased land values which they have created that ought
to be taxed, for taxing them will give the public the
full benefit of cheap fares.
So with railroads everywhere. And so not alone with
railroads, but with all industrial enterprises. So long
as we consider that community most prosperous which
increases most rapidly in wealth, so long is it the
height of absurdity for us to tax wealth in any of its
beneficial forms. We should tax what we want to repress,
not what we want to encourage. We should tax that which
results from the general prosperity, not that which
conduces to it. It is the increase of population, the
extension of cultivation, the manufacture of goods, the
building of houses and ships and railroads, the
accumulation of capital, and the growth of commerce that
add to the value of land — not the increase in the
value of land that induces the increase of population and
increase of wealth. It is not that the land of Manhattan
Island is now worth hundreds of millions where, in the
time of the early Dutch settlers, it was only worth
dollars, that there are on it now so many more people,
and so much more wealth. It is because of the increase of
population and the increase of wealth that the value of
the land has so much increased. Increase of land values
tends of itself to repel population and prevent
improvement. And thus the taxation of land values, unlike
taxation of other property, does not tend to prevent the
increase of wealth, but rather to stimulate it. It is the
taking of the golden egg, not the choking of the goose
that lays it.
Every consideration of policy and ethics squares with
this conclusion. The tax upon land values is the most
economically perfect of all taxes. It does not raise
prices; it maybe collected at least cost, and with the
utmost ease and certainty; it leaves in full strength all
the springs of production; and, above all, it consorts
with the truest equality and the highest justice. For, to
take for the common purposes of the community that value
which results from the growth of the community, and to
free industry and enterprise and thrift from burden and
restraint, is to leave to each that which he fairly
earns, and to assert the first and most comprehensive of
equal rights — the equal right of all to the land
on which, and from which, all must live.
Thus it is that the scheme of taxation which conduces
to the greatest production is also that which conduces to
the fairest distribution, and that in the proper
adjustment of taxation lies not merely the possibility of
enormously increasing the general wealth, but the
solution of these pressing social and political problems
which spring from unnatural inequality in the
distribution of wealth.
"There is," says M. de Laveleye, in concluding that
work in which he shows that the first perceptions of
mankind have everywhere recognized a most vital
distinction between property in land and property which
results from labor, — "there is in human affairs
one system which is the best; it is not that system which
always exists, otherwise why should we desire to change
it; but it is that system which should exist for the
greatest good of humanity. God knows it, and wills it;
man's duty it is to discover and establish it." ...
read the whole
article
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)
...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
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
f. The Single Tax Retains Rent for Common
Use.
To retain Rent for common use it is not necessary to
abolish land-titles, nor to let land out to the highest
bidder, nor to invent some new mechanism of taxation, nor
in any other way to directly change existing modes of
holding land for use, or existing machinery for
collecting public revenues. "Great changes can be best
brought about under old forms."109 Let land be held
nominally as it is now. Let taxes be collected by the
same kind of machinery as now. But abolish all taxes
except those that fall upon actual and potential Rent,
that is to say, upon land values.
If that were done it is doubtful if land-owners could
any longer confiscate enough Rent to be worth the
trouble. Even though some surplus were still kept
by them, it would be so much more easy to secure Wealth
by working for it than by confiscating Rent to private
use, to say nothing of its being so much more
respectable, that speculation in land values would
practically be abandoned. At any rate, the
question of a surplus — Rent in excess of the
requirements of the community — may be readily
determined when the principle that Rent justly belongs to
the community and Wages to the individual shall have been
recognized by society in the adoption of the Single Tax.
110
110. Thomas G. Shearman, Esq., of
New York, author of the famous magazine article on "Who
Owns the United States," estimates that sixty-five per
cent of the present annual value of the land in the
United States would pay all the present expenses of
American government — federal, state, county, and
municipal. ... read the book
Nic Tideman: Basic
Tenets of the Incentive Taxation Philosophy
Alanna Hartzok: Earth
Rights Democracy: Public Finance based on Early Christian
Teachings
Mason Gaffney: The Taxable Capacity of
Land
The question I am
assigned is whether the taxable capacity of land without
buildings is up to the job of financing cities, counties,
and schools. Will the revenue be enough? The answer is
"yes."
The universal state and local
revenue problem today is whether we must cap tax rates to
avoid driving business away. It is exemplified by Governor
Pete Wilson of the suffering State of California.
He keeps repeating we must make a hard
choice: cut taxes and public services, or drive out
business and jobs. (When a public figure gives you two
choices you know they're both bad, and he wants one of
them.)
The unique,
remarkable quality of a property tax based on land ex
buildings is that you may raise the rate with no fear of
driving away business, construction, people, jobs, or
capital! You certainly will not drive away the land.
However high the tax rate, not one square foot of it will
put on a track shoe and hop out of town. The only bad thing
to say about this tax's incentive effects is that it
stimulates revitalization, and makes jobs. If some people
think that is bad, maybe this attitude is the problem.
... Read the whole
article
Ted Gwartney:
A Free Market Strategy to Reduce Sprawl
One means that has long been available but not brought
into general use is to exempt buildings from the real
estate tax and begin to impose an annual tax on land
sites that makes holding land off the market for
speculation a costly proposition. An annual fee on land
should be set near what the land site alone would yield
if rented by the owner to the highest bidder. Think of
how this would change the behavior of land owners. If I
owned a parcel of land with a rental value of $6,000 a
year and that was near what the city charged me as my
annual fee, my return on investment as a land speculator
would be greatly reduced. In order to generate positive
cash flow I would either develop the land myself or put
it on the market so that someone else would develop it.
At the same time, if my tax rate on the building I
constructed on the land was zero, my incentive is to
construct a building that maximizes my cash flow (i.e.,
to develop the parcel to its highest and best use in the
market). At minimum, land prices would stabilize and the
increase in land brought onto the market would be
somewhat offset by increased demand. Land prices to
builders would tend to begin to fall over time. ...
read the whole article
Nic Tideman: The Case for Taxing Land
I. Taxing Land as Ethics and
Efficiency
II. What is Land?
III. The simple efficiency argument for
taxing land
IV. Taxing Land is Better Than
Neutral
V. Measuring the Economic Gains from
Shifting Taxes to Land
VI. The Ethical Case for Taxing Land
VII. Answer to Arguments against Taxing
Land
There is a case for taxing land based on ethical
principles and a case for taxing land based on efficiency
principles. As a matter of logic, these two cases
are separate. Ethical conclusions follow from
ethical premises and efficiency conclusions from
efficiency principles. However, it is natural for
human minds to conflate the two cases. It is easier
to believe that something is good if one knows that it is
efficient, and it is easier to see that something is
efficient if one believes that it is good.
Therefore it is important for a discussion of land
taxation to address both question of efficiency and
questions of ethics.
This monograph will first address the efficiency case for taxing land, because that
is the less controversial case. The efficiency case
for taxing land has two main parts.
...
To estimate the magnitudes of the impacts that
additional taxes on land would have on an economy, one
must have a model of the economy. I report on
estimates of the magnitudes of impacts on the U.S.
economy of shifting taxes to land, based on a
mathematical model that is outlined in the
Appendix.
The ethical case for
taxing land is based on two ethical premises:
...
The ethical case for taxing land ends with a
discussion of the reasons why recognition of the equal
rights of all to land may be essential for world
peace.
After developing the efficiency argument and the
ethical argument for taxing land, I consider a variety of
counter-arguments that have been offered against taxing
land. For a given level of other taxes, a rise in
the rate at which land is taxed causes a fall in the
selling price of land. It is sometimes argued that
only modest taxes on land are therefore feasible, because
as the rate of taxation on land increases and the selling
price of land falls, market transactions become
increasingly less reliable as indicators of the value of
land. ...
Another basis on which it is argued that greatly
increased taxes on land are infeasible is that if land
values were to fall precipitously, the financial system
would collapse.
...
Apart from questions of feasibility, it is
sometimes argued that erosion of land values from taxing
land would harm economic efficiency, because it would
reduce opportunities for entrepreneurs to use land as
collateral for loans to finance their ideas.
...
.
Another ethical argument that is made against
taxing land is that the return to unusual ability is
“rent” just as the return to land is
rent. ...
But before developing any of these arguments, I
must discuss what land is.
...
What makes it impossible to tax everything at the
same rate is that one of the things that would need to be
taxed is leisure. Taxing authorities have not yet
devised ways to maintain people’s tax obligations
when they decide to earn and spend less money. Thus
all systems that tax people according to what they
receive (from working or saving), or spend, generate
excess burdens. They do this by making the
incentive to work less than the value of what people
produce and the incentive to save less than the
productivity of investments financed by saving.
Still, systems of ‘broad-based’ taxes (e.g.,
sales taxes, income taxes and value added taxes)
generally have lower excess burdens than tax systems in
which a variety of individual goods and services are
taxed at different rates. Actual broad-based taxes
generally have exceptions and non-uniformities, and these
generally increase the excess burdens that the taxes
cause. Still, one way in which a departure from
uniformity in taxation can promote efficiency is that, if
there are some goods and services that are particularly
likely to be purchased in greater quantity when people
consume more leisure, then a somewhat higher tax on these
can serve as a partial substitute for taxing
leisure.
In addition to discouraging work, most tax systems
discourage saving by taxing the proceeds of
people’s savings. This results in less saving
and investment. With the passage of time, this can
cause a very large reduction in the amount of capital in
an economy. And a reduced stock of capital
generally means that labor will be less productive and
wages will be lower. A tax system that taxed only
consumption and not saving would not have this
component of excess burden. However, raising a
given amount of revenue in a tax system that did not tax
saving would require a greater distortion of the
labor/leisure decision than in a tax system that did tax
saving. ...
...The supply of land is said to be perfectly
inelastic, vertical. Thus when a tax introduces a
wedge between the price paid by buyers of land services
and the price received by seller, the quantity remains
unchanged. The triangle disappears. Thus
there is no excess burden of a tax on land. A tax
on land is ‘neutral’.
There are several limitations of this
analysis.
- First, the tax must not be more than the
rental value of land, or no one will be willing to hold
title to land and pay the tax. Since the most
productive uses of land often require capital that is
durable and immobile, it is also necessary for people to
be confident when they contemplate investment that the
tax will not exceed the rental value of the land over the
life of the investment.
- Second, the tax must be administered in such a
way that the tax will not increase if the land is used
more productively. That would discourage productive
use of the land.
- Finally, the analysis as presented applies
only to the indestructible components of land. If
there are ways that people might want to use land that
would reduce its value compared to what nature provided
(as with mining or fishing), then a tax on land in
proportion to its value will give people an inefficient
incentive to reduce its value.
There is a way to eliminate this inefficient
incentive. One can apply to mineable land a
‘severance tax’ for reductions in
value. To exactly offset the incentive effects of a
land value tax, the amount of the severance tax should be
the present value of the reductions in the land value tax
that occur because of the reduction in the value of the
land. Then the present value of the sum of the land
value tax payments and the severance tax payments will be
independent of how the land is used
To summarize: If land is subject to a tax or
combination of taxes with a present value that is
independent of how the land is used, and if potential
investors are confident that the magnitude of the tax
will not exceed the value of using the land over the life
of potential investments, then a tax on land has no
excess burden; it is neutral. ...
Because increases in land value generally cause
reductions in both the value of location-specific human
capital and the value of pre-existing structures, an
efficient system of incentives for activities that
increase land values would offer incentives reflecting
only the net benefits, after the value of the negative
consequences for physical and human capital had been
subtracted from the increase in land values. An
ideal system would collect all of the extra increase in
land value and use it to provide compensation for the
negative consequences for physical and human
capital. 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:
Land Taxation and Efficient Land Speculation
The optimal timing of development is an important
allocative function that can be either enhanced or
degraded by the impact of land taxes on land speculation.
This paper discusses four types of taxes on land:
- taxes on the rental value of land,
- taxes on the sale value of land,
- taxes on realized income from land, and
- taxes on realized gains from the sale of land.
All four taxes reduce incentives for speculation in
land, which is generally beneficial. The third and fourth
produce distortions with respect to incentives to develop
land, while the first and second do not. All four taxes
have some beneficial effect of mitigating imperfections
in capital markets. All permit reduction or elimination
of taxes with significant dead-weight losses, such as
those on improvements. ...
read the whole article
Jeff Smith and Kris Nelson: Giving Life to the Property Tax
Shift (PTS)
John Muir is right. "Tug on any one thing and find
it connected to everything else in the universe." Tug on
the property tax and find it connected to urban slums,
farmland loss, political favoritism, and unearned equity
with disrupted neighborhood tenure. Echoing Thoreau, the
more familiar reforms have failed to address this
many-headed hydra at its root. To think that the root
could be chopped by a mere shift in the property tax base
-- from buildings to land -- must seem like the epitome
of unfounded faith. Yet the evidence shows that state and
local tax activists do have a powerful, if subtle, tool
at their disposal. The "stick" spurring efficient use of
land is a higher tax rate upon land, up to even the
site's full annual value. The "carrot" rewarding
efficient use of land is a lower or zero tax rate upon
improvements.
Owners paying higher land dues feel
pressured to develop their land in order to pay their
dues, and development is already blighting many suburbs
and farmland. Won't the PTS force premature or excessive
development, losing open space and ecologically sensitive
areas? Environmentalists should understand that
development is actually needed to spare land. Using some
land more intensely means using other land not at all.
The PTS stimulates construction in the most
intensely-used locations; compact urban form leaves more
surrounding countryside pristine. Since about one-fifth
of urban areas are vacant or underused land, and half is
devoted to cars, there's plenty of room in cities for
growth. While suburban commercial centers compete with
downtown for redevelopment, each new building, whether
for business or residents, must find tenants.
Higher density is the expected result of the PTS, yet
many people oppose higher density. However, the noxious
component is not a higher density of population but of
automobiles, creating congestion, noise, noxious smells,
and danger. The PTS, by clearing out the infestation of
vehicles, makes human habitats more livable and the added
people unnoticeable.
Without coercion or remote planning, the PTS improves our
settlement patterns. Regulations and zoning, some assume,
might be vitiated or obviated, become obsolete. Instead,
the PTS makes it easier for regulations and zoning to do
their job. Since the land tax lowers land price, buying
land for parks and reserves is more easily afforded. The
loss in revenue from removing the newly public lands from
the tax rolls would be offset somewhat by the
corresponding rise in value of sites near the protected
open space. Creating green spaces raises the density of
already developed land, and thus its value. Furthermore,
land dues reduce the profit from land development, making
it a less attractive investment, and land use decisions
of less economic consequence. After a while, people with
deep pockets would turn to investments that, post-shift,
would be untaxed. Reserving land for recreational or
natural uses becomes less contentious; people could more
easily determine an optimum proportion of green space to
developed space.
Redirecting land rent from owner to government might
merely pass the motive to exploit from owner to state,
possibly the next implacable force against conservation.
However, while an individual must use their own land most
intensely to maximize profit, a government must optimize
land use to maximize its land tax base. That is, land
value thruout the jurisdiction is lower when there is
border-to-border development; overall values are higher
when some space is kept open. From the government's point
of view, there's more rent to be collected when highest
and best use includes nonuse.
A big problem needs a big solution which in
turn needs a matching shift of our prevailing paradigm.
Geonomics -- advocating that we share the social value of
sites and natural resources and untax earnings -- does
just that.
Read the whole
article
Jeff Smith: How
Profit Shapes Urban Space
Like the rest of the universe, US cities keep
expanding. Some time before the universe begins to
contract, American metro regions may, too. What
counterpart to gravity might suck suburbia back into the
hole of our doughnut cities? One of the most fundamental
forces in the world - money.
...
Without spending a penny of subsidy, cities can
make urban renewal more profitable than suburban
development. How is about as commonsensical as
Einsteinian physics, but like "e=mc2", it works. The
trick is to forget subsidies and lower one tax while
raising another. That is, levy a tax or charge a fee to
collect land value while eliminating any tax on buildings
or improvements.
The present property tax works backwards, like an
intruder from the anti-universe. It increases as owners
improve their property; it decreases when owners let
buildings dilapidate. "Save money, create slums," cities
tell owners.
Some owners do keep prime sites covered with
parking lots or abandoned buildings while waiting for
land values to rise. "Good numbers are hard to come by,"
notes Bill Batt, former
fiscal policy researcher for the New York legislature,
"but easily a quarter of a US city is under-utilized."
Thus urban cores decay, an entropy that seems natural and
inevitable yet is policy-induced.
If the property tax is a centrifugal force that
flings structures outward, its opposite is a land levy, a
centripetal force that pulls development inward. To pay
this charge, owners try to put their parcels to better
use. "Owners of the most valuable sites, paying the most,
try hardest," explains Tom Gihring, a Seattle-based
consultant.. "Since the most valuable lots lie about the
center, it is the center which draws development."
In-fill happens. ...
Read the whole
article
Jeff Smith: Planning by
Markets
... Since we do not collectively build homes and
businesses -- homeowners and business owners do that --we
ought not tax them. We do generate the value of land,
higher where density is higher. Nobody by himself made
density; we all do that. Via our agent, a local
government, we could collect public rent for public
betterment.
Planners have a litany of great ideas
for rebuilding cities(4) -- set-backs, landscaping,
pedestrian bridges, bridges, etc -- but have no idea of how
to pay for them. One way is to let them pay for themselves.
Improving a city raises its land's value. A tax or fee can
collect this ground rent that can then be used to pay off
the earlier investment in ecologizing the city(5). Indeed, the
expected change in land value can be a perfect measure of
some proposed improvement's worthiness. If it can pay its
way, throw it up. If it can't, then back to the drawing
board.
No longer inhibited by the property tax yet
spurred by annual land dues (tax or fee), owners and
developers get busy. Some Australian towns that tax land
alone average 50 percent more built value per acre than
those that don't. Since a mix of apartments, stores,
offices, schools, theaters, etc. maximizes site value and
the return to builders, they could find themselves
pulling on the same end of the rope with
planners.
Where planners, armed with the
sternest growth control measures, have failed, geonomics
can succeed. By making speculation too expensive, it
unplugs the "metro tub", letting the flow of development
return to its natural course, filling in the vacant lots
and abandoned buildings. Clever local governments, no
longer able to tax willy-nilly and thus more dependent upon
site rent, would squeeze streets, now overly wide for
traffic, replacing parking lanes with space for sidewalk
cafes beneath rows of shady trees, alongside lanes for
bikes, and thereby drive up site values.
... How long would it take
to ecologize cities after shifting its property tax?
While Johannesburg (South African) levied a rate of only
3 percent on site value, it enjoyed the fastest
site-recycling rate in the world, a little over 20 years.
Within a couple decades, we could have those cities we'd
love.
As cities grow more livable and
lovable, their site values rise. The resultant increase in
land dues would push owners to continually convert to
highest and best use automatically. In this positive
feedback loop, cities would constantly renew.
While generals and anarchists might not easily
find common cause, planners and markets can, when
planners paddle with, not against, the mighty current of
rent. Correcting the market, so that taxes and rents no
longer interfere with the choices of owners and
developers, would attain highest and best use of sites
automatically.
Read the whole
article
Michael Hudson and Kris Feder: Real Estate and the
Capital Gains Debate
Economic policy should
distinguish between activities which add to productive
capacity and those which merely add to overhead
This distinction elevates the policy debate above the
level of merely carping about inequitable wealth
distribution, an attack by have-nots on the haves, to the
fundamental issues. What ways of getting income deserve
fiscal encouragement, and how may economic surpluses best
be tapped to support government needs? Policies that subsidize rentier incomes while penalizing productive
effort have grave implications, not only for distributive
justice and social harmony, but also for economic
efficiency and growth.
Herbert J. G. Bab: Property Tax -- Cause of
Unemployment (circa 1964)
Property taxes shape the pattern of our
cities.
- If taxes on improvements are low or
non-existing and taxes on land are high, the cities are
bound to grow vertically and at a fast rate.
- If taxes on improvements are high and taxes on
land are low, our cities will spread over larger and
larger areas. They will become metropolitan areas and
they will grow at a much slower rate.
Relatively low taxes on land and high taxes on
improvements will discourage the owners of vacant lots or
underdeveloped land, such as that used for parking lots,
gas stations, hamburger stands, etc., from improving
their land. It will encourage them to keep the land out
of use and to sell later at a profit. This will create an
artificial shortage of land, which in turn will lead to
urban blight and irregular, leapfrog city
growth.
This urban sprawl makes our cities look ugly, but
it has many disadvantages besides:
- It gobbles up a tremendous amount of farm
land;
- the farmers have to give up their land before
it is really needed;
- the building developer has to go far out to
find available land;
- the prospective home-owner has to travel
farther;
- traffic on congested roads will increase
and
- new roads and schools will have to be
built.
It is generally believed that
zoning laws are a very effective tool to control the
growth of our cities. Zoning laws determine the best
possible use of urban land. Yet nobody
can be forced to improve his land and to build unless
there is an incentive. This can be achieved by taxing
land at a rate that will make it unprofitable to hold it
without improving it.
The city planner needs land taxation just as he
needs zoning laws. With both these tools the orderly
growth of our cities will be assured, but -- as
experience has shown -- without land taxation rational
and efficient land usage becomes impossible.
Read the whole
article
Bill Batt: The
Merits of Site Value Taxation
One must begin a discussion by
recognizing that governments, constitutionally speaking,
have two means by which to effectuate public policy,
conventionally known as tax powers and police
powers.1 The primary
purpose of taxing power historically has been to raise
the necessary revenue to support government functions as
defined by the electorate through its chosen
representatives. Many students of government argue that
this should be its only purpose. President Reagan, for
example, reflected this view of taxation when he stated
in 1981 that "the taxing power of the government must be
used to provide for legitimate government purposes. It
must not be used to regulate the economy or bring about
social change."2
This view has within it the implicit view that there is a
way to tax that is totally neutral in its influence on
economic behavior, something which has not always been
understood or agreed to. Taxes have always been used to
facilitate socioeconomic policies, and in recent years
have become a conscious tool of policy makers even more.
One recent study notes that in the state of Washington,
for example, 222 of the 378 identifiable tax breaks for
special purposes have been enacted since 1970; the state
of Oregon, similarly, has witnessed
288.3 But whether
using taxing powers to facilitate other purposes is a
wise and efficient approach needs to be more carefully
considered, and there has been too little discussion of
this issue in contemporary scholarship or political life.
Furthermore, only recently has it been possible to
understand the possibility of tax neutrality.
...
... Not all
revenue collection on the part of government is grounded
in the constitutional authority of its tax powers. Taxes
in the strictest sense of the term are revenues
involuntarily paid to general funds for the general
purposes of government. But there are many other revenues
paid to government that would never be construed as
taxes: lottery revenues, fines, interest payments,
environmental (green) fees, payment for information, and
user fees being the most common examples. Fines, green
fees, and user fees are instruments of police power
precisely because their primary purpose is to correct
behavior, and only secondarily to raise revenue. User
fees, along with environmental fees particularly, are
employed to recover the costs of use, wear or damage to
environmental or government-provided "services." (Only in
recent years has it been fashionable to regard use or
degradation of the natural environment as a "service,"
necessitating "correction," as was originally explicated
by Pigou earlier this century.
Fiscal measures such as those noted above can be
employed under police powers to correct, or at least
compensate for, otherwise egregious social behavior, and
public policy makers must concern themselves with the
question whether such measures are more or less
appropriate or effective. These provide an attractive
alternative to what have come to be known as "command and
control" approaches. Just as are so many fiscal measures,
command-and-control approaches to regulating and
controlling social and economic behavior is also grounded
in the police powers of government. Administrative theory
has grown in appreciation for fiscal approaches and away
from command-and-control approaches in recent
years.8 This is
because they are often far less expensive and more
efficient to implement, easier to understand, have a
greater degree of compliance, and has the added virtue,
lastly, of raising revenue for the support of
governmental responsibilities. This interest in "tax
shifting" has inspired the slogan, "Tax
Bads, Not Goods."... Read the
whole piece
Bill Batt: The
Nexus of Transportation, Economic Rent, and Land
Use
... To secure the fullest results of collecting
land rent, structures should be removed entirely from
revenue base and imposed on the land component alone.
Phasing out the tax burden on improvements and placing it
on land value alone removes the penalty now placed on
those who do invest in and maintain their buildings. And,
as mentioned earlier, it prompts titleholders to abjure
practices for speculative gain. If only the land value
component of the property tax is collected and tax on
buildings is eliminated, those who do use landsites to
the full extent that their value warrants are rewarded
for doing so. ...
Correcting Distortions by
Pricing: Increasing the Collection of Land
Rent
Recovering the economic rent from urban parcels
helps people to appreciate the true costs of the
transportation versus location trade-off. It brings the
carrying costs of site choices back to the present time
and makes them comparable with travel choices. The
payment of site rent becomes an operating cost. The other
corrective policy needed is to raise transportation costs
to a level commensurate with their full value as private
goods. Transportation user fees, in the form of motor
fuel taxes, green taxes, congestion fees, and
administrative costs (for the administration of drivers'
licenses and registration fees) could easily provide the
needed price corrections to bring into balance marginal
transportation costs and land rent collection. Doing so
would equilibrate choices between people living and
working in high rent urban centers and those in
peripheral low rent (but higher travel cost)
locales.
Figure 2 shows how a tax on land value (or
alternatively the tax on land rent) coupled with the
proper design of transportation fees can equilibrate the
competitive advantage of markets in urban areas relative
to suburbs, thereby reducing, and perhaps even reversing,
the centrifugal forces of sprawl development. The land
tax cannot alone redress the problem, especially so long
as such inordinate social subsidies are granted to
private motor vehicle transportation services. Nor can
transportation fees, raised to a level fully commensurate
with the social and private costs they incur, alone
ensure that the price of locations will be matched. But
to the extent that both are assessed, they reach far
toward correcting this disequilibrium. One could even
argue that all site rent should be recaptured by society
and that all transportation costs that are identifiable
as consumption of private goods should be priced
accordingly. Some advocates even suggest that doing so
will not only foster economic efficient behavior but also
provide sufficient revenue for a citizen's dividend
consistent with economic justice.... read the
whole article
Bill Batt: Comment on Parts of the
NYS Legislative Tax Study Commission's 1985 study
“Who Pays New York Taxes?”
Henry George’s Solution: Taxing the Flow of Land
Rent
If land values are really the present values of
anticipated future ground rents, one can certainly treat
them as flows rather than stocks, just as community
services are continuous flows. The amount of rent flowing
through a site and through the economy is not negligible;
what estimates have been made, where indeed the economic
data allow it to be made, suggest that it is roughly a
third of a nation’s GDP.29 The question is whether
it makes more sense to. Should we elect to continue
property tax regimes as we do, it would make better sense
to tax buildings as stocks and lands as rent flows. But
this raises the question whether real property should be
exempt from all taxes, as some have argued.30 What
rationale exists for taxing lands, whether as stocks or
flows; and why do we tax buildings? I will argue below
that taxing buildings and the failure to adequately tax
land both have deleterious consequences for the whole
economy.
Little justification exists for taxing
buildings, or improvements of any sort, so this question
is easily disposed of. The practice is explained largely
as a matter of historical inertia. Only in the
recent century or two have buildings represented any
significant capital value; prior to the rise of major
cities, the value of real property lay essentially in
land. American cities today typically record aggregate
assessed land values – at least when the valuations
are well-done – at about 40% to 60% of total
taxable value, that is, of land and buildings taken
together.31 Skyscrapers reflect enormous capital
investment, and this expenditure is warranted because of
the enormous value of locational sites. Each site gets
its market price from the fact that the total
neighborhood context creates an attractive market
presence and ambience. By taxing buildings, however, we
impose a penalty on their optimum development as well as
on the incentives for their maintenance. Moreover,
taxes on buildings take away from whatever burden
would otherwise be imposed on sites, with the result that
incentives for their highest and best use is
weakened. Lastly, the technical and
administrative challenges of properly assessing the value
of improvements is daunting, particularly since they must
be depreciated for tax and accounting purposes, evaluated
for potential replacement, and so on. In fact most costs
associated with administration of property taxation and
appeal litigation involve disputes over the valuation of
structures, not land values. ... read the whole
commentary
Bill Batt: How Our
Towns Got That Way (1996 speech)
Failure to recapture publicly-created
land rents through the tax mechanism provided the incentive
to speculators to buy land, not to use it in production but
to hold it for the rise. In this way, choice parcels remain
undeveloped or underdeveloped relative to the full extent
that their values warrant and development occurs instead in
remote areas where opportunity for profit is more
immediate. The result was low density development what we
know as sprawl.
To some people this may be
counter-intuitive. It may not be obvious that increasing
taxes on a parcel of land will foster its improvement.
Consider, however, the possibility that
there are two parcels of land in roughly the same location
and of equal size. You own a vacant parcel and
another next to it has a twenty-story building. If only the
land-value is taxed you will be paying the same tax revenue
as your neighbor. What are you likely to
do with your parcel? If you are
rational, you will either build a twenty-story building or
else sell the land to someone who will. In this way improvements tend to be clustered in
high-land-value areas except where it is prohibited,
perhaps for a park. ... read the whole
article
Wyn Achenbaum: Eminent Domain and Government
Giveaways
It seems to me that there are better ways than eminent
domain to provide the incentives that will lead the
private sector to develop choice land.
...
While at one time this area might have been an
appropriate place for a neighborhood of single family
homes, it appeared to me that that time had passed a
decade or so ago. It seemed to me that the path of
progress would -- if the incentives were logical and the
market responsive to signals -- have caused the private
sector to have redeveloped that site. Such re-development
might have been painful to the residents of the
neighborhood, but would have put now-choice land to a
higher and better use than single-family homes.
But our system wasn't designed to send signals all that
well -- Connecticut law required properties to be
reassessed once every decade (and I've heard that once in
early '70s and once in the late 80's was construed to
satisfy that requirement). Now assessments are required
every 4 years (though my town decided it didn't like the
2003 revaluation and is keeping the 1999 for a few more
years).
But if the properties had been reassessed on a regular
basis, with market-based values assigned first to the
land and the residual being assigned to the existing
buildings, the homeowners themselves would have been in a
position to make their own rational decisions on whether
it was worth it to them to continue to occupy extremely
valuable land (and pay the taxes on it), or more to their
advantage to accept an offer from someone who was
prepared to put it to a higher and better use, and take
that equity and buy elsewhere. ...
Our land, particularly the best-located land, is a
common asset on which we are all dependent. Allowing
individuals or corporations to occupy it without
compensating the rest of us for its value is the
underlying problem, and solving that problem through good
assessment and rational (that is, land value) taxes is
the way to solve it. When we do that, a lot of problems
will begin to fall away. Read the whole
article
The case for site value rating in terms of economic
efficiency is founded on the fact that a tax on
resources that are not produced by human effort is one
of the few sources of government revenue that does not
reduce incentives for people to be productive. Two
other revenue sources that have this virtue are taxes
on other government-granted privileges such as
exclusive use of radio frequencies and taxes on
activities with harmful consequences, such as polluting
the air. An economy will be more efficient if revenue
sources that do not diminish productivity are employed
to the greatest possible extent before any use is made
of taxes that impede productivity.
What makes a tax efficient is that the amount of tax
that is due cannot be reduced by reducing productive
activities. When incomes are taxed, people can reduce
the amount of taxes owed by working less. They do so,
and the productivity of the economy falls. When houses
are taxed, people can reduce the amount of taxes owed
by building fewer house and smaller houses. They do so,
and the housing shortage worsens. But when the
unimproved value of land is taxed, there is no
resulting diminution in the quantity of land. Thus
taxes can be levied on land without diminishing the
productivity of an economy. And shifting taxes from
other, destructive bases to land will improve the
productivity of an economy. ...
read the whole article
Land value taxation generalizes into the principle
that people should pay for all of their appropriations
of natural opportunities, according to the opportunity
costs of those appropriations, and the resulting
revenue should be shared equally. ...
Taxing land has an additional effect that increases
the stock of capital. A tax on land represents a
redistribution from living adults to the young and
unborn, who will now be born with rights to land.
Unless there is a perfectly offsetting reduction in the
desire to accumulate assets to transfer to the next
generation, this redistribution will induce the living,
who now have fewer assets, to accumulate at a more
rapid rate than they would otherwise do. That is,
saving and capital accumulation will increase.
Taxing land also increases the efficiency with which
land is used. This occurs through three paths.
- First, a tax on land reduces the return to land
speculation, and therefore reduces the quantity of land
speculation.
- Second, as taxes on land are capitalized into the
selling price of land, the result is the substitution
of a recurring cost (the annual tax) for a one-time
cost (the purchase price). This makes land relatively
more attractive to bidders with high discount rates and
relatively less attractive to bidders with low discount
rates. To the extent that the former are more
entrepreneurial and the latter more passive investors,
land will tend to flow into the hands of persons who
will choose to use it more intensively.
- The third path by which a tax on land increases the
efficiency with which land is used is that, for those
who are using land inefficiently, it substitutes an
explicit cost (the tax) for an implicit one (the income
foregone by inefficient use).
Psychologically, explicit costs tend to be more
effective in motivating efficient behavior than
implicit ones. ..
read the whole article
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