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Wealth and Want | |||||||
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Natural Resources
"The meek shall inherit the earth - but
not the mineral rights." - Jean Paul Getty
(1892-1976), billionaire oil tycoon
Henry George: Thy Kingdom Come (1889 speech)
... The story goes on to describe how the roads of
heaven, the streets of the New Jerusalem, were filled
with disconsolate tramp angels, who had pawned their
wings, and were outcasts in Heaven itself.
You laugh, and it is ridiculous. But there is a moral in it that is worth serious thought. Is it not ridiculous to imagine the application to God’s heaven of the same rules of division that we apply to God’s earth, even while we pray that His will may be done on earth as it is done in Heaven? Really, if we could imagine it, it is impossible to think of heaven treated as we treat this earth, without seeing that, no matter how salubrious were its air, no matter how bright the light that filled it, no matter how magnificent its vegetable growth, there would be poverty, and suffering, and a division of classes in heaven itself, if heaven were parcelled out as we have parceled out the earth. And, conversely, if people were to act towards each other as we must suppose the inhabitants of heaven to do, would not this earth be a very heaven? “Thy kingdom come.” No one can think of the kingdom for which the prayer asks without feeling that it must be a kingdom of justice and equality — not necessarily of equality in condition, but of equality in opportunity. And no one can think of it without seeing that a very kingdom of God might be brought on this earth if people would but seek to do justice — if people would but acknowledge the essential principle of Christianity, that of doing to others as we would have others do to us, and of recognising that we are all here equally the children of the one Father, equally entitled to share His bounty, equally entitled to live our lives and develop our faculties, and to apply our labour to the raw material that He has provided.... Read the whole speech Henry George: In Liverpool: The Financial Reform Meeting at the Liverpool Rotunda (1889)
Henry George: Thou Shalt Not Steal (1887 speech)
Not work enough! Why, what is work? Productive
work is simply the application of human labor to land, it
is simply the transforming, into shapes adapted to
gratify human desires, of the raw material that the
Creator has placed here. Is there not opportunity enough
for work in this country? Supposing
that, when thousands of men are unemployed and there are
hard times everywhere, we could send a committee up to
the high court of heaven to represent the misery and the
poverty of the people here, consequent on their not being
able to find employment.
What answer would we get?
What could we ask the Creator to
furnish us with that is not already here in abundance? He
has given us the globe amply stocked with raw materials
for our needs. He has given us the power of working up
this raw material.
If there seems scarcity, if there is want, if there are people starving in the midst of plenty, is it not simply because what the Creator intended for all has been made the property of the few? And in moving against this giant wrong, which denies to labor access to the natural opportunities for the employment of labor, we move against the cause of poverty. ... Go into Pennsylvania, and there you will see great stretches of land, containing enormous deposits of the finest coal, held by corporations and individuals who are working but little part of it. On these great estates the common American citizens who mine the coal are not allowed even to rent a piece of land, let alone buy it. They can only live in company houses; and they are permitted to stay in them only on condition (and they have to sign a paper to that effect) that they can be evicted at any time on five days’ notice. The companies combine and make coal artificially dear here, and make employment artificially scarce in Pennsylvania. Now, why should not those miners, who work on it half the time, why shouldn’t they dig down in the earth and get up coal for themselves? Who made that coal? There is only one answer — God made that coal. Whom did He make it for? Surely you would say that God made it for the people that would be one day called into being on this earth. But the laws of Pennsylvania, like the laws of New York, say God made it for this corporation and that individual; and thus a few people are permitted to deprive miners of work and make coal artificially dear. A few weeks ago when I was traveling in Illinois a young fellow got into the car at one of the mining towns. Entering into conversation with him, he said he was going to another place to try to get work. He told me of the condition of the miners, that they could scarcely make a living, getting very small wages, and only working about half the time. I said to him: "There is plenty of coal in the ground; why don’t you employ yourselves in digging coal?" He replied: "We did get up a co-operative company, and we went to see the owner of the land to ask what he would take to let us sink a shaft and get out some coal. He wanted $7,500 a year. We could not raise that much." Tax land up to its full value, and how long can such dogs-in-the-manger afford to hold that coal land away from these men? And when people who want work can go and employ themselves, then there will be no million or no thousand unemployed people in all the United States. The relation of employer and employed is a relation of convenience. It is not one imposed by the natural order. People are brought into the world with the power to employ themselves, and they can employ themselves wherever the natural opportunities for employment are not shut up from them. People do not have a natural right to demand employment of another, but they have a natural right, an inalienable right, a right given by their Creator, to demand opportunity to employ themselves. And whenever that right is acknowledged, whenever the people who want to go to work can find natural opportunities to work upon, then there will be as much competition among employers who are anxious to get people to work for them, as there will be among people who are anxious to get work. ... read the whole article Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and Charts (1894) — Appendix: FAQ
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation (1917)
“Free to Choose: A Conversation with Milton Friedman” — July 2006: http://www.hillsdale.edu/imprimis/ The following is an edited transcript of a conversation between Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn and Milton Friedman, which took place on May 22, 2006, at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in San Francisco, California, during a two-day Hillsdale College National Leadership Seminar celebrating the 25th anniversary of Milton and Rose Friedman's book, Free to Choose: A Personal Statement. excerpt:
Q Is there no tax you like? A Yes, there are taxes I like. For example, the gasoline tax, which pays for highways. You have a user tax. The property tax is one of the least bad taxes, because it's levied on something that cannot be produced — that part that is levied on the land. So some taxes are worse than others, but all taxes are bad. — Milton Friedman, interview with
Scott Duke Harris, William Ogilvie: An Essay on the Right of Property in Land (Scotland, 1782)
The monopoly of rude
materials, indispensably requisite for carrying on
any branch of industry, is far more pernicious than the
monopoly of manufactured commodities ready for
consumption. The monopoly possessed by landholders is of
the first sort, and affects the prime material of the
most essential industry.
The monopoly possessed by land-holders enables them to deprive the peasants not only of the due reward of industry exercised on the soil, but also of that which they may have opportunity of exercising in any other way, and on any other subject; and hence arises the most obvious interest of the landholder, in promoting manufactures.... Read the entire essay John Dewey: Steps to Economic Recovery
Lindy Davies: Land and Justice
Joseph Stiglitz: October, 2002, interview
Clarence Darrow: How to Abolish Unfair Taxation (1913)
Fred E. Foldvary — The Ultimate Tax Reform: Public Revenue from Land Rent
The economic policy of liberty has four
rules:
Michael Hudson: The Lies of the Land: How and why land gets undervalued
Turning land-value gains into
capital gains Hiding the free lunch Two appraisal methods How land gets a negative value! Where did all the land value go? A curious asymmetry Site values as the economy's "credit sink" Immortally aging buildings Real estate industry's priorities THE FREE LUNCH Its cost to citizens Its cost to the economy
Turning land-value gains into capital
gains
YOU MAY THINK the largest category of assets in
this countrly is industrial plant and machinery. In fact
the US Federal Reserve Board's annual
balance sheet shows real estate to be the economy's
largest asset, two-thirds of America's
wealth and more than 60 percent of that in land,
depending on the assessment
method.
Most capital gains are land-value
gains. The big players do not want their profits in rent,
which is taxed as ordinary income, but in capital gains,
taxed at a lower rate. To benefit as much as
possible from today's real estate bubble of fast rising
land values they pledge a property's rent income to pay
interest on the debt for as much property as they can buy
with as little of their own money as possible. After
paying off the mortgage lender they sell the property and
get to keep the "capital gain".
This price appreciation is actually a "land gain", that is, it's not from providing start-up capital for new enterprises, but from sitting on a rising asset already in place, the land. Its value rises because neighbourhoods are upgraded, mortgage money is ample, and rezoning is favorable from farmland on the outskirts of cities to gentrification of the core to create high-income residential developments. The potential capital gain can be huge. That's why developers are willing to pay their mortgage lenders so much of their rent income, often all of it. Of course, investing most surplus income and wealth in land has been going on ever since antiquity, and also pledging one's land for debt ("mortgaging the homestead") that often led to its forfeiture to creditors or to forced sale under distress conditions. Today borrowing against land is a path to getting rich -- before the land bubble bursts. As economies have grown richer, most of their surplus is still being spent acquiring real property, both for prestige and because its flow of rental income grows as society's prosperity grows. That's why lenders find real estate to be the collateral of choice. Most new entries
into the Forbes or Fortunelists of the richest men consist of real estate
billionaires, or individuals coming from the fuels and
minerals industries or natural monopolies. Those who
have not inherited family fortunes have gained their wealth
by borrowing money to buy assets that have soared in value.
Land may not be a factor of production, but it enables its
owners to assert claims of ownership and obligation, i.e.,
rentier income in the forms of rent and interest.
... Read the whole article
The Social Justice of Site Value
Rating
The Efficiency of Site Value Rating How Valuations would be Made Both for reasons of social justice and for reasons of economic efficiency, site value rating deserves a continued place in the programme of the Liberal Party. The case for site value rating in terms of social justice is founded on two understandings: first, that the value of land in the absence of economic development is the common heritage of humanity, and second, that increases in the rental value of land arising from economic development and government expenditures should be collected by governments to finance those activities. What is meant by "land" is the unimproved value of sites and the value of extractable natural resources such as North Sea oil. While there may someday be institutions capable of implementing a recognition of land as the heritage of all humanity on a worldwide basis, in the absence of such institutions each nation should implement a recognition that land within its boundaries is the common heritage of its citizens. This is accomplished not by making the nation a gigantic Common or by instituting government management of all land, but rather by requiring all persons and corporations that are granted the use of land to pay a fee or tax equal to what the rental value of the land they control would be if it were in an unimproved condition. 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. Subsequent sections explain in more detail these social justice and efficiency arguments for site value rating, describe procedures for implementing such a tax system, and explain why a variety of potential objections are without merit. ...
The extraction of minerals requires special
treatment under site value rating, because this activity
reduces the value of the heritage of future generations.
For mineral deposits that can be expected to be fully
depleted within a few years, the sensible thing to do is
to auction the right to deplete the resource fully,
subject to rules about restoration of the site when
extraction is complete. Future generations should be
compensated by investing the proceeds in such a way that
all generations share equally in the value of the
extracted resource.
For deposits that can be expected to last a generation or more, one must be concerned about whether future generations will be content with the financial arrangements that are made. For these cases, it is best to have deposits developed by joint public-private enterprises, where costs are shared in the same proportions as benefits, so that future generations cannot complain about their heritage having been sold for a song. In the same way that mineral
extractions reduce the value of land for future
generations, so can the subdivision of land into small
parcels. Once land has been subdivided, it is extremely
expensive, if it is possible at all, to reassemble it for
projects that require large sites. Reassembly, and the
economic growth that it permits, can be facilitated by a
"self-assessed property tax." Under such a tax, each owner
of property is required to specify a price at which he or
she would be willing to sell the property, and anyone who
wishes can buy the property at that price. A person who was
required to sell would be permitted to remove anything he
or she wished, so that compulsory sales would be initiated
only by persons or public bodies that wished to redevelop
land. The appropriate tax rate would be a fraction of a per
cent per year, so that people would find it financially
feasible to assess their land a prices that would fully
compensate them for being required to relinquish it. ...
Read
the whole article Nic Tideman: Global Economic Justice, followed by Creating Global Economic Justice Humanity is emerging from eons of development during which survival has been promoted both by the ability to grab resources from others and by the ability of groups to cooperate and share natural resources within communities that occupied territorial homelands. In recent centuries we have been developing a consensus that taking from the weak is wrong, and that we ought to have a social order that prevents all such behavior. But we have not yet worked out how to do it. Some people think of preventing grabbing in terms of preserving the status quo. There are two difficulties with this.
A practice of allowing an appropriation to be treated as just if it has survived long enough gives aggressors an incentive to see if they can grab and hold on long enough. The result is actions like Indonesia's seizure of East Timor and Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. Only if we have a standard of justice that is independent of history can we expect to end such actions. Henry George's theory of economic justice--that every person has a right to his or her productive powers, and that all persons have equal rights to all natural opportunities--provides a simple formula around which opinion about the shape of a peaceful world can coalesce. This may seem hopelessly optimistic. But no other theory that I have seen has anything like the clarity, coherence and power of this theory. ... Resources that Fluctuate over Time The natural opportunities that have been considered to this point are ones that, to a first approximation, yield constant returns over time. A new set of issues arises when this theory of social justice is applied to resources that yield returns that necessarily vary over time. Now the issue of intergenerational justice arises along with that of international justice. Consider first the issue of intergenerational justice without the complication of international concerns. The efficient use of depletable natural opportunities requires that they be allocated over time in such a way as to maximize the present value of net revenue from sales. As economists have long known, this requires that prices charged for resources that are being depleted rise at the rate of interest. But this is just efficiency. It says nothing about who should get the money. The axiom that all persons have equal rights to natural opportunities suggests that when we deplete a resource such as oil, there are two steps that must be taken to achieve intergenerational equity. In the first step, when oil is sold we must share the proceeds over generations in such a way that every person in every generation can receive a payment of the same real value every year. To satisfy this obligation when the number of people alive in different years is not proportional to the amount of oil used in those years, we need to invest the proceeds of oil sales in a fund that would make annual payments to all persons of a size that could be maintained for all generations. This first step provides intergenerational equity with respect to oil revenue, but it does nothing about the fact that, if oil is allocated efficiently over time, later generations will face a higher price of oil than early generations. To provide equity with respect to the changing price of access to natural opportunities, there must be a second step that redistributes money among generations to offset the changing price. This second step implicitly assumes a world with no change in technology. If an early generation provides later generations with improved technology, then the later generations are treated justly if the combination of prices of commodities, technology and money received from the earlier generation permits them to attain the same overall level of satisfaction as the earlier generation. This specification of justice presumes that everyone has the same tastes. When tastes differ, an improvement in technology that more than compensates some persons for a greater scarcity of some natural resources will provide inadequate compensation for others. Such inequality cannot be avoided. All that can be expected is that those who use exhaustible resources will, by limiting their use and providing endowments for future generations, make it possible for the typical member of every future generation to attain the same level of well-being as the typical members of the earlier generations of resource users. Success in such an effort cannot be guaranteed. We don't know the tastes of future generations. We don't know the rate at which technology will advance. We don't know the rate at which new resources will be discovered. Estimates of all these things must be made to determine the proper rate of resource use and the proper endowments of future generations. The most that can be asked for is a good-faith effort to achieve the standard required by justice. Now consider the international dimension of intergenerational equity. What one nation owes to others with respect to intergenerational equity is compensation for making it more difficult for the other nations to provide adequately for their future generations. If all nations are using the same amount of oil per capita, then no nation can complain about what the others are doing. But if one nation is using more oil per capita than the others, then it owes compensation to the others for making it harder for the others to provide all of their future generations with equal rights to natural opportunities. If oil is being allocated efficiently and equitably among generations, the amount of compensation that an excessively consuming nation owes will be the market value of its excess oil consumption, valued in terms of the price of oil in the ground. The same result is obtained if all nations include the resource value of all oil that they consume, and all other depletable resources, in the calculation of what they appropriate for themselves from everyone's common heritage. One of the ways that a nation can compensate other nations for disproportionate use of natural opportunities is by creating technology that other nations can use to compensate their future generations for scarcer natural resources. If gasoline costs twice as much but cars are twice as efficient, people are not, on net, disadvantaged by the higher price of gasoline. This line of reasoning requires contestable judgements about the value of new technology and how long it would have taken before someone else would have made the same discovery. Nevertheless, technological improvements are a valid form of compensation for resource scarcity. One issue that arises when technological improvements are used as compensation is that not all nations place the same value on technology. If some island nation wishes to maintain a way of life that does not involve cars, then that nation is not compensated for an increased scarcity of fish by increased efficiency of car engines. What compensates a particular nation must reflect the typical preferences of that nation.
Another troublesome issue with respect to natural
opportunities is that people have different ideas about
which creatures are properly treated simply as resources
and which deserve a higher level of respect. When
creatures are non-migratory, the right to control them
can simply go with the land they occupy, and bids for the
land will reflect values with respect to the creatures
that occupy the land. However, with migratory creatures
such as whales and songbirds, a different mechanism must
be created to deal with desires to protect. If nations
representing 80% of the world's population want to
protect whales, then they should be able to protect 80%
of whales. How such a rule would be implemented in
practice is a problem that I leave for others to wrestle
with. ...
What to Do When Some Nations Fail to Fulfill Their Obligations THE THEORY that has been developed incorporates all of the ways that nations impinge upon one another by their appropriations of natural opportunities-through their claims to land, natural resources, the frequency spectrum, and geosynchronous orbits, through their appropriations of fish in the ocean, through their use of natural resources that are embedded in goods, through their emissions of pollutants that cross international borders, including the ones that produce global warming and ozone depletion, through their decisions to have population growth rates that differ from the world average, and in any other way that nations appropriate scarce natural opportunities. The theory describes what nations must do to fulfill their obligations to other nations. But how will unwilling nations be compelled to fulfill their obligations if they do not wish to do so? The theory is not designed to coerce recalcitrant nations. The theory is designed to describe what must be done by those who wish to fulfill their obligations. But universal acceptance is not needed for the theory to work. In the first place, under the theory that has been presented only some nations have obligations. The others have claims. Until a careful analysis is done, it is not possible to specify which nations have the obligations and which have the claims. But only the nations with obligations need to be persuaded to fulfill their obligations under the theory, and these are likely to be predominantly rich nations. Because the magnitudes of transfers to recipient nations depend on what those nations do, they receive incentives to economize on their appropriations of natural opportunities, even if they do not agree with the theory. But suppose that only some of the nations with net obligations are willing to honor those obligations. How should these nations respond to the lack of cooperation by others?
What if a nation refuses to share the value of natural opportunities among its citizens? A reasonable test of whether a nation can properly be treated as the agent of its citizens and the appropriate recipient of its citizens' shares of the value of natural opportunities is whether the nation allows its citizens to leave. If a nation does not allow its citizens to leave, then it is not proper to treat the nation as the agent of its citizens. The citizens are effectively imprisoned. We have no way of honoring our obligations to them. We might put their shares in trust, but if they are not allowed to leave, then we should not trust their government to use their shares of the value of natural opportunities as they would wish. On the other hand, if the citizens could leave and decline to do so, and if there are some other nations that would accept them, then we are justified in regarding their continued citizenship as evidence of their implied consent to the decisions of their government about how their shares of natural opportunities will be used. This rule may induce governments that would otherwise keep their citizens captive within their borders to instead allow them liberty. Thus the proper application of a principle of equal rights of all persons to natural opportunities will generate incentives for increased compliance and increased liberty for all. It is not necessary to have a world government that has the power to coerce all nations to abide by a single authority's determination of what they owe. Every nation can make its own determination of what, if anything, they owe to others. Within broad limits people can accept differing interpretations of obligations. If some nation exceeds the limits of tolerance, other nations can reasonably respond by declining to regard that nation or its citizens as the true owners of the things they seek to trade. What is created is a diverse, tolerant, and responsible international community. It is not necessary to achieve
universal acceptance of this theory for it to be effective.
What is necessary is acceptance by the major economic
powers, plus a willingness to condition economic relations
on an assurance that traded goods are not unjustly
appropriated from nature, and are not made with the labor
of persons who are deprived of their liberty to migrate if
they choose.... Read the
whole article
How would the world look if its political
institutions were shaped by the conception of social
justice advanced by Henry George? Nic Tideman: Applications of Land Value Taxation to Problems of Environmental Protection, Congestion, Efficient Resource Use, Population, and Economic Growth
Applications to Resource Use
It is only a small step from charging people for
street use and parks to charging them for renewable and
exhaustible resources. If people who could fish as
much as they wanted would deplete fish stocks
excessively, then some form of control over fishing is
beneficial. It is possible in theory to have
efficient control through quotas, though it is difficult
to set the quotas properly, and highly contentious to
change them when conditions require a change. The
recognition that the fish are everyone's common heritage
would require that, if there are to be quotas, the quotas
be auctioned, and that if not, then everyone who fishes
be required to pay for fishing according to the loss in
the value of fish stocks that results from fishing.
If a fishing resource lies entirely within a single
nation (as in a lake or river), then the recipient of the
fees for fishing should be the polity that includes the
resources (Though the value of the fishing resource would
be included in the calculation of whether the nation was
using more than its share of global natural
opportunities.) When the fishing resource is in
international waters, the fees should be shared equally
among all nations in proportion to their populations.
...
With resources such as oil, which are
depleted over time, new issues of efficiency and justice
arise. Depletable resources ought to be regarded as part of
the heritage to which everyone has equal rights, though
some provision must then be made to provide incentives for
discovery. Equal rights are expressed by
requiring everyone who uses a depletable resource to pay
for the resulting depletion. Efficiency requires that a resource that is to
be depleted over time be sold in such a pattern over time
as will maximize the present value of receipts. This
generally means using a lot in early years, then less and
less as time goes by, with the price of resources in the
ground rising at the interest rate. If the receipts were
spent as they were received, more would go to early
generations than to later generations. A principle of equal
rights to natural opportunities means that the receipts
should be put into a fund, from which equal payments are
made to all persons in all years. Furthermore, later
generations are disadvantaged by the higher price of oil
that they face. A principle of equal rights for all persons
would allocate additional payments to later generations to
compensate them for the higher price of oil they faced,
though this could be offset by later generations having
access to technology that earlier generations did not have.
Thus a nation that provides the rest of the world with
technology that eases the task of providing for future
generations should receive a credit for this, although
there will be difficulty in estimating the contribution of
any innovation. (If one person had not discovered
something, the chances are that eventually some else would
have.) ... Read the entire
article
The Complementary Right of Equal
Access to Natural Opportunities
One of the factors that makes the case for secession difficult is the problem of regional inequality in natural resources. When the people who called themselves Biafrans sought to secede from Nigeria in the 1960s, the morality of their claim was undermined by the fact that, if they had succeeded, they would have taken disproportionate oil resources from the rest of Nigerians. The limited support for the efforts of the Chechins to separate from Russia is explained in part by the understanding that, even though the Chechins have been abused by Russians for centuries and have never fully acceded to their incorporation into Russia, if Chechniya were allowed to separate from Russia, that would create a precedent that would make it difficult to oppose an effort by the people of the sparsely populated Yakutsia region of Eastern Siberia, rich in oil and diamonds, to insist that they too have a right to be a separate nation. Perhaps, a general recognition of a right of secession will need to wait for another component of moral evolution: a recognition that all persons have equal claims on the value of natural opportunities. If this were recognized, then any nation or region with disproportionately great natural resources would be seen to have an obligation to share the value from using those resources with those parts of the world that have less than average resources per capita. This would eliminate the desire to appropriate natural resources as a reason for secession and as a reason for opposing secession. Signs of a recognition of the equal claims of all persons on the use of natural opportunities are slim. One can point to John Locke: Whether we consider natural Reason, which tells us, the Men, being once born, have a right to their Preservation, and consequently to Meat and Drink, and such other things, as Nature affords for their Subsistence: Or Revelation, which gives us an account of those Grants God made of the World to Adam, and to Noah, and his Sons, 'tis very clear, that God, as King David says, Psal. CXV. xvi. has given the Earth to the Children of Men, given it to Mankind in common.2 Locke goes on to say that every person has a right to himself, and therefore to the things of value that are created by combining his efforts with natural opportunities, "at least where there is as much and as good left in common for others." He then argues that with so much unclaimed land in America, no one can justly complain if all of Europe is privately appropriated. Locke does not address the question of how rights to land should be handled if there is no unclaimed land. Thomas Jefferson, writing on the subject of patents, said, But while it is a moot question whether the origin of any kind of property is derived from nature at all, it would be singular to admit a natural and even an hereditary right to inventors. It is agreed by those who have seriously considered the subject, that no individual has, of natural right, a separate property in an acre of land, for instance.3 Henry George said, The equal right of all men to the use of land is as clear as their equal right to breathe the air--it is a right proclaimed by the fact of their existence. For we cannot suppose that some men have the right to be in this world and others no right. General recognition of the equal rights of all to the use of land and other natural opportunities is hard to find. When the powerful nations of the world got together to eject Iraq from Kuwait, very little was heard of the bizarreness of supposing that Emir of Kuwait and his relatives had a right to all the oil that lay under Kuwait. Some recognition of equal rights to the use of natural opportunities can be found in the proposed Law of the Sea Treaty, which would have had all nations benefiting from the granting of franchises to extract minerals from the sea. From an economic perspective, the treaty was flawed by the fact that it would have created an artificial scarcity of seabed mining activities in order to raise revenue, and it was opposed by the U.S. and not implemented. But it did suggest general recognition of global equal rights to at least those natural opportunities that no one has yet begun to use. One impediment to the recognition of
equal rights to the use of natural opportunities is that
some system of assessment would be needed to identify the
transfers that would compensate for unequal access to
natural opportunities. Another impediment is that a system
of rewards for those who discover new opportunities would
be needed. But if there were a will to address them, these
technical difficulties could be solved adequately, as they
are in jurisdictions such as Alberta, Canada, that claim
all mineral rights for the government.... Read the whole
article
NATURE'S "GIFTS" SHOULDN'T BE
"FREE"!
We all need to be responsible (and financially accountable) for the consequences of our purchasing decisions. If the goods and services we buy have been produced by drawing on more of the Global Commons than others, then we'll be paying more eco-taxes. Some obvious examples of the activities whose costs we, the consumers, would have to bear are:
Karl Williams: Land Value Taxation: The Overlooked But Vital Eco-Tax
I. Historical overview
II. The problem of sprawl III. Affordable and efficient public transport IV. Agricultural benefits V. Financial concerns VI. Conclusion: A greater perspective Appendix: "Natural Capitalism" -- A Case Study in Blindness to Land Value Taxation Synopsis Land value taxation (LVT) has often been omitted from the lists of natural resources for which eco-taxes are being advocated. LVT provides strong financial encouragement for land to be put to its optimal use and will eliminate speculation on land, as occupants must pay the full LVT whether the land is being fully utilised or not. This leads to better land management, a reduction in urban sprawl, less urban smothering of agricultural land, and less farmland being pushed into hinterland. LVT makes the investment in resource-efficient infrastructure affordable because the resulting enhanced land values are "recycled" back into public coffers. One particular application of LVT to agricultural land provides much-needed financial incentives for organic farming. Unlike other ecotaxes which "sow the seeds of their own revenue demise," LVT actuallyincreases over time as our environment is enhanced and is thus a stable revenue base. This paper argues that the LVT assessment process shifts and refines our focus from monitoring human activity onto our use and abuse of natural resources, as any responsible form of stewardship should. It suggests that only if land users are prepared to pay the full cost of utilising resources should private resource holding be permitted.
"The depletion of natural resources and the
despoliation of nature is due to a single reason: the
failure properly to measure the rental value of all of
nature's resources, and to make the users pay the
community for the benefits they receive." F. Harrison,
"The Corruption of Economics" ...
Why has land value taxation (LVT) frequently been
omitted from lists of significant eco-taxes yet, as this
paper will argue, LVT can be enormously influential in
its effect on economic and environmental
practices?
One reason lies in the confusion arising from how the very word "land" is used imprecisely or in different circumstances such as
Even within the discipline of macroeconomics,
there have been three major shifts in the way land has
been regarded, almost in the manner of a magician's
sleight of hand. Scene 1 has the magician display a
rabbit in a cage. Scene 2 has the rabbit disappear. Scene
3 has the magician pull the "same" rabbit out of a
hat.
The process of monitoring and assessing LVT itself
leads to a more subtle, more environmentally-appreciative
understanding of how best to prioritise conflicting
demands on land. Should a tract of land best be used for
green space for local residents, a light rail corridor or
employment providing development? LVT assessment
inherently weighs the pros and cons of a whole range of
intangible costs and benefits for the wider community now
and into the future, and eliminates corrupting "NIMBY"
motives and rent-seeking behaviour that influence
existing planning and development decisions. In response
to the accusation that LVT assessment is little more than
a best guess at quantifying values that are inherently
unquantifiable, LVT advocates respond "Guilty as
charged!" However, they then add, "Our good guesses are
based on solid, objective methodology and are better than
wild guesses, and even most wild guesses are better than
the decisions made today." Currently,
many natural resources are almost assigned a worthless
value because, not entering the mainstream marketplace,
they usually have no $ tags hanging off them - hence the
existence of externalities whereby the environment is
plundered as near worthless. So
even wild guesses at the value of land and other natural
resources are better than the present situation, in which
the "no guess" decision effectively assigns natural and
community resources a zero value.
One way or another, it is necessary to quantify and prioritise the real value (in a broad sense) of natural resources to better account for economic externalities. In the end, only if a prospective resource user is prepared to pay the full cost of utilising land and other natural resources will resource extraction or development go ahead. The intrinsic nature of the LVT assessment process considerably assists in such cost estimation. LVT's foundation of detailed land use assessments will also help expose the true costs of subsidies for natural resources, which effectively amount to negative eco-taxes. Subsidies come in all shapes and sizes, often barely visible, and urgently need to be exposed and evaluated. Even some harmful subsidies which are labeled land taxes have nothing to do with genuine LVT. Banks gives the example of a Brazilian tax which was levied on unimproved land but was reduced by up to 90% on land used for crops or pasture. Forests were classified as unimproved land and were therefore taxed at the full rate, which induced settlers to chop down the trees to reduce their tax liability." ... The whole field of eco-taxes cannot be viewed in isolation of the fiscal imperatives to raise sufficient public finance, and here we see another of the virtues of LVT. If people were required to pay the rental value of most natural resources they used (as many, in fact, already do - to private owners) an adjustment in patterns of consumption would follow. The environmental goals would be achieved - at the cost of fiscal goals.... read the entire article
The Special Challenge to Economic
Thinking The Search for Surrogates Sources of Nonpoint Pollution What Problems are Created? What Problems are Unsolved by Excise Taxes on Surrogates? The Case of Forestry The Case of Urban Settlement The Case of Agriculture The Common Theme from Forest, City and Farm Solutions Mason Gaffney: Property Tax: Biases and Reforms
Priority #1. Safeguarding the property
tax
Priority #2: Enforce Good Laws
Priority #3. De-Balkanize Tax Enclaves
Priority #4. What Tax to Fight
First?
Priority #5: Make Landowners Pay Their Taxes In 1946 President Harry S. Truman, with the stroke of a pen, added 50 percent to the area of the U.S. when he unilaterally extended our traditional three-mile limit out to 200 miles.
Most of our domestic oil and gas is now produced
from the seabed under this water wilderness. The property
is public domain under federal BLM administration, but
firms bid for leaseholds there under a system that the
majors seem to manipulate to their advantage. Even so,
there are some Federal revenues from both lease payments
and corporate taxes. State and local revenues, however;
are nil.
Counties may, and often do assess and tax "possessory interests" in leaseholds on federal uplands that lie within state boundaries. They are helpless, however, to tax such property held offshore. The property values are huge, and so are the firms that own the leaseholds. Many firms own tens of millions of acres apiece, areas larger than whole states. Offshore oil is our largest enclave protecting rent-bearing lands from property taxation, and any other form of state or local taxation. Some form of national property tax is called for; or higher lease payments in lieu of taxes. Perhaps some income tax surcharge is the best way, or special federal tax on net proceeds. This paper cannot enter the thicket of what jurisdiction should have sovereignty to tax offshore leaseholds, nor how best to levy the tax. The point here is that no system of resource-based taxation is complete, philosophically or practically, that leaves this enclave untouched. Read the whole article
I. The issue
II. Sources of rent III. Dissipation of rent before the fisc takes it: what and how?
A. Dissipation means waste and destruction or
suppression.
B. How rent is dissipated. C. Open access followed by tenure: rent-seeking institutions.
IV. Dissipating rent via public
spending
A. Taxes and lease provisions need not twist
incentives.
B. Public spending of tax proceeds may dissipate rent. C. History of recognition of this spending effect D. Successful compromises with the principle.
1. Barriers to immigration or sharing. E. Less successful compromises with the
principle2. Selling voters on the benefits of immigration
1. Public works.
2. Subsidized public works in tandem with exclusionary zoning 3. Hocking the revenues
V. Solutions
A. Socialize rent at the national
level.
B. Limit benefits to citizens per se (not to landowners per se). C. A social dividend to citizens is the obvious route. D. Return rents to local school districts in inverse proportion to local tax base per capita (the Colin Clark principle). E. Promote James Madison and Neville Chamberlain to elder statesmen emeritus. Read the whole article Mason Gaffney: Sounding the Revenue Potential of Land: Fifteen Lost Elements
Variant kinds of natural
resources, hitherto neglected or not classed with land,
show great revenue potential. Some examples are
Mason Gaffney: The Taxable Surplus of Land: Measuring, Guarding and Gathering It
1. Common Property in Land is Compatible with the
Market Economy.
2. The Net Product of Land is the Taxable Surplus
A. To socialize the taxable surplus, land rent,
effectively, you must define and identify it carefully,
and structure your taxes to home in on it.
B. Taxable surplus is also what you can tax without driving land into the wrong use. C. To tax rent we must be sure there is rent to tax, and we must adopt public policies to husband and maximize it, and avoid policies that lower and dissipate it.
i. Avoid "perverse subsidies."
ii. Avoid letting lessees of public land conceal their revenues. iii. Avoid letting lessees or taxpayers pad their costs to understate their net revenues. iv. Avoid dissipating rent by allowing open access to resources like fisheries, v. Avoid trying to distribute rents to consumers by capping prices below the market.
D. Raising output by removing tax bias
E. Maximizing public revenue. F. Sustaining the tax base
3. Taxing the Net Product of Land Permits Untaxing
Labor
4. Taxing the Net Product of Land Permits Untaxing Capital 5. Taxing the Net Product of Land Provides Ample Public Revenues: a Master Solution to Many Problems
A. Public revenues will support the ruble.
B. Your public credit will, of course, recover to AAA rating when lenders see that there is a strong flow of revenue to pay public debts. C. Never again need you bend to any "advice" or commands from alien lenders, nor endure patronizing, humiliating homilies from alien bankers, nor beg any foreign power for aid. D. If you again feel the need (as I hope you will not) to rebuild your military, you will of course require strong revenues. E. Strong national revenues are required to unite Russia, and keep it one nation.
Summary
1. Common Property in Land is Compatible with the
Market Economy.
You can enjoy the benefits of a market economy
without sacrificing your common rights to the land of
Russia. There is no need to make a hard choice between
the two. One of the great fallacies that western
economists and bankers are foisting on you is that you
have to give up one to enjoy the other. These counselors
work through lending and granting agencies that seduce
you with loans and grants to learn and accept their
ideology, which they variously call Neo-Classical
Economics, or "monetarism," or "liberalization." It is
glitter to distract you and pave the way for aliens to
acquire and control your resources.
To keep land common while shifting to a market economy, you simply use the tax system. Taxation is the form that common property takes in a monetary, market-oriented economy. To tax is to socialize. It's then just a simple question of what you will socialize through taxation, and how; but in the answers lie success or failure. Not only can you have both common land and free markets, you can't have one without the other. They go together, like love and marriage. You need market prices to help identify land's taxable surplus, which is the net product of land after deducting the human costs of using it. At the same time, you must support government from land revenues to have a truly free market, because otherwise you will raise taxes from production, trade, and capital formation, interfering with free markets. If you learn this second point, and act on it, you will have a much freer market than any of the OECD nations that now presume to instruct you, and that are campaigning vigorously to make all nations in the world "harmonize" their taxes to conform with their own abysmal systems.
The very people who gave us the
term laissez-faire -- the slogan at the core of a free
market economy -- made communizing land rents a central
part of their program. These were the French
economistes of the 18th Century, sometimes called
"Physiocrats," who were the tutors of Adam Smith, and who
inspired land reforms throughout Europe. The best-known
of them were François Quesnay and A.R. Jacques
Turgot, who championed land taxation. They accurately
called it the "co-proprietorship of land by the
state." Since their time we have learned to measure land values, and we have broadened the meaning of "land" to comprise all natural resources. Agrarians will be relieved, and may be surprised, that farmland ranks well down the list in terms of total market value. Thus, a land tax is not primarily a tax on farms; only the very best soils in the best locations yield much taxable surplus. ... Another natural resource (hence part of "land"), whose nature and value the mass of people are only slowly realizing, is the radio spectrum. In this age of communication its value is vaulting skywards even faster than the rockets launching the satellites that direct and relay signals through the spectrum. Each satellite requires a spectrum assignment, or it is nothing but space junk. One minor American entrepreneur, Craig McCaw, collected a bundle of spectrum rights for cell phones, and a few years ago sold them to AT&T for $12 billions. Then Mr. McCaw went partners with Bill Gates, perhaps the richest American, in a firm called Teledesic, to launch hundreds of satellites and amass radio spectrum rights around the entire world, including your part of the world, in the hope of dominating worldwide communications. Radio spectrum is a natural resource, and it belongs to the government, even in the capitalistic U.S.A. When Teledesic comes calling, under the auspices of our Vice President Al Gore, don't sell anything cheap! In fact, don't sell anything at all, but lease it for a limited time, so you may gain from future rises in value. And don't stint on the professional help you should hire to protect your interests: these lease contracts are complex, and are worth Billions if you play your cards right. Hydrocarbons are a third set of valuable resources. The values involved are gigantic. The recent merger of the Exxon and Mobil oil firms was valued at $260 billions, several times greater than the Russian annual budget. Why should private parties make off with all this natural value? Several nations, including some of your neighbors, support themselves entirely from these revenues. Norway pays for a lush welfare state from its oil revenues. Its reserves are so valuable that the mere change in their appraised value in several recent years has exceeded the entire GDP of Norway. And your oil reserves? If they match your production, they may be the largest in the world. World oil prices are down this year, as you know, but there is another side to this. The devaluation of the ruble has raised the value of your oil in Russian terms, because the oil earns "hard" currency abroad. Your government has recognized this by imposing a special tax on the resulting "windfall," but we will see below (Sections 2,C and 2,D) that there is a much more effective way to tax resource rents. The American state of Alaska holds down its other taxes by socializing part of its oil revenues, which otherwise would inure to a handful of the major stockholders of two corporations (ARCO and BP). Alaska not only holds down other taxes, it pays each resident - man, woman, and child - a social dividend of over $1,000 per year. Go thou and do likewise. Your expert, Dmitri Lvov from the Russian Academy of Sciences, a speaker at this meeting, has written that you could cover most of your national budget from your enormous production of oil and gas. Many third-world nations like Venezuela or Nigeria have fabulous mineral oil that they fail to exploit for their own people, letting sophisticated or ruthless foreign corporations, in tandem with weak or corrupt insiders, reap the gains. The question for Russia is whether to follow their bad example and become a poor resource-colony of the west, or whether to assert your own sovereignty over your own resources for the benefit of your own people. You need look no further than Norway for a model. Other subsoil resources have great value, too. Many nations, even backward ones, gain large parts of their national revenue from "hardrock" minerals. Bolivia, Gabon, Jamaica, Liberia, New Caledonia, Papua-New Guinea, Zaire, and Zambia have raised over 25% of their budgets this way in recent years; Chile, Thailand and Malaysia have taken lesser, but substantial amounts. Saskatchewan, a Canadian Province, raises large revenues from potash and uranium; Minnesota, an American state, from iron ore; and so on. Some other nations fail to raise much revenue from fabulous minerals from which others profit, like S. Africa with its gold and diamonds, West Virginia with its coal, or Missouri with its lead mines and reserves. Russia is a treasure-house of untapped mineral wealth that you can and should tax to alleviate the condition of the Russian people. In arid lands, water is life, and the most valuable natural resource is water. For example, in southern California we need water so much we import it from the Feather River 600 miles north of us, pump it uphill through the long San Joaquin Valley, then over the high Tehachapi Mountain range, and tunnel it through the San Bernardino Mountain Range, all at great cost. When it gets here, it supplements and competes with local water that nature provides freely in the Santa Ana, San Jacinto, and other rivers. That local water then has a value equal to the high cost of importing the remote northern water. That value in the local waters is a taxable surplus. However, we have not learned to take that surplus value into the local treasuries; we give the water away, and worse, we actually subsidize people to withdraw water by helping them pay for dams, canals, and pipelines so they can waste water without paying for it. Thus we turn a public asset into a public liability - an extreme form of folly that is called "dissipating rent." In this age of growing water scarcities it is past time we learned to husband and nurture rent, in order to socialize it by taxing the surplus. So should you, in comparable circumstances. Another value from water is to generate power. Again, California witlessly fails to socialize this value, but Canada, our northern neighbor, has shown the way. British Columbia, Newfoundland (the Labrador part), Quebec, and other provinces raise large revenues from charges on the use of falling water. Russia, with some of the world's largest hydro-electric projects, can do the same, or better. Fisheries are another source of value. In the past most nations have let this rent be "dissipated" by overfishing. In recent years the U.S. and Canada have in effect "privatized" fishing in their offshore waters by limiting the number of licenses and boats. This limitation was needed and desirable, overall. It created large rents, where previously there were little or none, by preventing overfishing and the great waste of duplicate, triplicate, and even quintuplicate fishing effort. That is a good example of husbanding and guarding rent, which is necessary before you can collect it. It was not necessary or desirable, however, to give away this net benefit to private parties. The government did not sell these licenses, but simply gave them away to owners of existing boats, and others with political influence. Each license now sells for something like a million dollars, creating a new class of instant millionaires and "parlor fishermen." This giveaway to the few, and takeaway from the many, created an instant class society where before there were equal access and equal opportunities. These privileges are worth so much that there are now documented cases off Alaska where the parlor fisherman takes 70% of the total catch. The captain, the crew, and the owner of the boat, who do the work and bear the dangers and discomforts and financial risks of fishing, must get by with the other 30%. Parlor fishermen are simply leeches; these rents should be socialized, relieving the workers from taxes. ... Avoid "perverse subsidies." These are subsidies that encourage harmful things like
We have mentioned how we actually subsidize people to withdraw scarce water from our overdrawn rivers in the arid U.S.A. The so-called water "shortage" in the lower Colorado River is entirely an artifact of such misguided policies: every major agency drawing on the Colorado is actually subsidized to do so, when they should be paying for the privilege. If they paid, they would stop wasting water, and would enrich the Treasury, which could then abate taxes on work, trade, and saving. The U.S. Forest Service has turned a great national asset, our national forestlands, into a drain on the Treasury by subsidizing forest roads in subeconomic areas. It makes money selling good timber in good areas, but then spends $10 on roads into subeconomic areas to get $1 in revenues from sale of timber to private parties, destroying scenic values and watershed protection. Perverse subsidies like those are unspeakably foolish and wasteful. They "dissipate rent" so there is none left to tax. Avoid letting lessees of public land conceal their revenues. Many minerals and hydrocarbons on public lands are leased by private firms, subject either to "royalties" or "severance taxes" based on the value of output. Many of these private firms are "vertically integrated," meaning they own the downstream firms, often in other countries, to which they sell. They grow skilled at shifting profits away from where taxes are higher to where they are lower, by rigging the internal transfer prices. That is, they sell to themselves at artificially low prices, so your share of their revenues disappears. What they call "world market" prices are really their own internal prices, adjusted to help them steal from you. You must guard against that. Avoid trying to distribute rents to consumers by capping prices below the market. This, of course, is the history of energy prices in Russia; it has also been used, in milder forms, in Canada and the U.S. What is wrong with it? In a word, it fosters wasteful use, and aborts a lot of economical production. In addition, it leaves a lot of rent in private hands, untaxed. It is easy to understand the dire need for guaranteed fuel in a northern continental winter climate. You mustn't let people freeze, and they will bless and support you for keeping them warm. As society gets better organized, though, you can gain by guaranteeing the poor a minimum cash income with which to buy fuel and other needs at market prices, rather than lavishing them with free fuel that you might be exporting to meet other urgent needs. You can provide the cash income from the rents created when fuel prices rise, and have a lot more to spare from the resulting net gains, which I next explain. ... Note, finally, that a cap on the price of G [gross revenues], such as discussed above, has the same effects as a tax based on G. Read the entire article Nic Tideman: The Ethics of Coercion in Public Finance Jeff Smith: How Sharing Earth Brought Peace
Since forever, humans have claimed and
counter-claimed every square inch of this planet.
Occasionally, these disputes have ended peacefully. What
has worked in other times and places might work again in
the Mideast. Delivering a double dividend, what settled
land disputes also developed moribund economies and
revived developed ones. Among others, New York, now
aiming to rebuild, has used this policy before. Because
it's growing popular among environmentalists, greens
could lead the US to geonomics.
... These cases involved different classes, not different cultures. Yet with a new twist the rent rebate that worked within society may work between societies. The Koran urges landlords to not gouge tenants but to consider land a trust. In Israel, admonished to not own land forever, since the land is Mine (Leviticus), the National Trust leases all the land to the occupants. These strictures could lead to geonomics. Israel and Palestine would establish a steward to collect land dues and disburse rent dividends a la Alaska's oil dividend. Since land is more valuable in Israel than in Palestine, Jews would pay in more than Arabs, yet everyone would get back the same. And since Israelis prosper, they drive up land values; having Jews as co-owners developing land, raising its value, fattening everyone's Citizens Dividend Arabs might accept that. Profit does make for strange bedfellows. Two archrivals, China and Taiwan, recently agreed to explore for oil together.
While sharing rent may soothe
hurt feelings, collecting it stimulates
development. ...
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. ... Where to draw a line in the sand becomes a lot less contentious when land and oil are no longer spoils of war and when neighbors do not endure drastically different standards of living. Growing up, we learn to not fight over toys but to take turns. Societies need to learn this, too.
Early last century, Gifford Pinchot, first head of
the US Forest Service, said: "The earth belongs of right
to all its people and not to a minority, insignificant in
numbers but tremendous in wealth and power. The people
shall get their fair share of the benefit which comes
from the development of the country which belongs to us
all with equal opportunity for all and special privileges
for none." A man in a Republican administration could say
that then. We need to hear it again now.
Read the whole
article
Money is the mother's milk of politics. Yet the
milk invested by lobbyists and those they represent is a
drop in the bucket compared to the flow they get back
from the public tit, thanks to the milkmaid state.
Politicians grant well-connected big businesses:
a. direct cash outlays, such as cash to corporations for advertising overseas, Land titles are the granddaddy of all privileges. Historically, titles preceded all others and created a class of elite owners with the power to win the six other indirect subsidies, along with the more direct ones – grants, contracts, and tax favors. To undo and reverse this history, it's necessary to collect and share the natural rents from all seven inconspicuous privileges. For these pieces of paper, government should charge full market value. ... Getting a Citizens Dividend would not only eliminate poverty, it'd also erase any rationale for subsidies - direct or indirect - to the poor or to the privileged. Repealing the free ride of privileges would be like repealing capitalism. Without those subtle detours imposed upon public revenue, owners would have to work to amass a fortune, and work is one of the worst ways known to strike it rich. What you can do: Dry up the milkmaid
state. Dispense with the notion that the state must meddle
in enterprise. Dispense the notion from others, too. Focus
government on its lone raison d'etre - defend rights.
Demand your right to a fair share of natural revenue.
...
Read the whole
article
Alanna Hartzok: CITIZEN DIVIDENDS
AND OIL RESOURCE RENTS
Abstract: Citizens of Alaska have been
receiving individual dividend checks from an oil rent
trust fund since 1982. Norway¹s citizens receive
substantial social services and invest oil rents in a
permanent fund for the future. Nigeria has yet to
establish a similar fund for its oil revenue stream.
This paper explores the oil rent institutions of
Alaska, Norway and Nigeria with a focus on these
questions:
The paper recommends full use of information
and communication technologies for transparency in
extractive resource industries, that resource rent
from non-renewable resources should be invested in
socially and environmentally responsible ways and
primarily in the needed transition to renewable
energy based economies, and that oil and other
non-renewable resource rent funds should transition
towards capturing substantial resource rents from
surface land site values (ground rent) and other
permanent and sustainable sources of rent for
possible distribution of citizen
dividends. Nic Tideman: Revenue Sharing under Land Value Taxation
The proposition that the rental value of land
should be collected by governments and used for
public purposes has a powerful moral rationale: Since
no one made the land, no one can properly claim to
own it. There is a simple efficiency rationale as
well: Social collection of the rental value of land
does not interfere with incentives to be productive.
If governments do not collect the rental value of
land, then they will levy taxes that discourage
productive activity. When "government" is not a monolith but a collection of entities with responsibilities in different geographic and functional areas, these rationales for land value taxation leave unanswered the question of how the rental value of land should be allocated among governments. That question is addressed in this paper. I. Ethical Principles
A. People own themselves and therefore own
what they produce. II. Ethical
QuestionsB. People have obligations to share equally the opportunities that are provided by nature. C. People are free to interact with other competent adults on whatever terms are mutually agreed. D. People have obligations to pay the costs that their intrusive behaviors impose on others.
A. What is the relationship between justice
(as embodied in the ethical principles) and community
(or peace or harmony)? III. Efficiency
QuestionsB. How are the weak to be provided for? C. How should natural opportunities be shared? D. Who should be included in the group among whom rent should be shared equally? E. Is there an obligation to compensate those whose presently recognized titles to land and other exclusive natural opportunities will lose value when rent is shared equally? F. Can a person who is occupying a per capita share of land reasonably ask to be left undisturbed indefinitely on that land? G. What is the moral status of "intellectual property?" H. What standards of environmental respect can people reasonably require of others? I. What forms of land use control are consistent with the philosophy of Henry George?
A. Would public collection of the rent of land
provide enough revenue for an appropriate public
sector? B. How much revenue could public collection of rent raise? C. Is it possible to assess land with sufficient accuracy? D. How much growth can a community expect if it shifts taxes from improvements to land? E. To what extent does the benefit that one community receives from shifting taxes from buildings to land come at the expense of other communities? F. What is the impact of land taxes on land speculation? G. How, if at all, does the impact of shifting the source of public revenue to land change if it is a whole nation rather than just a community that makes the shift? H. Is there a danger that the application of Henry George's ideas would lead to a world of over-development? I. How would natural resources be managed appropriately if they were regarded as the common heritage of humanity? 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.
... An obvious loser is a resource extractor such as an Oregon timber harvester (Weyerhauser is the biggest landowner in the state). All the rent that society now allows them to retain, they'd lose. Perhaps there is a silver lining to corporate mergers and diversification and interlocking stock holding; the huge corporations holding resources would have other profitable lines to turn to. An obvious winner, balancing the losses of the extractor, are the service-providing companies located off the beaten path, like a neighborhood cafe. After centuries of just getting by, smaller enterprises would gain by competing on a level playing field. What they'd gain (that is, retain) is the fruit of their labor. Conversely, what big business would lose is the commonwealth generated by all. 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: Sharing Natural Rents to Sustain Human Society
To get rich, or more likely to stay rich, some
of us can develop land, especially sprawling shopping
centers, and extract resources, especially oil. While
sprawl and oil depletion are not necessary, they are
more profitable than a car-free functionally
integrated city. Under the current rules of doing
business, waste returns more than efficiency. We let
a few privatize rent -- ground rent and resource rent
-- although rent is a social surplus. As if rent were
not profit enough, winners of rent have also won
further state favors -- tax breaks, liability limits,
subsidies, and a host of others designed to impel
growth (20 major ones follow herein).
If we are to sustain our selves, our civilization, and our eco-system, we must make some hard choices about property. What we decide to do with rent, whether we let it reward our exploiting or our attaining eco-librium, matters. Imagine society waking up to the public nature of rent. Then it would collect and share its surplus that manifests as the market value of sites, resources, the spectrum, and government-granted privileges. Then we could forego taxing labor and capital. On such a level playing field, this freed market would favor efficiency -- the compact city -- not waste -- the mall and automobile. ... Drawing their cue from the public, governments tolerate "rentention", the private retention of publicly-generated land values. Lacking this Rent, states turn to taxes. But to grow the economy, all governments -- left, right, or undecided -- hustle to stimulate development; they cut taxes and slop subsidies. Going beyond the call of duty, the state excuses producers' their routine pollution and limit liability, thereby cutting the cost of insurance. Companies that don't impose on nature, worker, or customer are not benefited at all but lose a competitive advantage. On this tilted playing field, one with the lumps of subsidies and the tilts of taxes, technologies lean and clean have a hard time competing as suppliers of materials, homes, food, rides, and energy.... 1. Materials - Extraction vs. Recycling
Energy - Fossil Fuels vs.
Renewables
Dave Wetzel: Justice or Injustice: The Locational Benefit Levy
We all have our own personal interpretation of
how “justice” can be
achieved.
Often “justice” is interpreted in a very narrow legal sense and only in reference to the judicial system, which has been designed to protect the status quo. ... Of course, all citizens (and subjects in the UK) -- need to know exactly what are the legal boundaries within which society operates. But, supposing those original rules are unfair and unjust. Then the legal framework, being used to perpetuate an injustice -- does not make that injustice moral and proper even if within the rules of jurisprudence it is “legal.” Obvious examples of this dislocation between immoral laws and natural justice is
All these policies were
“lawful” according to the legal framework
of their day but that veneer of legality did not make
these policies righteous and
just. Any society built on a basis of injustice will be burdened down with its own predisposition towards self-destruction. Even the most suppressed people will one-day, demand justice, rise up and overthrow their oppressors. Human survival demands justice. Wherever slavery or dictatorship has been installed -- eventually, justice has triumphed and a more democratic and fairer system has replaced it. It is safe to predict that wherever slavery or dictatorship exists today -- it will be superseded by a fairer and more just system. Similarly, let's consider our distribution of natural resources. By definition, natural resources are not made by human effort. Our planet offers every inhabitant a bounty -- an amazing treasure chest of wealth that can supply our needs for food, shelter and every aspect for our survival. Surely, “justice” demands that this natural wealth should be equally available to all and that nobody should starve, be homeless or suffer poverty simply because they are excluded from tapping in to this enormous wealth that nature has provided. ... If our whole economy, with the private possession of land and other natural resources, is built upon an injustice -- then can any of us really be surprised that we continue to live on a planet where wars predominate, intolerance is common, crime is rife and where poverty and starvation is the norm for a huge percentage of earth's population. Is this inherited system really the best we can do? There must be a method for fairly utilising the earth's natural resources. Referring to the rebuilding of Iraq in his recent speech to the American Congress, Tony Blair stated “We promised Iraq democratic Government. We will deliver it. We promised them the chance to use their oil wealth to build prosperity for all their citizens, not a corrupt elite. We will do so”. Thus, Tony Blair recognises the difference between political justice in the form of a democratic Government and economic justice in the form of sharing natural resources. We have not heard any dissenting voice from this promise to share Iraq's natural oil wealth for all the people of Iraq to enjoy the benefits. But if it is so obviously right and proper for the Iraqi people to share their natural wealth – why is it not the practice to do the same in all nations? No landowner can create land values. If this were the case, then an entrepreurial landowner in the Scottish Highlands would be able to create more value than an indolent landowner in the City of London. No, land values arise because of natural advantages (eg fertility for agricultural land or approximity to ports or harbours for commercial sites) or because of the efforts of the whole community -- past and present investment by both the public and private sectors, and the activities of individuals all give rise to land values. Why do we not advocate the sharing of these land values, which are as much a gift of nature and probably in most western economies are worth much more than Iraqi oil? One solution would be to introduce a Location Benefit Levy, where each site is valued, based on its optimum permitted use and a levy is applied – a similar method to Britain's commercial rates on buildings but based soley on the land value and ignoring the condition of the building. The outcome of this policy would be to give all citizens a share in the natural wealth of the nation. ... It is an injustice that landowners can speculate on empty sites, denying their use for jobs or homes. It is an injustice that a factory owner can sack all their workers, smash the roof of their building to let in the rain and be rewarded with elimination of their rates bill. It is an injustice that the poorest residents pay the highest share of their incomes in Council Tax. It is an injustice that people are denied their share of the earth's resources. The Location Benefit Levy is a simple way to start addressing the world's last great injustice. Read the whole article Bill Batt: Water and Privatization
... But only recently, with
the advent of data availability and increased
computer power, is it possible to demonstrate that
Henry George was right: i.e. that taxing what he
called "land" - really meaning all natural capital
and resources rather than labor or human capital -
constitutes the best possible tax design we could
have. If these natural resources are a "commons" worthy of being preserved as the birthright of all humanity, their use can be rented at rates sufficient to cover the costs of not only the provision of those services but for all public needs. All taxes are ultimately shifted through the economy to rest on what classical economists call land rent in any case, and levying the taxes directly on rent improves efficiency by eliminating "deadweight loss." Moreover,taxing or collecting what classical economists call economic rent bears all the hallmarks of a perfect tax -- fairness, simplicity, stability, administrability, neutrality, and efficiency. ... read the whole article Bill Batt: The Compatibility of Georgist Economics and Ecological Economics
A Georgist agenda also calls for the regular
auctioning of mineral extraction rights, fishing
rights, and other access to natural resources in a
way that their rent is returned fully and fairly to
the public weal. Competitively assessed
royalties especially on the extraction of mineral
capital could yield billions of dollars. Alanna
Hartzok has offered compelling arguments why rent
from locational sites should be reserved to finance
the services of local governments, rent from natural
resources identifiable within a nation’s
boundaries should be captured to finance national
governments, and rents of those resources beyond
national borders should be used to finance world
governments. ...
A central premise of ecological economics is a
recognition that market prices do not reflect the
value of commodities, particularly the resources and
services of nature. Oscar Wilde first noted that
a cynic was “a man who knows the price of
everything and the value of nothing.”
83 But it is
clearly not only cynics who hold such ideas today.
The growing “commodification” of all
things — the consequence of a gradual and
inexorable privatization of the whole world and the
ever expanding attempts to include everything which
humans touch in a market economy, where objects and
services which lack a market price are thus treated
as free goods — means either that ultimately
everything must be priced or else that other means
must be found by which to identify value. The
subfield of environmental economics is based on just
this view — that everything must be priced. To
be sure, we cannot live without the natural
environment, yet treatment of natural goods and
services as free under the neoclassical economics
framework leads inevitably to their total consumption
and destruction.84 The looming
exhaustion of natural resources compels us to
recognize that market prices have limited worth in
signaling true value, whether those resources be the
biota of the world upon which human beings also
depend for their existence or mineral wealth in the
form of fossil fuel energy which drives modern
economies. If we do try in any way to price
the goods and services provided by the environment,
they are so far beyond counting that it becomes
self-evident that our economic approach must
change.85...
The heart of ecological economics is
ecological carrying capacity and the premise of
economic sustainability. Although this term has to
some extent become a mantra and widely abused, its
most popular definition remains that first enunciated
by the 1987 Brundtland Commission Report:
"development that meets the needs of
the present without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own
needs."92 Principle 3 of the 1992 UNCED
Rio Declaration: "The right to
development must be fulfilled so as to equitably meet
developmental and environmental needs of present and
future generations."93 At various times scholars
have sought to improve upon this definition; one
offered by adherents of the ecological economics
school reads as follows:
1. For renewable resources (fish, trees,
etc.), the rate of harvest should not exceed the rate
of regeneration.
2. The rate at which we allow economic
activity to generate wastes that must be passed into
the environment should not be allowed to exceed the
environment’s ability to absorb them.
3. The depletion of nonrenewable resources
(oil, coal, etc.) should not be offset by investment
in and development of renewable substitutes for
them.94
Implicit in all this is the argument that
manufactured capital (i.e., that created by human
beings), and natural capital (those resources
provided by nature) are not substitutable, as well as
the belief that current practices portend
irreversible consequences for the earth’s
environmental stability. Nor can the various
components of natural capital alone be regarded as
interchangeable goods. Natural gas might in some
instances be a substitute energy source for coal, and
chicken an alternative protein source to beef. But
fundamentally each element is to a significant extent
unique in nature — fulfilling its own special
niche in what ecologists call lexicographic
uniqueness. Conventional thinkers argue that these two classes of natural and man-made capital are mostly substitutable, in what ecological economists have called “weak sustainability.” But the contrary, “strong sustainability,” is at the heart of ecological economics, going even further than many authors of the Brundtland Commission Report would have accepted by recognizing the lexicographic character and place of each and every element of the biota.95 There is no definitional consensus, however. The Clinton-Gore administration, for example, established a President’s Council on Sustainable Development on June 15, 1993, and adopted the Brundtland Commission’s language. But it carefully avoided any detailed definition of what was meant by sustainability.96 Subsequent executive orders and press releases have been equally vague as to what definition of sustainability is being used,97 and to this day the matter remains unsettled. ... read the whole article Mason Gaffney: Red-Light Taxes and Green-Light Taxes
What is waste?
The question has been faced before. Gifford Pinchot was a leader with a magic name in the U.S.A. during the early conservation era. He answered well for his times and, I submit, for ours too. "... natural resources must be developed and preserved for the benefit of the many and not merely for the profit of a few. ... the people shall get their fair share of the benefit which comes from the development of the country which belongs to us all." He did not say just "preserved;" he said "developed and preserved." Today I suspect he would say "REdevelop," to get away from the negative baggage carried by "develop;" I certainly will. Pinchot went on: "The first principle of conservation is development, the use of the natural resources now existing ... for the benefit of the people who live here now. There may be just as much waste in neglecting the development and use of certain natural resources as there is in their destruction by waste. ... Conservation, then, stands emphatically for the use of substitutes (he mentions water for power and transportation) for all the exhaustible natural resources, ... The development of our natural resources and the fullest use of them for the present generation is the first duty of this generation. ... So Pinchot was against waste,
like everyone, but he gives it a new turn (or, rather,
an old turn that many have forgotten). To him, WASTE MEANS FAILING TO USE RENEWABLE
RESOURCES. Urban land makes a good example.
Urban land, economically speaking, is a lot like
falling water, strange as it seems. Economists (who are
not all bad) classify urban land as a "flow resource."
They liken it to flowing water because its services
perish with time, whether used or not - and we are
trapped in the one-way flow of time. It is an even
better example of a "flow resource" than water itself,
because unused water may have other uses downstream.
Even in wasting out through California's Golden Gate,
fresh water repels salinity. The unreaped harvests of
idle land, however, flow down the river and out the
Golden Gate of time like lost loves, and magic moments
that passed us by. The waste of NOT using flow
resources is just as real as the waste of misusing
exhaustible resources. Indeed, when we tote up the
transportation costs of disintegrated urban settlement
patterns, it is clear that failure to use good urban
land is a major cause of wasting energy. ... read the whole
article Mason Gaffney: Full Employment, Growth And Progress On A Small Planet: Relieving Poverty While Healing The Earth
6. Energy-wasting biases. Identifying
and eliminating tax biases to both extracting and
consuming energy, and other primary products. Whether
on balance these biases raise or lower prices to
consumers is not known, but neither is it relevant
here: the point is that the combination raises the
total volume of extracting the primary products, and
of course of consequent combustion and
pollution.
The writer has identified many of
these biases elsewhere (Gaffney, 1978). Suffice it here
to observe the following. It is not just that a
commodity like gasoline is subsidized; it is worse than
that. Within the stream of production, subsidies go to
those activities involved in extraction, while taxes
fall on activities downstream that conserve and
economize on the primary product (Gaffney, 1982)....
read the whole
article Mason Gaffney: Oil and Gas Leasing: a Study in Pseudo-Socialism
I pose three questions. I) What is Socialism? II) What is pseudo-Socialism? III) How should we administer public lands bearing oil and gas?... Read the whole article Maurie Fabrikant: An Open Letter to Wayne Swan
The "Great Australian Dream"
now - as in preceding years - has been to own your
own home. From their earliest years of
adulthood, most citizens have attempted to purchase
"a roof over their head." It used to be - no more
than two human generations ago - "a three-bedroom
weatherboard - or brick veneer, if you could afford
it! - on a quarter-acre block in the suburbs." Most
citizens - then - succeeded in realising that dream;
at least they started repaying a loan that was large
compared with their earnings. Nowadays, it's quite
impossible for most. Why? Simply because land-price
has escalated out of the reach of most. Allow me to
give you a specific instance:- ...
As you can very clearly see, it now costs couples - or singles - a great deal more to own a residence. Naturally, if they don't own their own residence, they must
None of these alternatives
lead to a high quality lifestyle and undoubtedly are
potent factors in separation and divorce and reliance
on drug abuse which, itself, leads to anti-social -
even criminal - behaviour. We also know to our
great regret that these aberrations are becoming
increasingly prevalent. So is there a solution? And
if so, what is it?
In my opinion, there certainly is a solution ... but, seemingly, very few want to know it. Judging by your article, I think you do. Here it is: ...
Modern conventional wisdom is
that increasing land price signifies a healthy
economy. Exactly the reverse is true!
Increasing land price demonstrates that much money is
being invested in real estate and that necessarily
means that less money is being invested in productive
ventures. Increasing land price causes increasing
rents ... because the land owner must derive
sufficient income to pay the interest charged on the
loan needed to buy the land and its improvements.
This makes it increasingly difficult for businesses
to trade profitably ... especially when there is a
plethora of complicated taxes that cause extremely
high compliance costs. It's no wonder that more and
more goods are now imported as local manufacturers
choose to close their operations. In many places in
Australia, land lies relatively idle. For example, in
Melbourne's CBD, several large blocks have been idle
for years and in the suburbs, shops remain empty for
months, even years. Yet government-released figures
on unemployment - the reality may well be much worse!
- admit that unemployment exceeds 6%. The old adage,
"Idle lands cause idle hands" is clearly demonstrated
in Australia ... and elsewhere.
The only possible "winners"
in this "game" are those who presently own land; the
more they own, the more they have the potential to
"win". Land owners enjoy enormous increase in the
price of land they own simply because they were able
to purchase it when its price was comparatively low.
They do not - in their role as owners - contribute in
any way to the prosperity of the nation. Indeed,
because they grow wealthier without producing, they
are, in fact, parasites! That sounds incredible but
it is true nonetheless. How so? Simply because those
owners receive part of the wealth earned by all
citizens; at least some of that wealth is used to
push up land prices but only owners enjoy those
increased prices. Tenants certainly do not! All who
labour - and this includes land owners who perform
labour! - are thereby effectively robbed of some of
their earnings. (Please note that I do not blame
landowners personally; most would - I'm certain - be
horrified to think that they are parasites. The fault lies in the
parliamentary enactments that permit such a situation
to prevail.)
Difficult as the situation is now, it will be worse still in another two human generations' time. How so? Because the same forces that have been exerted in the past continue unabated. In fact, these forces appear to be intensifying! Taxation is continuing to escalate as pressure groups clamour ever louder for financial assistance. The average rate at which personal income tax is levied is increasing - even though the maximum rate levied is falling - and sales taxes and the like are being applied to a widening range of goods and services. The wealthy continue to derive benefit from the tax-minimisation experts they employ - because they save more tax than they pay to those experts - leaving the relatively poorly-paid employees to carry most of the burden. Unless, of course, steps are taken to change these tendencies, Australia will become an increasingly unpleasant country in which to live. That's definitely not the future I want for my 3 children and 7 grandchildren. And I'm sure you don't, either! The solution to this conundrum is, perhaps amazingly, incredibly simple; namely, require all owners of land - in fact, all natural resources, including intangibles such as broadcast bands, to pay to all Australians, via the government, an annual rental in exchange for exclusive ownership rights to those natural resources. What could be fairer? If a citizen has exclusive ownership rights to a natural resource, that obviously means that all others have no rights to it whatsoever. Therefore, that citizen must pay compensation - in the form of a periodic rent - to all others. Now that's a perfect manifestation of "user pays". How big is this periodic rent? That's simply answered, too. It's what the citizens, generally, think that natural resource is worth! And that's easily - and accurately - determined by valuers, individuals who have great experience because they simply note the prices at which similar natural resources in the vicinity - both in space and in time - are sold then use those prices to predict that of a similar resource. This would constitute real tax reform and - when implemented - would obviate the need for income taxes and sales taxes. How is this? When a continuing rent is charged for ownership rights to a natural resource, that natural resource will have little or no purchase price. Setting up a business or residence will be much cheaper first up as only the improvements must be paid for initially. Money that presently must be borrowed to pay for access to natural resources will become available for productive purposes. Because rents will be payable on all natural resources that are privately owned - whether or not they are in use - those natural resources will become used or will return to the nation as public land. Speculation in natural resources will be immediately terminated thus eliminating a major factor in escalating price. The converse of the old adage quoted earlier is apposite:- Far less idle land will translate into far fewer idle hands! That will translate into a reduced need for social security expenditure. Additionally, lower levels of unemployment will cause reduced anti-social and criminal activity with consequent savings in law enforcement, punishment and rehabilitation. And elimination of most of our taxation regulations will cause compliance costs to all but disappear. The brakes that presently retard Australia's productivity will not merely be released; they will be discarded! ... read the entire article Nic Tideman: Market-Based Systems for Assigning Rental Value to Land
Judge Samuel Seabury: An Address delivered upon the 100th anniversary of the birth of Henry George
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... because democracy alone hasn't yet led to a society
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