Starve Government
Georgists seek to reduce or eliminate a lot of the
dumb taxes that government currently uses to collect the
revenue necessary to provide the services we all depend
on. But we don't necessarily seek to starve
government.
We seek to reduce or eliminate taxes on buildings, on
sales, on wages, while at the same time increasing the
revenue drawn from taxes on land value and on other
things that are like land, including the electromagnetic
spectrum, water rights, pollution rights, congestion
charges, etc.
Many of us believe that if a society shifts its tax
burden off buildings, sales and wages and onto land
value, many highly desirable things will happen,
including the reduction or abolition of poverty and the
reversal of urban sprawl. Each of these things will have
highly positive ripple effects, which are very likely to
include a reduction in demand for some of the kinds of
services government now supplies, particularly to the
poor. If we create a society where poverty is the
exception and prosperity the general norm, many other
social ills will disappear or be reduced to the point
where they are manageable.
Most of those who seek to "starve government" don't
seem to particularly care about the effects of the
services it provides on the lives of others. They
themselves generally know they can pay for the services
they want for themselves, and aren't all that interested
in how what might serve their own interests will affect
others. It would be interesting to know how many of them
have lived in a diverse city, and how many of them choose
to live in gated communities that are more
homogeneous.
I sometimes wonder whether the "starve government"
folks truly want to starve government, or merely don't
understand that there is a viable alternative to the
evils taxing income and sales. If one follows the precept
of "never ascribe to malice that which can be adequately
explained by stupidity," and considers that few of our
colleges or universities teach the ideas central to this
website, one may come up with a new understanding: it
isn't that the starve-government people are malicious
or stupid, it is that their education has been
neglected!
A tax on land value does not burden productivity, but
justly collects for the purposes of common spending that
which rightly belongs to the community! I'm sure that
this is something that Grover Norquist can
enthusiastically support.
Henry George: The
Common Sense of Taxation (1881 article)
The true purposes of government are well stated in the
preamble to the Constitution of the United States, as
they are in the Declaration of Independence. To insure
the general peace, to promote the general welfare, to
secure to each individual the inalienable rights to life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness — these are
the proper ends of government, and are therefore the ends
which in every scheme of taxation should be kept in
mind.
As to amount of taxation, there is no principle which
imposes any arbitrary limit. Heavy taxation is better for
any community than light taxation, if the increased
revenue be used in doing by public agencies things which
could not be done, or could not be as well and
economically done, by private agencies. Taxes could be
lightened in the city of New York by dispensing with
street-lamps and disbanding the police force. But would a
reduction in taxation gained in this way be for the
benefit of the people of New York and make New York a
more desirable place to live in? Or if it should be found
that heat and light could be conducted through the
streets at public expense and supplied to each house at
but a small fraction of the cost of supplying them by
individual effort, or that the city railroads could be
run at public expense so as to give every one
transportation at very much less than it now costs the
average resident, the increased taxation necessary for
these purposes would not be increased burden, and in
spite of the larger taxation required, New York would
become a more desirable place to live in. It is a mistake
to condemn taxation as bad merely because it is high; it
is a mistake to impose by constitutional provision, as in
many of our States has been advocated, and in some of our
States has been done, any restriction upon the amount of
taxation. A restriction upon the incurring of public
indebtedness is another matter. In nothing is the
far-reaching statesmanship of Jefferson more clearly
shown than in his proposition that all public obligations
should be deemed void after a certain brief term —
a proposition which he grounds upon the self-evident
truth that the earth belongs in usufruct to the living,
and that the dead have no control over it, and can give
no title to any part of it. But restriction upon public
debts is a very different thing from restriction upon the
power of taxation, and reasons which urge the one do not
apply to the other. Nor is increased taxation necessarily
proof of governmental extravagance. Increase in taxation
is in the order of social development, for the reason
that social development tends to the doing of things
collectively that in a ruder state are done individually,
to the giving to government of new functions and the
imposing of new duties. Our public schools and libraries
and parks, our signal service and fish commissions and
agricultural bureaus and grasshopper investigations, are
evidences of this.
But while no limit can be properly fixed for the
amount of taxation, the method of taxation is of supreme
importance. A horse may be anchored by fastening to his
bridle a weight which he will not feel when carried in a
buggy behind him. The best ship may be made utterly
unseaworthy by the bad stowage of a cargo which properly
placed would make her the stiffer and more weatherly. So
enterprise may be palsied, industry crushed, accumulation
prevented, and a prosperous country turned into a desert,
by taxation which rightly levied would hardly be felt.
... read the whole
article
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty: 10. Effect of Remedy Upon Wealth
Production (in the unabridged P&P:
Part IX — Effects of the Remedy: Chapter 1 — Of
the effect upon the production of wealth)
The elder Mirabeau, we are told, ranked the
proposition of Quesnay, to substitute one single tax on
rent (the impôt unique) for all other
taxes, as a discovery equal in utility to the invention
of writing or the substitution of the use of money for
barter.
To whosoever will think over the matter, this saying
will appear an evidence of penetration rather than of
extravagance. The advantages which would be
gained by substituting for the numerous taxes by which
the public revenues are now raised, a single tax levied
upon the value of land, will appear more and more
important the more they are considered.
- This is the secret which would transform the little
village into the great city.*
- With all the burdens removed which now oppress
industry and hamper exchange, the production of wealth
would go on with a rapidity now undreamed of.
- This, in its turn, would lead to an increase in the
value of land — a new surplus which society might
take for general purposes.
-
And released from the difficulties which
attend the collection of revenue in a way that begets
corruption and renders legislation the tool of
special interests, society could assume functions
which the increasing complexity of life makes it
desirable to assume, but which the prospect of
political demoralization under the present system now
leads thoughtful men to shrink from.
*At the beginning of
Book IX of the complete Progress & Poverty,
Henry George quotes from Themistocles: "I cannot play
upon any stringed instrument, but I can tell you how
of a little village to make a great and glorious
city."
Consider the effect upon the production of wealth.
To abolish the taxation which, acting and reacting,
now hampers every wheel of exchange and presses upon
every form of industry, would be like removing an immense
weight from a powerful spring. ... read the whole
chapter
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
The shifting of indirect taxes is accomplished by
means of their tendency to increase the prices of
commodities on which they fall. Their magnitude and
incidence 6 are thereby disguised. It was for this reason
that a great French economist of the last century
denounced them as "a scheme for so plucking geese as to
get the most feathers with the least squawking."7
7. Though his language was blunt,
the sentiment does not essentially differ from that of
"statesmen" of our day who meet all the moral and
economic objections to indirect taxation with the one
reply that the people would not consent to pay enough
or the support of government if public revenues were
collected from them directly. This means nothing but
that the people are actually hoodwinked by indirect
taxation into sustaining a government that they would
not support if they knew it was maintained at their
expense; and instead of being a reason for continuing
indirect taxation, would, if true, be one of the
strongest of reasons for abolishing it. It is
consistent neither with the plainest principles of
democracy nor the simplest conceptions of
morality. ...
4. CONFORMITY TO GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF
TAXATION
The single tax conforms most closely to the essential
principles of Adam Smith's four classical maxims, which
are stated best by Henry George 19 as follows:
The best tax by which public revenues can be raised is
evidently that which will closest conform to the
following conditions:
- That it bear as lightly as possible upon production
— so as least to check the increase of the
general fund from which taxes must be paid and the
community maintained. 20
- That it be easily and cheaply collected, and fall
as directly as may be upon the ultimate payers —
so as to take from the people as little as possible in
addition to what it yields the government. 21
- That it be certain — so as to give the least
opportunity for tyranny or corruption on the part of
officials, and the least temptation to law-breaking and
evasion on the part of the tax-payers. 22
- That it bear equally — so as to give no
citizen an advantage or put any at a disadvantage, as
compared with others. 23
19. "Progress and Poverty," book viii.
ch.iii.
20. This is the second part of Adam
Smith's fourth maxim. He states it as follows: "Every
tax ought to be so contrived as both to take out and to
keep out of the pockets of the people as little as
possible over and above what it brings into the public
treasury of the state. A tax may either take out or
keep out of the pockets of the people a great deal more
than it brings into the public treasury in the four
following ways: . . . Secondly, it may obstruct the
industry of the people, and discourage them from
applying to certain branches of business which might
give maintenance and employment to great multitudes.
While it obliges the people to pay, it may thus
diminish or perhaps destroy some of the funds which
might enable them more easily to do so."
21. This is the first part of Adam
Smith's fourth maxim, in which he condemns a tax that
takes out of the pockets of the people more than it
brings into the public treasury.
22. This is Adam Smith's second maxim. He
states it as follows: "The tax which each individual is
bound to pay ought to be certain and not arbitrary. The
time of payment, the manner of payment, the quantity to
be paid, ought all to be clear and plain to the
contributor and to every other person. Where it is
otherwise, every person subject to the tax is put more
or less in the power of the tax gatherer."
23. This is Adam Smith's first maxim. He
states it as follows: "The subjects of every state
ought to contribute towards the support of the
government as nearly as possible in proportion to their
respective abilities, that is to say, in proportion to
the revenue which they respectively enjoy under the
protection of the state. The expense of government to
the individuals of a great nation is like the expense
of management to the joint tenants of a great estate,
who are all obliged to contribute in proportion to
their respective interests in the estate. In the
observation or neglect of this maxim consists what is
called the equality or inequality of taxation."
In changing this Mr. George says
("Progress and Poverty," book viii, ch. iii, subd.
4): "Adam Smith speaks of incomes as enjoyed
'under the protection of the state'; and this is the
ground upon which the equal taxation of all species of
property is commonly insisted upon — that it is
equally protected by the state. The basis of this idea
is evidently that the enjoyment of property is made
possible by the state — that there is a value
created and maintained by the community; which is
justly called upon to meet community expenses. Now, of
what values is this true? Only of the value of land.
This is a value that does not arise until a community
is formed, and that, unlike other values, grows with
the growth of the community. It only exists as the
community exists. Scatter again the largest community,
and land, now so valuable, would have no value at all.
With every increase of population the value of land
rises; with every decrease it falls. This is true of
nothing else save of things which, like the ownership
of land, are in their nature monopolies."
Adam Smith's third maxim refers only to
conveniency of payment, and gives countenance to
indirect taxation, which is in conflict with the
principle of his fourth maxim. Mr. George properly
excludes it.
a. Interference with Production
Indirect taxes tend to check production and cause
scarcity, by obstructing the processes of production.
They fall upon men as they work, as
they do business, as they invest capital
productively. 24 But the single tax, which must be paid
and be the same in amount regardless of whether the payer
works or plays, of whether he invests his capital
productively or wastes it, of whether he uses his land
for the most productive purposes 25 or in lesser degree
or not at all, removes fiscal penalties from industry and
thrift, and tends to leave production free. It therefore
conforms more closely than indirect taxation to the first
maxim quoted above.
24. "Taxation which falls upon the
processes of production interposes an artificial
obstacle to the creation of wealth. Taxation which
falls upon labor as it is exerted, wealth as it is used
as capital, land as it is cultivated, will manifestly
tend to discourage production much more powerfully than
taxation to the same amount levied upon laborers
whether they work or play, upon wealth whether used
productively or unproductively, or upon land whether
cultivated or left waste" — Progress and
Poverty, book viii, ch. iii, subd. I.
25. It is common, besides taxing
improvements, as fast as they are made, to levy higher
taxes upon land when put to its best use than when put
to partial use or to no use at all. This is upon the
theory that when his land is used the owner gets full
income from it and can afford to pay high taxes; but
that he gets little or no income when the land is out
of use, and so cannot afford to pay much. It is an
absurd but perfectly legitimate illustration of the
pretentious doctrine of taxation according to ability
to pay.
Examples are numerous. Improved building
lots, and even those that are only plotted for
improvement, are usually taxed more than contiguous
unused and unplotted land which is equally in demand
for building purposes and equally valuable. So coal
land, iron land, oil land, and sugar land are as a rule
taxed less as land when opened up for appropriate use
than when lying idle or put to inferior uses, though
the land value be the same. Any serious proposal to put
land to its appropriate use is commonly regarded as a
signal for increasing the tax upon it.
b. Cheapness of Collection
Indirect taxes are passed along from first payers to
final consumers through many exchanges, accumulating
compound profits as they go, until they take enormous
sums from the people in addition to what the government
receives.26 But the single tax takes nothing from the
people in excess of the tax. It therefore conforms more
closely than indirect taxation to the second maxim quoted
above.
26. "All taxes upon things of unfixed
quantity increase prices, and in the course of exchange
are shifted from seller to buyer, increasing as they
go. If we impose a tax on money loaned, as has been
often attempted, the lender will charge the tax to the
borrower, and the borrower must pay it or not obtain
the loan. If the borrower uses it in his business, he
in his turn must get back the tax from his customers,
or his business becomes unprofitable. If we impose a
tax upon buildings, the users of buildings must finally
pay it, for the erection of buildings will cease until
building rents become high enough to pay the regular
profit and the tax besides. If we impose a tax upon
manufactures or imported goods, the manufacturer or
importer will charge it in a higher price to the
jobber, the jobber to the retailer. and the retailer to
the consumer. Now, the consumer, on whom the tax thus
ultimately falls, must not only pay the amount of the
tax, but also a profit on this amount to everyone who
has thus advanced it — for profit on the capital
he has advanced in paying taxes is as much required by
each dealer as profit on the capital he has advanced in
paying for goods." — Progress and Poverty,
book viii, ch. iii, subd. 2.
c. Certainty
No other tax, direct or indirect, conforms so closely
to the third maxim. "Land lies out of doors." It cannot
be hidden; it cannot be "accidentally" overlooked. Nor
can its value be seriously misstated. Neither
under-appraisement nor over-appraisement to any important
degree is possible without the connivance of the whole
community. 27 The land values of a neighborhood are
matters of common knowledge. Any intelligent resident can
justly appraise them, and every other intelligent
resident can fairly test the appraisement. Therefore, the
tyranny, corruption, fraud, favoritism, and evasions that
are so common in connection with the taxation of imports,
manufactures, incomes, personal property, and buildings
— the values of which, even when the object itself
cannot be hidden, are so distinctly matters of minute
special knowledge that only experts can fairly appraise
them — would be out of the question if the single
tax were substituted for existing fiscal methods. 28
27. The under-appraisements so common at
present, and alluded to in note 25, are possible
because the community, ignorant of the just principles
of taxation, does connive at them. Under-appraisements
are not secret crimes on the part of assessors; they
are distinctly recognized, but thoughtlessly
disregarded when not actually insisted upon, by the
people themselves. And this is due to the dishonest
ideas of taxation that are taught. Let the vicious
doctrine that people ought to pay taxes according to
their ability give way to the honest principle that
they should pay in proportion to the benefits they
receive, which benefits, as we have already seen, are
measured by the land values they own, and
underappraisement of land would cease. No assessor can
befool the community in respect of the value of the
land within his jurisdiction.
And, with the cessation of general
under-appraisement, favoritism in individual
appraisements also would cease. General
under-appraisement fosters unfair individual
appraisements. If land were generally appraised at its
full value, a particular unfair appraisement would
stand out in such relief that the crime of the assessor
would be exposed. But now if a man's land is appraised
at a higher valuation than his neighbor's equally
valuable land, and he complains of the unfairness, he
is promptly and effectually silenced with a warning
that his land is worth much more than it is appraised
at, anyhow, and if he makes a fuss his appraisement
will be increased. To complain further of the deficient
taxation of his neighbor is to invite the imposition of
a higher tax upon himself.
28. If you wish to test the merits in
point of certainty of the single tax as compared with
other taxes, go to a real estate agent in your
community, and, showing him a building lot upon the
map, ask him its value. If he inquires about the
improvements, instruct him to ignore them. He will be
able at once to tell you what the lot is worth. And if
you go to twenty other agents their estimates will not
materially vary from his. Yet none of the agents will
have left his office. Each will have inferred the value
from the size and location of the lot.
But suppose when you show the map to the
first agent you ask him the value of the land and its
improvements. He will tell you that he cannot give an
estimate until he examines the improvements. And if it
is the highly improved property of a rich man he will
engage building experts to assist him. Should you ask
him to include the value of the contents of the
buildings, he would need a corps of selected experts,
including artists and liverymen, dealers in furniture
and bric-a-brac, librarians and jewelers. Should you
propose that he also include the value of the
occupant's income, the agent would throw up his hands
in despair.
If without the aid of an army of experts
the agent should make an estimate of these
miscellaneous values, and twenty others should do the
same, their several estimates would be as wide apart as
ignorant guesses usually are. And the richer the owner
of the property the lower as a proportion would the
guesses probably be.
Now turn the real estate agent into an
assessor, and is it not plain that he would appraise
the land values with much greater certainty and
cheapness than he could appraise the values of all
kinds of property? With a plot map before him he might
fairly make every appraisement without leaving his desk
at the town hall.
And there would be no material difference
if the property in question were a farm instead of a
building lot. A competent farmer or business man in a
farming community can, without leaving his own
door-yard, appraise the value of the land of any farm
there; whereas it would be impossible for him to value
the improvements, stock, produce, etc., without at
least inspecting them.
d. Equality
In respect of the fourth maxim the single tax bears
more equally— that is to say, more justly —
than any other tax. It is the only tax that falls upon
the taxpayer in proportion to the pecuniary benefits he
receives from the public; 29 and its tendency,
accelerating with the increase of the tax, is to leave
every one the full fruit of his own productive enterprise
and effort. 30
29 The benefits of government are not the
only public benefits whose value attaches exclusively
to land. Communal development from whatever cause
produces the same effect. But as it is under the
protection of government that land-owners are able to
maintain ownership of land and through that to enjoy
the pecuniary benefits of advancing social conditions,
government confers upon them as a class not only the
pecuniary benefits of good government but also the
pecuniary benefits of progress in general.
30. "Here are two men of equal incomes
— that of the one derived from the exertion of
his labor, that of the other from the rent of land. Is
it just that they should equally contribute to the
expenses of the state? Evidently not. The income of the
one represents wealth he creates and adds to the
general wealth of the state; the income of the other
represents merely wealth that he takes from the general
stock, returning nothing." — Progress and
Poverty, book viii, ch. iii, subd. 4.
... read the
book
Bill Batt: The
Fallacy of the "Three-Legged Stool" Metaphor
Contemporary economists and conventional tax
theorists well recognize that taxing Labor and Capital is
detrimental to economic vitality — politicians
thrive on repeating this ad
nauseam. Currently the Republican party
candidates seem best able to exploit resentment about the
negative impact of taxes. But they are not alone in
failing to appreciate the nature of tax shifting.
What all fail to realize is that there are notable
exceptions to the rule that taxes are oppressive: any tax
imposed on an inelastic base -- that is, any form of Land
-- constitutes no distortion or excess burden
whatsoever.
Far from spreading the burden of
distribution over a wide array of tax bases, the
ideal tax, then, should be imposed solely on those
factors of production that form an inelastic base, i.e.,
that constitute forms of Land -- whether they be
locational sites, natural resources, the spectrum, time
slots, or others as they may arise in the
future. Land, in any of its forms, is
totally inelastic. Will Rogers in his pithy way
said it well, "Buy land. They ain't making any more
of the stuff." Mark Twain said it too. Read the whole
article
Mason Gaffney: Land
as a Distinctive Factor of Production
Land normally does not depreciate as a function of
time. Most attributes of land also withstand use
and abuse. Most land is, rather, expected to
appreciate in real value in the long run. Values go
in cycles, but the secular history is upwards as
population, capital, and demands all grow while land
remains fixed. Capital has a period of formation
during which it accretes value by storing up other inputs
and changing physical form, but that is a phase.
Once formed, almost all capital fails with
time.
Perhaps the most durable capital is intellectual,
like the writings of Plato. These, however, do not
endure generations without the continual human effort and
expense of education. As schools starve and
libraries close, it is sadly certain that much will be
lost. Under any conditions much is twisted in
transmission, like classical economics itself.
...
It follows that the demand for land arises over
time with incomes, but faster
than incomes. ... Read the whole
article
Alanna Hartzok: Who
Would Jesus Tax? The Saga of Susan Pace Hamill's
Alabama Tax Crusade
A University of Alabama School of Law Professor
has asked God's forgiveness for the years she lived in
the sin of ignorance about tax injustice. Susan Pace
Hamill, a tax expert, business consultant, and dedicated
United Methodist church goer, thought there was a
misprint when she first read that personal incomes as low
as $4,600 for a family of four were being taxed by the
state, while timber owners holding 71% of the land of
Alabama were paying less than $1 per acre in property
taxes. Two hours later she found out there had been no
mistake and that Alabama has the most regressive tax code
in the country. Her righteous rage spawned a tax crusade
that has reverberated onto the national
scene.
"As somebody who knows a lot about taxes, I could
not have imagined a design of a tax structure this bad,"
she said in a Tuscaloosa News story last February. "The
state's tax code is really horribly unjust and has no
moral, ethical leg to stand on. Period."
Alabamians with incomes under $13,000 pay 10.9
percent of their incomes in state and local taxes while
those who make over $229,000 pay just 4.1 percent.
Commercial property owners pay more than 50 percent of
property taxes, with homes approaching one-third.
Alabama's sales taxes are among the highest in the
nation, up to 10 percent in some areas, and do not exempt
even the most basic necessities such as food. The state's
1901 constitution was written primarily by large
landholders to secure their economic interests,
consequently property taxes are extremely light on their
holdings. ...
"Alabama's tax system is most abusive
because it taxes items like milk, yet offers tax breaks for
certain farm products," she said in a Huntsville Times
(3/26/03) interview. "It's also unfair to allow timberland
(which Hamill found out accounts for 71 percent of Alabama
land) to generate only two percent of all state property
taxes."
While resoundingly condemning the current system (she uses
words like "horrific" and "monstrous injustice") Hamill
clearly articulates a tax reform approach which shifts
taxes off of low wage earners and onto large land owners.
Through a combination of her own reasoning, caring heart,
and inherent sense of justice and a thorough investigation
of Judeo-Christian ethics, Hamill arrived at a tax policy
approach which bears remarkable similarities to the
economic justice crusades of 19th century reformer, Henry
George.
Her appeal is to the 93 percent of Alabama residents who
call themselves Christians. Hamill challenges them to put
their faith into practice. Her message fell on many already
listening ears. The state's two largest denominations,
United Methodists and Southern Baptists, had passed
resolutions favoring tax reform in 2000. In 2001 the
state's Episcopalians, Presbyterians and Catholics approved
similar calls. The Public Affairs Research Council of
Alabama and the Business Council of Alabama had long
clamored for tax change. In fact, tax reform is now
supported by most of the state's religious organizations,
according to Charles Durham, pastor of the First
Presbyterian Church in Tuscaloosa.
What makes Hamill's work so compelling is her deep grasp of
the Alabama tax code combined with her thorough
documentation of the scriptural bases for economic justice.
She quotes chapters and verses which proclaim that the poor
should not be oppressed and that society should create
conditions for their advance. Among her favorites are
Jesus' words in Matthew 25:45: "Whatever you did not do for
one of the least of these, you did not do for me." Luke
16:19-31 is a parable of a rich man sent to hell because of
his indifference to the disadvantaged and in Jeremiah
22:15-16, "He defended the cause of the poor and needy, and
so all went well." ...
Riley's tax plan, inspired in large measure by
Hamill's prophetic tax justice ministry, would bring in
an additional $1.2 billion in revenue while raising the
income threshold at which families of four start paying
taxes from the current $4,600 a year to more than
$17,000, scrapping the federal income tax deduction, and
increasing exemptions for dependent children. It would
give property tax breaks to small family farms, while
costing millions to the state's 500 or so farms and
timber tracts with more than 2,000 acres each, which
includes companies like Weyerhaeuser and Boise Cascade,
which own hundreds of thousands of acres.
"I've spent a lot of time studying the New
Testament and it has three philosophies: love God, love
each other, and take care of the least among you," said
Riley (New York Times, 6/10/03, "What Would Jesus Do?
Sock It to Alabama's Corporate Landowners")
Unfortunately, Alabama voters overwhelmingly voted
against the plan on September 9, 2003. Some said that the
poor did not trust the Republican tax relief plan and the
rich had solidly organized against it. Opponents made hay
out of the proposed sales tax increase on cigarettes,
cars and lawn mowers and services like car repairs in a
state where sales taxes already reach 11% in some areas.
... read the whole article
Some of those who advocate starving government are troubled
by the things on which the federal government spends our
money. They seek to fix the problem by cutting off
the flow of funds. Many of us suspect that the kinds of
spending they would choose to cut are not things we see as
option. Here's another point of view:
Jeff Smith: Leaking
Economic Value of Communities
Wearing pajamas outdoors in the winter, one
wouldn’t expect to retain body heat. Yet, people do
try to sustain community while hemorrhaging its
commonwealth. Losing it, residents must work more than
necessary.
When residents import food and
energy, they deprive others in the community of income.
Yet, the loss pales when compared to paying mortgages and
[income] taxes. A recent study of Oakland, CA found
torrents of dollars pumped out of town headed for the
treasuries of distant capitols and the bank vaults of
distant lenders.
While mortgages and interest elevate an elite
elsewhere, they keep debtors on a treadmill at home. To
those anxious over every next payment, how appealing is
an economy no longer expanding its girth? In addition,
what’s their debt for? Credit? The total savings of
all members of a community should suffice. Local bank
"used to" be the norm.
The other major drain, taxes, at
about 40% of the average worker’s income, usually
total more than the value of government services received.
And who receives them? Corporate loggers, miners, factory
farms, and tractor trailers. Lose such subsidies, leveling
the playing field, and local recyclers, family farmers, and
freight haulers could compete. Their success would plug the
visible leaks - imported food, energy, and
materials.
While a community might not be able to
command a distant capitol to turn off the subsidies, a
locality may be able to avoid federal and state
taxes. ...
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