Sustainability
Frank Stilwell and Kirrily Jordan: The Political Economy of Land:
Putting Henry George in His Place
Land is the most basic of all economic resources,
fundamental to the form that economic development takes.
Its use for agricultural purposes is integral to the
production of the means of our subsistence. Its use in an
urban context is crucial in shaping how effectively
cities function and who gets the principal benefits from
urban economic growth. Its ownership is a major
determinant of the degree of economic inequality: surges
of land prices, such as have occurred in Australian
cities during the last decade, cause major
redistributions of wealth. In both an urban and
rural context the use of land – and nature more
generally – is central to the possibility of
ecological sustainability. Contemporary social
concerns about problems of housing affordability and
environmental quality necessarily focus our attention on
‘the land question.’ ...
Environmental Concerns
What about the relevance of Georgist ideas to current
concerns with environmental quality and ecological
sustainability? Here too there is a strong claim to
consider. Interest in Georgism has been reinvigorated in
recent years by the need to develop public policies that
reflect the nature of land as a finite natural resource.
From a ‘green’ perspective, land tax is a
useful tool in discouraging the excessive and wasteful
use of land. That is, the prospect of paying a high rate
of land tax can be expected to discourage people from
purchasing more land than they need directly for their
own purposes. It accords with the principle that people
should be taxed according to their use of scarce
environmental assets.
This ‘ecological take’ on Georgism is
particularly powerful at a time of intensifying global
environmental problems and recognition of the need for
remedial policy responses. It requires creative extension
of Georgist principles because the limitation of
George’s own analysis in this context is its
primary focus on land. A range of other natural resources
needs to be considered, linking up with the broader
concerns of modern environmentalists such as Herman Daly
(see, for example, Daly and Cobb, 1990). Hence, land tax
should be seen as an adjunct to taxes on the use of other
scarce environmental assets, including mineral, forestry
and fishing stocks, and also bandwidth for radio and
telecommunications, for example (Stilwell, 2002:
316-317). It should also be seen as a corollary to other
taxes that discourage environmental damage, including
resource rental taxes, carbon taxes and fuel excises.
The case for these environmental taxes need not
necessarily rest on Georgist principles, of course, but
Georgism can claim to provide a unifying analytical
framework. A common feature of ‘environmental
taxes’ is that they are all targeted, like land
tax, at reducing the scope for profiting from the private
appropriation of natural resources, and thereby
restricting the profligate use of those resources.
A tension remains, reflecting the Georgist orientation
towards taxes rather than more directly regulatory
interventions. Whether the use of the price mechanism in
this ‘environmental fine tuning’ is
sufficient for dealing with pervasive environment threats
is a moot point. The nature and severity of environmental
stresses is such that more directly proscriptive
environmental policies are commonly needed to protect
natural resources. The creation and maintenance of
national parks, for example, constitutes a necessary
direct regulation of land-use: the market, even when
modified by taxes, cannot absolutely guarantee the
conservation of such crucial assets. In other words,
protection of ‘natural capital’ may commonly
require regulation as well as taxation. ... 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. ...
Good for the economy, the PTS is also good
for the eco-system. Were land levied, the owners of the
most valuable sites would feel most pressure to develop;
their sites tend to be closer to the city center. Hence
those owners draw any needed development, infilling
cities, sparing suburbs further encroachment. Other
highly valued sites are those rich in natural resources.
Again, using them more intensely frees up sites of lesser
natural endowment. Thus, besides conserving sites, the
PTS also conserves resources.
Higher efficiency makes feasible the goal of
sustainability. Going sustainable must radically alter
five basic strands in an economy:
-
agriculture,
- home
building,
- resource
extraction,
- energy,
and
-
transportation.
The segment of the economy
wasting the most resources is probably transportation. Sprawl exacerbates the need
for mobility while infilling reduces it. Presently, cars
claim 50% of urban surface. Land dues would motivate
owners to put their asphalt devoted to cars to higher and
better uses, ones that serve humans. A higher human
density provides mass transit with more riders so that
the system could expand and automobile dependency
contract, letting both city and suburb blossom.
Another resource-consumptive segment of the economy is
construction.
...
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
Bill Batt: How Our Towns
Got That Way (1996 speech)
Because our society is characterized by suburban
sprawl and is therefore motor vehicle dependent,
community is destroyed. George Kennan expresses this well
in the book cited earlier, but it is more empirically
documented in a recent article entitled "Bowling Alone", which David Broder of the
Washington Post considered the most important
academic article of 1995. The author of that piece,
Harvard Professor Bob Putnam, shows that our communal
relationships are declining, and that an ever smaller
proportion of the population is involved in social
activities of a cooperative and communal nature. As
Tocqueville noted, this used to be the unique strength of
American society; we're now losing it. Suburban sprawl
and the automobile play a large part in this. And the
reason we have these land-use configurations is in good
part, to my way of thinking, due to our property tax
policies and our subsidies to motor vehicle
transportation.
It doesn't take much reflection to
realize that the practices which we are following are
unsustainable. This is true not only environmentally but
also economically and socially. Author James Howard
Kunstler recently has described in his book Home from Nowhere how our cities are becoming not
only ugly but unlivable. The irony is also that, by having
followed the legacy of classical economics, we could easily
have provided for all our government services through taxes
based on land value.... read the whole
article Bill Batt: The Compatibility of Georgist
Economics and Ecological Economics
Not only are human beings co-equal
with other living beings of the earth, so also are beings
yet born entitled to an existence. The Iroquois Indians
of New York State are often quoted to the effect that
“In our every deliberation, we should consider the
impact of our decisions on the next seven
generations.” 101 Several contemporary
environmental organizations have adopted the Iroquois
“Great Law of Peace” so that it has become
the vernacular equivalent of the Brundtland
Report’s definition of sustainability. Sustainable
economics, or 7th generation planning, also requires
Daly’s “steady state” economy,
102 where (as if
natural resources constitute “capital”) one
lives only on interest and not principle. Daly contrasts
two notions of economic practice: growth and development.
The former may momentarily increase economic productivity
and wealth, but is in the long term a fatal course of
policy. It increases quantity but not quality.
Development, rather, is what should be aspired to, an
increase in quality, efficiency, and fulfillment through
minimal uses of energy and material resources. For
development, the value-added dimension comes from
treading lightly on the earth, from the use of mental
capital rather than physical capital.103 Daly in still another article
talks about three parameters of sustainability:
“allocation, distribution, and scale,” which
will lead to an economy which is “efficient, just
and sustainable.” 104... read the whole
article
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 6: Trusteeship of Creation
(pages 79-100)
By contrast, if pollution rights are assigned to
trusts representing pollutees and future generations, and
if these trusts then sell these rights to polluters, the
trusts rather than the polluters will capture the commons
rent. If the trusts split this money between per capita
dividends and expenditures on public goods, everyone
benefits.
At this moment, based on pollution rights allocated so
far, polluting corporations are getting most of the
commons rent. But the case for trusts getting the rent in
the future is compelling. If this is done, consumers will
pay commons rent not to corporations or government, but
to themselves as beneficiaries of commons trusts. Each
citizen’s dividend will be the same, but his
payments will depend on his purchases of pollution-laden
products. The more he pollutes, the more rent he’ll
pay. High polluters will get back less than they put in,
while low polluters will get back more. The microeconomic
incentives, in other words, will be perfect. (See figure
6.1.)
What’s equally significant, though less obvious,
is that the macroeconomic incentives will be perfect too.
That is, it will be in everyone’s interest to
reduce the total level of pollution. Remember how rent
for scarce things works: the lower the supply, the higher
the rent. Now, imagine you’re a trustee of an
ecosystem, and leaving aside (for the sake of argument)
your responsibility to preserve the asset for future
generations, you want to increase dividends. Do you raise
the number of pollution permits you sell, or lower it?
The correct, if counterintuitive answer is: you lower the
number of permits.
This macroeconomic phenomenon — that less
pollution yields more income for citizens — is the
ultimate knockout punch for commons trusts. It aligns the
interests of future generations with, rather than
against, those of living citizens. By so doing, it lets
us chart a transition to sustainability in which the
political pressure is for faster pollution reduction
rather than slower.
There’s one further argument for recycling
commons rent through trusts. As rent is recycled from
overusers of the commons to underusers, income is shifted
from rich to poor. That’s because rich households,
on average, use the commons more than poor households.
They drive SUVs, fly in jets, and have large homes to
heat and cool — thus they dump more waste into the
biosphere. Studies by Congress and independent economists
have shown that only a rent recycling system like the one
just described can protect the poor. Absent such a
system, the poor will pay commons rent and get nothing
back. In other words, they’ll get poorer.
As always, there are a few caveats.
- First, to the extent commons rent is used for
public goods rather than per capita dividends, the
income recycling effects are diminished. This is
offset, however, by the fact that public goods
benefit everyone.
- Second, the less-pollution-equals-more-dividends
formula doesn’t work indefinitely. At some
point after less polluting technologies have been
widely deployed, the demand for pollution absorption
will become elastic. Then, lowering the number of
pollution permits sold will decrease income to
citizens. But that time is far in the future, and
when it comes, the world will be a healthier place.
And even then, trustees won’t be able to
increase the number of pollution permits without
violating their responsibility to future generations.
...
read the whole chapter
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