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Wealth and Want | |||||||
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Take What You Need and Leave the Rest (and don't take more than you will put to
use, in order to make a profit off others' similar needs
— Our corporations, REITS and wealthy families take as their own our very best land: the urban land served by extensive, expensive and sophisticated infrastructure, the ocean, lake and river coasts. Our system of taxation does not collect from them the economic value of the land they hold. Some, like Ted Turner, wisely place more of their portfolio into land and other natural resource; our incentives provide them no reason not to do so. Georgists seek a society and an economy in which each
of us owns the amount of land we personally can put to
good use, pay society its annual worth for the exclusive
right to that property, and leave the rest of the land
available for others to access. Some of that land will
have little or no value, but it should be available. She
or he who has a plan for putting an excellent piece of
land to work should be able to access it, but its annual
cost to them should take into account the competing uses
of other entrepreneurs. This way, a good piece of land
will be used well, producing jobs for many more people
than it currently does in its underused state. The "100%
location" should be put to a "100% use," because that
will benefit all of us. (And its owner will profit from
the security of possession, and putting it to a 100% use
— but not from the economic rent of the site, which
he will return to the commons in the form of land value
taxation.) When our incentives allow someone (individual,
family trust, corporation, real estate investment trust)
to keep that land at 80% use, or 60% use, or even 40% use
until they're good and ready to improve it, hundreds or
thousands of us lose out, our cities sprawl, and land on
the fringes gets developed prematurely; people must
commute long distances. Those who say that "property
rights" are more important, that if a 40% use is what
that owner of a 100% location wants, that is his
prerogative, miss the point that land is fundamentally
different from things which are manmade, and we can't
create another plot of land in that 100% location —
and we all bear the costs of granting that level
of property privilege, through pollution, energy and time
usage, etc.
Ted Gwartney: Estimating Land Values
Each person has a right to keep what he or she
produces, but no one has the right to waste what belongs
to all people, the land which includes the natural
environment. Each person should have an opportunity to
use the best land for his business or personal needs, as
long as they are willing to pay the land rent that other
land users are willing to pay.
If the value of land rent exceeds the community's needs for public services a method of dispensing of the revenue can easily be found. To maintain an equitable society, where nobody has special benefits that they do not pay for, it is important to collect all of the land rent. The community should use what is needed for public services and improvements such as schools, hospitals, parks, police, roadways, utilities and defense -- and reserve a fund for emergencies. An ethical proposal might be to then divide the excess revenue that is not needed for public facilities and services at the end of each year and send each citizen in that community an equal portion of the remaining revenue. This is similar to the method used in Alaska and Alberta. Equality of opportunity to be productive can only be accomplished by recapturing all of the market rent of land and ensuring that all people benefit from its value. Not only is land rent potentially an important source of public revenue, collecting all of it would ensure that the equal opportunity to be productive would be available to all citizens. People could fund useful buildings, equipment and wages, rather than having to buy land at inflated prices. Many countries, including the United States, were started on the premise of using land rent to fund public services. Many countries suffer economic loss because they no longer collect the market rent of land. The value of land can be estimated with an acceptable accuracy, at a cost which is very small compared to the revenue to be obtained. A proper system of assessment and taxation of land can provide for the proper economic use of the land. A land site should be available to the user who can make the highest and best use of the site and maximize the site benefits for all people. A land tax can provide a major source of public revenue which the local governing body could use for the benefit of all people. A land tax can prevent the dispossession of our children, the future producers in the society. Justice requires that land values, which are created by society and nature, be made available for public improvements. This is the responsibility of good government.Read the whole article Nic Tideman: Peace, Justice and Economic Reform
These components of the classical liberal
conception of justice are held by two groups that hold
conflicting views on a companion issue of great
importance: how are claims of exclusive access to natural
opportunities to be established?
John Locke qualified his statement that we own what we produce with his famous "proviso" that there be "as much and as good left in common for others." A few pages later, writing in the last decade of the seventeenth century, he said that private appropriations of land are actually not restricted, because anyone who is dissatisfied with the land available to him in Europe can always go to America, where there is plenty of unclaimed land.[12] Locke does not address the issue of rights to land when land is scarce. One tradition in classical liberalism concerning claims to land is that of the "homesteading libertarians," as exemplified by Murray Rothbard, who say that there is really no need to be concerned with Locke's proviso. Natural opportunities belong to whoever first appropriates them, regardless of whether opportunities of equal value are available to others.[13] The other tradition is that of the "geoists," as inspired if not exemplified by Henry George, who say that, whenever natural opportunities are scarce, each person has an obligation to ensure that the per capita value of the natural opportunities that he leaves for others is as great as the value of the natural opportunities that he claims for himself.[14] Any excess in one's claim generates an obligation to compensate those who thereby have less. George actually proposed the nearly equivalent idea, that all or nearly all of the rental value of land should be collected in taxes, and all other taxes should be abolished. The geoist position as I have expressed it emphasizes the idea that, at least when value generated by public services is not an issue, rights to land are fundamentally rights of individuals, not rights of governments. There are two fundamental problems with the position of homesteading libertarians on claims to land. The first problem is the incongruity with historical reality. Humans have emerged from an environment of violence. Those who now have titles to land can trace those titles back only so far, before they come to events where fiat backed by violence determined title. And the persons who were displaced at that time themselves had titles that originated in violence. If there ever were humans who acquired the use of land without forcibly displacing other humans, we have no way of knowing who they were or who their current descendants might be. There is, in practice, no way of assigning land to the legitimate successors of the persons who first claimed land. And to assign titles based on any fraction of history is to reward the last land seizures that are not rectified. The second fundamental problem with the position of the homesteading libertarians is that, even if there were previously unsettled land to be allocated, say a new continent emerging from the ocean, first grabbing would make no sense as a criterion for allocating land. It would be inefficient, for one thing, as people stampeded to do whatever was necessary to establish their claims. But that is not decisive because, if we are concerned with justice, it might be necessary for us to tolerate inefficiency. But the homesteading libertarian view makes no sense in terms of justice. "I get it all because I got here first," isn't justice. Justice -- the balancing of the scales -- is the geoist position, "I get exclusive access to this natural opportunity because I have left natural opportunities of equal value for you." (How one compares, in practice, the value of different natural opportunities is a bit complex. If you really want to know, you can invite me back for another lecture.)
Justice is thus a regime in which persons have the
greatest possible individual liberty, and all acknowledge
an obligation to share equally the value of natural
opportunities. Justice is economic reform--the abolition
of all taxes on labor and capital, the acceptance of
individual responsibility, the creation of institutions
that will provide equal sharing the value of natural
opportunities. ...
Read the entire
article
Mason Gaffney: The Taxable Capacity of Land Another attractive feature of land taxation is its interesting positive effect on the economic base of a city. It strengthens it by its tendency to hit absentee owners harder than resident owners. The land fraction in real estate is generally highest in the CBD of any city, so that is a favorite place for absentees to buy and hold. They like the steady income, and the "trophy" quality. The surplus in real estate is what attracts outside buyers, and land is what yields the surplus. About 2/3 of downtown Los Angeles is owned by non-resident aliens, for example. In a more workaday city, Milwaukee, the absentee owners consist of former residents, or their heirs, who grew too rich to abide the harsh winters. Consider the effect on your balance of payments. When you get more tax money from absentees, money that used to flow to Tehran, Zurich, or Palm Beach now flows into your local treasury to pay your local teachers and city workers, and relieve your builders and building managers. In this way taxing land actually acts to undergird the value of its own base. ... Read the whole article Jeff Smith: Share Rent, Transform Society
Frank Stilwell and Kirrily Jordan: The Political Economy of Land: Putting Henry George in His Place
Peter Barnes: Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 2: A Short History of Capitalism (pages 15-32)
Peter Barnes: Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 8: Sharing Culture (pages 117-134)
Robert H. Browne: Abraham Lincoln and the Men of His Time
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Wealth and Want
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... because democracy alone hasn't yet led to a society
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