Tax Administrability
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
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. ...
f. The Single Tax Retains Rent for Common
Use.
To retain Rent for common use it is not necessary to
abolish land-titles, nor to let land out to the highest
bidder, nor to invent some new mechanism of taxation, nor
in any other way to directly change existing modes of
holding land for use, or existing machinery for
collecting public revenues. "Great changes can be best
brought about under old forms."109 Let land be held
nominally as it is now. Let taxes be collected by the
same kind of machinery as now. But abolish all taxes
except those that fall upon actual and potential Rent,
that is to say, upon land values.
If that were done it is doubtful if land-owners could
any longer confiscate enough Rent to be worth the
trouble. Even though some surplus were still kept by
them, it would be so much more easy to secure Wealth by
working for it than by confiscating Rent to private use,
to say nothing of its being so much more respectable,
that speculation in land values would practically be
abandoned. At any rate, the question of a surplus —
Rent in excess of the requirements of the community
— may be readily determined when the principle that
Rent justly belongs to the community and Wages to the
individual shall have been recognized by society in the
adoption of the Single Tax. 110
110. Thomas G. Shearman, Esq., of
New York, author of the famous magazine article on "Who
Owns the United States," estimates that sixty-five per
cent of the present annual value of the land in the
United States would pay all the present expenses of
American government — federal, state, county, and
municipal. ... read the book
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894) — Appendix: FAQ
Q8. What would be the expense of collecting the
single tax as compared with that of collecting present
taxes?
A. Much less. It is easier to assess fairly, and easier
to collect fully; the machinery of assessment and
collection would be simpler and cheaper, and it would not
enable first payers to collect the tax with profits upon
it from ultimate payers.
... read the
book
Bill Batt: Painless
Taxation
Abstract Real tax reform could
do away with those taxes that are resented by the large
proportion of our population. We could replace all taxes
on wages and on interest by instead taxing economic rent.
Rent is windfall income; it is income that arises not
from the efforts of any person or corporation; it comes
about as a surplus gain from common social enterprise.
There is ample moral warrant for society to lay claim to
that which it has created, as well as to that which no
individual or party has earned. Analysis increasingly
makes clear that economic rent in all its forms is far
larger than official government figures indicate; in fact
it is likely sufficient to supplant all current taxes on
labor and capital (wages and interest) which are
acknowledged to have so many negative effects. Recovering
economic rent in all its manifestations by taxing its
various bases actually can foster economic performance
and yield other benefits that make it the natural source
of revenue for governments. Such a tax is essentially
painless. ...
Tax Principles
The starting points should be the lessons that have
been learned over the course of the past three hundred
and more years about what is a good tax. Most basic
textbooks in public finance enumerate them in very clear
form, and they constitute benchmarks against which to
measure the soundness of any particular tax. They are
listed as few as three or as many as eight such
principles but little disagreement exists as to their
substance, regardless of ideology or government. Most
commonly enumerated are neutrality, efficiency, equity,
administrability, simplicity, stability,
sufficiency.[3] Tax theorists
typically measure revenue structures according to any or
all of these criteria: ...
Administrability refers to the ease
with which a tax can be administered and collected. Taxes
which distort the economy are inefficient but so are
taxes that cost lots to administer. This is measured not
only in the direct costs of tax avoidance and accounting
expenses, but in the level of evasion and cheating, and
by the cost of government auditing and policing. When the
taxpaying public perceives that a tax is easily evaded,
cumbersome, and unfair, it loses its legitimacy and calls
government itself into question. ... read the whole
article
Bill Batt: The
Merits of Site Value Taxation
Administrability refers to
the ease with which a tax can be administered and
collected. Taxes which distort the economy are
inefficient as are taxes that cost lots to administer.
This is measured not only in the direct costs of tax
avoidance and accounting expenses, but in the level of
evasion and cheating, and by the cost of government
auditing and policing.16 When the taxpaying public
perceives that a tax is easily evaded, cumbersome, and
unfair, it loses its legitimacy and calls government
itself into question.
16Alan Durning notes in
his book Tax Shift (1998, p. 17), that "Complying [with
the personal income tax alone] takes Americans 5 billion
hours each year. For every dollar raised, U.S. taxpayers
spend nine cents obeying the law. Cheating is widespread;
roughly one-fifth of income goes
unreported.
This is why the principle of simplicity is important: the more complex the
tax design, the more lawyers and accountants will find
loopholes, encourage the appearance of unfairness, and
drive up the cost of its administration. With simple
taxes other parties cannot avoid paying their fair share,
thereby enhancing the legitimacy and hence the compliance
of the tax system. ... Read the
whole piece
see also Bill Batt: How
Our Towns Got That Way (1996 speech)
Charles T. Root — Not a Single Tax! (1925)
The proverb "There is nothing sure but Death and
Taxes," is at once a recognition of the tendency to
change in all human affairs, and a triumphant assertion
of Conservatism that there remain at least two immutable
things.
But the tooth of time which respects no mortal
institution is boldly at work on even this proverb and
threatens to remove Taxes from the meagre list of things
permanent. It is the purpose of this booklet to give some
account of this startling phenomenon. With this in view
let us lay down and briefly defend the proposition that
—
Taxation as a means of meeting the proper
expenses of government is oppressive, unjust,
inexpedient and unnecessary.
This proposition will strike a good many readers as
absurd, but all must at least recognize the timeliness of
the topic and the importance of any contribution to the
discussion of a subject which is agitating the whole
civilized world, for the methods, subjects and amounts of
taxation are among the pressing problems of every
country.
The most obvious question which arises in the mind of
anyone who reads for the first time the proposition above
laid down is this:
"If taxation is unnecessary, what is to take its
place? Government and its functions are increasingly
expensive. They require a lot of money. Where is it to
come from?" The answer may be placed in the form of a
second proposition:
Every community, whatever its political name and
extent — village, city, state or province or nation
— has its own normal, unfailing income, growing
with the growth of the community and always adequate to
meet necessary governmental expenditure.
To explain: Every community has an indefeasible
original right to the land on which it exists, and to all
the natural, unmodified properties and advantages of that
particular area of the earth's surface. To this land in
its natural state, undrained, unfenced, unfertilized,
unplanted and unoccupied, including its waters, its
contents and its location, every individual in the
community (which may consist of any political unit
selected) has an equal right, while all the individuals
together have a joint right to the value for use which
society has conferred upon these natural advantages.
This value for use is known as "Land Value," or by the
not particularly descriptive but generally adopted name
of "Economic Rent." ...
An authority on municipal taxation estimates the
present economic rent of the land embraced in the City of
New York at from $350,000,000 to $400,000,000. Assuming
the lesser of these figures and adding the receipts from
licenses, fees and fines, New York City should receive,
of her own income, enough to pay all her own legitimate
bills, to make her proper contributions to county and
state and build a new subway or its equivalent every
year.
And this with nobody paying a dollar of taxes, or, if
we except the fines, a dollar that he was not ready and
glad to pay for his own advantage.
We repeat, this is not taxation; but for the sake of
those who cannot grasp the idea of public revenue without
taxation, let us state the matter in their own
language.
Think of a tax which both assesses itself and collects
itself, which burdens no one, which is paid voluntarily,
and only by those who do so for their own profit or other
advantage. Compare this with our present system of taxes,
which everyone despises, which can be collected in full
only from the very scrupulous and from the helpless, from
trust funds of widows and orphans, or from estates which
lie naked before the tax gatherer on the records of
court; a system which drives men of property from state
to state and town to town in flight from the assessor,
and well-nigh forces many worthy citizens to practices of
evasion which must make it hard for them to look into
their own mirrors during the season for "Correction of
Assessments;" there can be but one verdict upon such
comparison. ...
The amount of economic rent which is taken by the
community for public purposes is not a tax paid by the
land-holder, but whatever amount of such rent is left in
his hands is a gift to him by the community, or else is
the compensation which the community allows him for
acting as its agent and collector in the matter of
economic rent.
This is an important distinction which is necessary to
make the facts and the relations clear. It is also highly
expedient. Taxation and the idea behind it are abhorrent
to men. As a result of long experience the very word
Taxation connotes to them injustice, oppression, and
antagonism between the individual and the community. To
the mass "The Single Tax" means simply rolling into one
the manifold injustices and oppressions of the present
complex system. Only slow headway can be made by a
proposition which at first sight seems to promise merely
to shift the burden from one shoulder to the other.
But make it plain to the wayfaring man that taxation
can be abolished and will be abolished whenever the
voters of any political unit so decree, and a force of
hope and purpose will be liberated which must bring
nearer the time when the things that are the community's
will be rendered to it, and the things which are the
individual's will be left in his unmolested possession.
The watchword of our friends the Georgeites is "A Single
Tax." The true slogan is "Not a Single Tax!"; and the
triumph of the cause behind that slogan would cut more of
the taproots of poverty, vice and social unrest than any
other progressive step which is a legislative
possibility. ... read
the whole article
Fred E. Foldvary — The Ultimate Tax Reform: Public
Revenue from Land Rent
Nevertheless, many economists have recognized and
supported land value taxation for public finance.
Léon Walras, known for his development of
general-equilibrium theory, wrote land rent provides the
best means for funding a state.22 Knut Wicksell, a
Swedish economist who integrated classical, neoclassical,
and Austrian economic thought, wrote, “the general
economic development of the community” increased
the value of its land, and he proposed taxing such
increases.23 Contemporary economists who have written
favorably about land value taxation include Kris Feder,
Mason Gaffney, C. Lowell Harris, Fred Harrison, Nicolaus
Tideman, the late William Vickrey (winner of the 1996
Nobel Prize in economics), and myself.
Other economists have opposed the public collection of
rent. William Fischel (1998) accuses land value taxation
of high administrative costs in “the knife-edge
goal” of “getting almost all land
rent.” He does not say why there has to be such an
impossible “knife-edge goal.” Others claim
the administrative costs of property taxes are greater
than for income taxes. But even if this is so, real
property taxes already exist, so eliminating income and
sales taxes can only reduce total tax-collecting costs,
not increase them. ...
Costs of collection and
administration
Consider the effect of abolishing income taxes and
sales taxes, replacing them with a land value tax. There
would no longer be any tax audits. There would be no
record-keeping for taxes. You, the landowner, would
instead get a monthly bill, like you get for utilities.
You would simply pay the bill or have it automatically
deducted from some financial account. At the same time,
government would avoid the high cost of processing
complex accounts and keeping individual tax records. It
would only need to keep real estate records and assess
the land values, both of which it already does for
property tax purposes.
Those who are retired or temporarily have little cash
income would be able to defer taxes by accumulating liens
on the real estate until they die or sell the property,
as is commonly done today with real estate taxes.
If you thought the assessment of the land value was
too high, you could appeal, as one can today’s real
estate taxes. The land value assessments would be public
records available on the Internet, unlike income tax
records, which are quite properly hidden from public
view. You could easily compare your assessment with those
of your neighbors. If the appeals board rejected your
claim, the assessment could be appealed to a jury, if you
were willing to pay the cost of the jury’s
decision.
Nobody would be sent to prison for tax evasion,
because there would be no tax evasion. A non-payer would
lose title to his land or lose the protective services of
government, depending on the local enforcement practice.
Property taxes are already being assessed and collected
by counties in the U.S. A complete shift to the taxation
of land values would not increase these costs, but would
eliminate the expenses involved in collecting sales and
income taxes. ... read
the whole document
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