Underused Land
When an urban lot is left vacant, or used as a parking
lot, or left with an empty building on it, or operated
with a one- or two-story building when the surrounding
neighborhood is five-story or ten-story buildings, all
those who live or workin the area must expend their
footsteps or purchased energy to get around the underused
property. It isn't supplying services the neighborhood
needs. Local government still pays for police and fire
protection, and city water and sewer pipe goes by the
property.
When a downtown acre is properly developed, ten or
more acres on the fringe can be protected from premature
development, and instead of sprawling or growing
hopscotch into agricultural land or wilderness, the town
or city can remain compact and dense.
Why do urban lots remain underused? The owner is
waiting for his "ship to come in." He hopes or expects
that at some point the city — his fellow taxpayers
— will invest in the area, increasing his land's
value and allowing him to reap a windfall gain. And as
long as his property taxes are low, his holding costs are
not enough to bother him. He can afford to wait. Our
incentives are perverse: we don't charge him much in
property taxes compared to his neighbor who has developed
his land well.
How do we improve the situation? Reduce the tax rate
on the buildings, and nudge it upwards on the land value.
The disincentives to improving the property go down, and
the incentives for either improving the land or selling
it to someone who will improve it rise. Who wins? The
entire neighborhood, which gets the benefit of some
useful addition to the area. The environment. Those who
want jobs. Those who want to open a business. Who loses?
The fellow who is waiting for the rest of the neighbors
to make his property valuable, or wants to leave his
heirs a nice present.
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, now taxes its land at 6
times the millage rate it taxes its buildings, and has
experienced many kinds of gains as a result. Sixteen
other towns and cities in Pennsylvania also tax land
values more heavily than buildings, and have found it
beneficial.
H.G. Brown: Significant Paragraphs
from Henry George's Progress & Poverty, Chapter 4: Land
Speculation Causes Reduced Wages
If the land of superior quality as to location were
always fully used before land of inferior quality were
resorted to, no vacant lots would be left as a city
extended, nor would we find miserable shanties in the
midst of costly buildings. These lots, some of them
extremely valuable, are withheld from use, or from the
full use to which they might be put, because their
owners, not being able or not wishing to improve them,
prefer, in expectation of the advance of land values, to
hold them for a higher rate than could now be obtained
from those willing to improve them. And, in consequence
of this land being withheld from use, or from the full
use of which it is capable, the margin of the city is
pushed away so much farther from the center.
But when we reach the limits of the growing city the
actual margin of building, which corresponds to the
margin of cultivation in agriculture — we shall not
find the land purchasable at its value for agricultural
purposes, as it would be were rent determined simply by
present requirements; but we shall find that for a long
distance beyond the city, land bears a speculative value,
based upon the belief that it will be required in the
future for urban purposes, and that to reach the point at
which land can be purchased at a price not based upon
urban rent, we must go very far beyond the actual margin
of urban use. ... read the whole
chapter
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. ...
And will not the community gain by thus refusing to
kill the goose that lays the golden eggs; by thus
refraining from muzzling the ox that treadeth out the
corn; by thus leaving to industry, and thrift, and skill,
their natural reward, full and unimpaired? For there is
to the community also a natural reward. The law of
society is, each for all, as well as all for each. No one
can keep to himself the good he may do, any more than he
can keep the bad. Every productive enterprise, besides
its return to those who undertake it, yields collateral
advantages to others. If a man plant a fruit tree, his
gain is that he gathers the fruit in its time and season.
But in addition to his gain, there is a gain to the whole
community. Others than the owner are benefited by the
increased supply of fruit; the birds which it shelters
fly far and wide; the rain which it helps to attract
falls not alone on his field; and, even to the eye which
rests upon it from a distance, it brings a sense of
beauty. And so with everything else. The building of a
house, a factory, a ship, or a railroad, benefits others
besides those who get the direct profits. ...
And to shift the burden of taxation from production
and exchange to the value or rent of land would not
merely be to give new stimulus to the production of
wealth; it would be to open new opportunities.
For under this system no one would care to
hold land unless to use it, and land now withheld from
use would everywhere be thrown open to
improvement.
The selling price of land would fall; land
speculation would receive its death blow; land
monopolization would no longer pay.* Millions and
millions of acres from which settlers are now shut out by
high prices would be abandoned by their present owners or
sold to settlers upon nominal terms. And this not merely
on the frontiers, but within what are now considered well
settled districts.
* The fact that a tax on the rental value
of land cannot be shifted by landowners to tenants,
though recognized by all competent economists, is
sometimes a stumbling block to persons untrained in
economics. The reason such a tax cannot be shifted is
that it cannot limit the supply of land. Landowners are
presumably, before the tax is laid, charging all the
rent they can get. There is nothing in a tax on the
rental value of land to make tenants willing to pay
more or to make land more difficult to hire. On the
contrary, more land will be on the market, because of
such a tax, rather than less, since the tax puts a
heavy penalty on holding land out of use and unimproved
for mere speculation. The competition of former vacant
land speculators to get their land used will make land
cheaper to rent rather than more expensive. And since
only the net rent remaining after the tax is subtracted
is capitalized into salable value, land will be very
much cheaper to buy. H.G.B.
And it must be remembered that this would
apply, not merely to agricultural land, but to all land.
Mineral land would be thrown open to use, just as
agricultural land; and in the heart of a city no one
could afford to keep land from its most profitable use,
or on the outskirts to demand more for it than the use to
which it could at the time be put would warrant.
Everywhere that land had attained a value, taxation,
instead of operating, as now, as a fine upon improvement,
would operate to force improvement. Whoever
planted an orchard, or sowed a field, or built a house,
or erected a manufactory, no matter how costly, would
have no more to pay in taxes than if he kept so much land
idle.
- The monopolist of agricultural land would be taxed
as much as though his land were covered with houses and
barns, with crops and with stock.
- The owner of a vacant city lot would have to pay as
much for the privilege of keeping other people off of
it until he wanted to use it, as his neighbor who has a
fine house upon his lot.
- It would cost as much to keep a row of tumble-down
shanties upon valuable land as though it were covered
with a grand hotel or a pile of great warehouses filled
with costly goods.
Thus, the bonus that wherever labor is most productive
must now be paid before labor can be exerted would
disappear.
- The farmer would not have to pay out half his
means, or mortgage his labor for years, in order to
obtain land to cultivate;
- the builder of a city homestead would not have to
lay out as much for a small lot as for the house he
puts upon it*;
- the company that proposed to erect a manufactory
would not have to expend a great part of its capital
for a site.
- And what would be paid from year to year to the
state would be in lieu of all the taxes now levied upon
improvements, machinery, and stock. ... read the whole
chapter
Henry George: Why The
Landowner Cannot Shift The Tax on Land Values (1887)
Here, let us say, is a lot on the principal select
street of a city having an annual or rental value of
$10,000. Such a lot would now command a selling price of
some $250,000. An increased tax upon Land Values would
not reduce its rental value, except as it might have an
effect in forcing into use unoccupied land at a greater
distance from the center of the city. But as less of this
rental value could be retained by the owner, the selling
price would be diminished. And if a tax on Land Values
could be imposed with such theoretical perfection that
the whole rental value would be taken by the community,
the owner would lose both his income from its present
value and any expectation of profit from its future
increase in value. While it would be still worth as much
as before to the user, it would be worth nothing at all
to the mere owner. Instead of having a selling value of
$250,000, it would not sell for anything, since what the
user paid for the privilege of using it would go in full
to the community. Under a tax of this kind, even though
it could not be imposed with theoretical nicety, the mere
owner of land would disappear. No one would care to own
land unless he wanted to improve or use it. ...
read the whole article
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural
Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation
(1917)
Q41. Why would the single tax be an improvement
upon present systems of taxation?
A. Because: (1) The taking for public uses of that value
which justly belongs to the public is not a tax; (2) it
would relieve all workers and capitalists of those taxes
by which they are now unjustly burdened, and (3) it would
make unprofitable the holding of land idle.
Q50. How could the landowner escape the alleged
burden of an increase in his land tax?
A. Simply by assuming the legitimate role of a model
landlord, by putting his land to suitable use, in
providing for tenants at lowest possible price the best
accommodations and facilities appropriate to the
situation that money can buy.
Q52. In old cities, it is not nearly all the land
in use?
A. About one half the area of New York and Chicago is
classed by the assessors as vacant. In Boston the
proportion is: occupied, 45 percent; vacant, 43 percent;
marsh, 12 percent. ... read the whole
article
Clarence Darrow: How to Abolish Unfair
Taxation (1913)
The single tax theory is that the public should take
all the value of land, as it was made by the public. Land
value goes up because of population, and not because of
the owner of the title deed, and the value should be
taken by the community, and thus create a natural fund
from which to make improvements for the comfort of all,
and thus make life easier. It would abolish poverty, that
crime of the century, which has always come with
civilization; inequality of wealth, which comes as the
world grows older, and which we have never been able to
cure, because man wants to hold what he cannot
use, and pass on to future generations what they will not
use. ... read the whole
speech
Upton Sinclair: The
Consequences of Land Speculation are Tenantry and Debt on
the Farms, and Slums and Luxury in the Cities
I know of a woman — I have never had the
pleasure of making her acquaintance, because she lives in
a lunatic asylum, which does not happen to be on my
visiting list. This woman has been mentally incompetent
from birth. She is well taken care of, because her father
left her when he died the income of a large farm on the
outskirts of a city. The city has since grown and the
land is now worth, at conservative estimate, about twenty
million dollars. It is covered with office buildings, and
the greater part of the income, which cannot be spent by
the woman, is piling up at compound interest. The woman
enjoys good health, so she may be worth a hundred million
dollars before she dies.
I choose this case because it is one about which there
can be no disputing; this woman has never been able to do
anything to earn that twenty million dollars. And if a
visitor from Mars should come down to study the
situation, which would he think was most insane, the
unfortunate woman, or the society which compels thousands
of people to wear themselves to death in order to pay her
the income of twenty million dollars?
The fact that this woman is insane makes it easy to
see that she is not entitled to the "unearned increment"
of the land she owns. But how about all the other people
who have bought up and are holding for speculation the
most desirable land? The value of this land increases,
not because of anything these owners do — not
because of any useful service they render to the
community — but purely because the community as a
whole is crowding into that neighborhood and must have
use of the land.
The speculator who bought this land thinks that he
deserves the increase, because he guessed the fact that
the city was going to grow that way. But it seems clear
enough that his skill in guessing which way the community
was going to grow, however useful that skill may be to
himself, is not in any way useful to the community. The
man may have planted trees, or built roads, and put in
sidewalks and sewers; all that is useful work, and for
that he should be paid. But should he be paid for
guessing what the rest of us were going to need?
Before you answer, consider the consequences of this
guessing game. The consequences of land speculation are
tenantry and debt on the farms, and slums and luxury in
the cities. A great part of the necessary land is held
out of use, and so the value of all land continually
increases, until the poor man can no longer own a home.
The value of farm land also increases; so year by year
more independent farmers are dispossessed, because they
cannot pay interest on their mortgages. So the land
becomes a place of serfdom, that land described by the
poet, "where wealth accumulates and men decay." The great
cities fill up with festering slums, and a small class of
idle parasites are provided with enormous fortunes, which
they do not have to earn, and which they cannot
intelligently spend. ... read the whole
article
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
d. Effect of Confiscating Rent to Private
Use.
By giving Rent to individuals society ignores this
most just law, 99 thereby creating social disorder and
inviting social disease. Upon society alone, therefore,
and not upon divine Providence which has provided
bountifully, nor upon the disinherited poor, rests the
responsibility for poverty and fear of poverty.
99. "Whatever dispute arouses the
passions of men, the conflict is sure to rage, not so
much as to the question 'Is it wise?' as to the
question 'Is it right?'
"This tendency of popular discussions to
take an ethical form has a cause. It springs from a law
of the human mind; it rests upon a vague and
instinctive recognition of what is probably the deepest
truth we can grasp. That alone is wise which is just;
that alone is enduring which is right. In the narrow
scale of individual actions and individual life this
truth may be often obscured, but in the wider field of
national life it everywhere stands out.
"I bow to this arbitrament, and accept
this test." — Progress and Poverty, book vii, ch.
i.
The reader who has been deceived into
believing that Mr. George's proposition is in any
respect unjust, will find profit in a perusal of the
entire chapter from which the foregoing extract is
taken.
Let us try to trace the connection by means of a
chart, beginning with the white spaces on page 68. As
before, the first-comers take possession of the best
land. But instead of leaving for others what they do not
themselves need for use, as in the previous
illustrations, they appropriate the whole space, using
only part, but claiming ownership of the rest. We may
distinguish the used part with red color, and that which
is appropriated without use with blue. Thus: [chart]
But what motive is there for appropriating more of the
space than is used? Simply that the appropriators may
secure the pecuniary benefit of future social growth.
What will enable them to secure that? Our system of
confiscating Rent from the community that earns it, and
giving it to land-owners who, as such, earn
nothing.100
100. It is reported from Iowa that a few
years ago a workman in that State saw a meteorite fall,
and. securing possession of it after much digging, he
was offered $105 by a college for his "find." But the
owner of the land on which the meteorite fell claimed
the money, and the two went to law about it. After an
appeal to the highest court of the State, it was
finally decided that neither by right of discovery, nor
by right of labor, could the workman have the money,
because the title to the meteorite was in the man who
owned the land upon which it fell.
Observe the effect now upon Rent and Wages. When other
men come, instead of finding half of the best land still
common and free, as in the corresponding chart on page
68, they find all of it owned, and are obliged either to
go upon poorer land or to buy or rent from owners of the
best. How much will they pay for the best? Not more than
1, if they want it for use and not to hold for a higher
price in the future, for that represents the full
difference between its productiveness and the
productiveness of the next best. But if the first-comers,
reasoning that the next best land will soon be scarce and
theirs will then rise in value, refuse to sell or to rent
at that valuation, the newcomers must resort to land of
the second grade, though the best be as yet only partly
used. Consequently land of the first grade commands Rent
before it otherwise would.
As the sellers' price, under these circumstances, is
arbitrary it cannot be stated in the chart; but the
buyers' price is limited by the superiority of the best
land over that which can be had for nothing, and the
chart may be made to show it: [chart]
And now, owing to the success of the appropriators of
the best land in securing more than their fellows for the
same expenditure of labor force, a rush is made for
unappropriated land. It is not to use it that it is
wanted, but to enable its appropriators to put Rent into
their own pockets as soon as growing demand for land
makes it valuable.101 We may, for illustration, suppose
that all the remainder of the second space and the whole
of the third are thus appropriated, and note the effect:
[chart]
At this point Rent does not increase nor Wages fall,
because there is no increased demand for land for use.
The holding of inferior land for higher prices, when
demand for use is at a standstill, is like owning lots in
the moon — entertaining, perhaps, but not
profitable. But let more land be needed for use, and
matters promptly assume a different appearance. The new
labor must either go to the space that yields but 1, or
buy or rent from owners of better grades, or hire out.
The effect would be the same in any case. Nobody for the
given expenditure of labor force would get more than 1;
the surplus of products would go to landowners as Rent,
either directly in rent payments, or indirectly through
lower Wages. Thus: [chart]
101. The text speaks of Rent only as a
periodical or continuous payment — what would be
called "ground rent." But actual or potential Rent may
always be, and frequently is, capitalized for the
purpose of selling the right to enjoy it, and it is to
selling value that we usually refer when dealing in
land.
Land which has the power of yielding Rent
to its owner will have a selling value, whether it be
used or not, and whether Rent is actually derived from
it or not. This selling value will be the
capitalization of its present or prospective power of
producing Rent. In fact, much the larger proportion of
laud that has a selling value is wholly or partly
unused, producing no Rent at all, or less than it would
if fully used. This condition is expressed in the chart
by the blue color.
"The capitalized value of land is the
actuarial 'discounted' value of all the net incomes
which it is likely to afford, allowance being made on
the one hand for all incidental expenses, including
those of collecting the rents, and on the other for its
mineral wealth, its capabilities of development for any
kind of business, and its advantages, material, social,
and aesthetic, for the purposes of residence." —
Marshall's Prin., book vi, ch. ix, sec. 9.
"The value of land is commonly expressed
as a certain number of times the current money rental,
or in other words, a certain 'number of years'
purchase' of that rental; and other things being equal,
it will be the higher the more important these direct
gratifications are, as well as the greater the chance
that they and the money income afforded by the land
will rise." — Id., note.
"Value . . . means not utility, not any
quality inhering in the thing itself, but a quality
which gives to the possession of a thing the power of
obtaining other things, in return for it or for its
use. . . Value in this sense — the usual sense
— is purely relative. It exists from and is
measured by the power of obtaining things for things by
exchanging them. . . Utility is necessary to value, for
nothing can be valuable unless it has the quality of
gratifying some physical or mental desire of man,
though it be but a fancy or whim. But utility of itself
does not give value. . . If we ask ourselves the reason
of . . . variations in . . . value . . . we see that
things having some form of utility or desirability, are
valuable or not valuable, as they are hard or easy to
get. And if we ask further, we may see that with most
of the things that have value this difficulty or ease
of getting them, which determines value, depends on the
amount of labor which must be expended in producing
them ; i.e., bringing them into the place, form and
condition in which they are desired. . . Value is
simply an expression of the labor required for the
production of such a thing. But there are some things
as to which this is not so clear. Land is not produced
by labor, yet land, irrespective of any improvements
that labor has made on it, often has value. . . Yet a
little examination will show that such facts are but
exemplifications of the general principle, just as the
rise of a balloon and the fall of a stone both
exemplify the universal law of gravitation. . . The
value of everything produced by labor, from a pound of
chalk or a paper of pins to the elaborate structure and
appurtenances of a first-class ocean steamer, is
resolvable on analysis into an equivalent of the labor
required to produce such a thing in form and place;
while the value of things not produced by labor, but
nevertheless susceptible of ownership, is in the same
way resolvable into an equivalent of the labor which
the ownership of such a thing enables the owner to
obtain or save." —
Perplexed Philosopher, ch. v.
The figure 1 in parenthesis, as an item of Rent,
indicates potential Rent. Labor would give that much for
the privilege of using the space, but the owners hold out
for better terms; therefore neither Rent nor Wages is
actually produced, though but for this both might be.
In this chart, notwithstanding that but little space
is used, indicated with red, Wages are reduced to the
same low point by the mere appropriation of space,
indicated with blue, that they would reach if all the
space above the poorest were fully used. It thereby
appears that under a system which confiscates Rent to
private uses, the demand for land for speculative
purposes becomes so great that Wages fall to a minimum
long before they would if land were appropriated only for
use.
In illustrating the effect of confiscating Rent to
private use we have as yet ignored the element of social
growth. Let us now assume as before (page 73), that
social growth increases the productive power of the given
expenditure of labor force to 100 when applied to the
best land, 50 when applied to the next best, 10 to the
next, 3 to the next, and 1 to the poorest. Labor would
not be benefited now, as it appeared to be when on page
73 we illustrated the appropriation of land for use only,
although much less land is actually used. The prizes
which expectation of future social growth dangles before
men as the rewards of owning land, would raise demand so
as to make it more than ever difficult to get land. All
of the fourth grade would be taken up in expectation of
future demand; and "surplus labor" would be crowded out
to the open space that originally yielded nothing, but
which in consequence of increased labor power now yields
as much as the poorest closed space originally yielded,
namely, 1 to the given expenditure of labor force.102
Wages would then be reduced to the present productiveness
of the open space. Thus: [chart]
102. The paradise to which the youth of
our country have so long been directed in the advice,
"Go West, young man, go West," is truthfully described
in "Progress and Poverty," book iv, ch. iv, as follows
:
"The man who sets out from the eastern
seaboard in search of the margin of cultivation,
where he may obtain land without paying rent, must,
like the man who swam the river to get a drink, pass
for long distances through half-titled farms, and
traverse vast areas of virgin soil, before he reaches
the point where land can be had free of rent —
i.e., by homestead entry or preemption."
If we assume that 1 for the given expenditure of labor
force is the least that labor can take while exerting the
same force, the downward movement of Wages will be here
held in equilibrium. They cannot fall below 1; but
neither can they rise above it, no matter how much
productive power may increase, so long as it pays to hold
land for higher values. Some laborers would continually
be pushed back to land which increased productive power
would have brought up in productiveness from 0 to 1, and
by perpetual competition for work would so regulate the
labor market that the given expenditure of labor force,
however much it produced, could nowhere secure more than
1 in Wages.103 And this tendency would persist until some
labor was forced upon land which, despite increase in
productive power, would not yield the accustomed living
without increase of labor force. Competition for work
would then compel all laborers to increase their
expenditure of labor force, and to do it over and over
again as progress went on and lower and lower grades of
land were monopolized, until human endurance could go no
further.104 Either that, or they would be obliged to
adapt themselves to a lower scale of living.105
103. Henry Fawcett, in his work on
"Political Economy," book ii, ch. iii, observes with
reference to improvements in agricultural implements
which diminish the expense of cultivation, that they do
not increase the profits of the farmer or the wages of
his laborers, but that "the landlord will receive in
addition to the rent already paid to him, all that is
saved in the expense of cultivation." This is true not
alone of improvements in agriculture, but also of
improvements in all other branches of industry.
104. "The cause which limits speculation
in commodities, the tendency of increasing price to
draw forth additional supplies, cannot limit the
speculative advance in land values, as land is a fixed
quantity, which human agency can neither increase nor
diminish; but there is nevertheless a limit to the
price of land, in the minimum required by labor and
capital as the condition of engaging in production. If
it were possible to continuously reduce wages until
zero were reached, it would be possible to continuously
increase rent until it swallowed up the whole produce.
But as wages cannot be permanently reduced below the
point at which laborers will consent to work and
reproduce, nor interest below the point at which
capital will be devoted to production, there is a limit
which restrains the speculative advance of rent. Hence,
speculation cannot have the same scope to advance rent
in countries where wages and interest are already near
the minimum, as in countries where they are
considerably above it. Yet that there is in all
progressive countries a constant tendency in the
speculative advance of rent to overpass the limit where
production would cease, is, I think, shown by recurring
seasons of industrial paralysis." — Progress and
Poverty, book iv, ch. iv.
105. As Puck once put it, "the man who
makes two blades of grass to grow where but one grew
before, must not be surprised when ordered to 'keep off
the grass.' "
They in fact do both, and the incidental disturbances
of general readjustment are what we call "hard times."
106 These culminate in forcing unused land into the
market, thereby reducing Rent and reviving industry. Thus
increase of labor force, a lowering of the scale of
living, and depression of Rent, co-operate to bring on
what we call "good times." But no sooner do "good times"
return than renewed demands for land set in, Rent rises
again, Wages fall again, and "hard times" duly reappear.
The end of every period of "hard times" finds Rent higher
and Wages lower than at the end of the previous
period.107
106. "That a speculative advance in rent
or land values invariably precedes each of these
seasons of industrial depression is everywhere clear.
That they bear to each other the relation of cause and
effect, is obvious to whoever considers the necessary
relation between land and labor." — Progress and
Poverty, book v, ch. i.
107. What are called "good times" reach a
point at which an upward land market sets in. From that
point there is a downward tendency of wages (or a rise
in the cost of living, which is the same thing) in all
departments of labor and with all grades of laborers.
This tendency continues until the fictitious values of
land give way. So long as the tendency is felt only by
that class which is hired for wages, it is poverty
merely; when the same tendency is felt by the class of
labor that is distinguished as "the business interests
of the country," it is "hard times." And "hard times"
are periodical because land values, by falling, allow
"good times " to set it, and by rising with "good
times" bring "hard times" on again. The effect of "hard
times" may be overcome, without much, if any, fall in
land values, by sufficient increase in productive power
to overtake the fictitious value of land.
The dishonest and disorderly system under which
society confiscates Rent from common to individual uses,
produces this result. That maladjustment is the
fundamental cause of poverty. And progress, so long as
the maladjustment continues, instead of tending to remove
poverty as naturally it should, actually generates and
intensifies it. Poverty persists with increase of
productive power because land values, when Rent is
privately appropriated, tend to even greater increase.
There can be but one outcome if this continues: for
individuals suffering and degradation, and for society
destruction. ...
Q32. Is not ownership of land necessary to induce
its improvement? Does not history show that private
ownership is a step in advance of common
ownership?
A. No. Private use was doubtless a step in advance of
common use. And because private use seems to us to have
been brought about under the institution of private
ownership, private ownership appears to the superficial
to have been the real advance. But a little observation
and reflection will remove that impression. Private
ownership of land is not necessary to its private use.
And so far from inducing improvement, private ownership
retards it. When a man owns land he may accumulate wealth
by doing nothing with the land, simply allowing the
community to increase its value while he pays a merely
nominal tax, upon the plea that he gets no income from
the property. But when the possessor has to pay the value
of his land every year, as he would have to under the
single tax, and as ground renters do now, he must improve
his holding in order to profit by it. Private possession
of land, without profit except from use, promotes
improvement; private ownership, with profit regardless of
use, retards improvement. Every city in the world, in its
vacant lots, offers proof of the statement. It is the
lots that are owned, and not those that are held upon
ground-lease, that remain vacant.
Q44. Though some people have made money by owning
land, isn't it true that others have lost? And don't the
losses more than off-set the gains?
A. Possibly. But that has no bearing upon the question.
What men lose through investments in land, the community
does not gain; but what they gain the community does
lose. Therefore, as between land speculators and the
community, the losses cannot be charged against the
gains.
Q46. How can it be possible that speculative land
values cause business depressions when, as any business
man will tell you, the whole item of land value —
whether ground rent or interest on purchase money —
is one of the smallest items in every
business?
A. You overlook the fact that the item of speculative
rent is the only item which the business man does not get
back again. The cost of his goods, the expense of clerk
hire, the rent of his building, the wear and tear of
implements, are all received back, in the course of
normal business, in the prices of his goods. Even his
ground rent, to the extent that it is normal (i.e., what
it would be if the supply of land were determined alone
by land in use, and not affected by the land that is held
out of use for higher values), comes back to him in the
sense that his aggregate profits are that much greater
than they would be where ground rent was less. But the
extra ground rent which he is obliged to pay, in
consequence of the abnormal scarcity of land, is a dead
weight; it does not come back to him. Therefore, even if
infinitesimal in amount, as compared with the other
expenses of his business — and that is by no means
admitted — it is the one expense which may break a
thriving business down. Besides, it is not alone the
ground rent paid by the business man for his location
that bears down upon his business prosperity; the weight
of abnormally high land values in general presses upon
business in general, and by obstructing the flow of trade
forces the weaker business units to the wall. It is not
altogether safe to deduce general economic principles
from the ledgers of particular business houses.
Q59. How would you compensate the man who has
bought a lot in order to make a home upon it, but is not
yet able to build?
A. By letting him, when he is ready to build, have a
better lot for nothing. The single tax would do this by
discouraging the cornering of land which now makes all
good lots scarce. When land was no longer appropriated
except for use, and that would result from the operation
of the single tax, there would be an abundance of
building lots to be had for the taking, which would be
far more desirable than the kind to which men who cannot
afford to build homes now resort when they buy lots for a
home. ... read the
book
Charles T. Root — Not a Single Tax! (1925)
... But before this time the reader, unless he has
given previous attention to the subject, is full of
objections to the above doctrine: "How about the law?" he
is asking. "Hasn't a man the right to buy a piece of land
as cheaply as he can, to do what he pleases with it, and
hold on to it till he gets ready to sell?" The answer is
that at present he certainly has this statutory right,
which has been so long and so universally recognized that
most people suppose it to be not only a legal, but a real
or equitable right. A shrewd man, foreseeing the
direction of growth of population in a city, for example,
can buy a well-located block at a moderate figure from
some less far-seeing owner, can let it grow up to weeds,
fence it off against all comers and give it no further
attention except to pay the very small tax usually
imposed upon vacant land.
Meantime the increasing community builds up all around
it with homes, banks, stores, churches, schools, paving
and lighting the streets, giving police and fire
protection, etc., and at last comes to need this block so
urgently that the owner is fairly begged to sell it, at
three or ten or fifty times what it cost him. Quite often
the purchaser at this enormous advance is the very
community which has through its presence and the
expenditure of its taxes created practically the whole
value of the land in question!
It was said above that an individual has a statutory
right to pursue this very common course. That was an
error. The statement should have been that he has a
statutory wrong; for no disinterested person can follow
the course of land speculation as almost universally
practiced, without feeling its rank injustice.
...
An illustration has already been given of the case of
a piece of farm land. Let us take an example in a large
city. Let us take a corner lot centrally located in New
York City, the title to which lot is held by, say, Mr.
John William Rhinelastor. This lot was a part of an old
Dutch farm, and is an heirloom. It did not cost the
present owner anything, nor his father nor his
grandfather. There is a little old building on it, which
has always been rented at a figure ten times as large as
the taxes imposed, so that the owner has been handsomely
subsidized each year for storing his title-deeds during a
period of the city's growth in which the increase in
population and the expenditure of public money in that
neighborhood have raised the value of this corner
location to, say, two hundred times its early value.
About now, Mr. Rhinelastor decides that he will go
abroad to live, and can't be bothered with this piece of
property. But knowing that the pressure of population is
sure to increase and that the expenditure of public money
to the benefit of this land must continue, he will not
sell it. So he gives a twenty-one year lease to the
corner for, say, $20,000 a year net, with a privilege to
the lessee of renewals at advancing figures. The lessee
agrees to pay all taxes.
Now what is this net $20,000 a year, which will be
regularly remitted to Mr. Rhinelastor, in Europe or
wherever he may be, given in payment for? Not for the old
building — the first thing the lessee does is to
pull it down. Not for the land itself — it is all
rock, which has got to be blasted out as part of its
improvement.
Clearly it is paid for a location or site value, which
the community, and the community only, has built up and
paid for. In other words, the present $20,000 rental, and
the larger one which that location will command in later
years, is strictly a community product, and as such
belongs to the community and not to Mr. Rhinelastor.
...
Again, while it must be firmly insisted that the
economic rent is the rightful property of the community
and not of the landowner, the community would probably
never take it all. Communal ownership of land is not
desirable, even if it were practicable. Individual
ownership and management are best, and it is not at all
improper for the community to allow the owner something
for caring for the land to which he holds title, and for
collecting and transmitting to the treasury the economic
rent.
But — and right here is one of the prime
advantages of the abolition of taxation — Mr.
Rhinelastor, in order to get satisfactory return from his
land, must improve it. Unless he is satisfied with a
small income from it, to wit, the proportion of the
economic rent which the community chooses to leave in his
hands, he must put upon his land the best building the
location will warrant. The rents of this building will be
his in their entirety, not one dollar of them being taken
from him by taxation. If he is not prepared or not
willing to do this he would probably find it more
profitable, before he leaves the country, to sell the
land to some one of the many persons who are eager to
build upon it. It will always be salable, although not by
any means at present figures.
Now imagine for a moment the effect upon the
appearance of a city and upon the comfort of its
population which would result from the change of fiscal
policy which this article proposes. At present, a
tempting premium is placed upon keeping land unimproved
or inadequately improved, while a heavy penalty is
imposed upon improvement. Most land appreciates
constantly. All buildings depreciate from the moment of
completion. Yet the building is taxed equally with the
land.
What incentive does such a system offer the
speculative landowner to put up a commodious,
well-lighted modern structure in place of the old ruin
which now pays him so well? The old one cannot depreciate
much more, and while paying a trifling tax because of its
physical worthlessness, he is thereby enabled to collect
and pocket the economic rent of the ground, which the
community is continually rendering more valuable. The new
building would absorb a large amount of capital, would
begin to run down even before it could be occupied, and
would be taxed to the limit. Why then is not the landlord
justified in letting well enough alone, enjoying the
growing economic rent, and waiting till he can get a
fancy price for the right to collect it?
But reverse the conditions. Reclaim for the community
its natural income, making it expensive either to keep
needed land vacant or to withhold it from the ready and
willing to improve it to the full extent of its
possibilities.
Does it require severe intellectual effort to foresee
the results? Better and better houses, apartments,
tenements, offices and stores, more employment for labor
in all enterprises now held back by the shadow of the
tax-gatherer, an end of all tax-lying, tax-evasion and
tax-injustice, and withal, a public revenue adequate to
all real public needs.
What a contrast to the existing plan of pouring public
money into the laps of individual landowners to their own
moral disadvantage and that of their children, as well as
the economic disadvantage of their neighbors, while
constantly cudgeling the civic brains, straining the
public credit, impoverishing widows and orphans, and
increasing the exactions from every citizen and
corporation that can be caught, in the effort to raise
more and more money to bestow upon the same
beneficiaries. ... read
the whole article
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. ...
The Possibility of Land (Rent)
Taxation
The key to understanding how taxing various forms of
land conform to sound tax theory comes with an
appreciation of the importance of economic rent. Largely
discarded in 20th century economic analysis, rent is the
price for the use of land. Just as the price of labor is
paid in wages and the price of capital is paid in
interest, land rent is the unearned increment that
attaches to land in the form of a surplus when its price
is not paid by its users. All taxes, ultimately, come out
of rent; however, by collecting revenue from other
sources, the rent is left to settle in ever increasing
encrustations on land sites, i.e., capitalized,
ultimately raising their market price. In so doing, these
land prices are distorted so that their optimal use is
not secured.
Examples of such distortion are not difficult to
identify. Consider, first of all, the use of
locations in our urban environments, many of which are
underused while prospective entrepreneurs are driven to
second-best locations because titleholders opt to let the
rent accrete and passively raise their market price. Land
speculation is rife most of all in instances where there
is a great disparity between the tax rate on these sites
and the rate of rent appreciation. When the holding costs
of ownership are nominal, there is no incentive for
improving them or selling to others who will, and urban
environments suffer as a result. Another example
is rent that collects to the electromagnetic spectrum,
making it attractive for owners of electronic media,
communications networks and so on, to rely on returns to
their investments even when the resource itself is
sparsely used. So also with the time slots for take-offs
and landings at airports. These opportunities are
respected as private property, even while they gain in
market value in response to the general traffic volume of
the facility. This occurs regardless whether the
particular airlines use their slots or not. London Mayor
Ken Livingstone has proposed to tax the rent from
Heathrow and Gatwick both for their revenue advantage and
to assure their more optimal use.[7] One could go
on, pointing to any number of instances where economic
rent is available to be had for the support of public
services in lieu of conventional taxes which we recognize
as destructive in their effects.[8] It is not
surprising that when pressed even conventional
(neoclassical) economists are often willing to concede
that the best possible tax of all is one placed on land
rent.[9] ... 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. ...
Rus
(rural regions) provide resources as
urbs (cities) provide services. Yet neither does
so efficiently now. Allowed by a present property tax
that takes aim at buildings while treading lightly on
sites, owners of sites and resources both overextract and
withhold appropriate land from use, speculating on a
higher future return. Vacant and underused sites waste
on the average about 22 percent of city surface. Using
land less than optimally means more land must be
used. Clark County, Washington, combines the empty
storefronts, vacant lots, run-down buildings in
Vancouver, the county seat, with one of the fastest
growth rates in the nation. The inflated prices are
hardly affordable by governments intending to purchase
open space; hence parks are smaller and fewer.
...
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
Lindy Davies: Land and Justice
If we just look at the "ecological footprint," it's
easy to be scared of the seemingly unavoidable damage we
are doing to the earth. But seeing "the footprint" in
terms of its components — subsistence, wealth, and
illth — makes it clear that the fact of persistent
and growing global poverty is not the inevitable result
of population growth. I believe it’s true that the
world cannot long support current levels of pollution,
waste and habitat destruction — but these problems
spring not from production itself — and certainly
not from trade, itself — but from privileges,
granted to individuals and corporations — things
that we can correct, if we choose to.
To solve the problem of land and justice is to remove
unjust privilege, by instituting an economic system that
rewards production and prohibits extortion.
It’s all about the land: not only is land
necessary for all life — land is also necessary for
all production. So, as human population increases, and as
the production of wealth gets more and more efficient,
the demand for land goes up, and, of course, the land
factories start cranking out more land!
Wait! They can't DO that, can they?
Wealth — products, widgets — these things
are made by human beings. If customers are willing to buy
more of them, then manufacturers will make more of them.
But human beings can't make land. The supply of land
cannot be increased. If the demand for land increases,
only one thing can happen: its price will go up.
The owners of land see population and
production go up, up, up — and no more land. So,
they will only put their land to use if they have an
immediate need for the cash. If they can afford to wait,
they will wait, because they expect the land's value to
increase with time.
That, in a nutshell, is the key to the land problem
— the problem of poverty.
That is why millions upon millions of people who are
willing and able to work cannot find work, even while
millions upon millions of acres of useable land (city
land, industrial land, farm land, you name it) are held
idle.
This leads to no end of problems. In the United
States, it brings urban blight and suburban sprawl, which
disrupt communities, and waste energy and resources. You
don’t think under-use of land is that big a deal?
Consider the fact that in the five boroughs of New York
City, 7.5% of its land, or 18.6 square miles, is vacant.
That’s buildable land, not parks or streets. And,
of course, a great deal more land in New York, as in
every other city, is used somewhat, but far less than the
local economy would support. New York City has about 80
people per acre of residential land. That means that New
York’s vacant land could house another 956,000
people at current density levels, without even starting
to use its vast stock of under-used land. ... read the whole
speech
Tony Vickers: From
Zee to Vee: using property tax assessments to monitor the
economic landscape
The ‘real world’ in which human
society exists is not confined to natural, physical
phenomena. From earliest times, human beings have
interacted socially and economically. As they do so, they
have specialised and traded in goods and services which
are the products of combinations of labour, capital,
enterprise and the fourth – often forgotten but
distinct – factor of all production: land.
Land comprises all natural resources,
not just ‘terra
firma.’ It is the universe minus man’s
products. Even the simplest of human activities, sleep,
requires each of us to occupy exclusively a space, a
location, preferably a bed in a home of our own. But that
word ‘own’ conjures emotions and political
postures. ...
The author came to this field of work
from a career in defence mapping, where he dealt with a
wide range of applications for GIS using geospatial
physical map data of variable quality from/of many
countries and sources. Prior to that he was a construction
engineer and planner with several firms in England
generically known as ‘speculative
developers’. Their core business, he learned from
experience, was not necessarily to create homes, office
blocks and factories but to manipulate the property market
in order to profit from the uplift in land values that
follows from decisions by public officials and other
entrepreneurs. His on-site construction management
skills were needed to produce a steady turnover, employ a
minimum of labour and capital and minimise inevitable
losses on operations. The real profits were made on land
deals, buying speculatively and holding sites out of use
until ‘ripe’ for development.
...
Distinguishing land from
buildings
The Nobel-winning economist William Vickrey said that the
property tax is actually two different taxes (Vickrey
1991). That is because buildings are capital, not land, in
the economic sense – even if, in most legal codes,
there is no distinction between land and improvements made
to it which are all lumped together as ‘landed
property’ or real estate. Buildings and other
improvements to land all depreciate over time unless
further capital is expended. Eventually the market value of
such improvements may become negative, owing to the
costs that would need to be incurred by someone wishing to
redevelop the site for an alternative use. But that does
not necessarily take away the rental value of the
site.
Much urban blight is caused by these
so-called ‘brown field’ vacant and under-used
sites. However they are often in valuable locations, with
good transport connections. It may be that owners are
speculating that land prices will rise and enable them to
sell at greater profit in the future than now, or it may be
that there is genuinely no market for sites in a particular
location unless the cost of remediation is subsidised as a
form of public investment. Such investment, according to
Vickrey and other followers of Henry George, can be
entirely funded from LVT. In a lecture given in 1991, first
published last year, Vickrey claimed:
“Cities have the capacity to be
fully self-financing without dependence on either federal
assistance or on general taxes that are unrelated to
benefits received.”
The proviso, according to Vickrey, is
to replace the tax on buildings with a tax on land value
alone – LVT:-
“The property tax combines one
of the best and one of the worst taxes we have. The
portion that falls on sites or land values is the only
major tax that is reasonably free of distortionary
effects and is not intolerably regressive”.
Taxing buildings and work done to
improve them discourages such work. Un-taxing them and
taxing land more highly, irrespective of its actual state
of development but based upon its highest and best
immediate potential use, will encourage owners to
maintain their sites and buildings in such a way as to
maximise their income. A remote site or one with
conservation or other restrictions will have a low site
value, hence attract low taxes, whereas a high value city
centre derelict site will very soon be redeveloped. The
extra property tax revenue from extending the tax base to
sites that are currently under-taxed (because the tax is
based primarily on building/rental value not site/owner
value), ensures public infrastructure projects can be
funded without resource to general taxes or excessive
borrowing on the financial markets.Read the
whole article
Winston Churchill:
The People's Land
Fancy comparing these healthy processes with the
enrichment which comes to the landlord who happens to own
a plot of land on the outskirts or at the centre of one
of our great cities, who watches the busy population
around him making the city larger, richer, more
convenient, more famous every day, and all the while sits
still and does nothing. Roads are made, streets are made,
railway services are improved, electric light turns night
into day, electric trams glide swiftly to and fro, water
is brought from reservoirs a hundred miles off in the
mountains -- and all the while the landlord sits still.
Every one of those improvements is effected by the labour
and at the cost of other people. Many of the most
important are effected at the cost of the municipality
and of the ratepayers. To not one of
those improvements does the land monopolist as a land
monopolist contribute, and yet by every one of them the
value of his land is sensibly enhanced. He renders no
service to the community, he contributes nothing to the
general welfare; he contributes nothing even to the
process from which his own enrichment is derived.
If the land were occupied by shops or by dwellings, the
municipality at least would secure the rates upon them in
aid of the general fund, but the land may be unoccupied,
undeveloped, it may be what is called 'ripening' -- ripening at
the expense of the whole city, of the whole country, for
the unearned increment of its owner. Roads perhaps may have to be diverted to avoid this
forbidden area. The merchant going to his office, the
artisan going to his work, have to make a detour or pay a
tram fare to avoid it. The citizens are losing their
chance of developing the land, the city is losing its
rates, the State is losing its taxes which would have
accrued if the natural development had taken place; and
that share has to be replaced at the expense of the other
ratepayers and taxpayers, and the nation as a whole is
losing in the competition of the world -- the hard and
growing competition of the world -- both in time and
money. And all the while the land monopolist has
only to sit still and watch complacently his property
multiplying in value, sometimes manifold, without either
effort or contribution on his part; and that is justice!
... Read the whole piece
Ted Gwartney: Estimating Land
Values
THE SOURCE OF PUBLIC
REVENUE
What are the factors that cause land to have
market value and to whom does this market revenue
advantage properly belong? Land has market value for
three reasons:
- the limited supply and "natural" productivity
of the soil and natural resources,
- the publicly provided services, including
planning, improvements that increase the market value of
land and
- the growth of communities and peoples'
competitive demand for the exclusive use of prime
locations.
Land rent is the price that people and businesses
are willing to pay for the exclusive right to possess and
use a good land site for a period of time. For example,
people prefer to use sites of good location because it
gives them an advantage of spending less time in travel
by being near what they choose to do and where they work.
A businessman can sell more goods at a site where many
people pass each day, compared to a site where only a few
people would pass.
The collection of land rent should be
used as revenue, by the community for supplying public
needs. This returns the advantage an individual land
possessor receives from the exclusive use of a land site,
to the balance of the people who live within the community
and have allowed the land possessor the exclusive use of
the land site for the period of time.
ENVIRONMENTAL
PRESERVATION
It is the responsibility of the local communities
to insure that the market rent of land is collected for
public purposes. When a major part of land rent is not
collected, which is the case in most of the world today,
land title holders obtain rights to sell the value of the
public improvements which were made by the whole
community. The community added to the market value of
land by making improvements which increases demand and
rent for the land. The longer the possessors hold the
land out of use the greater will be the bonus they
obtain.
By prohibiting people from using good
land, the possessors force the premature use of other less
desirable land, which is more distant from the city. This
raises the cost of community improvements and the rental
value of the unused, but better located, land. This
precipitates the degradation of the rural environment by
using city land inefficiently -- and creates huge
unnecessary pressures on the natural
environment.
A problem that we face is that cities
throughout the world are spreading out and using land
prematurely which is not needed and should not be used.
That is because failure to collect land rent subsidizes the
waste of natural resources and clutters the environment.
Cities that collect the full rental value of land are more
compact and provide greater and less costly amenities for
their citizens.
Any moves to enact good government
principles without collecting the full market rent of the
land may result in a failure. People are guided by the
profit motive. When people can make a larger profit by
doing nothing, but keeping the land they possess out of use
for a long period of time, they will do so. When the
community collects the full market rent of land, they
eliminate the motive for keeping land out of efficient use,
because the unearned profit has been collected as public
revenue.
Efficient land use appeals to all
people because it surpasses the political constraints of
most people. Everybody understands that the earth belongs
equally to all people. They want a clean environment on
earth and to leave a healthy inheritance to the future
generations, regardless of their political
viewpoints.
The major function
of a competent city government is to provide good community
services by collecting the land rent created within the
community to ensure the efficient use of land and equal
opportunities for all of its citizens.
Transportation is an important function of government which
would facilitate the creation of a compact city, where
people can easily find the facilities they desire for
education, commerce, religion and recreation. Good land
use, with the freedom of individuals to achieve the highest
and best use of land, would ensure a desirable community. A
compact city would reduce the need to invade the wilderness
and devastate the environment. ... Read the whole
article
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
SUMMARY
Two appraisal methods
PROPERTY IS APPRAISED in two ways.
Both start by estimating its market value.
- The land-residual approach subtracts
the value of buildings from this overall value,
designating the remainder as the value of land. Building
values may be estimated in terms of their replacement
cost (which usually produces a very high estimate,
leaving little land value) or their depreciated value
(which gives an unrealistically low building estimate,
inasmuch as maintenance and repairs save most buildings
from deteriorating through wear and tear). Using the
depreciated value method leaves a higher residual land
value. The Federal Reserve Board recently has
experimented with a hybrid intermediate method that
values buildings on the basis of their "historical
costs".
- The building-residual approach starts
by valuing the land, and treats the difference as
representing the building's value. The first step in this
approach is to construct a land-value map for the
district or city. This displays fairly smooth contours
for land values. Overlays would show zoning variations.
Most of the variations in property prices around this
normalized map will be for structures, along with a
sizable component of "errors and omissions." This
approach rarely is used, and most assessed land values
vary drastically from one parcel to the next.
The problem is especially apparent in
the case of parking lots or one-story "taxpayers," that
is, inexpensive buildings in neighbourhoods that are
heavily built up. Their purpose is simply to be rented
out at enough to carry the property's tax bill, not to
maximise the site's current economic
value.
Note that the Fed's land-residual
appraisal methods do not acknowledge the possibility that
the land itself may be rising in price. Site values appear
as the passive derivative, not as the driving force. Yet
low-rise or vacant land sites tend to appreciate as much as
(or in many cases, even more than) the improved properties
around them. Hence this price appreciation cannot be
attributed to rising construction costs. If every property
in the country were built last year, the problem would be
simple enough. The land acquisition prices and construction
costs would be recorded, adding up to the property's value.
But many structures were erected as long ago as the 19th
century. How do we decide how much their value has changed
in comparison to the property's overall value?
The Federal Reserve
multiplies the building's original cost by the rise in the
construction price index since its completion. The
implication is that when a property is sold at a higher
price (which usually happens), it is because the building
itself has risen in value, not the land site. However, if
the property must be sold at a lower price, falling land
prices are blamed.
If it is agreed that any explanation
of land/building relations should be symmetrical through
boom and bust periods alike, then the same appraisal
methodology should be able to explain the decline of
property values as well as their rise. The methodology
should be as uniform and homogeneous as possible. By that, I mean that
similar land should be valued at a homogeneous price, and
buildings of equivalent worth should be valued
accordingly.
If these two criteria are accepted,
then I believe that economists would treat buildings as the
residual, not the land. Yet just the opposite usually is
done. ...
SUMMARY
For hundreds of years property's
value has been calculated by discounting its flow of rental
income at the going rate of interest. The lower the
interest rate, the higher the price a given rental stream
will justify -- or as property owners express it, the more
years' rent a property will bring. What is so striking
about land values today is that they are rising for reasons
independent of their earnings stream. The major new
consideration is their prospect for future "capital" (that
is, land-price) gains. In sum, the ultimate aim of real
estate investors no longer is so much to seek income --
most of which is pledged to their bankers as interest
payments on the property they acquire -- as much as to seek
property gains. Politically opportunites abound. Merely
changing zoning in New York City in the 1980s to allow
using commercial loft spaces for residential purposes had
the effect of multiplying asset values five or
tenfold.
Whether the gains come from selling
the property or from borrowing more money against it, the
essential phenomenon is the rapid growth in asset values
and real estate's uniquely favored tax treatment. That's
why investors choose real estate instead of bonds or
stocks, and much of the strategy underlying corporate
takeovers has followed the strategies they developed over
the past half century.
Nationwide the capital-gains
dimension needs to be incorporated into the rental revenue
statistics to measure real estate's total returns.
This sector's nearly complete success in
escaping the tax collector has placed an enormous tax
burden on everyone else. read the entire
article
Ted Gwartney: A Free Market Strategy to
Reduce Sprawl
- Unused land is far more abundant than we
realize.
- End the Public Subsidy of Land Speculation and
Sprawl
- Counterproductive growth limitations and
regulations should be abolished.
- A Strategy for Urban Renewal
- A Strategy for Economic
Development
- Public Finance by Self-Financing
Unused land is
far more abundant than we
realize.
We utilize less than 5% of the total land area in
the United States for urban purposes, including housing,
commerce, and manufacturing. As you fly across the
country all you see is farm, timber, desert and an
occasional small community. While less than 5% of our
nation's land area is needed for urban purposes, much
vacant land within existing cities is bypassed because it
is cheaper to build further out than pay the high prices
demanded for the more efficient, better located, land.
The result is urban sprawl.
- Why do we choose to utilize land distant from
employment, social, and civic needs while bypassing
superior land?
- Why do many of us choose to spend two hours
each day commuting to work?
- Why do our older cities fail to renew or
rebuild obsolete buildings?
Sprawl is not just about the
density of land use. In many cities only one half of the
land is devoted to housing and commercial uses while the
other half is vacant or under-improved. Could it be that
there are inefficient requirements built into some public
policies? Smart growth should not be constrained by
archaic patterns that impede or misappropriate free and
open urban land usage. Local ordinances and
practices within cities that force accelerated suburban
sprawl should be abolished. We don't need more
regulation, we need greater freedom to act responsibly.
Individuals should have the opportunity to decide whether
they want to live in the suburbs or in the city. This
should not be a coerced decision because of a public
policy that impedes growth within the city. Simple tax
reform can help to achieve some of the goals and
objectives of smart growth without government
intervention and wasteful subsidies.
End the Public
Subsidy of Land Speculation and
Sprawl
If land holders can produce a higher return on
investment by not using land for productive purposes but
rather hold it for a higher price from those willing and
able to pay the higher price in the future, there is a
flaw in public policy. Public policy thereby gives
speculative, nonproductive investment a higher return
than productive investment. Sprawl is subsidized by taxes
on production and distribution and the failure to
recapture the benefits resulting from public
improvements. If we choose to end this subsidy, we would
reduce sprawl.
One example that I know is that of a
friend who bought land within the city but did nothing with
it. I asked him why he put good money into an investment
that had no visible return? He replied that, by holding the
land for future sale or development, his long term return,
in capital gains would exceed 18% annually. If he built a
building on the site now, his long term return would only
be 12% annually, including both net income plus capital
gains. Why should he use his land now when it would be more
profitable for him to not use it, but to hold it for a
larger future gain?
Most major cities have a substantial
amount of fully serviced but unused or underused land
sites. It is estimated that 38% of the land area in Los
Angeles is unused, 30% in New York City and 25% in
Washington, D.C. Intercity sites are bypassed because land
speculators receive a greater benefit by ignoring the
highest and best use of land sites. A greater profit is
made when development is delayed and the land price
increases to higher levels. But building within existing
developed areas uses the existing and underused
infrastructure, roads, transit, public facilities, and
services. Sprawl requires new expenditures on public goods
and services, more government, more taxes, more
dislocation. ... Read the whole
article
Wyn Achenbaum: Eminent Domain and Government
Giveaways
It seems to me that there are better ways than
eminent domain to provide the incentives that will lead
the private sector to develop choice land.
... our system wasn't
designed to send signals all that well -- Connecticut law
required properties to be reassessed once every decade
(and I've heard that once in early '70s and once in the
late 80's was construed to satisfy that
requirement)....
But if the properties had been reassessed on a
regular basis, with market-based values assigned first to
the land and the residual being assigned to the existing
buildings, the homeowners themselves would have been in a
position to make their own rational decisions on whether
it was worth it to them to continue to occupy extremely
valuable land (and pay the taxes on it), or more to their
advantage to accept an offer from someone who was
prepared to put it to a higher and better use, and take
that equity and buy elsewhere.
I am sympathetic to those who want to occupy their
homes forever, but if those homes are located on land
that is valuable (because of its views or water access or
transportation services, for example) or becomes valuable
because of surrounding development, it seems fair that
they compensate the rest of us for holding up progress,
for continuing to occupy as single-family residences,
land which it is now time to develop into something that
produces good results for the entire
community.
Most of us know of an older home, or perhaps a
diner, or something else that was a highly appropriate
use for its site -- and typical of the neighborhood -- 50
years ago, which stubbornly remains in the middle of a
neighborhood which has been redeveloped with taller
commercial buildings. The home or diner is something
everyone else has to walk around, drive around. If that
site were well developed, it could prevent the premature
development of far less desirable sites on the fringe of
town -- an acre downtown well developed, can save 10 or
so acres on the fringe.
Should we protect the right of elderly people to
stay in their homes, at the expense of the rest of the
community? Should we protect the right of a young person
who shares that home to stay there for an entire
lifetime, at the expense of the community? I'm
comfortable with the idea of allowing the elderly person
to defer payment of the property taxes, with
interest-bearing debt accruing against the property until
it is sold or transferred. It seems to me to be an
acceptable tradeoff, even if it creates potholes in the
redevelopment. But his heirs should not inherit it until
the lien is satisfied, which will usually mean that at
last it will be developed consistent with the
neighborhood.
But unless the properties are regularly and
correctly assessed, land first and buildings as the
residual, we won't have the signals which tell us when it
might be time to move on. ... read the entire
article
Mason Gaffney: The Taxable Surplus of
Land: Measuring, Guarding and Gathering It
Taxable surplus is also what
you can tax without driving land into the wrong
use. It is not enough that the land supply is
fixed: a tax must not force underuse or other misuse of
the fixed supply.
A great advantage of taxing rent is
that it does not change the ranking of land uses in the
eyes of the landowner. Let me explain.
In a free market, the function of rent is to sort and
arrange land uses: landowners allocate land to those uses
yielding the most net product, or rent. Economists have
shown (and you can easily see) that this is socially
advantageous: the net product is the excess of revenue
over all costs, so land yielding the highest rent is
adding its utmost to the national product.
When you base your tax on the net product (or rent), the
ranking of rival land uses remains the same after-tax as
it was before-tax. That is, if use "A" yields 20% more
rent than use "B", and a tax takes 50% of the rent, then
use A still yields the owner 20% more after-tax than use
B, and the owner still prefers use A. We will see below,
(Section
D), that when you tax something other than rent (say
the Gross Revenue, G), you will drive the land into less
intensive uses, or out of use altogether.
A related advantage of taxing rent is
that you can often levy the tax on the land's
potential to yield rent,
regardless of what use the owner actually chooses.
This is, indeed, a standard way of taxing rent in most
capitalist nations. It is possible because buyers and
sellers trade land based on their careful estimates of
its maximum rent-yielding capability. The tax valuer
observes and records these value data, and uses them to
place a value on all comparable lands. Many books and
manuals and professional journals have been published on
the techniques used: it is a well established art, with
its own professional associations, of which our speaker
Mr. Gwartney is a leading member.
Such a tax is limited to the maximum
possible rent, and so will not exceed a landowner's
ability to pay - provided he uses the land in the most
economical manner (which is not always the most intensive
manner). It will surely not interfere with his using the
land in the best way, but will discourage using it any
other way. ... read the whole
article
Al Hartheimer: Affordable
Housing and the Land Value Tax Perspective: a letter to
Asheville, North Carolina
To make housing more affordable we
advocate the reduction of the tax on buildings and a
simultaneous rise of the tax on land to yield the same or
more revenue. This is called Land Value Taxation. It is
also called the two-rate tax, incentive taxation and the
split-rate tax.
We know, from studies of the twenty Pennsylvania
taxing jurisdictions that use LVT, that every time the
tax on buildings is reduced, and simultaneously the tax
on land is increased, that there is a spurt of
construction. According to Plassmann and Tideman
(A Markov Chain Monte Carlo Analysis of
the Effects of Two-Rate Property Taxes in
Pennsylvania, Florenz Plassmann and T. Nicholas
Tideman, September 1997, p19), "This means that, for an
average municipality, an increase in the adjusted tax
differential of 1 mil will yield an expected increase in
the total value of construction of 1.58%". Much of this
increase in construction comes from people improving
their homes with the knowledge that the penalty for
making improvements is being reduced.
Does this provide more affordable housing? Pittsburgh
has used the two-rate tax since 1915, 85 years. Recently,
Lew Sichelman (The Housing Scene, by Lew Sichelman, the
Los Angeles Times, Sunday, June 4, 2000) said "According
to the federal government's latest tabulation, the
average of both new and existing houses sold in 31 key
markets nationwide reached $200,300 during the first
three months of this year…. The San Francisco Bay
Area…remains the most expensive place in the
country in which to buy a house. The average price there
is now $384,700. …At the other end of the price
spectrum, the average remains under $150,000 in only two
places: Pittsburgh at $143,300….and St. Louis at
$145,100." So Pittsburgh, the only sizeable city in the
United States to use the two-rate tax, has the lowest
cost housing in the country. A coincidence? Perhaps
not.
An interesting and amazing thing about the Pittsburgh
experience is that the two-rate tax in Pittsburgh applies
only to the city tax, not to the school tax and not to
the county tax. It's impressive to say that for the city
tax the tax rate on land is six times higher than the tax
rate on buildings, but because of the much higher value
of buildings, only about 57% of the city tax is from
land. When you add the school tax and the county tax,
less than 40% of the tax yield is from land.
So a modest land tax applied over a long time (85
years) results in the lowest average cost of housing in
the country. Imagine what would happen if the tax on
buildings were eliminated and all of the city revenue
came from the land tax. It boggles the mind to think
about it. ... read the entire
article
Jeff Smith: Sharing
Natural Rents to Sustain Human Society
Transportation - Cars vs. a Mix of
Modes
- Rent. Not having to pay Rent to
their community, urban owners awaiting a higher future
return under-use prime sites, forcing
development outward. Sprawl requires cars, displacing
buses, bikes, and people.
- Taxes. The tax on income makes
capital less remunerative, so a blue chip stock, not
quite so visionary, becomes more attractive than a
risky new start-up trying to make money doing good. A
hybrid electric car or a fuel-cell light enough to
power buses and trucks begs for funds while a GM
doesn't. Tariffs fall on imported vehicles, which tend
to be more fuel-efficient than their domestic
counterparts. Thus the market share of efficient cars
is kept smaller than it otherwise would be.
- License. The price of gasoline
does not include all the costs from smog - damage to
crops, lungs, buildings, etc - disadvantaging bikes and
buses.
- Subsidy. Freeways, overly wide
streets, highway patrols, traffic courts, ambulances,
and free military chastisement of overseas suppliers
that everyone pays for, not just drivers, pave the way
for car dependency, not an integrated use of bikes and
buses. Gasoline ought to cost at least $7.00 per gallon
figures the World Resources Institute (Green Fees,
1992). ...
Henry David Thoreau said the best thing government can
do for business is get out of it. Nevertheless, some hope
to shift subsidies from grey bads to green goods. Yet the
state need not subsidize at all. It's dauntingly
difficult to know whom to fund; a solar steam generator
may be the most promising idea one day while
photovoltaics are the next. Efficient alternatives don't
need largesse but fairness. A handout shields new
industry from the forces that compel efficient growth.
The best thing government can do for the environment is
exit environmental enterprise. ... read
the whole article
Land value taxation generalizes into the principle
that people should pay for all of their appropriations
of natural opportunities, according to the opportunity
costs of those appropriations, and the resulting
revenue should be shared equally. ...
Taxing land has an additional effect that increases
the stock of capital. A tax on land represents a
redistribution from living adults to the young and
unborn, who will now be born with rights to land.
Unless there is a perfectly offsetting reduction in the
desire to accumulate assets to transfer to the next
generation, this redistribution will induce the living,
who now have fewer assets, to accumulate at a more
rapid rate than they would otherwise do. That is,
saving and capital accumulation will increase.
Taxing land also increases the efficiency with which
land is used. This occurs through three paths.
- First, a tax on land reduces the return to land
speculation, and therefore reduces the quantity of land
speculation.
- Second, as taxes on land are capitalized into the
selling price of land, the result is the substitution
of a recurring cost (the annual tax) for a one-time
cost (the purchase price). This makes land relatively
more attractive to bidders with high discount rates and
relatively less attractive to bidders with low discount
rates. To the extent that the former are more
entrepreneurial and the latter more passive investors,
land will tend to flow into the hands of persons who
will choose to use it more intensively.
- The third path by which a tax on land increases the
efficiency with which land is used is that, for those
who are using land inefficiently, it substitutes an
explicit cost (the tax) for an implicit one (the income
foregone by inefficient use).
Psychologically, explicit costs tend to be more
effective in motivating efficient behavior than
implicit ones. ...
read the whole article
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