This article was written for the former Soviet Union,
during their transition from communism, in the hope
that they would see the justice and wisdom in adopting
Henry George's remedy. (See " advice to other countries" for more
such articles.)
Mason Gaffney: Privatizing Land
Without Giveaway
II. Reasons to Socialize Land
Rent
A. Financial Reasons to Reserve
Rent as a Tax Source
1. An entire nation cannot be sold off quickly at
other than fire-sale prices. Mass privatization is a way
of securing the worst possible bargain for the public
selling the land.
2. In a massive general land sale, most land would
be bid up by a small number of buyers with surpluses of
"patient money," many of them looking toward use or
resale in the distant future. These buyers are the kind
stigmatized as "land speculators," for their traditional
indifference to highest and best current use of
land.
3. A government selling land, even at fire-sale
prices, would be swamped with cash flow
4. Governments need revenues in
perpetuity.
5. Private wealth being scarce in most Soviet
republics, wealthy aliens would prevail in bidding for
much of the best land.
6. The land market works better, on an ongoing
basis, if land remains subject to regular taxes or other
charges in perpetuity.
7. Counterproductive rent-seeking behavior, in the
most primal sense, is maximized when land is simply
privatized without the state's reserving substantial
servitudes, especially tax power.
8. Local governments, traditionally undernourished
and weak in much of the Soviet Union, also need revenues
in perpetuity.
9. A means is needed gently to pry loose surplus
land from state agencies like ministries in charge of
production.
10. Public acquisition of lands for such uses as
rights-of-way (r.o.w.), schools, reservoirs, air bases,
parks, and watershed protection becomes much more costly
when all land is privatized first.
B. Functional
Reasons for Taxing Land Rent
1. Taxing land allows us to avoid taxing
functional activities like production, exchange, work,
saving, and investment.
2. Taxing land holds down its purchase price, thus
easing and democratizing entry.
3. Taxing land drains cash from sleeping owners of
surplus land, arousing them in the most compelling way to
the otherwise overlooked opportunity cost of their
surpluses.
4. Taxing land motivates sellers and moves the
otherwise torpid land market.
5. Taxing land promotes markets by pushing central
urban land into commercial uses yielding high cash
flows.
6. Taxing land discourages the motives, currently
powerful and dominant, to hold land mainly as a store of
value and hedge against inflation.
7. It is arguable that taxes on bases other than
land are largely shifted to - that is, are drawn from -
land rent anyway.
C. Ethical Reasons for Taxing Land
Rent D. Political
Reasons for Taxing Land Rent Read the
whole
article
Mason Gaffney: The
Taxable Capacity of Land
Another attractive feature
of land taxation is its interesting positive effect on
the economic base of a city. It strengthens it by its
tendency to hit absentee owners harder than resident
owners. The land fraction in real
estate is generally highest in the CBD of any city, so
that is a favorite place for absentees to buy and hold.
They like the steady income, and the "trophy" quality.
The surplus in real estate is what
attracts outside buyers, and land is what yields the
surplus. About 2/3 of downtown Los
Angeles is owned by non-resident aliens, for example. In
a more workaday city, Milwaukee, the absentee owners
consist of former residents, or their heirs, who grew too
rich to abide the harsh winters.
Consider the effect on your
balance of payments. When you get more tax money from
absentees, money that used to flow to Tehran, Zurich, or
Palm Beach now flows into your local treasury to pay your
local teachers and city workers, and relieve your
builders and building managers. In this way taxing land
actually acts to undergird the value of its own
base. ...
Read the
whole
article
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)
... Well may the community leave to the individual
producer all that prompts him to exertion; well may it
let the laborer have the full reward of his labor, and
the capitalist the full return of his capital. For the
more that labor and capital produce, the greater grows
the common wealth in which all may share. And in the
value or rent of land is this general gain expressed in a
definite and concrete form. Here is a fund which the
state may take while leaving to labor and capital their
full reward. With increased activity of production this
would commensurately increase.
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.
*Many persons, and among them some
professional economists, have never succeeded in
getting a thorough comprehension of this point. Thus,
the editor has heard the objection advanced that the
greater cheapness of land is no advantage to the poor
man who is trying to save enough from his earnings to
buy a piece of land; for, it is said, the higher
taxes on the land after it is acquired, offset the
lower purchase price. What such objectors do not see
is that even if the lower price of land does no more
than balance the higher tax on it, (and this
overlooks, for one thing, the discouragement to
speculation in land), the reduction or removal of
other taxes is all clear gain. It is easier to save
in proportion as earnings and commodities are
relieved of taxation. It is easier to buy land,
because its selling price is lower, if the land is
taxed. And although the land, after its purchase,
continues to be taxed, not only can this tax be fully
paid out of the annual interest on the saving in the
purchase price, but also there is to be reckoned the
saving in taxes on buildings and other improvements
and in whatever other taxes are thus rendered
unnecessary. H.G.B.
Consider the effect of such a change upon the labor
market. Competition would no longer be one-sided, as now.
Instead of laborers competing with each other for
employment, and in their competition cutting down wages
to the point of bare subsistence, employers would
everywhere be competing for laborers, and wages would
rise to the fair earnings of labor. For into the labor
market would have entered the greatest of all competitors
for the employment of labor, a competitor whose demand
cannot be satisfied until want is satisfied — the
demand of labor itself. The employers of labor would not
have merely to bid against other employers, all feeling
the stimulus of greater trade and increased profits, but
against the ability of laborers to become their own
employers upon the natural opportunities freely opened to
them by the tax which prevented monopolization.
With natural opportunities thus free to labor;
- with capital and improvements exempt from tax, and
exchange released from restrictions, the spectacle of
willing men unable to turn their labor into the things
they are suffering for would become impossible;
- the recurring paroxysms which paralyze industry
would cease;
- every wheel of production would be set in
motion;
- demand would keep pace with supply, and supply with
demand;
- trade would increase in every direction, and wealth
augment on every hand. ... read the whole
chapter
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty: 11 Effect of Remedy Upon the Sharing
of Wealth (in the unabridged P&P:
Part IX Effects of the Remedy — Chapter 2: Of the
Effect Upon Distribution and Thence Upon Production
But great as they thus appear, the advantages of a
transference of all public burdens to a tax upon the
value of land cannot be fully appreciated until we
consider the effect upon the distribution of wealth.
Tracing out the cause of the unequal distribution of
wealth which appears in all civilized countries, with a
constant tendency to greater and greater inequality as
material progress goes on, we have found it in the fact
that, as civilization advances, the ownership of land,
now in private hands, gives a greater and greater power
of appropriating the wealth produced by labor and
capital.
Thus, to relieve labor and capital from all taxation,
direct and indirect, and to throw the burden upon rent,
would be, as far as it went, to counteract this tendency
to inequality, and, if it went so far as to take in
taxation the whole of rent, the cause of inequality would
be totally destroyed. Rent, instead of causing
inequality, as now, would then promote equality. Labor
and capital would then receive the whole produce, minus
that portion taken by the state in the taxation of land
values, which, being applied to public purposes, would be
equally distributed in public benefits.
That is to say, the wealth produced in every community
would be divided into two portions.
- One part would be distributed in wages and interest
between individual producers, according to the part
each had taken in the work of production;
- the other part would go to the community as a
whole, to be distributed in public benefits to all its
members.
In this all would share equally — the weak with
the strong, young children and decrepit old men, the
maimed, the halt, and the blind, as well as the vigorous.
And justly so — for while one part represents the
result of individual effort in production, the other
represents the increased power with which the community
as a whole aids the individual.
Thus, as material progress tends to increase rent,
were rent taken by the community for common purposes the
very cause which now tends to produce inequality as
material progress goes on would then tend to produce
greater and greater equality.
Who can say to what infinite powers the
wealth-producing capacity of labor may not be raised by
social adjustments which will give to the producers of
wealth their fair proportion of its advantages and
enjoyments! With present processes the gain would be
simply incalculable, but just as wages are high, so do
the invention and utilization of improved processes and
machinery go on with greater rapidity and ease.
But I shall not deny, and do not wish to lose sight of
the fact, that while thus preventing waste and thus
adding to the efficiency of labor, the equalization in
the distribution of wealth that would result from the
simple plan of taxation that I propose, must lessen the
intensity with which wealth is pursued. It seems to me
that in a condition of society in which no one need fear
poverty, no one would desire great wealth — at
least, no one would take the trouble to strive and to
strain for it as men do now. For, certainly, the
spectacle of men who have only a few years to live,
slaving away their time for the sake of dying rich, is in
itself so unnatural and absurd, that in a state of
society where the abolition of the fear of want had
dissipated the envious admiration with which the masses
of men now regard the possession of great riches, whoever
would toil to acquire more than he cared to use would be
looked upon as we would now look on a man who would
thatch his head with half a dozen hats.
And though this incentive to production be withdrawn,
can we not spare it? Whatever may have been its office in
an earlier stage of development, it is not needed now.
The dangers that menace our civilization do not come from
the weakness of the springs of production. What it
suffers from, and what, if a remedy be not applied, it
must die from, is unequal distribution!
Nor would the removal of this incentive, regarded only
from the standpoint of production, be an unmixed loss.
For, that the aggregate of production is greatly reduced
by the greed with which riches are pursued, is one of the
most obtrusive facts of modern society. While, were this
insane desire to get rich at any cost lessened, mental
activities now devoted to scraping together riches would
be translated into far higher spheres of usefulness. ...
read the whole chapter
H.G. Brown:
Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's
Progress & Poverty: 12.
Effect of Remedy Upon Various Economic Classes (in the
unabridged P&P:
Part IX: Effects of the Remedy — Chapter 3. Of the
effect upon individuals and classes)
When it is first proposed to put all taxes upon the
value of land, all landholders are likely to take the
alarm, and there will not be wanting appeals to the fears
of small farm and homestead owners, who will be told that
this is a proposition to rob them of their hard-earned
property. But a moment's reflection will show that this
proposition should commend itself to all whose interests
as landholders do not largely exceed their interests as
laborers or capitalists, or both. And further
consideration will show that though the large landholders
may lose relatively, yet even in their case there will be
an absolute gain. For, the increase in production will be
so great that labor and capital will gain very much more
than will be lost to private landownership, while in
these gains, and in the greater ones involved in a more
healthy social condition, the whole community, including
the landowners themselves, will share.
- It is manifest, of course, that the change I
propose will greatly benefit all those who live by
wages, whether of hand or of head -- laborers,
operatives, mechanics, clerks, professional men of all
sorts.
- It is manifest, also, that it will benefit all
those who live partly by wages and partly by the
earnings of their capital -- storekeepers, merchants,
manufacturers, employing or undertaking producers and
exchangers of all sorts from the peddler or drayman to
the railroad or steamship owner -- and
- it is likewise manifest that it will increase the
incomes of those whose incomes are drawn from the
earnings of capital. ...
read the whole chapter
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