Not a Tax at All!
see also: Charles Root: Not a Single Tax!
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of
Natural Taxation, from Principles of Natural
Taxation (1917)
Q1. What is a tax?
A. A tax is a compulsory contribution of individual
product or the value of such product toward the needs of
government.
Q2. What is meant by the single tax?
A. The payment of all public expenses from economic rent,
the normal revenue, thus eventually abolishing all
taxes.
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.
... read
the whole article
Fred E. Foldvary —
The Ultimate Tax Reform: Public Revenue from Land
Rent
Frank Chodorov, a fervent individualist and founding
editor of The Freeman, published by the Foundation for
Economic Education and still a leading libertarian
journal of ideas, became in 1937 director of the Henry
George School of Social Science in New York City, serving
until 1942. Like most followers of Henry George, Chodorov
regarded a charge on land value as not a true tax, which
arbitrarily extracts wealth, but a “payment for the
use of a location, determined by the higgling and
haggling of the market, and it makes no difference to the
land user whether he pays rent to the city fathers or to
a private owner.”26 Explaining the value of a
location derives to a great extent from community
services, rather than the efforts of the landowner as
such, Chodorov noted “it would seem logical that
this value — which we call land rent — should
go to defray the expenses of these common services." ...
read the whole document
Frank Stilwell and Kirrily Jordan:
The Political Economy of Land: Putting Henry George in His
Place
Indeed, one could say that the term ‘tax’
is a misnomer because what is really involved is value
created by the community being retained by the community
rather than being appropriated by private landholders.
For example, under current arrangements landowners
receive ‘windfall’ gains when the market
value of their land rises as a result of publicly
provided infrastructure being built nearby, or when local
government zoning decisions reclassify their land as
appropriate for further development. In this way,
individual landowners stand to reap huge benefits at the
expense of community-generated processes. Such
arrangements create an odd incentive: allowing
landholders to appropriate the unearned wealth generated
by rising land values, thereby rewarding this
unproductive activity, while taxing productive endeavour.
The Georgist land tax ‘remedy’, by contrast,
would eliminate such perverse incentives and thereby more
effectively align private and public interests in the use
of society’s resources. ...
read the whole article
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