Present Value
I once heard a visiting professor tell an audience of
economics and finance undergraduates that the concept of
Present Value was probably the most important one they
could master, both for their business lives and their
personal finances.
Fred E. Foldvary —
The Ultimate Tax Reform: Public Revenue from Land
Rent
Another objection to taxing land value, which some
find compelling, is that when the owner bought the land,
he already paid the present value of all future rents, so
taxing the land would be a double payment. But many who
bought their lands in the past have enjoyed gains, often
large, in the real estate value. Moreover, this is only a
transition problem; once the tax is in place, a new
buyer’s tax is offset by a lower price for land and
lower mortgage interest payments. Such an argument would
prevent the liberation of slaves, since slave owners also
pay the value of future labor when they buy a slave. ...
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Charles T. Root — Not
a Single Tax! (1925)
let us lay down and briefly defend the proposition
that —
Taxation as a means of meeting the proper
expenses of government is oppressive, unjust,
inexpedient and unnecessary.
This proposition will strike a good many readers as
absurd, but all must at least recognize the timeliness of
the topic and the importance of any contribution to the
discussion of a subject which is agitating the whole
civilized world, for the methods, subjects and amounts of
taxation are among the pressing problems of every
country.
The most obvious question which arises in the mind of
anyone who reads for the first time the proposition above
laid down is this:
"If taxation is unnecessary, what is to take its
place? Government and its functions are increasingly
expensive. They require a lot of money. Where is it to
come from?" The answer may be placed in the form of a
second proposition:
Every community, whatever its political name and
extent — village, city, state or province or nation
— has its own normal, unfailing income, growing
with the growth of the community and always adequate to
meet necessary governmental expenditure.
To explain: Every community has an
indefeasible original right to the land on which it
exists, and to all the natural, unmodified properties and
advantages of that particular area of the earth's
surface. To this land in its natural state, undrained,
unfenced, unfertilized, unplanted and unoccupied,
including its waters, its contents and its location,
every individual in the community (which may consist of
any political unit selected) has an equal right, while
all the individuals together have a joint right to the
value for use which society has conferred upon these
natural advantages.
This value for use is known as "Land Value," or by the
not particularly descriptive but generally adopted name
of "Economic Rent."
Briefly defined the land value or economic rent of any
piece of ground is the largest annual amount voluntarily
offered for the exclusive use of that ground, or of an
equivalent parcel, independent of improvements thereon.
Every holder or user of land pays economic rent,
but he now pays most of it to the wrong party.
The aggregate economic rent of the territory occupied by
any political unit is, as has been stated above, always
sufficient, usually more than sufficient, for the
legitimate expenses of the government of that unit. As
also stated above, the economic rent belongs to the
community, and not to individual landowners.
On the other hand, the result of every utilization or
enhancement of the natural advantages of land (such as
farm profits, the rent and selling value of buildings and
other improvements), when accomplished by an individual,
belongs wholly to that individual, and should never, and
need never, be taken from him by taxation.
One must be careful not to confuse land-value with the
price of land. The price of land is the sum
demanded for the transference from one individual to
another of the privilege to collect and retain land-value
and thus to divert public earnings to private pockets.
...
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Bill Batt: Comment on Parts of
the NYS Legislative Tax Study Commission's 1985 study
“Who Pays New York Taxes?”
The problem as I see it is the mixing of two separate
dimensions of economic value – what are frequently
referred to as stock and flow. Stock value is a variable
that has no time dimension, e.g., the stock of capital,
or what in real estate is typically understood as the
market price of a parcel.19 Flow, by contrast, is the
quantity of an economic variable measured over a period
of time. So the flow of an investment may be measured as
the amount of investment expenditure or the amount of
income return in a given time, such as in a yearly
period.20 We can easily understand stock when looking at
the value of a house or an office building just as we can
for a car or a computer, as it represents the investment
of labor and capital, and can be priced based on market
supply and demand, depreciation, and replacement value
much as with any other manufactured good.
The other component of a real property parcel is the
land value, which reflects a market price based on very
different criteria. Despite the apparent reality that
land is visible and tangible, land prices reflect the
value of location more than they do the material content
they contain. This is easy to understand when one
reflects that if some earth is removed from a site and
brought to another place, the prices of each site is
largely unaffected.21 Location value has duration, and
the value of this flow of rights for exclusive use of a
site requires a flow price rather than a stock price.
This flow is really what classical economists refer to as
ground rent or economic rent.22 Also known as “land
rent,” it is defined as “a payment to a
factor beyond what is needed to put that factor into use;
[it is a price for use] beyond what is needed to maintain
a market for land.”23 Land has a selling
price because we have come to regard land sites as
objects, as commodities to be traded,24 and they are
understood to have a static price, as a stock rather than
as a flow. That stock price really needs to be understood
instead as the “present value” of the flow of
ground rent minus taxes. “Present value” is
an economic term that refers to “the worth of a
future stream of returns or costs in terms of their value
now.”25 Consideration in this way brings
to the fore other concerns and factors.
The market price of a location depends not only on
ground rent and taxes, effectively its present value, but
also upon the “discount rate,” or interest
rate, that prevails in the market used to calculate its
returns and costs. When interest rates go up, the market
prices of sites fall, just as for any other economic
encumbrances placed on locational sites. ... read the whole
commentary
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