Value
Henry George:
The Common Sense of Taxation (1881 article)
These are truisms. Yet so widespread and persistent is
the notion that all property should be taxed, that they
are generally ignored. Nothing is clearer than that when
a farmer who wants more capital puts a mortgage on his
farm, no new value is thereby created. Yet, in most of
our States, both the farm and the mortgage are taxed;
though so obvious is the double taxation that in some of
them the clumsy expedient of making an exemption to the
debtor is resorted to.
But it is manifest that property of this kind is not a
fit subject for taxation, and ought not to be considered
in making up the assessment rolls. It has, in itself, no
value. It is merely the representative, or token,
of value — the certificate of ownership, or the
obligation to pay value. It either represents
other property, or property yet to be brought into
existence. And, as nothing real can be drawn from that
which is not real, taxation upon property of this kind
must ultimately fall, either upon the property
represented, in which case there is double taxation, or
upon those whose obligations it expresses, in which case
men are taxed, not upon what they own, but upon what they
owe; and all cumbrous devices to prevent the unjust
effects of such taxation, like other complications of the
revenue system, simply give to the stronger and more
unscrupulous opportunities of throwing the burden upon
the weaker and more conscientious. Property of this kind
ought not to be taxed at all. Property in itself valuable
is clearly that with which any wise scheme of taxation
should alone deal.
To consider the nature of property of this kind is
again to see a clear distinction. That distinction is
not, as the lawyers have it, between movables and
immovables, between personal property and real estate.
The true distinction is between property which is, and
property which is not, the result of human labor; or, to
use the terms of political economy, between land and
wealth. For, in any precise use of the term, land is not
wealth, any more than labor is wealth. Land and
labor are the factors of production. Wealth is such
result of their union as retains the capacity of
ministering to human desire. A lot and the house
which stands upon it are alike property, alike have a
tangible value, and are alike classed as real estate. But
there are between them the most essential
differences.
- The one is the free gift of Nature, the other the
result of human exertion;
- the one exists from generation to generation, while
men come and go; the other is constantly tending to
decay, and can only be preserved by continual
exertion.
- To the one, the right of exclusive possession,
which makes it individual property, can, like the right
of property in slaves, be traced to nothing but
municipal law; to the other, the right of exclusive
property springs clearly from those natural relations
which are among the primary perceptions of the human
mind.
Nor are these mere abstract distinctions. They are
distinctions of the first importance in determining what
should and what should not be taxed.
For, keeping in mind the fact that all wealth is the
result of human exertion, it is clearly seen that, having
in view the promotion of the general prosperity, it is
the height of absurdity to tax wealth for purposes of
revenue while there remains, unexhausted by taxation, any
value attaching to land. We may tax land values as much
as we please, without in the slightest degree lessening
the amount of land, or the capabilities of land, or the
inducement to use land. But we cannot tax wealth without
lessening the inducement to the production of wealth, and
decreasing the amount of wealth. We might take the whole
value of land in taxation, so as to make the ownership of
land worth nothing, and the land would still remain, and
be as useful as before. The effect would be to throw land
open to users free of price, and thus to increase its
capabilities, which are brought out by increased
population. But impose anything like such taxation upon
wealth, and the inducement to the production of wealth
would be gone. Movable wealth would be hidden or carried
off, immovable wealth would be suffered to go to decay,
and where was prosperity would soon be the silence of
desolation. ...
read the whole article
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
THE phenomena of value are at bottom illustrations of
one principle. 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 reproduce 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. —
A Perplexed Philosopher
(Mr. Spencer's Confusion As To Value)
WHEREVER land has an exchange value there is rent in
the economic meaning of the term. Wherever land having a
value is used, either by owner or hirer, there is rent
actual; wherever it is not used, but still has a value,
there is rent potential. It is this capacity of yielding
rent which gives value to land. . . . No matter what are
its capabilities, land can yield no rent and have no
value until some one is willing to give labor or the
results of labor for the privilege of using it; and what
anyone will thus give, depends not upon the capacity of
the land, but upon its capacity as compared with that of
land that can be had for nothing. —
Progress & Poverty
Book III, Chapter 2 — The Laws of Distribution:
Rent and the Law of Rent
STATED reversely, the law of rent is necessarily the law
of wages and interest taken together, for it is the
assertion, that no matter what be the production which
results from the application of labor and capital, these
two factors will only receive in wages and interest such
part of the produce as they could have produced on land
free to them without the payment of rent — that is
the least productive land or point in use. —
Progress & Poverty
Book III, Chapter 2 — The Laws of Distribution:
Rent and the Law of Rent
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from George"
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