Wealth from Privatizing Land Rent
estimate of costs of maintenance
depreciation
other tax benefits
Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F.
Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and Charts
(1894)
3. THE SINGLE TAX FALLS IN PROPORTION TO
BENEFITS
To perceive that the single tax would justly measure
the value of government service we have only to
realize that the mass of individuals everywhere and
now, in paying for the land they use, actually pay
for government service in proportion to what they
receive. He who would enjoy the benefits of a
government must use land within its jurisdiction. He
cannot carry land from where government is poor to
where it is good; neither can he carry it from where
the benefits of good government are few or enjoyed
with difficulty to where they are many and fully
enjoyed. He must rent or buy land where the benefits
of government are available, or forego them. And
unless he buys or rents where they are greatest and
most available he must forego them in degree.
Consequently, if he would work or live where the
benefits of government are available, and does not
already own land there, he will be compelled to rent
or buy at a valuation which, other things being
equal, will depend upon the value of the government
service that the site he selects enables him to
enjoy. 14 Thus does he pay for the service of
government in proportion to its value to him. But he
does not pay the public which provides the service;
he is required to pay land-owners.
14. Land values are lower in all
countries of poor government than in any country of
better government, other things being equal. They
are lower in cities of poor government, other
things being equal, than in cities of better
government. Land values are lower, for example, in
Juarez, on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande,
where government is bad, than in El Paso, the
neighboring city on the American side, where
government is better. They are lower in the same
city under bad government than under improved
government. When Seth Low, after a reform campaign,
was elected mayor of Brooklyn, N.Y., rents advanced
before he took the oath of office, upon the bare
expectation that he would eradicate municipal
abuses. Let the city authorities anywhere pave a
street, put water through it and sewer it, or do
any of these things, and lots in the neighborhood
rise in value. Everywhere that the "good roads"
agitation of wheel men has borne fruit in better
highways, the value of adjacent land has increased.
Instances of this effect as results of public
improvements might be collected in abundance. Every
man must be able to recall some within his own
experience.
And it is perfectly reasonable that
it should be so. Land and not other property must
rise in value with desired improvements in
government, because, while any tendency on the part
of other kinds of property to rise in value is
checked by greater production, land can not be
reproduced.
Imagine an utterly lawless place,
where life and property are constantly threatened
by desperadoes. He must be either a very bold man
or a very avaricious one who will build a store in
such a community and stock it with goods; but
suppose such a man should appear. His store costs
him more than the same building would cost in a
civilized community; mechanics are not plentiful in
such a place, and materials are hard to get. The
building is finally erected, however, and stocked.
And now what about this merchant's prices for
goods? Competition is weak, because there are few
men who will take the chances he has taken, and he
charges all that his customers will pay. A hundred
per cent, five hundred per cent, perhaps one or two
thousand per cent profit rewards him for his pains
and risk. His goods are dear, enormously dear
— dear enough to satisfy the most
contemptuous enemy of cheapness; and if any one
should wish to buy his store that would be dear
too, for the difficulties in the way of building
continue. But land is cheap! This is the
type of community in which may be found that land,
so often mentioned and so seldom seen, which "the
owners actually can't give away, you know!"
But suppose that government improves.
An efficient administration of justice rids the
place of desperadoes, and life and property are
safe. What about prices then? It would no longer
require a bold or desperately avaricious man to
engage in selling goods in that community, and
competition would set in. High profits would soon
come down. Goods would be cheap — as cheap as
anywhere in the world, the cost of transportation
considered. Builders and building materials could
be had without difficulty, and stores would be
cheap, too. But land would be dear!
Improvement in government increases the value of
that, and of that alone.
Now, the economic principle pursuant to which
land-owners are thus able to charge their
fellow-citizens for the common benefits of their
common government points to the true method of
taxation. With the exception of such other monopoly
property as is analogous to land titles, and which in
the purview of the single tax is included with land
for purposes of taxation, 15 land is the only kind of
property that is increased in value by government;
and the increase of value is in proportion, other
influences aside, to the public service which its
possession secures to the occupant. Therefore, by
taxing land in proportion to its value, and exempting
all other property, kindred monopolies excepted
— that is to say, by adopting the single tax
— we should be levying taxes according to
benefits.16
15. Railroad franchises, for example,
are not usually thought of as land titles, but that
is what they are. By an act of sovereign authority
they confer rights of control for transportation
purposes over narrow strips of land between
terminals and along trading points. The value of
this right of way is a land value.
16. Each occupant would pay to his
landlord the value of the public benefits in the
way of highways, schools, courts, police and fire
protection, etc., that his site enabled him to
enjoy. The landlord would pay a tax proportioned to
the pecuniary benefits conferred upon him by the
public in raising and maintaining the value of his
holding. And if occupant and owner were the same,
he would pay directly according to the value of his
land for all the public benefits he enjoyed, both
intangible and pecuniary.
And in no sense would this be class taxation.
Indeed, the cry of class taxation is a rather
impudent one for owners of valuable land to raise
against the single tax, when it is considered that
under existing systems of taxation they are exempt.
17 Even the poorest and the most degraded
classes in the community, besides paying land-owners
for such public benefits as come their way, are
compelled by indirect taxation to contribute to the
support of government. But landowners as a class go
free. They enjoy the protection of the courts, and of
police and fire departments, and they have the use of
schools and the benefit of highways and other public
improvements, all in common with the most favored,
and upon the same specific terms; yet, though they go
through the form of paying taxes, and if their
holdings are of considerable value pose as
"the tax-payers" on all important occasions,
they, in effect and considered as a class, pay no
taxes, because government, by increasing the value of
their land, enables them to recover back in higher
rents and higher prices more than their taxes amount
to. Enjoying the same tangible benefits of
government that others do, many of them as
individuals and all of them as a class receive in
addition a tangible pecuniary benefit which
government confers upon no other property-owners. The
value of their property is enhanced in proportion to
the benefits of government which its occupants enjoy.
To tax them alone, therefore, is not to discriminate
against them; it is to charge them for what they
get.18
17. While the landholders of the City
of Washington were paying something less than two
per cent annually in taxes, a Congressional
Committee (Report of the Select Committee to
Investigate Tax Assessments in the District of
Columbia, composed of Messrs. Johnson, of Ohio,
Chairman, Wadsworth, of New York, and Washington,
of Tennessee. Made to the House of Representatives,
May 24, 1892. Report No. 1469), brought out
the fact that the value of their land had been
increasing at a minimum rate of ten per cent per
annum. The Washington land-owners as a class thus
appear to have received back in higher land values,
actually and potentially, about ten dollars for
every two dollars that as land-owners they paid in
taxes. If any one supposes that this condition is
peculiar to Washington let him make similar
estimates for any progressive locality, and see if
the land-owners there are not favored in like
manner.
But the point is not dependent upon
increase in the capitalized value of land. If the
land yields or will yield to its owner an income in
the nature of actual or potential ground rent, then
to the extent that this actual or possible income
is dependent upon government the landlord is in
effect exempt from taxation. No matter what tax he
pays on account of his ownership of land, the
public gives it back to him to that extent.
18. Take for illustration two towns,
one of excellent government and the other of
inefficient government, but in all other respects
alike. Suppose you are hunting for a place of
residence and find a suitable site in the town of
good government. For simplicity of illustration let
us suppose that the land there is not sold outright
but is let upon ground rent. You meet the owner of
the lot you have selected and ask him his terms. He
replies:
"Two hundred and fifty dollars a
year."
"Two hundred and fifty dollars a
year!" you exclaim. "Why, I can get just as good a
site in that other town for a hundred dollars a
year."
"Certainly you can," he will say.
"But if you build a house there and it catches fire
it will burn down; they have no fire department. If
you go out after dark you will be 'held up' and
robbed; they have no police force. If you ride out
in the spring, your carriage will stick in the mud
up to the hubs, and if you walk you may break your
legs and will be lucky if you don t break your
neck; they have no street pavements and their
sidewalks are dangerously out of repair. When the
moon doesn't shine the streets are in darkness, for
they have no street lights. The water you need for
your house you must get from a well; there is no
water supply there. Now in our town it is
different. We have a splendid fire department, and
the best police force in the world. Our streets are
macadamized, and lighted with electricity; our
sidewalks are always in first class repair; we have
a water system that equals that of New York; and in
every way the public benefits in this town are
unsurpassed. It is the best governed town in all
this region. Isn't it worth a hundred and fifty
dollars a year more for a building site here than
over in that poorly governed town?"
You recognize the advantages and
agree to the terms. But when your house is built
and the assessor visits you officially, what would
be the conversation if your sense of the fitness of
things were not warped by familiarity with false
systems of taxation? Would it not be something like
what follows?
"How much do you regard this house as
worth? " asks the assessor.
"What is that to you?" you
inquire.
"I am the town assessor and am about
to appraise your property for taxation."
"Am I to be taxed by this town? What
for?"
"What for?" echoes the assessor in
surprise. "What for? Is not your house protected
from fire by our magnificent fire department? Are
not you protected from robbery by the best police
force in the world? Do not you have the use of
macadamized pavements, and good sidewalks, and
electric street lights, and a first class water
supply? Don't you suppose these things cost
something? And don't you think you ought to pay
your share?"
"Yes," you answer, with more
or less calmness; "I do have the benefit of these
things, and I do think that I ought to pay my share
toward supporting them. But I have already paid my
share for this year. I have paid it to the owner of
this lot. He charges me two hundred and fifty
dollars a year -- one hundred and fifty dollars
more than I should pay or he could get but for
those very benefits. He has collected my
share of this year's expense of maintaining town
improvements; you go and collect from him. If you
do not, but insist upon collecting from me, I shall
be paying twice for these things, once to him and
once to you; and he won't be paying at all, but
will be making money out of them, although he
derives the same benefits from them in all other
respects that I do."
... read the book
Frank Stilwell and Kirrily Jordan:
The Political Economy of Land: Putting Henry George in
His Place
George saw land as a community resource provided by
nature, to which every human being had an equal
right. He argued that, since land was fixed in
supply, the system of private land ownership allowed
the wealthy few to enjoy exclusive rights to land and
its benefits, while alienating the poorer majority
from land ownership and forcing them to pay rent to
landowners in order to access this necessary
resource. Moreover, the collection of rents
by landowners allowed them to increase their wealth
without contributing to the productive efforts of
society. As the population grew, so too did
the demand for land, forcing rents and land values
ever higher. In addition, increases in land value
resulting from publicly-funded developments, such as
roads and public transport systems, unduly benefited
landowners at the expense of the community. Such
unearned gains from landownership encouraged
speculation in land, pushing prices even higher,
while exposing the economy to the risks of
speculative ‘booms’ and
‘busts.’...
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