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Land Economics: To the Heart of the
Matter |
Wendell Fitzgerald and Cathe Smeland |
| [Reprinted from CONSENSUS,
April 1989] |
Can you imagine an economic analysis based on the Green promise of
neither right nor left but in front? Can you imagine an economic system
consistent with the Green pillars of ecological wisdom, personal and
social responsibility, grassroots democracy, and nonviolence? Such an
economic analysis exists.
Not only that - It has been attracting Green attention in recent years
and deserves even broader consideration by the movement. It's an idea
with a long history of support in the writings of the likes of William
Perm (1693), Tom Paine (1797). John Stuart Mill (1848), and Leo Tolstoi.
It's basic principles were explored in detail over 100 years ago by the
American political economist and social philosopher. Henry George in a
book entitled Progress and Poverty written and published in San
Francisco in 1679. A world wide movement based on these ideas continues
to find George's ideas increasingly relevant to a broad range of today's
social, economic and environmental issues.
The solution proposed! by George involves the rather mundane sounding
concept of taxing land values, otherwise known as "land value
taxation." Application of this idea is being vigorously pursued by
grass roots property tax reform movements in many states and in
particular in Pennsylvania, where nine cities, including Pittsburgh,
have adopted it in a significant degree. The idea has already found
application by local governments all over Jamaica, New Zealand.
Australia, parts of western Canada, and Taiwan. The principle involved
has found approval with Greens who have studied it in the San Francisco
Bay Area, San Diego, and Scotland.
The analysis might well be of interest to Greens because it focuses on
the economics of land - the economics of Mother Earth herself. The land
question is at the heart of long standing issues of social and economic
Justice as well as issues of environmental degradation. Familiarity with
some of the basic principles of the economics of land will Illustrate
the scope of the land question.
Landowners don't create land value
The first principle of the economics of land is that land is one of the
essential ingredients in all economic activity. There are three "factors
of production," as economists call them. They are land, labor and
capital. All fundamental economic analysis is based on determining the
dynamic relationship between these factors. In spite of this, economists
and the public in first world nations generally feel that land is no
longer important to economic analysis because it is judged that capital,
the human-made tools of production, is so much more important. Many
economists go so far as to consider land Just another form of capital
and dispense with the distinction altogether, thereby conveniently
dispensing with the land question. It Is obvious, however, that humans
are and will continue to be totally dependent on land for all raw
materials used in production and for sites upon which to conduct not
only all economic activities but every other human activity as well.
Land is distinct from capital because it is not produced by humans as
is all capital. As a result land gets its value and reacts to taxation
in a totally different way than capital. Although these distinguishing
features may seem technical at first glance, the distinction between
land and capital is not merely a technicality. Blurring the distinction
between land and capital has the same magnitude of significance as
calling slaves (human beings) the property (capital) of their "owners"!
... and leads to equally unacceptable consequences.
The second principle of the economics of tend is that land gets its
monetary market value from the community as a whole and not from any
Individual owner. Stated in another way. this important principle is
that the value of land is created by the community, not by the
Individual. Restated again it says that the individual does not. Indeed
cannot, create the value of land. It is society, the community of all
individuals existing and acting together, that creates land value.
All human made capital and wealth is created by human effort, usually
using other capital (tools) in the process. Land, however, is not made.
It Just is and has been provided free by the Creator. Originally, land
is free for the taking and has no market value but as land is settled
and population grows a market for land is established and the price of
land is bid up. In addition to the effect of growing population, land
value is increased as the productivity of the community is increased by
general educational and technological advances. Land value is further
increased by anything that makes the community a nicer and more
desirable place to live such as public improvements and public services.
It can be said that all general progress in society is reflected in
rising land values, and indeed, is reflected no place else.
Land held for ransom
The significance of these principles is that the owner of land per se
does not provide anything to the economy which was not already in
existence. The land owner as land owner does nothing creative or
productive. All the land owner does is put a fence around a piece of
land and charge the rest of humanity a fee (land rent) for access to it
or, if he uses the land himself, he avoids paying land rent to someone
else. In either event the landowner no more deserves or earns the rent
to land than the slaveowner deserved or earned the production of the
slave. A theft and a terrible Injustice is involved in both instances.
The fact that a current landowner paid good money for the land does not
suddenly make land rent an earned income any more than paving money for
a slave entitled the owner to the slave's production.
If a landowner assumes the role of labor and/or capital and builds a
building and sells it or leases It out. something that was not in
existence before Is being provided, and compensation for It Is deserved
and earned. Landowners as landowners claim to provide a service by
making the land available for use. They claim that If it were not for
them land would not be made available when and as needed. For this they
claim to deserve compensation.
Such claims are patently absurd. The land Is already and will always be
available. Landowners do not make land available, they hold it for
ransom!
This is not to say that landowners are bad or that private ownership of
land should be abolished. Private ownership of land has a positive
aspect in that it provides for secure possession or tenure of land and
this guarantees to labor and capital their just reward. This benefits
the community by encouraging labor and capital to provide housing and
other needed improvements. It is the private ownership of land value and
the private collection of land rent which harms society.
Since land value and land rent are. in essence, a gift of society to
the landowner, the incentive Is and has been to grab as much land as
possible to cash in on this gift. The result is land monopoly, land
speculation and a powerful incentive to abuse and misuse the land.
In the U.S.. the best estimate is that 5% of the people own 95% of the
ownable land and natural resources. Federal, state and local governments
own about 40% of the total, which is to the benefit of society as a
whole. That aside, the other 60% of the land is even more monopolized in
ownership than other valuable assets such as stocks and bonds. Land is
useful and necessary in itself, but add to that the free gift of ever
increasing community-created land value and the land is bound to be
sought after and held on to by all means fair or foul. The historical
plight of American Indians and the current victims of right wing death
squads In Latin America attest to this fact.
Land speculation results in rapidly rising costs for land beyond
anything supportable by actual economic usefulness or productivity. The
high cost of housing and the tragedy of homelessness are really problems
of land speculation. The accompanying chart identifies the problem by
showing that the cost of land has gone up more than six times the cost
of labor and materials for housing between 1960 and 1980. Land as a
percentage of total housing costs has continued to rise since then. In a
related issue, the current Savings and Loan debacle is. for the most
part, nothing more than a failed attempt to cash in on the promise of
rising real estate, i.e., land values. Obviously land speculation is not
always successful and when it is not the losses involved are usually not
paid by the players.
Land speculation has the additional effect of creating urban sprawl.
The Incentive for land owners is to hold land for its Increase In value
rather than to build improvements to take advantage of real economic
opportunities offered by locations closer in to the center of cities.
People and businesses who want to build and/or locate in the community
are forced to find more affordable and available land sites further and
further out from city centers. This gives rise to the familiar pattern
of leapfrog development. The impact on the community is devastating. The
environment is torn up unnecessarily, the supply of affordable housing
is curtailed at its inception, people are caught up in the congestion
and pollution caused by forced reliance on the automobile, all economic
activity is made more costly.
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