I shall briefly state the fundamental principles of what
we who advocate it call the Single Tax.
We propose to abolish all taxes save one single tax levied on the
value of land, irrespective of the value of the improvements in or
on it.
What we propose is not a tax on real estate, for real estate
includes improvements. Nor is it a tax on land, for we would not tax
all land, but only land having a value irrespective of its
improvements, and would tax that in proportion to that value.
Our plan involves the imposition of no new tax, since we already
tax land values in taxing real estate. To carry it out we have only
to abolish all taxes save the tax on real estate, and abolish all of
that which now falls on buildings or improvements, leaving only that
part of it which now falls on the value of the bare land, increasing
that so as to take as nearly as may be the whole of economic rent,
or what is sometimes styled the "unearned increment of land
values."
That the value of the land alone would suffice to provide all
needed public revenues--municipal, county, State, and national--
there is no doubt.
To show briefly why we urge this change, let me treat (1) of its
expediency, and (2) of its justice.
From the Single Tax we may expect these advantages:
1. It would dispense with a whole army of tax gatherers
and other officials which present taxes require, and place in the
treasury a much larger portion of what is taken from people, while
by making government simpler and cheaper, it would tend to make it
purer. It would get rid of taxes which necessarily promote fraud,
perjury, bribery, and corruption, which lead men into temptation,
and which tax what the nation can least afford to spare -- honesty
and conscience. Since land lies out-of-doors and cannot be removed,
and its value is the most readily ascertained of all values, the tax
to which we would resort can be collected with the minimum of cost
and the least strain on public morals.
2. It would enormously increase the production of wealth
--
(a) By the removal of the burdens that now weigh upon industry
and thrift. If we tax houses, there will be fewer and poorer
houses; if we tax machinery, there will be less machinery; if we
tax trade, there will be less trade; if we tax capital, there will
be less capital; if we tax savings, there will be less savings.
All the taxes therefore that we would abolish are those that
repress industry and lessen wealth. But if we tax land values,
there will be no less land.
(b) On the contrary, the taxation of land values has the effect
of making land more easily available by industry, since it makes
it more difficult for owners of valuable land which they
themselves do not care to use to hold it idle for a large future
price. While the abolition of taxes on labor and the products of
labor would free the active element of production, the taking of
land values by taxation would free the passive element by
destroying speculative land values and preventing the holding out
of use of land needed for use. If any one will but look around
today and see the unused or but half-used land, the idle labor,
the unemployed or poorly employed capital, he will get some idea
of how enormous would be the production of wealth were all the
forces of production free to engage.
(c) The taxation of the processes and products of labor on one
hand, and the insufficient taxation of land values on the other,
pro- duce an unjust distribution of wealth which is building up in
the hands of a few, fortunes more monstrous than the world has
ever before seen, while the masses of our people are steadily
becoming relatively poorer. These taxes necessarily fall on the
poor more heavily than on the rich; by increasing prices, they
necessitate a larger capital in all businesses, and consequently
give an ad- vantage to large capitals; and they give, and in some
cases are designed to give, special advantage and monopolies to
combinations and trusts. On the other hand, the insufficient
taxation of land values enables men to make large fortunes by land
speculation and the increase of ground values -- fortunes which do
not represent any addition by them to the general wealth of the
community, but merely the appropriation by some of what the labor
of others creates.
This unjust distribution of wealth develops on the one hand a
class idle and wasteful because they are too rich, and on the
other hand a class idle and wasteful because they are too poor. It
deprives men of capital and opportunities which would make them
more efficient producers. It thus greatly diminishes production.
(d) The unjust distribution which is giving us the hundred-fold
millionaire on the one side and the tramp and pauper on the other,
generates thieves, gamblers, and social parasites of all kinds,
and requires large expenditure of money and energy in watchmen,
policemen, courts, prisons, and other means of defense and
repression. It kindles a greed of gain and a worship of wealth,
and produces a bitter struggle for existence which fosters
drunkenness, increases insanity, and causes men whose energies
ought to be devoted to honest production to spend their time and
strength in cheating and grabbing from each other. Besides the
moral loss, all this involves an enormous economic loss which the
Single Tax would save.
(e) The taxes we would abolish fall most heavily on the poorer
agricultural districts, and tend to drive population and wealth
from them to the great cities. The tax we would increase would
destroy that monopoly of land which is the great cause of that
distribution of population which is crowding the people too
closely together in some places and scattering them too far apart
in other places. Families live on top of one another in cities
because of the enormous speculative prices at which vacant lots
are held. In the country they are scattered too far apart for
social intercourse and convenience, because, instead of each
taking what land he can use, every one who can grabs all he can
get, in the hope of profiting by its increase in value, and the
next man must pass farther on. Thus we have scores of families
living under a single roof, and other families living in dugouts
on the prairies afar from neighbors -- some living too close to
each other for moral, mental, or physical health, and others too
far separated for the stimulating and refining influences of
society. The wastes in health, in mental vigor, and in unnecessary
transportation result in great economic losses which the Single
Tax would save.
Let us turn to the moral side and consider the question of
justice.
The right of property does not rest upon human laws; they have
often ignored and violated it. It rests on natural laws -- that is
to say, the law of God. It is clear and absolute, and every
violation of it, whether committed by a man or a nation, is a
violation of the command, "Thou shalt not steal." The man
who catches a fish, grows an apple, raises a calf, builds a house,
makes a coat, paints a picture, constructs a machine, has, as to any
such thing, an exclusive right of ownership which carries with it
the right to give, to sell or bequeath that thing.
But who made the earth that any man can claim such ownership of
it, or any part of it, or the right to give, sell or bequeath it?
Since the earth was not made by us, but is only a temporary dwelling
place on which one generation of men follow another; since we find
ourselves here, are manifestly here with equal permission of the
Creator, it is manifest that no one can have any exclusive right of
ownership in land, and that the rights of all men to land must be
equal and inalienable. There must be exclusive right of possession
of land, for the man who uses it must have secure possession of land
in order to reap the products of his labor. But his right of
possession must be limited by the equal right of all, and should
therefore be conditioned upon the payment to the community by the
possessor of an equivalent for any special valuable privilege thus
accorded him.
When we tax houses, crops, money, furniture, capital or wealth in
any of its forms, we take from individuals what rightfully belongs
to them. We violate the right of property, and in the name of the
State commit robbery. But when we tax ground values, we take from
individuals what does not belong to them, but belongs to the
community, and which cannot be left to individuals without robbery
of other individuals.
Think about what the value of land is. It has no reference to the
cost of production, as has the value of houses, horses, ships,
clothes, or other things produced by labor, for land is not produced
by man, it was created by God. The value of land does not come from
the exertion of labor on land, for the value thus produced is a
value of improvement. That value attaches to any piece of land means
that that piece of land is more desirable than the land which other
citizens may obtain, and that they are willing to pay a premium for
permission to use it. Justice therefore requires that this premium
of value shall be taken for the benefit of all in order to secure to
all their equal rights.
Consider the difference between the value of a building and the
value of land. The value of a building, like the value of goods, or
of anything properly styled wealth, is produced by individual
exertion, and therefore properly belongs to the individual; but the
value of land only arises with the growth and improvement of the
community, and therefore properly belongs to the community. It is
not because of what its owners have done, but because of the
presence of the whole great population, that land in New York is
worth millions an acre. This value therefore is the proper fund for
defraying the common expenses of the whole population; and it must
be taken for public use, under penalty of generating land
speculation and monopoly which will bring about artificial scarcity
where the Creator has provided in abundance for all whom His
providence has called into existence. It is thus a violation of
justice to tax labor, or the things produced by labor, and it is
also a violation of justice not to tax land values.
These are the fundamental reasons for which we urge the Single
Tax, believing it to be the greatest and most fundamental of all
reforms. We do not think it will change human nature. That, man can
never do; but it will bring about conditions in which human nature
can develop what is best, instead of, as now in so many cases, what
is worst. It will permit such an enormous production as we can now
hardly conceive. It will secure an equitable distribution. It will
solve the labor problem and dispel the darkening clouds which are
now gathering over the horizon of our civilization. It will make
undeserved poverty an unknown thing. It will check the
soul-destroying greed of gain. It will enable men to be at least as
honest, as true, as considerate, and as high-minded as they would
like to be. It will remove temptation to lying, false, swearing,
bribery, and law breaking. It will open to all, even the poorest,
the comforts and refinements and opportunities of an advancing
civilization. It will thus, so we reverently believe, clear the way
for the coming of that kingdom of right and justice, and
consequently of abundance and peace and happiness, for which the
Master told His disciples to pray and work. It is not that it is a
promising invention or cunning device that we look for the Single
Tax to do all this; but it is be- cause it involves a conforming of
the most important and fundamental adjustments of society to the
supreme law of justice, because it involves the basing of the most
important of our laws on the principle that we should do to others
as we would be done by.
The readers of this article, I may fairly presume, believe, as I
believe, that there is a world for us beyond this. The limit of
space has prevented me from putting before them more than some hints
for thought. Let me in conclusion present two more:
1. What would be the result in heaven itself if those who
get there first instituted private property in the surface of
heaven, and parceled it out in absolute ownership among themselves,
as we parcel out the surface of the earth?
2. Since we cannot conceive of a heaven in which the equal rights
of God's children to their Father's bounty is denied, as we now deny
them on this earth, what is the duty enjoined on Christians by the
daily prayer: "Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth,
as it is in heaven?"