Origanalist
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- Feb 25, 2012
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I will continue to champion liberty, justice and the truth in threads where they are relevant.
A true inspiration to human kind you are Roy.
I will continue to champion liberty, justice and the truth in threads where they are relevant.
How much less impressive, then, is your non-response?
You just have to refuse to know the facts, because you have already realized that they prove your beliefs are false and evil.
No, taken from others.The assumption there, of course, being that revenues collected are all on the basis of value given,
Yes, that's what, "incentives matter" means, duh.and that government will want to give even more of that value in return so that it can get even more revenue in the future.
Yes, but only an undemocratic, unaccountable government that doesn't use LVT.In reality, government can successfully siphon value, as a parasite that does nothing but drain life blood from its host without giving much at all in return, beyond a heavier requirement for consumption.
Right. Parasitism is a universal characteristic of societies that support a wealthy, idle, greedy, landowning overclass. Part of the reason for ancient Egypt's high agricultural productivity was the increasing parasitism of the landowning priestly overclass as more and more land accumulated in its hands, and the farmers had to support more and more spending on monumental temple architecture as well as feed themselves and their families.To a parasite, "increased productivity" of a host is a natural result of an artificial requirement for increased energy consumption and output requirements of its hosts, who are put into an enhanced state of stress.
Steven is trying to prevent himself and his readers from knowing the fact that people are willing to pay for access to government services (schools, police and fire protections, sanitation, Medicare and Medicaid, etc.) and infrastructure (roads, airports, water and sewer systems, etc.), but it is greedy, parasitic private landowners whom they are forced to pay for such benefits, not the government that actually provides them.But the "giving back" paradigm is convenient, because any successful adjustments that private individuals and firms make as a result of LVT will all be conveniently attributed to LVT, and existing infrastructure, in whatever condition it is in, as if government actually "gave" something in return.
That describes landowners, who provide nothing in return for land rent, but does not describe government, which provides valued and desirable services and infrastructure.Tapeworms consume nutrients that are taken in by their host. But even though they often kill their hosts, they manage to survive and propagate as a species.
Tell the truth.Do they give something in return? In a manner of speaking, yes, if we spin it thusly:
This describes the effect of landowner privilege in gradually destroying societies that submit to it.The host must now work harder and increase its consumption beyond what the tapeworm can consume. It is a death spiral, of course, because as the host grows, so does its tapeworm.
Just as only the less productive are unable to survive landowner parasitism.It is in this way that the tapeworm only inflicts a net drain on the life and energy of "less productive" bodies, who cannot consume enough for both tapeworm and themselves.
The irony here is staggering, and hilarious. Steven is describing very precisely what landowners do, and how they rationalize it.The survival rate of the healthier hosts can be used as evidence that the tapeworm actually "gave back" something to more productive bodies, who prove "more productive" (to the tapeworms, and therefore more deserving, albeit from their perspective only).
So, Roy, by giving you tapeworms, I am actually giving you something. I am testing your productivity, and giving you added strength! So come, Roy, let me provide you with some added strength.
It is not a lie. It is self-evident and indisputable fact, as proved by the invariable poverty of every government-"free" society that has ever existed. You just have to find some way not to know that fact, and to stop others from knowing it, as you have already realized that it proves your beliefs are false and evil.That's one of the most presumptuous of all the geo-collectivist lies: that economic opportunities and advantages can be attributed primarily to government services and infrastructure.
You obviously have no idea of what the Henry George Theorem says, or means.The "Henry George Theorem" -- wherein a coincidental correlation is found between private land rents and the amount a government spends (not needs to spend), but only under certain conditions, if you hold the economy up to a certain light and view it "just so".
No, it identifies the fact that there is exactly one tapeworm, and it is the landowner. The producer pays taxes to fund government services and infrastructure; the government receives the taxes and spends the money on the desired services and infrastructure, netting nothing; the landowner then charges the producer full market value for access to the desired government services and infrastructure the producer's taxes just paid for. The producer has therefore been forced to pay for government twice so that the landowner can pocket one of the payments in return for absoutely nothing. Government ends up providing back the value it receives in taxes; the landowner gets to take produced value in return for nothing; the producer is robbed of part of the value he produces by having to pay for government twice.What the "Henry George Theorem" suggests is that there are two tapeworms with equal appetites in the economy.
Refuted above.This may only indicate that the appetite of the government tapeworm
Refuted above. It is the landowner and the landowner only who simply takes what the market will bear, and must always function as a tapeworm.only tracks evenly with the appetites of the private ones. In other words, the government may only be following suit, taking what it already sees the market will bear.
That's just more of your usual evil, dishonest filth. It is in fact the landowner who is the vampire, and the analogy is a remarkably accurate one: the landowner feeds on the lifeblood of the producer -- the product of his labor -- and gives nothing back; after repeatedly being forced to submit to the vampire's vile, putrid feedings on his body, the producer (assuming he is strong enough, and does not succumb) will, in sheer self-defence, buy some land and turn vampire himself, feeding on the lifeblood of other producers. Thus the evil infection spreads until a majority of people -- even the majority of producers -- are vampires. In their evil sickness of greed for human blood, the latter can no longer perceive that even as they feed on the remaining innocent producers, their blood is in turn being consumed by bigger vampires who are not producers.GeoVampires
You must always lie about what I have plainly written. ALWAYS. LVT unambiguously liberates all from the depredations of the vampires, and the UIE ensures that no one need ever pay anyone just for the opportunity to work and live.are not interested in relieving any hosts already afflicted (Roy's non-existent UIE bandaid notwithstanding).
It is LVT that frees everyone from the tapeworms, as there is no longer any opportunity for parasitism: all the transactions are voluntary, market-based, beneficiary-pay, value-for-value transactions, and no one gets something for nothing -- except their rights to life, liberty and property in the fruits of their labor.In reality geotapeworms don't want anyone free of Land Tapeworms;
Competition is impossible, as land is a canonical example of monopoly.they just don't want competition,
But in fact, no exceptions to the "NO tapeworms" rule.and no exceptions to the tapeworm rule.
There can be no tapeworms with LVT, as no one gets something for nothing. You just always have to lie. ALWAYS.There is only room in LVT Dodge for one kind of tapeworm.
Lie, as proved above.They want the tapeworm paradigm left intact, with the logical conclusion that we should just turn everyone into a host for the biggest tapeworm of all.
You always have to concoct stupid lies to tell. It's just despicable, evil filth.Note that in Roy's Geocommunist rationale,
Right: the kind that produces value in return for commensurate value consensually rendered.the renter's situation does not change. The renters all still have landlords, and still must pay rents, only the landlord is now "the right kind".
You are the one rationalizing the depredations of tapeworms, Steven, as I have proved to you above, for the hundredth time.That's just it, my fine slippery tapeworm advocate.
Lie. The landowner pays, and no one else. What the end user pays in LVT is just the same amount the landowner would have charged him. As he loses nothing, he cannot possibly be the one paying. You know this, but are deliberately lying about it.All LVT is paid for by productivity of end users, who are not necessarily the landowners.
Another lie. LVT means the producer need only pay for government once, instead of twice. The only loser is the landowner, who is no longer privileged to get something for nothing. LVT cannot be siphoned from productivity, as the productive are precisely the ones who benefit most by it.There is no such thing as LVT that did not originate from, and was not ultimately siphoned from, productivity.
Yes, in what some people may think of as Steven's "mind," our motive for proving that current taxes are grotesquely unjust, destructive and evil is that we harbor a secret agenda to keep and even increase them...What the Henry George Theorem suggests to the doubly and triply evil statist vampires (the majority, who are not "single taxers" at all), is that with the addition of LVT state siphoning of private land rents, government spending can effectively DOUBLE, based on what the market already has proven it can bear.
Absurd lie.Which, ironically, is precisely what LVT would accomplish.
Despicable, dishonest and disgraceful beneath all contempt.Greedy, evil, filthy way to rob and enslave the productive, thy name is Geoism.
Government ends up providing back the value it receives in taxes...
The landowner pays, and no one else. What the end user pays in LVT is just the same amount the landowner would have charged him.
LVT cannot be siphoned from productivity, as the productive are precisely the ones who benefit most by it.
Those who must pay landowners for access to the services and infrastructure government spending pays for, of course. You know that. That's why you own land: so you can pocket everyone else's taxes."back"? To whom?
I'm assuming democratic accountability, of course.Let's put our minds into your goofy frame of reference, wherein we pretend for a minute that the government would not behave as it always has with regard to spending, and that the government is only spending revenue, in the spirit of "giving back" (i.e., actually providing necessary public services and nothing more).
What do you mean by "actually do pay"? In economics, the actual payer of a tax is considered to be the one who has less money as a result of the tax. If introduction of a tax leaves someone's financial position unchanged, then they aren't paying that tax. The ones paying it are the ones whose financial positions are made worse by it. You don't seem to be clear on that.If I am a landowner who is renting out to those who actually do pay the tax to the state,
Right. It is now a wash instead of you getting to keep the money your tenants are paying for access to the services and infrastructure government provides. You now have less money, not your tenants.the renters will pay me rents on my capital improvements, even as they pay the state for the rents on my land (which makes that a wash for me).
No. Your term, "landowner/developer" is a dishonest attempt to pretend that owning land is the same thing as building improvements. That is of course a lie, as you know.Whatever infrastructure and other government services are provided inure primarily to my benefit, as the landowner/developer, as I rent out my capital improvements!
No. LVT stops the producers' treadmill by ensuring that they need only pay for government once instead of twice. It is their current double payment for government, with one of the payments being given to landowners in return for nothing, that puts the productive on the treadmill and landowners on the escalator.So I benefit from the LVT treadmill
No. The escalator is only for landowners, not developers -- who, as producers, are automatically consigned to the treadmill. LVT stops both the landowners' escalator and the producers' treadmill. When, under LVT, the end users need only pay for government once, and get the benefits of the services and infrastructure they are paying for, they are no longer on a treadmill but on a fixed ramp, climbing as fast as their own productive efforts will carry them.that ONLY end users must tread as they pay to support it, but which powers MY landowner/developer escalator.
No. You just don't know -- and refuse to learn -- any economics.Blatant self-contradiction.
YES, IT DOES, as explained above. The tenant is no worse off, so he can't be the one paying the tax. The landowner is the ONLY one who is worse off, so he IS the only one paying the tax.Condensed, that sentence reads: The landowner pays...what the end user pays in LVT. You say "What the end user pays in LVT"...but then insist that only landowners are paying it. The fact that the landowner does not keep that particular portion of the rents does not mean that the landowner is the one paying them.
Instead of pocketing the rent. Right. No longer being able to pocket that money means that he is paying that money as a result of the tax. I don't know any clearer way to explain that to you.He is neither paying the land rents himself, nor is he pocketing the land rents paid by others. The LVT portion of the rents passes directly from the renters' pocket to the state, with the landowner acting only as the collection arm intermediary of the state.
No, you are equivocating on the word, "pay." Maybe I enabled you to confuse yourself by trying to go along with your terminology in my previous message. Let's try again:The ONLY landowners who actually pay ANY LVT would be those who also happen to be end users of that land, with no rents charged to anyone else. In other words, "productive" landowners.
"Proof" refuted above.Wrong, as proved above,
You know that the developer is producing something and is therefore productive, while the landowner is not and therefore is not. Why pretend that they are the same? (As if we both don't know very well why...)unless by "the productive" you mean landowners and developers,
Tenants are consumers of developers' improvements, but many of them are also productive. In the cases where the tenant is not productive (e.g., is simply occupying a residence), the developer is. The landowner qua landowner never is.and not those they rent to,
Meaningless noise.in their state/owner/developer rental alliance.
No. HK does not recover all the land rent, so leaseholders there can cream off some of it -- but rarely as much as a landowner in the USA. In general, the longer a lease has been in effect, the more rent the leaseholder can cream off. But a full implementation of LVT leaves no rent in the landowner's pockets at all, and they are the only losers. As producers, developers would certainly benefit from LVT, but probably the biggest beneficiaries would be the landless working poor, who would be lifted into the middle class virtually at one stroke.Like the leaseholder/developers who benefit most in Hong Kong, LVT would benefit landowner/developers the most.
Nope. Disproved above. As they are not made worse off, they can't be footing the bill. I'm not sure there is any clearer way to explain that to you.The actual productive end users would foot the bill at all times for all of that,
I have proved they would benefit from LVT, as it is the landowner alone who is the tapeworm. See above.but they would not be the beneficiaries of your tapeworm tax.
ROTFL! You only proved you either don't know any economics, or are lying.As proved.
That's why you own land: so you can pocket everyone else's taxes.
In economics, the actual payer of a tax is considered to be the one who has less money as a result of the tax. If introduction of a tax leaves someone's financial position unchanged, then they aren't paying that tax.
The ones paying it are the ones whose financial positions are made worse by it. You don't seem to be clear on that.
It is now a wash instead of you getting to keep the money your tenants are paying for access to the services and infrastructure government provides. You now have less money, not your tenants.
Your term, "landowner/developer" is a dishonest attempt to pretend that owning land is the same thing as building improvements.
As the landowner, you do not have and are not renting out capital improvements, but simply charging the developer for access to the benefits of government services and infrastructure.
As the developer, you are renting out your capital improvements to tenants, charging them land rent for the advantages of the location, and paying that land rent to the landowner for access to the same advantages.
The fact that a given individual might be functioning as both landowner and developer does not mean they are the same thing, any more than a given priest being a pedophile means they are the same thing (OK, maybe that wasn't such a good example....).
You ARE reliant on lying about the relationship between landowners and developers.
LVT stops the producers' treadmill by ensuring that they need only pay for government once instead of twice.
The escalator is only for landowners, not developers -- who, as producers, are automatically consigned to the treadmill.
LVT stops both the landowners' escalator and the producers' treadmill.
You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to Steven Douglas again...
<yawn> Tell it to the many great economists, philosophers and other great thinkers, including Nobel laureates in economics, who advocate LVT. The notion that you understand it better than they do is cretinous.I have your LVT by the cajones now, Roy.
Ain't that the truth...Thank you for the education, speaking as the only one between us that has really profited from these endless rounds.
Or economics.I had never even heard of LVT before debating it with you.
No. I have been very clear, and have expressed myself in simple, grammatical English. The economic relationships are a bit subtle, and IME most people can't understand them, but your main difficulty is that you have to refuse to know all facts that prove your beliefs are false and evil, and that requirement makes any clear identification of those facts incomprehensible to you.Your ridiculously overly-complex web of linguistic machinations and tortured interpretations used to describe your LVT Emperor's Clothes made it very difficult (at first) to even see where you were coming from.
It has actually been a learning circle for you: you have not learned a damn thing, and are right back where you started: totally ignorant of both taxation economics and land economics, and determined to remain so.So it has been a learning curve for me, Roy, not you.
Because the fallacies, absurdities and lies have not changed.Your ad nauseam turing machine responses (including all the screed comprised of nothing but righteously indignant denouncements) have not changed a whit since your arrival.
It has not grown at all. You didn't know any land or taxation economics at the outset, and you still don't.Meanwhile, my understanding has done nothing but grow;
No $#!+...not for understanding economics in general,
I did not originate LVT. It's a policy whose benefits have been known for over 250 years, and are not disputed by any competent economist.but for understanding WHICH pieces of economics you have been applying, misapplying, or simply fabricating altogether to make your Roy's complex and intricately woven LVT Tapestry.
Sounds more like you've been doing 'shrooms.I have studied your loom, and have seen your tapestries.
Idiocy lacking any basis in fact, logic or economics.I know exactly where you zig and where you zag now, and exactly why and where your most ideal implementation of LVT fails miserably, even by your warped, distorted standards and ideals, and why it really is tantamount to nothing more than human enslavement.
It hasn't been the bumps that have been making me sick. It has been the unutterable dishonesty of everything you have written.Get ready for a bumpier ride.
But, of course, they don't.I can see why you hate the Austrians...They are the only ones who have the silver bullet to your werewolf in sheep's clothing.
Nope. Land, unlike products of labor, cannot be produced."Classical economy erred when it assigned land a distinct place in its theoretical scheme. Land is, in its economic sense, a factor of production, and the laws determining the formation of the prices of land are the same that determine the formation of other forms of production."
Right, but wages do not include a return to advantages stemming from location.
"Thus the term labor includes all human exertion in the production of wealth, and wages, being that part of the produce which goes to labor, includes all reward for such exertion. There is, therefore, in the political-economic sense of the term, no distinction as to the kind of labor, or as to whether its reward is received through an employer or not. ..." Mises
Strawman. The community doesn't own the land. No one owns the land. Individuals privileged with exclusive use of land owe rent to the community because the community is forcefully deprived of their equal liberty to use the land."The paradox is that, on the one hand, you say that an individual cannot own land because he did not produce it, and, on the other hand, you say that the community owns the land, though the community did not produce it either. My question is: how did the commuity become the owner of the land?"
The market values land, not individuals."Even if we could magically alternate, we still could not determine at what price an individual values the [transformed or] untransformed land, as we would need a market transaction know anything about the value individuals place on something, which would require him to sell it to someone else. However, even a sale does not necessarily tell us how much the seller valued the property in monetary terms. It merely tells us that that price was one price in a range of prices at which the seller was willing to sell."
"Rent is the difference between production on some given land, versus identical production on marginal land."Only when considering the moral dimension of man as well as the economic dimension can we allow for the possibility that a seller may refuse to sell at that high bid price (or will give it to the buyer for less than that absurd bid). The value the seller ascribed to his property would necessarily be the lowest price at which he would be willing to sell the untransformed property. So, the only way the Georgist tax-collector could determine what to peg the LVT at would be to read the mind of the current land-owner, in never-never-land where we can alternate between transformed and untransformed land."
"you cannot determine the value of the untransformed land...even in the case of completely untransformed land, you cannot determine how much an individual values it unless you can read his or her mind (that is, you can’t tell the absolute lowest price at which he’d be willing to sell, or the absolute highest price at which he’d be willing to buy). And you also run into the practical problem of determining the highest value placed on the property by any individual (thus, it’s highest valued use).
Nope. Ownership of land constitutes, in the first place, an initiation of aggression."...you can’t magically alternate between transformed and untransformed land. I will also say that it’s immoral to do that, as it would require forcing a sale of property by the owner, which constitutes the initiation of aggression.
Question begging. This assumes the market allows the initiation of force that is land ownership in the first place, which is of course at the heart of the argument.Also, by forcing the owner to sell, you’ve changed what would otherwise be the price of the magically untransformed land on the free market, because you’ve created a pressure on him to sell, which will drive the price down.
Complete nonsense. Even if this were true, the tax would be continually adjustable, so that it would jibe with market valuation. Mises embarrasses himself here.Thus, you have defeated your own objective, and will almost necessarily underestimate the price at which the untransformed land sells on a free market without coercsion (by coercing the owner to sell, you’ve lowered the price). Thus, you have under-estimated the land-value tax."
Get rid of the state, and such issues are the least of your problems.Get rid of the state and taxes can't go to "parasite" landowners...seems that gets beyond you.
Oh, please. Do you really think I haven't demolished all the Austrian School's stupid anti-LVT garbage a hundred times? Read and learn:I can see why you hate the Austrians...They are the only ones who have the silver bullet to your werewolf in sheep's clothing.
Problem is, that's just objectively false. Unlike capital, land's supply is fixed, and it has no cost of production. Therefore, even if its price declines to zero, it's all still available. That is not true of capital or labor."Classical economy erred when it assigned land a distinct place in its theoretical scheme. Land is, in its economic sense, a factor of production, and the laws determining the formation of the prices of land are the same that determine the formation of other forms of production."
How is that relevant?"Thus the term labor includes all human exertion in the production of wealth, and wages, being that part of the produce which goes to labor, includes all reward for such exertion. There is, therefore, in the political-economic sense of the term, no distinction as to the kind of labor, or as to whether its reward is received through an employer or not. ..." Mises
The community does not own the land. It merely CONSISTS OF the people whose rights to use the land the landowner is abrogating. Similarly, the community does not own the atmosphere. But if someone starts pumping poison into it, the community has every right to stop him by force."The paradox is that, on the one hand, you say that an individual cannot own land because he did not produce it, and, on the other hand, you say that the community owns the land, though the community did not produce it either. My question is: how did the commuity become the owner of the land?"
What any individual thinks the land is worth is irrelevant. Its value is what it would trade for in the market, not some subjective opinion of the owner (or anyone else). The owner can set a floor on its value by refusing to sell for some offered amount, but that's all. He can't make it worth more than the highest offer."Even if we could magically alternate, we still could not determine at what price an individual values the [transformed or] untransformed land, as we would need a market transaction know anything about the value individuals place on something, which would require him to sell it to someone else. However, even a sale does not necessarily tell us how much the seller valued the property in monetary terms. It merely tells us that that price was one price in a range of prices at which the seller was willing to sell."
Refuted above. The owner's subjective opinion does not define the land's market value."Only when considering the moral dimension of man as well as the economic dimension can we allow for the possibility that a seller may refuse to sell at that high bid price (or will give it to the buyer for less than that absurd bid). The value the seller ascribed to his property would necessarily be the lowest price at which he would be willing to sell the untransformed property. So, the only way the Georgist tax-collector could determine what to peg the LVT at would be to read the mind of the current land-owner, in never-never-land where we can alternate between transformed and untransformed land."
That is just Austrian "subjective theory of value" garbage. Value is not subjective. It is what an item would trade for in the market. That requires two people's opinions, which by definition makes it not subjective. The plain fact is, real estate appraisers determine the unimproved value of land all the time, and the standard error of their estimates, when compared with actual transaction prices, is less than 5%. It would be even less in a jurisdiction that used LVT, as there would be no speculative froth in the prices."you cannot determine the value of the untransformed land...even in the case of completely untransformed land, you cannot determine how much an individual values it unless you can read his or her mind (that is, you can’t tell the absolute lowest price at which he’d be willing to sell, or the absolute highest price at which he’d be willing to buy). And you also run into the practical problem of determining the highest value placed on the property by any individual (thus, it’s highest valued use)."
Blatant question begging fallacy. It is the land"owner" who initiates aggression by forcibly excluding others from the land. If some stupid swine parks his car on the sidewalk in front of your house, you will rightly say, "Move it or lose it," because your liberty right to use the sidewalk has priority over his property right in the car."...you can’t magically alternate between transformed and untransformed land. I will also say that it’s immoral to do that, as it would require forcing a sale of property by the owner, which constitutes the initiation of aggression.
Irrelevant. That pressure to sell is exactly what makes the land market more efficient and the values easier to determine.Also, by forcing the owner to sell, you’ve changed what would otherwise be the price of the magically untransformed land on the free market, because you’ve created a pressure on him to sell, which will drive the price down.
That is utter garbage. Land value is net of taxes in any case. The "pressure to sell" just represents the free market's normal incentive for efficient allocation of resources.Thus, you have defeated your own objective, and will almost necessarily underestimate the price at which the untransformed land sells on a free market without coercsion (by coercing the owner to sell, you’ve lowered the price). Thus, you have under-estimated the land-value tax."
Wrong. Get rid of the state while retaining landowning, and the parasitic landowner simply imposes taxes himself. It's called, "feudalism." Seems that gets beyond you.Get rid of the state and taxes can't go to "parasite" landowners...seems that gets beyond you.
No, it's not, because you know that's impossible. Any rent you don't pay in taxes you have to pay the landowner either periodically for use of the land while he retains ownership, or in advance when you buy the land from him. That is what the Net Present Value Equation MEANS.No, the reason that I own land (and want everyone else to as well - my objective) is so that we can all be FREE from paying ANY RENTS at all (property OR land),
Land rent arises primarily from government spending on desired services and infrastructure (which also make possible the community's creation of desired opportunities and amenities, and enables advantageous use of the physical qualities nature created). That fact is neither circular nor question begging. It is just an indisputable fact of economics that you have to refuse to know, because you have already realized that it proves your beliefs are false and evil.which you, in circular question begging form, refer to as "everyone else's taxes".
It's not my personal spin, stop lying. It's a known and accepted fact of economics. It is merely a fact of economics that is not known to you because you do not know any economics.Thank you for Roy's Personal Spin Theory of Tax Incidence under color of "in economics". Nice quick-change artist.
But were the same amount of money as he now pays in taxes, and paid for the same thing.You took a renter, who has less money as a result of paying rents-which-were-not-taxes,
There is nothing magical about it, stop lying, because it is self-evidently objectively correct.and by simply calling those rents "taxes", can magically declare that he is no worse off because, his financial position was unchanged.
But that is impossible, as proved above. And you know it.Ideally, my objective would be to make it possible for no individual to ever pay rents to anyone, public or private, so that their positions would be better off, not "no worse off".
There was no verbal sleight-of-hand, stop lying. It was "simplistic" because the facts are simple, self-evident, and indisputable.Your simplistic verbal sleight of hand did not say anything about how tax incidence is determined. You don't seem to be clear on that.
It is completely clear, stop lying. All competent economists are aware that tax incidence is determined by elasticities. What is hotly debated is the magnitude of those elasticities, because they usually can't be measured empirically.But that's understandable, because neither is it clear to economists who hotly debate tax incidence to this day.
The price of what? The police intervention? Of course he isn't.A private individual who is whipping a man in chains is stopped by the police. The police keep that man in chains and proceed to whip him with exactly the same intensity, only this time on behalf of the state. Since the victims' pain position is "made no worse by it", can we say that he is not the one "paying the price"?
The burden of being deprived of the opportunity to be evil? Yes, he clearly does, just as under LVT, the landowner bears the burden of being deprived of the opportunity to be evil.Can we say that the private individual who was doing the whipping before somehow "bears the burden", based on his inability to whip anyone personally?
Since LVT is not in place, he is pocketing other people's taxes no matter what the source.Since LVT is not in place, and since LVT on individuals is not the only way to pay for services and infrastructure, we are not buying into your arrogating presumption that he is "pocketing" infrastructure taxes that do not exist from that source,
The existence of the land's unimproved value proves the existence of the community that the landowner is depriving of the land. There is no other way it could have that value.or stealing from some geocommunistic community that also does not exist.
No, it is meant to pretend that landowner and developer are the same thing.That is only your dishonest attempt at a strawman argument for something that was not claimed. A landowner/developer is only meant to distinguish a particular type of owner. A SUBSET.
<yawn> Steven, do you know what the GRE is? It is a standardized qualification test for people intending to enter graduate studies.As a collectivist macro-aggregate-only thinker, you have definite problems wrapping your head around the concept of subsets and sets, trees versus forests, individuals versus community, and other important distinctions.
Clarity is the one thing you cannot permit, which is why you had to produce the following mushy fuzzy obfuscating with disingenuous question-begging compound statement:Let's be a little more clear, and not so mushy fuzzy obfuscating with disingenuous question-begging compound statements.
No. The LVT does not affect the supply of or the rental demand for the land, and thus does not affect its rental price. The landowner CANNOT charge the tax to the end user, except to the extent that he reduces the amount of rent he pockets for himself. The tenant is not willing to pay any more, and will just leave.Under an LVT regime, the land rents portion of total rents (on land plus capital improvements plus land) is charged to thedeveloperlandowner, who in turn charges this tax to the end user who is actually paying the rents foraccess to the benefits ofgovernment services and infrastructure.
No. LVT does not affect either supply or demand, and therefore cannot affect price. The landowner simply keeps less rent. He has no choice, as raising his tenants' lease payments will simply make them leave. If all landowners try to increase lease payments, tenants will just use less land, leaving some landowners out in the cold. They will then reduce their lease amounts to the market level, driving all the other landowners to do likewise.Since the LVT portion of rents is effectively a surcharge for land rents that is proportionately and uniformly applied to all lands, the tax burden can never fall to anyone who is not an end user of land.
It falls on him whether he has renters or not.IF the landowner/developer has no renters, that burden falls ultimately to him (as HE is then the end user).
I see. So, in whatever it is that you use in place of a brain, when a comatose landowner's land declines in exchange value from $1M to $0 as a result of LVT, that makes him the ultimate beneficiary of LVT because his tenant is paying all the taxes!The only question is which end users will benefit most from the tax, versus who will bear the greatest tax incidence, or burden. Entities other than end users of land are the ultimate beneficiaries, as they are completely free of all taxes.
No, you are just pretending tax incidence and spending benefit are the same. They are not the same, any more than landowning and developing are the same (which is another favored pretense of yours).The tax incidence (the party on whom the true burden of the tax falls) cannot be properly assessed without knowing the use of the tax revenues. It will fall on whomever pays the most tax but receives the least amount of benefits for those revenues when they are spent, while the least tax incidence (greatest beneficiaries of the tax) will be those who pay the least tax but receive the most benefits -- again, depending on how the revenues are spent.
The LVT does not affect the supply of or the rental demand for the land, and thus does not affect its rental price.
LVT does not affect either supply or demand, and therefore cannot affect price.
...when a comatose landowner's land declines in exchange value from $1M to $0 as a result of LVT, that makes him the ultimate beneficiary of LVT because his tenant is paying all the taxes!
LOL, none of that makes any sense at all. It's so self-evidently ridiculous, it'd be a waste of time to refute it (assuming anyone not seeking laughs bothers to read it, which is doubtful). Kudos on the anti-geoist magnum opus of complete and utter descent into inanity.LVT - STATE-ENCOURAGED AND ENFORCED FEUDALISM
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Oh lord.Bit of a thought experiment...
Uh, ok. What is the point of this nonsensical "thought experiment?" Other showing that a representative democracy makes no sense when there's no one to represent, of course.On the island of Geomania, there lives Person A, Person B and Person C. A rule is suggested: No one can own any land but must rent it from a Government so that each person is free to go anywhere on the island whenever he wishes without any restriction. All three agree government will be selected by annual majority vote. Following a democratic vote, the government consists of Person A, elected by Person A and Person B, C did not vote for A. Person A now controls all land for rent and divides equally the island In 3; 1 equal plot for each person. A grants 2 of the three plots for use of land to both Person B and Person C for 50 coconuts each per year. He grants the final plot to himself. Land rent (coconuts) is to be paid to an account under the direction of Person A. All coconuts collected will be used toward the protection of the island from exterior threats and protecting each from the theft of “land use” by the others. A, being the elected government, naturally declares himself the final judge in all disputes between all parties involving land rents, even those involving himself. Naturally this authority would include deciding rent amounts and proper possession.
Since A and B constitute the elective majority governing power and C is the minority who did not vote for A. B has expressed his wish to use C’s land and says he will not vote with A in the next election if he does not get a lower than market assessment on C’s land so that he may rent it to gain the resources of coconuts on it for a larger gain… A, fearing his loss of power to possibly C or B, gives into this pressure and rents Cs land to B against C’s wish for 40 coconuts instead of the assessed 50 coconuts. C is left landless while B has accumulated more land at a under assessment price. A receives B’s vote and retains majority power.