This isn't rocket science. Taxing land will not reduce its supply, nor will it increase demand. The owner of the land will bear the full burden of the tax.
Thanks for your antiquated propaganda citations from Henry George (no authority here), rather than argue anything directly yourself. You are certainly right that it is not rocket science. It is basic economics, which you also fail to understand, as you make the same fatal mistakes as Roy relating to supply and demand, even quoting Henry George in a way that suggests he made the same
truly basic mistakes as both of you.
Think about something: Why did you say "
reduce" supply and "
increase" demand, rather than simply "affect" either way? If LVT removes incentive from land speculators to hold onto lands, that tax most certainly gives landowners an incentive to SELL (make more land available to the market), thus affecting an INCREASE in supply (as a market correction), which in turn affects market price, with a consequent downward pressure on land values on the whole.
Thus, taxing land
affects both supply and demand (but only if you're honest enough to use the actual economic definitions for each), and can indeed be passed onto others, like any other cost.
Henry George wrote that LVT
"...in no way diminishes the amount of land there is to use..." What does that mean, exactly? The "
amount of land there is to use" is NOT the
economic supply.
So much for your appeals to Henry George.