rwpi said:
Roy L said:
One can never know for sure what a government will do in the event. That is a political problem peculiar to each jurisdiction, and irrelevant to what kind of policy government should pursue as a matter of principle. Implementation is an issue no matter what policy you advocate, even if it is no policy at all.
It is a tricky issue...I don't know what the best answer is.
This is a problem faced with our government when interpreting corporate charters. In American jurisprudence, it is not the
stated intent of a corporation or the philosophies held by founding members that are considered by the legislature or the courts when granting or interpreting a corporate charter, but rather the maximum extent of corporate powers
that could be employed by a corporate body once a charter is granted. In reality, governments are absolutely no different. The world has learned from sad experience that what a dictator promises is often meaningless. Once firmly empowered and in control, s/he can be benevolent or malevolent. Despite all political assurances, there is nothing in his/her "charter" that guarantees otherwise, and that goes back to the question of the rule of law, as opposed to the rule of men.
This parallels one of the biggest (political) problems facing LVT proponents, and that is how they deal with valid objections regarding what abuses COULD happen at the hands of the State (the taxing jurisdictions) once these bodies assume de facto ownership of all land, and ultimate control of all land titles, including a) how land is valued and ad valorem taxes are levied for land rents, b) what other taxes might still exist and to what extent after implementation, and c) how wealth is spent or otherwise redistributed once collected.
Objections, even in this thread, are dealt with as implementation proposals as they are imagined and devised by individuals -- everything from formulas for land valuation to exemptions (and/or dividends) for individuals. But the devil in their details are in the fact that none of these proposals are presented as first principles, but are interpreted by many as only the spoonful of political or philosophical promise sugar to help the LVT medicine go down.
The fact that there are no guarantees (even offered) is usually dismissed, as most of the LVT proponents I have interacted with consider all such objections to be secondary issues (out of those forthright enough to admit the objections are valid), while holding up LVT as a matter of first principle. As such, LVT proponents tend to be far more trusting of the state, and instead push hard, with moral polemics and economic arguments, that LVT should be agreed upon in principle and implemented first, with problems or potential abuses dealt with and corrected after the fact. That approach creates a political brick wall that is predictably stained with the blood from the smashed foreheads of many LVT proponents, including Henry George.
LVT proponents are definitely fighting an uphill battle with regard to trust in government, especially in light of governments they already see as evil for the policies they've enacted to date. The only reason a government would be trusted with LVT: the fact of LVT would be evidence that the government is finally "doing the right thing" - headed in the "right direction". And who doesn't love and trust a government that does according to their will, their philosophies?
As a matter of first principals, I look to the protection of individuals - NOT "the community" and not "the state".
Many opponents, like myself, look to a much broader context in terms of the issue of individual (minority by definition) trust in the state. One of those trust issues stems from the state's proven "revenue expansion" tendencies - including levels of obfuscating complexity - for any revenue stream once the power to collect is established as a matter of principle. Few argued against the arguably "simple" Income Tax when it was ratified in 1913, and primarily because it had NO discernible affect on most individuals.
"First they came for the wealthy, and I did not speak out..." In 1913, the top tax bracket was 7 percent on all income over $500,000 (orders of magnitude more today’s dollars), and the lowest tax bracket was 1 percent. Most individuals paid no income tax, so it wasn't an issue for most. The rate of expansion that finally encompassed the vast majority of the population with confiscatory abuses were exponential, but blossomed later into a monster, AFTER the camel's nose was squarely in the tent, with income tax established as a first principle. The seed of another head for the hydra.
I have yet to hear an LVT proponent deal with this except to dismiss it as something that just "goes with the [political] territory". It does not seem to be a problem for them, or a valid objection for LVT, first and foremost because they honestly believe in earnest that landownership is the biggest evil ever contrived, and the root cause of most of the poverty and oppression in the world, and that LVT is a panacea - the only moral, sensible, economically feasible and sustainable regime possible. They also observe that LVT is already implemented, tried to whatever degree and form it is tried in other parts of the world, which they are quick to point to as model successes, which cause them to hold out hope. Comes the continued cry:
LVT first, corrections after. Get that camel's nose squarely in the tent. Potential abuses are incidental, and up to the people themselves to correct.
Anyone forced to change their opinion is still of that same opinion, so the objection that is constantly dismissed still remains. What is to prevent LVT from being just another revenue stream - one more ADDITIONAL power, a system of abuses to stack on top of the rest? Why is there no push to abolish other taxes FIRST,
as a matter of first principles? Obviously, if the dream of so-called "single taxers" is to be realized,
to get from here to there requires at least the acknowledgment that a sow's ear is in already in place of the LVT silk purse. The state has already become addicted to current revenue streams, and has created REAL ADDICTIONS to real people (MOST of the population is addicted and dependent in one form or another) who rely on these revenue streams for their lives and livelihoods. So a compromise in the form of a transition proposal has to made. And how is that treated by LVT proponents?
Roy L said:
"...the proposal is to reduce and abolish other taxes commensurately.
And by "the proposal", Roy means, of course, "his proposal". Even as a transition, or shift from many tax mechanisms into one, the absolute abolishment of other taxes (by a given date) could be proposed as a "LVT sink or swim" rule. But it isn't. As a matter of first principles LVT implementation could be CONDITIONED upon the abolishment (NOT just promises of reduction) of other taxes. But you won't hear that proposal from very many, because the elimination of other taxes is only presented in the context of a
theoretical possibility, and not a guarantee of any kind. Never a condition. The cry is for LVT, first and foremost - fix and deal with everything else after. Why, it will be so liberating, and work so swimmingly well, that
governments would be fools not to get rid of the other, now unnecessary, taxes! Now sell that to people living in the real world, who have their eye on the reputation of the state, and not some imagined state that would finally be sated, and that would magically transform into a Good Witch once the LVT panacea is applied.
Likewise comes the objection: What is to prevent the tax or taxing rules or formulas from morphing or expanding to swallow up and encompass individuals in their homes,
even on the worst lands? What is to prevent a floor from being established - a minimum LVT tax from being levied on everyone? What is to prevent land valuations from being inflated, just as property taxes so often are -- whether by assessing values higher, or by increasing the mill rates, so that a higher bill results from even the lowest valuations?
LVT proponents from Henry George on have proposed only that "the full value" of unearned land rents be recovered. That's LAND RENT TIMES ONE (although some propose that 85-90% be levied, acknowledging the role that landholders would play in collection and administration). However, what if that turned out not to be sufficient for government's stated needs? What is to prevent that rule from being changed to LAND RENT TIMES 1.5, or even 2, or 3, or 7? You can still value land the same way, but revenue could increase by rationalize that 1X land rent is not sufficient, and raise the multiplier accordingly (AS IS DONE WITH REGULARITY WITH PROPERTY TAXES). A war is all it takes for that to happen, along with the straight-faced assurance that it would be temporary only, due to extraordinary circumstances.
Roy-the-benevolent-dictator says that this could not happen, but that's because
that is not in his proposal -- that's a different LVT, and something different than what he proposes. Some argue that it would be impossible for the state to increase land rents, or that it would "not be in the state's interest", based on their reasoning, their preferred rules, and their preferred formulas. But that's no different than saying how things would work if you were the dictator. It's the same reasoning that benevolence COULD be found in any dictator. It is completely within the realm of possibility that a supreme dictator COULD BE benevolent. It's NOT probable given the history of the world, but it is certainly possible. But what does that have to do with trust?
LVT could be
conditioned upon absolute guarantees (not political promises or incidental, secondary, or initial assurances) that individuals would be Constitutionally secure in their homes, truly free and unaffected by the tax -- not just as a matter of personal exemptions for some formulated amount. Not "exempt", but rather IMMUNE to the degree everyone would be. In other words, landownership and allodial title not abolished at all
for primary residences, even if an area limit was placed that applied equally to all. That would stop the vast majority of all land speculation in its tracks, and allow LVT to function outside the realm of personal living conditions. Landowners of primary residences could speculate and trade up or down all they wanted, but only to an area limit -- the remainder of the land could be allocated as a matter of taxable privilege only, according to the dictates of LVT, but the people themselves would be free.
But no. Private landownership (allodial title)
in any form is already condemned as the evil of evils - abusive in all cases, and which must be stamped out entirely.
For LVT proponents their uphill battle is well deserved, I think, with proposals I hope continue to be ignored, and continue to go down in flames. LVT is nothing more than an ad valorem tax on land -- a mechanism for revenue to the taxing jurisdiction. All arguments of the incidental effects and wonders of LVT notwithstanding, LVT in itself is not a first principle, and can be abused like any other mechanism. Until geolibs get their actual first principles straight, and until they focus on all individuals and their rights, as NON-COLLECTIVIZED, NON-SOCIALIZED rights, I'll continue to see the majority of them as little more than misguided socialist religious zealots on a mission to make perpetual renters out of everyone -- not just the "evil landowners" they fantasize about turning the tables on.