Those two phrases tend to split opinion along traditional left and right wing lines.
The lefties love the idea of Collective Ownership ('CO') because they think it means centralised state ownership, and the right wingers hate the idea for the equal and opposite reason. Right wingers appreciate the concept of The Invisible Hand ('TIH') but lefties deny it even exists, which is why they want everything to be nationalised, regulated, centrally planned etc.
Actually, CO and TIH are much the same thing: consider a large plc with tens of thousands of shareholders - instead of each shareholder owning a desk, a delivery van, or some computer records and employing one or two people, they each own a small percentage of a larger whole. The business and all its assets are owned collectively. In theory, shareholders could vote to liquidate the company and take the assets pro rata to the number of shares they own, but in all but the most extreme cases, they would lose out sorely by doing so - you're better off with £5,000 worth of shares than you are with a second hand delivery van, for example (or else you'd sell the shares and buy a second hand delivery van).
Similarly, you could say that this pooling is TIH at work; if there are economies of scale, people end up better off by owning a small share of a larger pie than the whole of a very small pie.
[Further, that plc might have tens of thousands of employees. Of course, they do not 'own' the business in a legal sense, but in economic terms, they very much do, and they speak of 'their colleagues' or 'their desk' or 'their cash till' or whatever. In the long run, an employee has much the same interest in his employer doing well as a shareholder does.]
"What's the point of all this musing?", you may ask.
Let's be old fashioned and assume that this plc is run for the benefit of its shareholders. It may be that they have a shop (or factory) near you, which you visit frequently because you shop (or work) there, but it is making losses and they close it down. As a customer (or worker), you will be a bit miffed, but if you are also a shareholder, you will benefit. TIH continues working.
Or it may be that the plc wants to open up a new shop (or factory) near you. Maybe you don't like this, because it will mean more traffic on your road. Or maybe you do like this because you'll get a job there. If they open the shop or factory, some win, some lose, but the economy as a whole wins. TIH is still working.
The problem is that NIMBYs will always have a stronger voice than people who are looking for a job (because there are more of them). Imagine that every business had to get the permission of everybody within a certain radius of its stores or factories before it opened one or closed one, we'd end up with some quasi-socialist nightmare. No new shop or factory would be allowed to open, and existing ones would not be allowed to close (or would be subsidised, like 'rural post offices').
Oh ... this is exactly what has happened to this country. As this story illustrates, TIH has been largely smashed to pieces in this country by the Home-Owner-Ists; it cannot guide people to the overall optimum outcome. The story concerns NIMBYs and Greenies, both staunch opponents of economic progress, ganging up against the third Heathrow runway, but the same principle applies to anything and everything.
"With you so far" I hear you sigh, "So what's the solution?"
OK, as a thought experiment and not a serious proposal, let's superimpose the CO model that we had with a plc on land ownership. Everybody hands over their land to UK Land plc (which then owns all UK land) in exchange for shares to the same value. UK Land plc collects market rent on everything and dishes it to shareholders as regular dividends, so that instead of owning a house worth £200,000 and living 'rent free', you own £200,000 worth of shares in UK Land plc, pay £8,000 a year rent and get £8,000 in dividends. Shares in UK Land plc would be freely tradeable, of course.
UK Land plc would thus have one aim - to maximise its rental income on behalf of its shareholders. When deciding whether to allow a third runway at Heathrow it would compare the possible fall in rental values of houses in the flight path against the increase in rental values (more jobs in the area, they can collect more rent from BAA etc) and if this gives a positive result, it would go ahead (I'm assuming that it would, for the purposes of this post).
The same applies to power stations, sewage works, new houses, roads - things that help the UK economy and which enhance rental values overall go ahead; other stuff doesn't. Land would be put to its most efficient use without the NIMBYs and Greenies blocking everything.
So, turning back to the people affected by a third runway, some don't like aircraft noise, but they wouldn't have to worry about the capital value of their home, because the capital value of their shares in UK Land plc would go up ever so slightly; and if the rental value of their house goes down, they can either stay there and pocket the difference (their dividend income from UK Land plc also goes up ever so slightly) or move elsewhere. Others are happy to live near Heathrow because they work there and want a shorter commute. And so on.
But all shareholders in UK Land plc would benefit from the new runway, even if they live in the Outer Hebrides. Almost by definition, the gains would outweigh the losses. TIH would sort out who lives where on the basis of free markets; rather than the Home-Owner-Ists first deciding where they want to live and then dictating everything else that happens via a rigid planning system.
Just sayin', is all.
Elevate their cause?
3 hours ago
7 comments:
the difficulty is that some/most people want it both ways. So, the residents of Henley want to have their boho chic town, but also want development a few miles away in Reading so that they have jobs to go to.
Hmmm... It does make me wonder if home-ownerism is a result of the motor car. Before then, if a town opposed development then they couldn't reap the rewards of it.
I think there is a problem in that when people buy a house in a nice area they are buying on the assumption that it will stay nice. Eg, my mother moved to a beautiful Cotswolds village a few years ago and paid a lot for it, the main attraction being the beauty of the village and the surrounding area. Most of the cost is therefore tied up in this location. If you were to build a power plant, a chemicals plant and an airport in the village, then this would be destroyed and the value of the house would no doubt go down.
(There would be people who would like to work there but likely as not they would not value the house as highly as it is valued now).
So, how, if you want a house like this, do you get the reassurance that you are getting what you are paying for? Either local planning laws (which seem to me to be a bit too strict), or, assuming anyone can do what they like, perhaps the village buys all the nearby land, thus preventing anyone from buying a house and turning it into an open fronted brothel/powerplant/chemical spraying combo NIMBY hellhole. Or, whenever a house comes on the market, the village collectively buys it, rewrites the contract so that nobody can do anything but live there for 100 years, and then sell the house on again. They could even sell their houses to themselves with this kind of clause. Then at least everyone knows where they stand and it is down in contract. Otherwise you are bound to have this NIMBY attitude as people thought they were buying into something that wasn't explicitly stated and is being threatened.
I had an argument over on Twitter the other night about this.
As I see it, there's nothing wrong with co-operatives or mutuality as long as it isn't imposed from the top.
It's all the fault of the original qualification for the Franchise - you had to be a landowner. I Bet there's a Freehold Road near you.
The English, well the Brits really are welded to landownership with near paranoia. I am a landowner in the sense that I own (well strictly Mrs Lola part owns - I just live there) and I love wheer I live. But - and you may not belive this - I dearly want reform of the tax system to discourage home-owner-ism.
Funny bit really is that HOI gets worse under Labour. they always destroy wealth and the currency and the money supply by inflation and that always favours HOI.
Anyway, I can't see a fault with the Tumbrill and the guillotine.
JT, I doubt it, Home-Owner-Ism has been around for centuries.
EKTWP, I have fleshed out the post a bit, I hope that answers your queries. I agree on the private solutions you mention, but the NIMBYs don't want the hassle and expense of buying up surrounding fields - they want to prevent the farmer from building houses using the force of the state for free.
HS, but Home-Owner-Ism and NIMBYism is enforced 'from the top', i.e. by The State.
L, that may be part of the cause. But under this thought experiment you can become a landowner much more easily by buying shares in UK Land plc if you so wish.
Socialism wedded to Blue Socialism (i.e. HOIsm) as practised by NuLabour is a recipe for disaster of course, as we are currently experiencing.
Mark,
Your argument is all well and good, under the assumption that a house is more or less fungible.
I don't think that's true for many home-owners. Typical renters hang curtains and a few pictures on the white walls, and call it done. Typical homeowners spend years getting the decor just to their taste, adding or removing walls etc. These activities don't add to the market value of their home, but to add to the personal value they place on it. They represent a huge cost sunk into this particular house, so it's not so easy for them to up and move if they don't like the noise of the new airport.
Anon, I know all that.
It's a rubbish excuse for stifling the economy though. It is so petty minded. These Home-Owner-Ists use the force of the state to prevent other people making £1 in order to keep 10p of value for themselves. No wonder our economy is fucked.
It just illustrates that the Invisible Hand has been well and truly smashed to pieces.
Post a Comment