Saturday, 5 June 2010

Killer arguments against LVT, not (44)

People who have absolutely no idea what they are talking about keep lining up those killer arguments to be flattened by the Wadsworth LVT steamroller (TM Jim). I lobbed in the LVT grenade over in a thread on the IEA blog a couple of months ago and look what we found in the rubble:

Richard Wellings Says: "Mark,
(1) What would happen to old people on low incomes with big houses if a flat-rate land/property tax was introduced? Would they be thrown out of their homes and their property confiscated? [which he followed up with: "If LVT did mean forcing many elderly people from their homes, it would be almost impossible to implement politically."]
(2) And what about semi-subsistence smallholders who wanted to ‘opt out’ and live off the land? Would they be allowed to pay the land tax in carrots and turnips?"


I'll deal with the Poor Widow Bogey (for the dozenth time) tomorrow if I may. The debate on his question (2) developed thusly:

Philip Says: "... your last point is exactly the idea in terms of the economic justification. Say Baldrick is growing turnips on top of land that could be used for a diamond mine. The tax is levied not on the income from the turnips but on the rental value of the land which depends on its possible use as a diamond mine. The tax is therefore levied without any penalty for putting the land to its best value use – the diamond miner pays exactly the same tax as the turnip grower. As such, there is no disincentive to maximise the value of output unlike with a tax on rents, work and profits.

Jim keeps digging [obligatory pun]: "... the turnips vs diamond mine analogy nicely encapsulates my opposition to LVT. I maintain that I should have the right (3) to use my diamond mine as a turnip patch if I so choose, and not be forced to sell it, or mine diamonds against my will, in order to pay the LVT. In my view the property rights of the individual outweigh the overall (potential) positives for society as a whole from LVT.

I am for the individual against the collective, and I see LVT as a form of the collective imposing their view on what ’should’ be happening on a piece of land (4), rather than the right of the individual to choose his or her land usage, and be taxed on the income produced thereby (5)."


OK. Deep breath everybody.

Let's set the scene, a decade or three into the future and imagine we had phased out (a) all existing taxes on incomes and production (income tax, National Insurance, VAT, corporation tax, total current revenues £350 billion per annum) and (b) all existing taxes on land, property, wealth etc (in descending order: Council Tax, Business Rates, Stamp Duty, capital gains tax, inheritance tax, insurance premiums tax and for good measure the TV licence fee, total current revenues about £70 billion) and we collected as much as we could from land value tax. Total LVT receipts might be a quarter of GDP, which would average out at about £12,000 for an average house per annum (and maybe £9,000 for a median house).

In a proper Georgist world, LVT receipts are used to pay for the core functions of the state and the rest dished out again as Citizen's Dividends, so by definition, the median household in an median house is a net nil taxpayer, if Poor Widows are your concern, it would be a cinch to pay out most of the Citizen's Dividends to the elderly, of course.

Addressing point (2), having done a few minutes 'research', I know that the rental value of agricultural land in the UK is about £50 per acre per year. So Richard's Wellings' 'semi-subsistence smallholders' eking out an existence on (say) two acres of land would be paying about £100 in rent or tax per annum (and whether they pay this as rent to the current 'owner' or as tax to the local council makes not the slightest difference to anything anyway).

I doubt very much that these people would completely cut themselves off from the outside world and so we can safely assume that they would be selling some of their carrots and turnips to pay for things like seeds, replacement farm tools, medicine or toilet paper or something.

So I simply do not agree that expecting them to sell an extra £100's worth of carrots and turnips in exchange for society in general respecting and protecting their exclusive possession of two acres of land is excessive, neither does it make a scrap of difference whether they pay that £100 in tax or as rent to the current owner. Further, assuming some sort of Citizen's Dividend were paid out, 'semi-subsistence smallholders' would actually be ahead on the deal. See also my comments on (5).

As to point (3) I find it useful to look at actual facts rather than dabbling in hysteria
a) AFAII, there are no significant diamond reserves in the UK.
b) The most important mineral under UK soil, in terms of value is coal.
c) If our mythical smallholder were to discover a stupendously rich seam of coal (which could be extracted profitably) under his two acres, what would happen? Absolutely nothing. Please remember, in the real world, that to run a coal mine you need hundreds and hundreds of acres of land, the mining rights to two acres are worthless.
d) So would his tax go up? No of course not. More importantly, before you start digging, you have to get all sorts of planning permission and pay for the mining rights. Until and unless a mining company gets the permission to dig, acquires all the required bits of land and pays for the mining rights, the value of the land at the surface does not change.

His point (4) uses the s-word 'should'. Is he not even dimly aware of planning restrictions in this country, which dictate exactly what you are or are not allowed to build or do on any patch of land? Is this not an extreme form of "the collective imposing their view on what ’should’ be happening on a piece of land? Is there any fundamental difference between NIMBYism and a Socialist command economy? That's not a rhetorical question, by the way.

At least Jim has the nerve to stick up for income tax in his point (5). Quite why a tax that discourages individual efforts is preferable to one that encourages individual efforts is a mystery to me, but hey. As ever, he fails to realise that here in the real world, the existing tax and land use system in this country prevents exactly that which he claims to support, i.e. "the right of the individual to choose his or her land usage, and be taxed on the income produced thereby"

Before our income-producing average guy has the chance to engage in the mutually beneficial free exchange of goods and services, he first has to pay a privately collected tax to whomever it is who currently has dibs on that bit of land on which he'd like to carry out those exchanges. if you want to rent or buy a shop, you have to bid more than the next best offer, i.e. whoever can squeeze the biggest profits by trading from that site has to pay over the bulk of his super-profits to the existing 'owner'.

This privately collected tax (rents or mortgage repayments) leaves the trader with little choice as to what to do on that site and takes away a large chunk of the profits. It is impossible to have a non-Socialist economy where anything else happens - whether we tax incomes or land values, in the long run, the people who can generate the highest incomes and profits will always end up living in or trading from the best locations (and there is nothing wrong with that, of course).

By this stage, of course, the killer arguments have completely contradicted themselves, mired themselves in falsehoods and half-truths and collapsed under their own weight.

If you wanted to drop out of the rat race and become a 'semi-subsistence smallholder' anywhere in the UK, it is not just a question of scraping together the £100 a year in ground rent or tax for the actual land, the biggest problem you'll face is finding two acres on which you can build yourself somewhere to live.

The local NIMBYs will make bloody sure that that you never get planning permission for anything new, so you have to find a couple of acres on which a house is already standing - and as we know, houses sell at a premium of tens or hundreds of thousands of pounds over their bricks and mortar value, so the biggest (and in most cases insurmountable) financial hurdle to becoming a 'semi-subsistence smallholder' is not the £100 rent for the land, it's the tens or hundreds of thousand pounds premium you have to pay to be able to live on your two acres.

Here endeth.

18 comments:

Anonymous said...

Usual arrogance and overhandedness from the LVT crew, I see.

So, snide comments aside about 'mythical smallholders' ~ (you might sneer at them from behind your calculator, but they do exist, you know. The world can't all be full of accountants) ~ who, exactly, would rent them this land?

At the moment, people with capital buy land and rent it to peeps at a profit. However, your LVT model is going to take 100% of that rental value and spend it on diversity officers and the bloomin BBC (for Christs sake), so the chap with capital will invest it elsewhere.

So who, exactly, will be renting the land to these epople? The State? Lovely. That'll be efficient and totally uncorrupt.

However, I agree about the corporatism of planning laws. Perhaps you should concentrate on campaigning to get them scrapped rather than insulting everyone who doesn't believe in your single issue God.

Here endeth.

Mark Wadsworth said...

HH: "So, snide comments aside about 'mythical smallholders' ~ who, exactly, would rent them this land?"

Under a Georgist system smallholders would be a lot better off (Citizen's Dividend > LVT). Please try to read and understand the post first before diving in. What on earth is 'snide' about pointing out that such people would be better off? Where have I ever shown any anitpathy towards smallholders?

"Who would rent them the land?"

Daft question. Whoever currently 'owns' the land would sell it to them for peanuts (its capital purchase price having been depressed even lower than its current £5,000 per acre) or rent it to them for £50 an acre.

"your LVT model is going to take 100% of that rental value and spend it on diversity officers and the bloomin BBC (for Christs sake)..."

Where did I ever say that? Where did Henry George ever say that? Or Adam Smith or Tom Paine or David Ricardo?

".. so the chap with capital will invest it elsewhere."

There is a fixed amount of ag. land. That is the physical 'capital'. Methinks you are confusing physical capital with 'money'.

If ag. land becomes less attractive as an investment for people with money (but no personal attachment to the land), then great!

If the 'chap with [money]' prefers to invest elsewhere (in more profitable ventures), then all things being equal, the equlibrium price/rent of ag. land will fall and there will be more land available for the potential smallholders.

How is that anti-smallholder? Before you talk about 'arrogance' vis-a-vis smallholders, can you please explain why a system that makes it easier and cheaper for smallholders to carry out their chosen lifestyle is somehow anti-smallholder?

Please?

Paul Lockett said...

Harry Haddock: so the chap with capital will invest it elsewhere.

Or to put it more precisely, the chap with cash will have to invest it in a productive venture, rather than a state created opportunity for freeloading.

Sounds good to me.

Ed said...

I maintain that I should have the right (3) to use my diamond mine as a turnip patch if I so choose, and not be forced to sell it, or mine diamonds against my will, in order to pay the LVT.

There's a great opportunity here for LVT. If we assume that the diamonds/oil/coal/gas can be extracted from underneath this smallholder's turnip patch without disturbing him (i.e. not open-cast mining, but by drilling sideways from neighbouring land) then the smallholder can continue to pay the tiny LVT due on 2 acres of turnips, while the mining company pays LVT on this same 2 acres plus the rest of this mine site on the value of the mineral rights. The "land" is being put to two uses simultaneously by different owners, hence two lots of LVT are due.

Note that this assumes that the turnip farmer is not receiving any payment from the mining firm for them accessing the minerals hundred of feet underground without disturbing the turnips above, i.e. the turnip farmer will have forfeited his claim on the minerals, as will anyone who buys the turnip farm in the future. The land registry will have a separate set of deeds for the underground mineral rights. Losing the right to claim benefit from the minerals is the price of not being forced to pay the vastly higher LVT due on them. Problem solved.

Mark Wadsworth said...

PL, Ed, ta for back up, but you are making the fatal error of applying commonsense and logic to practical issues.

As HH's comment makes clear, on Planet Home-Owner-Ist (or Planet Faux Libertarian, whatever), a policy which in real life would encourage (and to some extent would subsidise) smallholders is derided as being anti-smallholder.

Unfortunately, we live in the parallel universe run by Home-Owner-Ists and Faux Libertarians, not real life.

Anonymous said...

Unfortunately, we live in the parallel universe run by Home-Owner-Ists and Faux Libertarians, not real life

Sigh.

For the ten millionth time, I don't own a single square inch of land, in any country, on any of the properties I live in.

I need to write a complete article on my blog to point out your numerous contradictions and faults in your argument (thank god your Georgists can't turn off Google Blog search, eh?), but can we just agree on a couple of things? As a non land owner, if it is OK to be described as a 'Home Ownerist', or, by a man who is in the Burka ban party, a 'Faux Libertarian', and if it isn't snide to transform small holders into 'mythical small holders' because they cause you an inconvenience (and somehow claim to become their champion. ~sick) or elderly people in homes they own as 'widow twanky', will it be all right, in the spirit of fun and by your own editorial standards, to title the blog post 'A reply to Mark Wadsworth ~ One time aide to Hitler and a world renowned pedophile' just because we disagree on economics, sorry, I mean religion?

Just in the spirit of fun, you understand.

Mark Wadsworth said...

HH: "if it isn't snide to transform small holders into 'mythical small holders' because they cause you an inconvenience (and somehow claim to become their champion. ~sick)"

You, sir, are scraping the barrel now.

One of many knock on effects of Georgism would be to advance the interests of actual or potential smallholders.

I have never claimed to be their 'champion' or otherwise.

Can you please explain which bits of Georgism would be inimical to the interests of actual or potential smallholders?

Can you please explain what evidence you have that Georgists see small holders as an 'inconvenience'? That it is all some cunning plot to f*** over smallholders?

Please?

PS, I have never contradicted myself. Ever. I do not advance 'arguments'. I stick to facts and logic and draw conclusions.

I say: "If we stick with the current set of rules then X will happen. My evidence for this is that we have had the current set of rules for a long time and X keeps happening.

If we were to change the rules, then Y will happen. My evidence for this is observing what other countries do or have done or what the UK has done in the past and Y happened"


As it happens, I prefer Y to X - if others prefer X to Y, then fine. It is a democracy after all.

sobers said...

I think I'm the Jim in this thread, so I'm honoured to be given a MW LVT steamroller thread of my own.

I'm afraid you're missing the point of my turnip patch/diamond mine analogy. I KNOW there are no diamonds in the UK, but it the principle of the thing. I feel as owner of a piece of land I am entitled to use it for whatever purpose I chose, and not be taxed on some potential usage that I might not want to be involved in.

Now I know you're going to say that planning restriction stop me doing all sorts of things with my land. Yes thats true. But they do not give me a huge bill to pay when I have no income to pay it unless I sell my land, or use it in the way State (as the LVT levier) decrees is the most economically efficient. If anything planning restrictions reduce my income opportunities (and thus my tax) rather than increase them.

I accept that if there were no planning restrictions, LVT would be reasonably fair. Because there would be no 'hope value' attached to land. It would be worth what it was worth, based on what it could produce. A patch of land with diamonds on would be worth millions, a patch down the road with no diamonds very little.

But in the UK land can go from being worth £5K/acre (pure agricultural value (actually its not worth that much agriculturally - its inflated due to favourable taxation rules)) to being worth hundreds of thousands (with planning for houses say, or a supermarket (over a million/acre then)). And land with no change of use planning, but the potential to have it can be anywhere in between. So you have a very fluid situation, where you COULD have land worth X or 5X or 10X or 100X, all depending on what value someone somewhere puts on your land. And you would be expected to pay LVT on that value, despite a) not actually having planning permission for houses, and b) no or little income from the land to pay it. Thus anyone who owned a small piece of land with their house would be forced to sell it, because the POTENTIAL to get planning permission is always there.

So while planning restrictions prevent land owners using their land as they see fit, I will oppose LVT.

Mark Wadsworth said...

Sobers: "I feel as owner of a piece of land I am entitled to use it for whatever purpose I chose, and not be taxed on some potential usage that I might not want to be involved in."

1. You are still distinguishing between 'publicly collected taxes' and 'privately collected taxes'.

2. If somebody wants exclusive possession to a small patch of land, then he has to pledge sightly more of his net income than the next highest bidder.

3. The money that the highest bidder hands over as rent or mortgage repayments are a 'privately collected tax' on his income.

4. Of course, there are also 'publicly collected taxes' on his income.

5. Thus in future, exclusive possession of any plot of land will only pass to those who are prepared to generate the maximum income from living at or trading from that plot.

6. That may well be a good system of rationing land ownership in future, but why should current landowners be exempt from this? Why should current land 'owners' be tax collectors rather than tax payers?

Mark Wadsworth said...

Sobers, this is a classic: "anyone who owned a small piece of land with their house would be forced to sell it"

To whom? Have you never heard of 'free markets'? If, using your rather emotive language, one person is 'forced' to sell something, then surely, somebody else has the 'opportunity' to buy it?

Land cannot mysteriously be destroyed, it merely gets allocated to those who can generate the highest (non land-based) incomes. Even in the absence of LVT that is ultimately what happens.

The tax and capital selling price would level out so that the current occupant is no more willing to sell it than anybody else is to buy it.

sobers said...

I'm afraid you're being obtuse. Of course you can be forced by financial constraints to sell land (or anything). If I am faced with a LVT bill I cannot afford, I will have to a) try to realise the value that the LVT represents by using the land in a different manner, or b) sell it for what I can get for it to get to get some cash to pay my LVT liability.

Option a) is not very helpful, as if I wanted to be a property developer, I would have done it myself anyway. And b) isn't much better as I've lost the use of my land, which I wanted to keep ( to keep horses on say, or grow fruit & veg). Either way I have been forced by financial constraints to sell my land or use it in a way I did not wish to.

You have admitted in the post above that LVT is designed to allocate land 'to those who can generate the highest (non land-based) incomes'. Ergo if you wish to use a piece of land in a non economically efficient way, your wishes are over ridden by the MW LVT steam roller.

Hence why I repeat, LVT is the collective vs the individual, and as such I oppose it.

Mark Wadsworth said...

Sobers, I am not being obtuse.

1) If you can keep a certain number of horses or grow a certain amount of fruit and veg on a certain piece of land, then you would only be 'forced' to sell it to somebody if they were capable of keeping more horses or growing more fruit and veg on that same piece of land.

2) In my book, if land ends up being owned by people who can keep more horses or grow more fruit and veg, then that is A Good Thing. For a given amount of land we have more horses and more fruit and veg.

3) If somebody is wealthy enough to buy that land and leave it fallow for his personal enjoyment of having a big back garden, then that is also A Good Thing. He is putting that land to its optimum economic use (from his point of view) and is compensating society for the fact that there are fewer horses and less fruit and veg than would otherwise be the case.

4) As to 'non-land based incomes', don't split hairs. The bulk of the value of horses or fruit and veg derives from the fact that somebody is prepared to slave away at keeping horses or growing the stuff. That is not 'land based income', that is reward for hard work and risk and enterprise.

"LVT is the collective vs the individual, and as such I oppose it."

Complete in as many words as you like:

"Income tax and restrictive planning laws represent the triumph of the individual over the collective because..."

Any answers containing the phrases 'One time aide to Hitler' or 'world renowned pedophile (sic)' will be awarded extra points, of course.

TheFatBigot said...

"... imagine we had phased out [current taxes] and we collected as much as we could from land value tax. ... LVT receipts are used to pay for the core functions of the state and the rest dished out again as Citizen's Dividends ... it would be a cinch to pay out most of the Citizen's Dividends to the elderly ..."

This is a very fine summary of the downside of LVT.

Combined with the Citizen's Dividend it is tax credits writ large, writ so large that everyone is tied into the scheme.

The State will tax you according to one capital asset only (to which it can apply any value of its choosing). There are no checks on how high the tax rate will be other than the ballot box, and once recipients outnumber payers the result is obvious.

There is no escaping that LVT, as defined in the quoted passages at the head of this comment, is nothing less than nationalisation of all privately owned land.

We know from previous discussions that a land owner who cannot pay the tax out of currently available funds will be given the option of selling (and bearing estate agent's fees, solicitor's fees and removal costs, thereby increasing the cost of the tax enormously) or staying put and having the tax charged against their property (no doubt with interest - and who will prevent that interest being hiked to give the government a bonus when the owner drops off the twig?)

To my mind that is a fundamentally unsound basis of taxation. It makes a limited number of people responsible for every whim of a spendthrift government whilst ensuring that those who have to pay can never have the numbers to vote for any other scheme. Where is the brake? What is to be built into this system to ensure that the payers are not just cash cows to 100% of the value of their land?

Mark Wadsworth said...

TFB, I would invite you to take all your rhetoric and apply it to income tax or VAT instead.

For example, if LVT is nationalisation of land, aren't income tax, VAT, corporation tax 'the nationalisation of labour and enterprise'?

"Where is the brake? What is to be built into this system to ensure that the payers are not just cash cows to 100% of the value of their land?"

Yet another killer argument which ignores the most basic rules of economics - for every seller there is a buyer.

People keep talking about people being 'forced to sell' but what about the people who thereby are 'given the opportunity to buy'?

Once all land has changed hands once, or once people had made the conscious decision to stay living where they are, despite the tax, the tax is therefore entirely voluntary.

if you don't want to be 'a cash cow' then just sell your property and rent it back.

bayard said...

"But they do not give me a huge bill to pay when I have no income to pay it unless I sell my land"

Who is talking about a "huge bill" here? MW repeatedly points out that agricultural land would, in all probability, not be subject to LVT and that at least half the country would not pay LVT at all. MW posits a LVT of about 1% AFAICR, not the 100% you keep bandying about. Also, if you have no income in today's tax climate, you would still have problems with things like eating, keeping warm and getting about and would be "forced" to sell your property or rent it out to do something about it. Also the number of property owners with no mortgage and little or no income who are not pensioners is vanishingly small.

sobers said...

You are ignoring the hope value of gaining planning permission. I'll give you a concrete example. I own a farm which fields run right up to a village. The paddocks next to the village have a value far in excess of the value of the fields half a mile away because there is the hope value that someday you could get planning permission for houses. I know this for a fact as I've just had to have the land valued for tax purposes. Thus I would be taxed on that potential, even though I don't actually have planning permission.

The more I read your writings on LVT, the more I come to the same conclusion as TFB. You are effectively nationalising all land. You ascribe no rights of the owner to do as he sees fit with his land, because he will always be taxed on what you (the collective) decrees is the most economically effective land usage.

I think you are forgetting that the pursuit of the 'the most economically effective' usually ends up providing the most bland and soul-less solutions. Why are most town centres full of identikit chain stores? Because they are the most economic occupiers of said shops. But town centres are dying for precisely that reason. No one wants to go there because you could be anywhere. They prefer going to town such as Bath where independent eclectic retailers still exist have have not been pushed out by the most 'economically efficient'.

LVT would result in the tyranny of the masses. No one other than the extremely cash/income rich would be able to build anything other than that suitable for the mainstream. The quirky, the off beat, the left field, would all disappear, swamped by the 'most economically efficient'.

And that would be sad, and wrong.

Mark Wadsworth said...

S, we have discussed 'hope values' at length before, and if you sat down and thought it through, you would realise it is not an issue at all.

a) If you were so minded, you could waive that hope value by entering into a restrictive covenant for the benefit of the local NIMBYs. That boosts the value of their houses so it would henceforth be their problem (they get what they pay for, which is scarcity value), not yours.

b) The 'hope value' is merely a percentage of the future value with planning permission. If we had a full Land Value Tax, then all land in the UK would be worth much the same (i.e. a few hundred or thousand pounds per acre). Therefore the hope value would be so infinitely small as to be not worth measuring.

c) If that land has a measurable hope value, you can always sell it to a builder and rent it back from him for the next few decades until planning permission materialises, making yourself a tidy profit.

You then say something that is logically inconsistent: "You ascribe no rights of the owner to do as he sees fit with his land, because he will always be taxed on what you (the collective) decrees is the most economically effective land usage."

Yes I do ascribe rights to the owner - see option (a).

When you say 'the collective' what you actually mean is 'the free markets'. Why should landowners be immune from market forces?

For example, what if you adopt option (c), has the builder not just paid you a large chunk of 'privately collected tax'? He is now really committed to trying to get planning permission. Market forces make him do so - if he doesn't, he will have lost money and/or go bankrupt.

If we are broadly agreed that 'market forces' are A Good Thing and tend to lead to better outcomes than a Socialist command economy or a NIMBY/Home-Owner-Ist economy, then what is the problem?

sobers said...

A free market is willing buyer/willing seller. If I am forced to sell because I have a large LVT bill I cannot pay I am not a true willing seller. I do not wish to sell but have to for financial reasons beyond my control.

You wish to ascribe to some bureaucrat the power to decree that 'this land/property could be used in this way, and as such is to be taxed as if it were being so used'. That is not compatible with the rights of property owners in my view. An massive part of your self determination has been taken away from you by the State (the collective).

Someone somewhere will always have a way of making more money than you from a piece of land or property. So for whatever usage you decide to put your land/property the LVT will almost always be levied at a rate above that of the income generated. LVT decides that cash today is more important than anything else. Whatever you can to today or tomorrow to generate the most cash is what you have to do, because thats what you will be taxed upon. It allows nothing for long sightedness, and forward planning for things that 'the markets' do not forsee.

I'll give you an example. A friend of mine bought an old run down pub in a small market town in Wales 20 years ago. The most economically efficient usage would probably have been to close it, turn it into flats, or a single dwelling, and sell it, or rent it out. So thats what she would have been taxed on. But she chose to run it, slowly turning it into a restaurant/bar, and opening a shop on part of the premises as well. Her business now is very successful, generates more profit than the rent from a few flats would, and is undoubtedly worth more to the ambiance of the town than more flats. Everyone told her she was mad, but she had the vision to create something different, something that 'the markets' were not providing. If she had had to pay LVT based on the potential capital value, rather than income tax (which she paid virtually none to start with as the business took time to get off the ground) it would never have happened. And the area and its inhabitants would be the worse off for it.

LVT will always favour the quick fix, the easy option. Anything that takes time, is hard and difficult, will always be trumped by those that say 'I can make more money here than you can'