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RE: OWNERSHIP: tim Wetzel D
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Subject:[socialcredit] RE: OWNERSHIP: the "single tax"
Date:Monday, December 13, 2004  18:28:48 (-0000)
From:Wetzel Dave <Davewetzel @.......uk>

William et al

Developers should gain their reward for developing attractive buildings
which people want to use. (i.e. a return on their capital employed).

However, what they are not entitled to is the land value that nature or the
community creates. (i.e. economic rent).


Dave
Dave Wetzel 


-----Original Message-----
From: william_b_ryan@yahoo.com [mailto:william_b_ryan@yahoo.com]
Sent: 09 December 2004 16:59
To: ownership@cog.kent.edu; socialcredit@elistas.com
Subject: OWNERSHIP: the "single tax"


Nature has a zero cost of production in terms of 
labor expended and/or capital goods utilized. "Rent" 
is the measure of the difference between locations 
and between natural resource-laden lands. There are 
just not enough "best locations" and "best natural 
resource-laden lands" to go around. So, some come to 
have more exchange value than others, the difference 
having nothing to do with what the individual deed 
holders do or do not do. 
---------------------------------
-------------------------------
This train of logic contains several suppositions 
that are open to challenge.  I'll touch on only some 
of them.

You equate "rent" to differences in exchange values 
and conclude that those differences have nothing to 
do with what individual deed holders do or do not do. 

This seems to arbitrarily exclude private development 
from the equation and ignores the benefit to the 
entire community when development occurs.  To the 
extent the private developer personally benefits from 
the development, which is not cost free to the 
private developer in any real sense, those benefits 
are earned by the developer, are they not?  To the 
extent the entire community benefits from the 
development, which would not have occurred without 
the development, the benefits the community receives 
are unearned by the community, are they not?
-

This exchange value has to do with the fact that 
supply is finite, population keeps increasing and the 
demand for locations is infinite. 
---------------------------------
-------------------------------
Supply is definitely not "finite," because of 
discovery, innovation and development.  And demand in 
the economic sense is definitely not "infinite" 
because it is satiable.  Even the manic glutton let 
loose in the five star restaurant with an open tab 
will reach the point where he will not eat another 
bite.
-

My perspective, then, is that the failure of society 
to collect this fund for use by all of society (even 
for partial distribution to each citizen as a 
dividend) "is more akin to theft."
---------------------------------
-------------------------------
But you're talking about land.  "Fund" refers to 
money, something quite different, right?  Where does 
the fund exist that can be taxed?  Is not the "single 
tax" tantamount to abolition of private ownership in 
land?

If so, it is incumbent on you to demonstrate with a 
preponderance of evidence that centralized "non-
profit" land management by some politburo is 
inherently superior to decentralized management for 
profit, in terms of the public welfare.

Moreover, it is a fact that private ownership in land 
is what we now have.  You will have to further 
demonstrate that confiscation will not do more harm 
than good in the disruption that would inevitably 
result.  That is the practical reality you do not 
address, is it not?

It is the reality that every utopian schemer avoids.  
But hell, on to the Winter Palace!
-




--- Ed Dodson <ejdodson@comcast.net> wrote:

> Ed Dodson responding...
> Michael Bindner wrote (11/29/04):
> 
>   I would argue that taxing someone's non-income
> producing land over the
> cost of services to maintain roads, public safety
> and housing/building
> regulation is more akin to theft.
> 
>   Ed Dodson here:
>   Nature has a zero cost of production in terms of
> labor expended and/or
> capital goods utilized. "Rent" is the measure of the
> difference between
> locations and between natural resource-laden lands.
> There are just not
> enough "best locations" and "best natural
> resource-laden lands" to go
> around. So, some come to have more exchange value
> than others, the
> difference having nothing to do with what the
> individual deedholders do or
> do not do. This exchange value has to do with the
> fact that supply is
> finite, population keeps increasing and the demand
> for locations is
> infinite. My perspective, then, is that the failure
> of society to collect
> this fund for use by all of society (even for
> partial distribution to each
> citizen as a dividend) "is more akin to theft."
> 
>    ...Public goods require mandatory taxation or the
> good is not adequately
> provided.
> 
>   Ed Dodson here:
>   If one defines taxation as the confiscation of
> private property and earned
> income flows, then the public collection of location
> rent is, in fact, not
> taxation but could very well be sufficient to
> provide for public goods and
> services.
> 
>   Over and above that I would have progressive
> income taxation of higher
> incomes to pay interest and principal on the
> national debt (held by the
> public, the social insurance system, and on debts
> forgiven from the
> developing world) and on overseas military
> adventures (Iraq comes to mind),
> with these taxes ceasing when the debt is paid and
> such adventures cease.
> 
>   Ed Dodson here:
>   An argument can be made looking at income data
> that a very considerable
> portion of high marginal incomes are unearned, the
> results of "rent-seeking"
> investment behavior. This is way I have argued for
> restructuring of the
> Federal income tax into a graduated flat tax that
> exempts incomes up to the
> national median, then imposes moderate rates of
> taxation on higher marginal
> incomes. A balanced budget requirement combined with
> conversion of U.S.
> government debt into fully amortizing bonds as they
> mature and are refunded
> will ensure we get out from our the financial mess
> we are in now.
> 




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