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Yes, all land should be taxed, every last bit of it, including farms, corporate, primary residence, church land, government land.
And all those land tax records should be public, so that everyone can see the rate paid and by whom.
The end result would be that no one can profit by doing nothing while demanding that others pay them for the right to live.
Land prices would decline, and this would be a wonderful thing for everyone except landlords who don't create and maintain nice buildings. (If you build and maintain a nice building, you could still be a landlord and make a profit.) Banks would find that their collateral for mortgages is lower, but this is also a good thing. Bankers live by sucking interest payments out of young couples who want to buy a house to raise a family.
There would also be a boom in economic activity because working and running a business would no long be punished by taxes. Most taxes are currently paid solely so that...
Yes, all land should be taxed, every last bit of it, including farms, corporate, primary residence, church land, government land.
The land value tax should be set by bidding when the land is sold. Let the market figure out the right tax.
Artificial wealth is when you possess what you have but are making payments to the real 'owner,' the lender that you borrowed your funds from.
This is another reason we should have hard silver metal currency by weight.
The government cannot plausibly find it and tax it, nor should they be able to.
This would lead to forced sales when the value of the land goes up.
This is like paying rent to the government on all acreage in the domain.
Hong Kong and Singapore are characterized by rapid economic development and a high population density of 6,250 and 6,055 per km2 land respectively. Land revenue is their major source of income to finance their public infrastructure and social services. Their design and collection of taxes on land, their value‐capture instruments and their allocation of revenue for public works are examined. The article finds that there are some similarities between the two cities in capturing land value, such as the collection of annual rates and stamp duty on property. The differences include the adoption of property tax surcharge and the development charge. In fact, each mechanism has its pros and cons. The method and the extent of each mechanism depend on the goals of the government in respect of the social and economic conditions.
Patrick says
citTits what is a "Swiss brake"? A search just gets me bicycle parts.
Patrick https://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/commentary/switzerland-has-budget-surplus-heres-how-and-what-the-us-could-learn
As The Heritage Foundation’s Romina Boccia notes, the Swiss government is restrained by what is called a “debt brake”—a constitutional balanced-budget amendment that requires the government’s budget to balance over the course of a normal business cycle.
The Swiss rule has successfully cut debt-to-GDP from 49% to well below 30%. It enjoys wide support, thanks in large part to its transparent, simple, and limited design.
The spending limit is also flexible, allowing for deficits during economic downturns and requiring a small budget surplus during booms.
HeadSet says
This would lead to forced sales when the value of the land goes up.
This is already an issue with existing property tax, so it's not anything unique to Georgism.
One simple solution is to defer the land value tax until the owner dies. That is, let it accumulate as a debt to the government, but with no obligation for the owner to sell until the owner dies.
Singapore do these things.
You do force payment of all the back tax when the property sells after the owner dies.
There is a war going on now on the American people, its a financial and cultural war.
Patrick says
You do force payment of all the back tax when the property sells after the owner dies.
This seems to be no different than debt. You know there would be fees, fines and interest attached.
Let me know if you have a different idea for a way to raise tax money that does not penalize work or commerce.
Land taxes penalizes physical assets
gabbar says
There is a war going on now on the American people, its a financial and cultural war.
No doubt about it.
RWSGFY says
Not sure if serious. Living standards in NoKo are shit.
Yes, living standards in North Korea are shit.
I don't see any causal relation between not having a national debt and low living standards.
Besides, land value is highly dependent on use/purpose, as exemplified by the drastically lower property tax if land is used for agriculture in most jurisdictions (per acre, farm land generates far less money than using the same acre for storage facility or home building; using home building lot price for taxation and collect full utilization value would immediately put all farm land at negative value).
Why not eliminate all income tax and sales tax and just have a land value tax instead?
through Constitutional Amendment, the Fed not only controls the money supply, but it charges the Government fees and interest on the debt that the government creates
It is never going to get payed back. Big buyers of treasuries don't seem to care. So does it even matter? If you say it does matter, when does it start mattering? 30 tril, 40tril, 100 tril....1 qudrillion?
The $64,000 question. Seems like it will never matter. My belief is you'll see the results as a smaller middle class and a larger and larger poor class.
I would rather have a government going further into debt each year than expanding its coffers every year.
Misc says
I would rather have a government going further into debt each year than expanding its coffers every year.
False choice. The government can limit spending to collections.
its all about cash flow ... not enough income to match expenses and the federal government does not have assets or savings to cover its expenses ...
One simple solution is to defer the land value tax until the owner dies. That is, let it accumulate as a debt to the government, but with no obligation for the owner to sell until the owner dies.
D says
its all about cash flow ... not enough income to match expenses and the federal government does not have assets or savings to cover its expenses ...
Print it.
Why tax at all? Most of the budget is borrowed.
"I pay $7.95 to a broker for a trade, it would be a great injustice to pay 50 cents more in tax for a total of $8.45! I'll be bankrupt if I had to do that! Unfair!"
Seriously, there's a tax on buying pink lawn flamingoes from Ace Hardware but you can trade thousands of shares without paying sales tax?
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I know that a lot of people say so that the Fed can collect interest from taxpayers, and that may be so, but why would the government even agree to that?
It seems that every country on earth has national debt, but how can this be? It always costs more to borrow and pay interest than to save and simply pay for something.
Is every country on earth stupid and/or irresponsible? Is it just that they have more demand for services than they can afford? If that's so, then it's still stupid because they have to pay it off eventually anyway. Or do they just keep rolling over the debt forever, growing ever larger? Eventually their debts will be infinite and the interest will be unpayable.