[01] The best tax by which public revenues
can be raised is evidently that which will closest conform to
the following conditions:
[02] 1. That it bear as lightly as possible
upon production -- so as least to check the increase of the general
fund from which taxes must be paid and the community maintained.
[03] 2. That it be easily and cheaply collected,
and fall as directly as may be upon the ultimate payers -- so
as to take from the people as little as possible in addition to
what it yields the government.
[04] 3. That it be certain -- so as to
give the least opportunity for tyranny or corruption on the part
of officials, and the least temptation to lawbreaking and evasion
on the part of the taxpayers.
[05] 4. That it bear equally -- so as to
give no citizen an advantage or put any at a disadvantage, as
compared with others.
[06] Let us consider what form of taxation
best accords with these conditions. Whatever it be, that evidently
will be the best mode in which the public revenues can be raised.
[07] I. -- The Effect of Taxes upon
Production
[08] All taxes must evidently come from
the produce of land and labor, since there is no other source
of wealth than the union of human exertion with the material and
forces of nature. But the manner in which equal amounts of taxation
may be imposed may very differently affect the production of wealth.
Taxation which lessens the reward of the producer necessarily
lessens the incentive to production; taxation which is conditioned
upon the act of production, or the use of any of the three factors
of production, necessarily discourages production. Thus taxation
which diminishes the earnings of the laborer or the returns of
the capitalist tends to render the one less industrious and intelligent,
the other less disposed to save and invest. Taxation which falls
upon the processes of production interposes an artificial obstacle
to the creation of wealth. Taxation which falls upon labor as
it is exerted, wealth as it is used as capital, land as it is
cultivated, will manifestly tend to discourage production much
more powerfully than taxation to the same amount levied upon laborers,
whether they work or play, upon wealth whether used productively
or unproductively, or upon land whether cultivated or left waste.
[09] The mode of taxation is, in fact,
quite as important as the amount. As a small burden badly placed
may distress a horse that could carry with ease a much larger
one properly adjusted, so a people may be impoverished and their
power of producing wealth destroyed by taxation, which, if levied
in another way, could be borne with ease. A tax on date trees,
imposed by Mohammed Ali, caused the Egyptian fellahs to cut down
their trees; but a tax of twice the amount imposed on the land
produced no such result. The tax of ten per cent. on all sales,
imposed by the Duke of Alva in the Netherlands, would, had it
been maintained, have all but stopped exchange while yielding
but little revenue.
[10] But we need not go abroad for illustrations.
The production of wealth in the United States is largely lessened
by taxation which bears upon its processes. Shipbuilding, in which
we excelled, has been all but destroyed, so far as the foreign
trade is concerned, and many branches of production and exchange
seriously crippled, by taxes which divert industry from more to
less productive forms.
[11] This checking of production is in
greater or less degree characteristic of most of the taxes by
which the revenues of modern governments are raised. All taxes
upon manufactures, all taxes upon commerce, all taxes upon capital,
all taxes upon improvements, are of this kind. Their tendency
is the same as that of Mohammed Ali's tax on date trees, though
their effect may not be so clearly seen.
[12] All such taxes have a tendency to
reduce the production of wealth, and should, therefore, never
be resorted to when it is possible to raise money by taxes which
do not check production. This becomes possible as society develops
and wealth accumulates. Taxes which fall upon ostentation would
simply turn into the public treasury what otherwise would be wasted
in vain show for the sake of show; and taxes upon wills and devises
of the rich would probably have little effect in checking the
desire for accumulation, which, after it has fairly got hold of
a man, becomes a blind passion. But the great class of taxes from
which revenue may be derived without interference with production
are taxes upon monopolies -- for the profit of monopoly is in
itself a tax levied upon production, and to tax it is simply to
divert into the public coffers what production must in any event
pay.
[13] There are among us various sorts of
monopolies. For instance, there are the temporary monopolies created
by the patent and copyright laws. These it would be extremely
unjust and unwise to tax, inasmuch as they are but recognitions
of the right of labor to its intangible productions, and constitute
a reward held out to invention and authorship.1
There are also the onerous monopolies alluded to in Chap. IV of
Book III, which result from the aggregation of capital in businesses
which are of the nature of monopolies. But while it would be extremely
difficult, if not altogether impossible, to levy taxes by general
law so that they would fall exclusively on the returns of such
monopoly and not become taxes on production or exchange, it is
much better that these monopolies should be abolished. In large
part they spring from legislative commission or omission, as,
for instance, the ultimate reason that San Francisco merchants
are compelled to pay more for goods sent direct from New York
to San Francisco by the Isthmus route than it costs to ship them
from New York to Liverpool or Southampton and thence to San Francisco,
is to be found in the "protective" laws which make it so costly
to build American steamers and which forbid foreign steamers to
carry goods between American ports. The reason that residents
of Nevada are compelled to pay as much freight from the East as
though their goods were carried to San Francisco and back again,
is that the authority which prevents extortion on the part of
a hack driver is not exercised in respect to a railroad company.
And it may be said generally that businesses which are in their
nature monopolies are properly part of the functions of the State,
and should be assumed by the State. There is the same reason why
Government should carry telegraphic messages as that it should
carry letters; that railroads should belong to the public as that
common roads should.
[14] But all other monopolies are trivial
in extent as compared with the monopoly of land. And the value
of land expressing a monopoly, pure and simple, is in every respect
fitted for taxation. That is to say, while the value of a railroad
or telegraph line, the price of gas or of a patent medicine, may
express the price of monopoly, it also expresses the exertion
of labor and capital; but the value of land, or economic rent,
as we have seen, is in no part made up from these factors, and
expresses nothing but the advantage of appropriation. Taxes levied
upon the value of land cannot check production in the slightest
degree, until they exceed rent, or the value of land taken annually
for unlike taxes upon commodities, or exchange, or capital, or
any of the tools or processes of production, they do not bear
upon production. The value of land does not express the reward
of production, as does the value of crops, of cattle, of buildings,
or any of the things which are styled personal property and improvements.
It expresses the exchange value of monopoly. It is not in any
case the creation of the individual who owns the land; it is created
by the growth of the community. Hence the community can take it
all without in any way lessening the incentive to improvement
or in the slightest degree lessening the production of wealth.
Taxes may be imposed upon the value of land until all rent is
taken by the State, without reducing the wages of labor or the
reward of capital one iota; without increasing the price of a
single commodity, or making production in any way more difficult.
[15] But more than this. Taxes on the value
of land not only do not check production as do most other taxes,
but they tend to increase production, by destroying speculative
rent. How speculative rent checks production may be seen not only
in the valuable land withheld from use, but in the paroxysms of
industrial depression which, originating in the speculative advance
in land values, propagate themselves over the whole civilized
world, everywhere paralyzing industry, and causing more waste
and probably more suffering than would a general war. Taxation
which would take rent for public uses would prevent all this;
while if land were taxed to anything near its rental value, no
one could afford to hold land that he was not using, and, consequently,
land not in use would be thrown open to those who would use it.
Settlement would be closer, and, consequently, labor and capital
would be enabled to produce much more with the same exertion.
The dog in the manger who, in this country especially, so wastes
productive power, would be choked off.
[16] There is yet an even more important
way by which, through its effect upon distribution, the taking
of rent to public uses by taxation would stimulate the production
of wealth. But reference to that may be reserved. It is sufficiently
evident that with regard to production, the tax upon the value
of land is the best tax that can be imposed. Tax manufactures,
and the effect is to check manufacturing; tax improvements, and
the effect is to lessen improvement; tax commerce, and the effect
is to prevent exchange; tax capital, and the effect is to drive
it away. But the whole value of land may be taken in taxation,
and the only effect will be to stimulate industry, to open new
opportunities to capital, and to increase the production of wealth.
[17] II. -- As to Ease and Cheapness
of Collection
[18] With, perhaps, the exception of certain
licenses and stamp duties, which may be made almost to collect
themselves, but which can be relied on for only a trivial amount
of revenue, a tax upon land values can, of all taxes, be most
easily and cheaply collected. For land cannot be hidden or carried
off; its value can be readily ascertained, and the assessment
once made, nothing but a receiver is required for collection.
[19] And as under all fiscal systems some
part of the public revenues is collected from taxes on land, and
the machinery for that purpose already exists and could as well
be made to collect all as a part, the cost of collecting the revenue
now obtained by other taxes might be entirely saved by substituting
the tax on land values for all other taxes. What an enormous saving
might thus be made can be inferred from the horde of officials
now engaged in collecting these taxes.
[20] This saving would largely reduce the
difference between what taxation now costs the people and what
it yields, but the substitution of a tax on land values for all
other taxes would operate to reduce this difference in an even
more important way.
[21] A tax on land values does not add
to prices, and is thus paid directly by the persons on whom it
falls; whereas, all taxes upon things of unfixed quantity increase
prices, and in the course of exchange are shifted from seller
to buyer, increasing as they go. If we impose a tax upon money
loaned, as has been often attempted, the lender will charge the
tax to the borrower, and the borrower must pay it or not obtain
the loan. If the borrower uses it in his business, he in his turn
must get back the tax from his customers, or his business becomes
unprofitable. If we impose a tax upon buildings, the users of
buildings must finally pay it, for the erection of buildings will
cease until building rents become high enough to pay the regular
profit and the tax besides. If we impose a tax upon manufactures
or imported goods, the manufacturer or importer will charge it
in a higher price to the jobber, the jobber to the retailer, and
the retailer to the consumer. Now, the consumer, on whom the tax
thus ultimately falls, must not only pay the amount of the tax,
but also a profit on this amount to every one who has thus advanced
it -- for profit on the capital he has advanced in paying taxes
is as much required by each dealer as profit on the capital he
has advanced in paying for goods. Manila cigars cost, when bought
of the importer in San Francisco, $70 a thousand, of which $14
is the cost of the cigars laid down in this port and $56 is the
customs duty. But the dealer who purchases these cigars to sell
again must charge a profit, not on $14, the real cost of the cigars,
but on $70, the cost of the cigars plus the duty. In this way
all taxes which add to prices are shifted from hand to hand, increasing
as they go, until they ultimately rest upon consumers, who thus
pay much more than is received by the government. Now, the way
taxes raise prices is by increasing the cost of production, and
checking supply. But land is not a thing of human production,
and taxes upon rent cannot check supply. Therefore, though a tax
on rent compels the landowners to pay more, it gives them no power
to obtain more for the use of their land, as it in no way tends
to reduce the supply of land. On the contrary, by compelling those
who hold land on speculation to sell or let for what they can
get, a tax on land values tends to increase the competition between
owners, and thus to reduce the price of land.
[22] Thus in all respects a tax upon land
values is the cheapest tax by which a large revenue can be raised
giving to the government the largest net revenue in proportion
to the amount taken from the people.
[23] III.-As to Certainty
[24] Certainty is an important element
in taxation, for just as the collection of a tax depends upon
the diligence and faithfulness of the collectors and the public
spirit and honesty of those who are to pay it, will opportunities
for tyranny and corruption be opened on the one side, and for
evasions and frauds on the other.
[25] The methods by which the bulk of our
revenues are collected are condemned on this ground, if on no
other. The gross corruptions and fraud occasioned in the United
States by the whisky and tobacco taxes are well known; the constant
undervaluations of the Custom House, the ridiculous untruthfulness
of income tax returns, and the absolute impossibility of getting
anything like a just valuation of personal property, are matters
of notoriety. The material loss which such taxes inflict -- the
item of cost which this uncertainty adds to the amount paid by
the people but not received by the government -- is very great.
When, in the days of the protective system of England, her coasts
were lined with an army of men endeavoring to prevent smuggling,
and another army of men were engaged in evading them, it is evident
that the maintenance of both armies had to come from the produce
of labor and capital; that the expenses and profits of the smugglers,
as well as the pay and bribes of the Custom House officers, constituted
a tax upon the industry of the nation, in addition to what was
received by the government. And so, all douceurs to assessors;
all bribes to customs officials; all moneys expended in electing
pliable officers or in procuring acts or decisions which avoid
taxation; all the costly modes of bringing in goods so as to evade
duties, and of manufacturing so as to evade imposts; all moieties,
and expenses of detectives and spies; all expenses of legal proceedings
and punishments, not only to the government, but to those prosecuted,
are so much which these taxes take from the general fund of wealth,
without adding to the revenue.
[26] Yet this is the least part of the
cost. Taxes which lack the element of certainty tell most fearfully
upon morals. Our revenue laws as a body might well be entitled,
"Acts to promote the corruption of public officials, to suppress
honesty and encourage fraud, to set a premium upon perjury and
the subornation of perjury, and to divorce the idea of law from
the idea of justice." This is their true character, and they succeed
admirably. A Custom House oath is a byword; our assessors regularly
swear to assess all property at its full, true, cash value, and
habitually do nothing of the kind; men who pride themselves on
their personal and commercial honor bribe officials and make false
returns; and the demoralizing spectacle is constantly presented
of the same court trying a murderer one day and a vendor of unstamped
matches the next!
[27] So uncertain and so demoralizing are
these modes of taxation that the New York Commission, composed
of David A. Wells, Edwin Dodge and George W. Cuyler, who investigated
the subject of taxation in that State, proposed to substitute
for most of the taxes now levied, other than that on real estate,
an arbitrary tax on each individual, estimated on the rental value
of the premises be occupied.
[28] But there is no necessity of resorting
to any arbitrary assessment. The tax on land values, which is
the least arbitrary of taxes, possesses in the highest degree
the element of certainty. It may be assessed and collected with
a definiteness that partakes of the immovable and unconcealable
character of the land itself. Taxes levied on land may be collected
to the last cent, and though the assessment of land is now often
unequal, yet the assessment of personal property is far more unequal,
and these inequalities in the assessment of land largely arise
from the taxation of improvements with land, and from the demoralization
that, springing from the causes to which I have referred, affects
the whole scheme of taxation. Were all taxes placed upon land
values, irrespective of improvements, the scheme of taxation would
be so simple and clear, and public attention would be so directed
to it, that the valuation of taxation could and would be made
with the same certainty that a real estate agent can determine
the price a seller can get for a lot.
[29] IV.-As to Equality
[30] Adam Smith's canon is, that "The subjects
of every state ought to contribute toward the support of the government
as nearly as possible in proportion to their respective abilities;
that is, in proportion to the revenue which they respectively
enjoy under the protection of the state." Every tax, he goes on
to say, which falls only upon rent, or only upon wages, or only
upon interest, is necessarily unequal. In accordance with this
is the common idea which our systems of taxing everything vainly
attempt to carry out -- that every one should pay taxes in proportion
to his means, or in proportion to his income.
[31] But, waiving all the insuperable practical
difficulties in the way of taxing every one according to his means,
it is evident that justice cannot be thus attained.
[32] Here, for instance, are two men of
equal means, or equal incomes, one having a large family, the
other having no one to support but himself. Upon these two men
indirect taxes fall very unequally, as the one cannot avoid the
taxes on the food, clothing, etc., consumed by his family, while
the other need pay only upon the necessaries consumed by himself.
But, supposing taxes levied directly, so that each pays the same
amount. Still there is injustice. The income of the one is charged
with the support of six, eight, or ten persons; the income of
the other with that of but a single person. And unless the Malthusian
doctrine be carried to the extent of regarding the rearing of
a new citizen as an injury to the state, here is a gross injustice.
[33] But it may be said that this is a
difficulty which cannot be got over; that it is Nature herself
that brings human beings helpless into the world and devolves
their support upon the parents, providing in compensation therefor
her own sweet and great rewards. Very well, then, let us turn
to Nature, and read the mandates of justice in her law.
[34] Nature gives to labor; and to labor
alone. In a very Garden of Eden a man would starve but for human
exertion. Now, here are two men of equal incomes -- that of the
one derived from the exertion of his labor, that of the other
from the rent of land. Is it just that they should equally contribute
to the expenses of the State? Evidently not. The income of the
one represents wealth he creates and adds to the general wealth
of the State; the income of the other represents merely wealth
that he takes from the general stock, returning nothing. The right
of the one to the enjoyment of his income rests on the warrant
of Nature, which returns wealth to labor; the right of the other
to the enjoyment of his income is a mere fictitious right, the
creation of municipal regulation, which is unknown and unrecognized
by Nature. The father who is told that from his labor he must
support his children must acquiesce, for such is the natural decree;
but he may justly demand that from the income gained by his labor
not one penny shall be taken, so long as a penny remains of incomes
which are gained by a monopoly of the natural opportunities which
Nature offers impartially to all, and in which his children have
as their birthright an equal share.
[35] Adam Smith speaks of incomes as "enjoyed
under the protection of the state"; and this is the ground upon
which the equal taxation of all species of property is commonly
insisted upon -- that it is equally protected by the state. The
basis of this idea is evidently that the enjoyment of property
is made possible by the state -- that there is a value created
and maintained by the community, which is justly called upon to
meet community expenses. Now, of what values is this true? Only
of the value of land. This is a value that does not arise until
a community is formed, and that, unlike other values, grows with
the growth of the community. It exists only as the community exists.
Scatter again the largest community, and land, now so valuable,
would have no value at all. With every increase of population
the value of land rises; with every decrease It falls. This is
true of nothing else save of things which, like the ownership
of land, are in their nature monopolies.
[36] The tax upon land values is, therefore,
the most just and equal of all taxes. It falls only upon those
who receive from society a peculiar and valuable benefit, and
upon them in proportion to the benefit they receive. It is the
taking by the community, for the use of the community, of that
value which is the creation of the community. It is the application
of the common property to common uses. When all rent is taken
by taxation for the needs of the community, then will the equality
ordained by Nature be attained. No citizen will have an advantage
over any other citizen save as is given by his industry, skill,
and intelligence; and each will obtain what he fairly earns. Then,
but not till then, will labor get its full reward, and capital
its natural return.