.
Stemming Sprawl: The Fiscal Approach
|
| [Chapter 10 from the
book, Suburban Sprawl: Culture, Theory, and Politics, edited
by Matthew J. Lindstrom and Hugh Bartling;
Rowman
& Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2003. Reprinted
with permission from the publisher. All rights reserved.] |
SPRAWL DEVELOPMENT CONFIGURATIONS are not natural. Were it not for
incentives to the contrary, people would choose to live and work in dose
proximity. This has been well documented in studies of every era and
place.[1] Only when incentives are put in place that induce people to
live in other circumstances do they choose settlement patterns that are
remote, less accessible, and alienating. Only in the industrial era and
after have outlying areas become more attractive. Tracing the history of
such developments makes it dear that they are a response to less livable
conditions of urban life as they have evolved -- the pollution of ah-
and water, loss of nature, loss of privacy, housing deficiencies, and so
on. In more recent years, differentials in taxation and die quality of
services (such as schools) have also played a role in making the suburbs
more attractive.
Those differentials are explained by public policies that were never
understood or envisioned by their designers. Lacking an appreciation of
land economics or the relationship between land value and transportation
service, governments have put into place a system of taxes and subsidies
that amplify and exacerbate whatever impulses already exist to escape
the pathologies of urban environments. The polluting industries of the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries are largely gone, but the
impulses to leave cities behind continue, driven now by policies for
which governments themselves are responsible.
It is important to understand how closely linked transportation costs
and land costs are. There are fixed costs involved in locating a home or
a business in either place: the costs of building a home, office, or
factory and the costs of purchasing a car or a truck. Leaving those
costs aside for the moment, consider the relationship between the
variable operating costs due to locating in an urban center versus those
in locating at the periphery, expressed conceptually in figure 10.1.
Figure 10.1 shows that a household or business is likely to incur costs
by locating at either site, whether at a city's center or at the city's
edge. At a center site, the costs will take the form of higher land
rent; at the city's edge, the costs will be transportation related. If
this is not readily apparent, it is because society provides subsidies
to titleholders and travelers beyond what are directly experienced or
understood.
Transportation Costs
Consider first the costs of transportation in remote areas; such costs
are necessarily higher. The way in which geographers and some land
economists understand transportation is by using the terms "accessibility"
and "mobility." As explained in one basic textbook,
Accessibility refers to the number of
opportunities, also called activity sites, available within a certain
distance or travel time. Mobility refers to the ability to move
between different activity sites (e.g., from home to a grocery
store).[2]
American transportation planners have focused excessively on mobility
with almost total disregard for accessibility. The result is that we are
frequently hard put to accomplish our transactions for lack of easy
access, even though it is easy to travel great distances with facility.
One old joke will serve as a metaphor to better illustrate the dilemma:
A man ordered a cup of coffee at a lunch counter and
shortly then ordered a second cup. After quickly drinking that cup, he
ordered a third cup, and then a fourth, and then a fifth. The
waitress, astonished at this man's requests, finally said to him, "My
Sir! You certainly do like coffee." "I certainly do,"
he replied. "Otherwise I wouldn't be drinking all this water just
to get a little."
The analogy is apparent: Water is to mobility as coffee is to
accessibility. We do an awful lot of driving just to do what we need to
do. This is because transportation engineers and land use planners have
confused two fundamental concepts: access and mobility.
By confusing these two principles, we spend an inordinate amount of
money on transportation services, most of it on roads and highways. One
1993 study calculated that the total costs of motor vehicle
transportation to our society equal approximately a fourth of our gross
domestic product (GDP).[3] The study concluded that "when the full
range of costs of transportation are tallied, passenger ground
transportation costs the American public a total of $1.2 to $1.6
trillion each year. Just the costs of automobile crashes represents a
figure equal to 8 percent of the American GDP.[4] Japan, by way of
comparison, spends an estimated 10.4 percent to satisfy all its
transportation requirements, although the figure might be a bit low
because not all externalities are included in the calculation.[5] Road
user fees in 1991 totaled only about $33 billion, whereas the true costs
to society were ten times that;[6] put another way, drivers pay only 10
percent of the true costs of their motor vehicle use.[7] The balance is
paid by society, effectively subsidizing highway use by paying for all
but the marginal out-of-pocket operating costs.
The relationship between transportation costs and land values can be
made even clearer by empirical study of how land values increase as one
moves toward the center of the city. In an investigation for the Urban
Land Institute, the author concluded that, for Portland, Oregon,
each additional mile [traveled] translated into slightly
more than $5,000 in housing costs; closer-in locations command a
premium, those farther out save money. A ten-mile difference, all
other things being equal, would amount to about $56,000 in new home
value.
For a household in which one worker drives downtown (or at least to a
more central location) to work, that ten-mile difference may amount to
4,600 miles annually, assuming 230 days of commuting and a round-trip
of 20 miles each day. Moreover, if non-work trips to the central area
and elsewhere doubled that amount, the tradeoff would be about 9,000
miles annually, which could mean a higher/lower driving cost of $3,000
annually, not counting the time saved/spent.[8]
Such are the savings for living closer to the urban center by ten
miles. If the urban resident has to rely on a car nonetheless,
subtracting some $3,000 annual travel expenses will still leave him
paying again that much (and likely more) to own a car. Author James
Kunstler put the true costs along with other experts at about $6,100
annually seven years ago.[9] The American Automobile Association
calculated that a car driven 15,000 miles in 2001 cost 51 cents per
mile, or $7,650.[10] This figure reflects only direct costs to the
driver, not the additional costs passed on to society.
The latter figures include externalities such as pollution and the
costs of highway crashes. Hortatory public pleas for people to tune up
their engines so ' that they pollute less, to inflate tires properly,
and to drive more safely are not likely to change the reality that
people are forgetful and fallible. Pollution-free cars are not
available; people must drive to participate in this society. The
consequences of sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide, and ozone are no longer
a matter of debate; they are scientific fact Despite frequent headlines
about replacing the internal combustion engine, all the realistic
substitutes also ultimately rely on fossil fuel power, solar-powered
cars are far in the future, if at all, and also fail to deal with any
transition. And every person driving his or her own car multiplies the
probabilities of accidents. When people step into a car, they are seldom
mindful of such odds. Yet if the direct pecuniary costs of driving
increase in any substantial way, there will surely be significant
changes in the trade-offs involved in housing/transportation choices. As
will be made clear later, making costs visible and linking them to
private personal behavior is one way to ensure that transportation pays
its own way.
Sooner than Americans are likely to bear the real burden of global
warming's environmental consequences, they are likely to experience the
onset of price rises for petroleum. Experts are divided, but among those
best insulated from the pressures of bias, there is increasing consensus
that the peak of oil extraction worldwide will come sometime around 2010
if not sooner.11 Rising prices will not induce greater supply; it will
not change the fact that the world will have passed the point of most
easily extracted oil and will enter a long and increasingly steep period
of declining availability. It is rather a matter of physics: When it
costs more in energy to bring oil from deep in the earth than what can
be extracted, it is not worth the investment Even the greater wealth of
American society will not insulate it from world competition over what
is a limited and fungible commodity. How this alters the calculations
Americans make about where to live and work will increasingly depend on
the price they are willing to pay for transportation service.
Looking at figure 10.1 once more, it is likely that the slope of the
line reflecting land rent and transportation costs will become steeper
in time, making each factor greater relative to the other. The century
during which motor vehicle transportation was dominant tended to flatten
that line, but the greater and growing transportation costs will tend to
make land values at urban centers higher relative to remote locales,
much as occurred in pre-industrial times or during the railroad and
canal eras. George Kennan notes in one of his books that
The railway ... was capable of accepting and disgorging
its loads, whether of passengers or freight, only at fixed points.
This being the case, it tended to gather together, and to concentrate
around its urban terminus and railhead, all activity that was in any
way related to movements of freight or passengers into or out of the
city. It was in this quality that it had made major and in some ways
decisive contributions to the development not only of the great
railway metropolises of the Victorian age -- particularly of such
inland cities as Moscow, Berlin, Paris, and Chicago -- but even
certain of the great maritime turnover ports, such as London and New
York.
The automobile, on the other hand, had precisely the opposite
qualities. Incapable, in view of its own cumbersomeness and
requirements for space, of accepting or releasing large loads at any
concentrated points anywhere, but peculiarly capable of accepting and
releasing them at multitudes of unconcentrated points anywhere else,
the automobile tended to disintegrate and to explode all that the
railway had brought together. It was, in fact, the enemy of the
concentrated city. Thus it was destined to destroy the great densely
populated urban centers of the nineteenth century, with all the
glories of economic and cultural life that had flowed from their very
unity and compactness.[12]
Land Rent
From the standpoint of an economic geographer and for some land
economists, land rent is simply capitalized transportation cost. Land
rent is the surplus generated by social activity on or in the vicinity
of locational sites that accrues to titleholders of those parcels.
Whether or not it is recaptured by public policy, rent is a natural
factor deriving from the intensive use of natural capital. One must
return to nineteenth-century classical economics to appreciate the
importance of economic rent or land rent; neoclassical economic
frameworks have largely discarded it.13 More intensive use of high-value
land sites leads to site configurations that are less dependent on
transportation services. Land rent is highest where the greatest traffic
and market exchanges occur, that being at the center of large
conurbations. Comparing land values of urban property parcels, the
highest land rent in the urban cores and traffic junctures are analogous
to the contours of land elevations. Mountain peaks gradually slope down
to valleys and flatland regions and continue outward until at distant
points-perhaps at the poles of the earth-land sites have no market value
at all.
The differentials in land values are profound, even more than most
people realize. In 1995, in the small city of Ithaca, New York, the
highest quintile of land had a value of over $56,000 per acre in the
downtown center, whereas the lowest quintile only a mile away falls to
less than $3,000.[14] Large city centers have far higher site prices.
Even in Polk County, Iowa (which includes Des Moines), in the middle of
cornfields where I did a study two years ago, the highest urban value
land site was $31.3 million per acre, which quickly declined to about
$20,000 per acre only about a mile away. In the spring of 1998, one land
parcel (the building was to be razed) of less than an acre in New York .
City's Times Square and split in two pieces by Broadway was sold by
Prudential Life to Disney for roughly $240 million.[15] To take another
instance, a nine-acre tract on the East River in New York City occupied
by an obsolete power plant was purchased by Mort Zuckerman to build
high-rise condominiums two years ago. The sale price was in the
neighborhood of $680 million and would have been higher were it not for
some enormous costs associated with the demolition of the old
structures.[16] It should be noted that the overwhelming proportion of
land value is in cities; relatively speaking, the site values of
peripheral lands, typically used for agriculture and timber growth, are
negligible. Land values are high in urban areas because, over time, rent
accrues to a site. Each improvement in proximity to a property parcel
enhances the value of all other parcels. This makes even unimproved
sites attractive objects for speculation, particularly when land sites
surrounding it are to be improved by adding either transportation
service or new structures. One nine-mile stretch of interstate highway
in Albany, New York, costing $125 million to construct, has yielded $3.8
billion in increased land values (constant dollars) within just two
miles of its corridor in the forty years of its existence.[17] This is a
thirty-fold return in a time span typically used for bond repayment! The
Washington
Metro created increments in land value along much of the
101-mile system completed by 1980 that easily exceeded $3.5 billion,
compared with the $2.7 billion of federal funds invested in Metro
up until that time.[18] Any major building construction project, private
or public, will have a similar effect on adjacent land sites.
Differentials in land value can have a profound effect on decisions made
by titleholders, either positively by inducing appropriate development
in urban cores or negatively by giving monopoly titleholders power to
hold sites out of use for long-term speculative gain. Such decisions of
course determine the character of urban configurations and society as
well.
Stemming Sprawl: Command-and-Control Measures
Policymakers have two modes of leverage by which to implement public
will: 1) so.-called command-and-control approaches that are typically
enforced by what state and federal constitutions group under "police
powers" and 2) fiscal approaches that typically involve a variety
of taxes, fees, fines, and other charges that derive constitutionally
from either police powers or "tax powers." When governments
administer either of these powers, they are legitimate and
authoritative. Fiscal measures available to governments can come from
either ground. The charges that the private sector usually impose differ
in that they usually are responsive to market forces. Prices that are
established by government, however, are not necessarily responsive to
market forces, nor are they intended to be. Rather, they are set in
order to accomplish specific public policy goals.[19] They can be no
less efficient, however, when responsibly instituted.
Governments face the challenge of knowing which of the tools at their
disposal-command-and-control approaches or "pricing"
approaches -- will best serve effective and efficient achievement of
public policies. Only in recent years, however, has there been a renewed
interest in fiscal levers to achieve goals that policymakers seek to
achieve. There is particular interest among students of welfare
economics in incorporating costs earlier regarded as externalities,
especially in designing environmental policies. Moreover, the use of
pricing approaches to recover costs of government services that have a
high level of private good about them can bring about more attractive
and achievable goals than reliance on conventional police power
approaches. User fees, environmental fees, and other such fiscal tools
have become more fascinating -- at least to students of public policy --
than conventional taxes.
The renewed interest in fiscal approaches comes in recognition of the
fact that traditional command-and-control approaches have not been
successful. Government authority is far more effective at prohibiting
and controlling than it is inducing and channeling.[20] Three
illustrations of failed command-and-control approaches will demonstrate
this: zoning, urban growth boundaries, and altering (usually expanding)
political jurisdictions.
Zoning
The largest single and impartial study of zoning, a 1969 report to the
National Commission on Urban Problems (the Douglas Commission), conceded
that zoning is of questionable value. A part titled "Fragmentation
in Land-Use Planning and Control" quoted with approval a (then)
recent study that had held the following:
1) While a great deal has been said about what zoning ought
to do, very little has been said about what zoning actually does to
the city and its inhabitants.
2) Although zoning is the most widespread tool of land-use control
and urban planning in the United States, there is almost no evidence,
logical or empirical, to indicate whether or not zoning accomplishes
the goals and purposes attributed to it by planners and other
proponents.
3) There is almost no evidence to indicate that the unzoned city is
substantially different from, or substantially similar to, the zoned
city.[21]
Planners, of course, respond by saying that they have been given too
little power and that their designs needed to be incorporated more
widely, comprehensively, and stringently over broader regions. To their
way of thinking, it is the balkanization of municipal plans, as well as
their tepid injunctions, that account for failure. Zoning, they argue,
needs the even more fundamental support of "master plans,"
that is, more command-and-control instruments.
Zoning becomes captive of parochial interests -- home owners,
speculators, the highway industry, and building contractors -- who
naturally either resist or exploit the inexorable and evolutionary
patterns of change. The political Right criticizes zoning for
interfering with individual choice and rational land use,[22] and the
Progressive Center criticizes it for being outdated and rigid at best,
unresponsive and destructive at worst. Alan Ehrenhalt, columnist for
Governing Magazine, said,
The postwar zoning codes discouraged the old
pedestrian-scale Main Street corridors that had flourished before
World War II, and encouraged their replacement with strip-mall-like
businesses that provided large amounts of parking. They took the idea
of segregated uses and pressed it much further than die original
versions had dared go. The more distance they could create between
residential, commercial and industrial uses, planners reasoned, the
easier it would be to dissuade residents from escaping to greener
pastures.[23]
Implicit in all this is an authoritarian approach to land use
decisions. It arises out of the notion that professionals -- in this
case planners -- know best and that fragmented land use is an outgrowth
of "excessive localism" and fragmented decision making and an
inability to see the "big picture." The report recognized the
continuing influence of the classic approach of planners first put forth
in the (congressional) Standard City Planning Act of 1928 and defined in
detail in Edward Bassett's classic book The Master Plan. In that
text, to influence planners for decades to come, three criteria
determined the scope of a good plan: "Each of the elements of the
plan relates to land areas; has been stamped on land areas by the
community for the community use; (and] can be shown on a map."[24]
Particularly revealing, and no doubt deliberate, is the use of the word
"stamp." The approach is autocratic, static-rather than
organic, and governmentally expensive.
Urban Growth Boundaries
Urban growth boundaries (UGBs) are another panacea receiving great
attention: the attempt to curtail outward growth by imposing a
constraining girdle on development. Portland, Oregon, and Boulder,
Colorado, are the exemplars, both having instituted their policies
decades ago. In Boulder, however, the results are more hi consequence of
factors relating to topography and infrastructure service than to
prohibition of outward extension.[25] And Portland has been pressured to
alter its boundary repeatedly as differential land values within and
beyond the boundary induce growth patterns both unnatural and
inefficient.[26] Landholders within the city endorsed it because it
doubled their site values in a decade, which has meant that, relative to
local income, housing is now more expensive than in any city except San
Francisco.[27] Inevitably, the economic pressures grew to the point of
political crisis, at which time the policies were relaxed. This is
because UGBs deal with symptoms rather than the root economic causes of
the problem. In 1996, six Bay Area communities "locked in"
long-term protection for the greenbelt by adopting a UGB covering a
total of 3.75 million acres.2* For perspective, this translates to 5,860
square miles, an expanse equal to that of Connecticut and Rhode Island
together. But only 731,000 acres, 1,142 square miles, are urbanized[29]
at the present time, and it could be a century before "build-out"
and any significant impact from such measures occur. It was politically
impossible to impose any smaller design, which illustrates the
difficulty, and indeed the fallacy, of using a command-and-control
device to constrain an inexorable economic force.
Elastic City Boundaries
The former mayor of Albuquerque, New Mexico, David Rusk, has made a
name for himself promoting what he calls "elastic cities."[30]
His answer is for municipalities to expand or combine their political
boundaries in order to "capture" suburban growth in their tax
base. In some cases, state laws must be passed to authorize this,
overcoming the reluctance of suburbs to relinquish their privileged
status. In those states where such annexation is permissible and has
occurred, it might momentarily help address a shrinking tax base, but
the urban configuration is unaltered and perhaps bloated. Consider, for
example, the case of Columbus, Ohio, which in 1950 had an incorporated
area of only 39.9 square miles.[31] The total number of square miles by
1967 had grown to 114 and in 1996 had almost doubled again to 206.[32]
One unwelcome consequence, however, is the reduction of farmland, which
the city is now realizing.
Stemming Sprawl: Pricing Measures for Transportation
From the foregoing, it is clear that insofar as the causes of sprawl
development are economic, the solution needs to be economic as well. The
equilibrium of forces can be restored in two ways: 1) by charging the
true marginal costs of motor vehicle transportation to users and 2) by
recovering the economic rent from urban site owners that is really the
socially created value.
It is easy to distinguish five elements of transportation service cost:
capital investment, maintenance costs, regulation costs, environmental
externalities, and congestion costs. Each of these calls for a different
treatment with respect to revenue design. Capital costs are best
recovered by recapturing the land rent proximate to the highway
corridors. This is socially created value, which is better used to honor
debt service of infrastructure investment than allowing it to be
retained as windfall gains by titleholders to property dose by. User
fees, most aptly linked to the purchase of motor fuel and tire wear,
serve as a proxy for the use of the roads and can be designed to be
commensurate with use. As the wear and tear of roads as well as police
patrol, snow and ice control, and signaling all involve operating and
maintenance costs, such charges are easily linked with benefits
received. In the future, still more accurate systems of service charges
are likely to appear: Singapore, Hong Kong, and New Zealand are already
reliant on electronic devices that record road use by time, place, and
vehicle weight.
Ensuring the safety of drivers and vehicles through licenses,
registrations, and inspections is most appropriately financed by fees
commensurate with the costs of their administration. This way, if a
vehicle is used but seldom, it is charged on the basis of its
identification rather than assuming any projected level of use.
Environmental externalities such as pollution costs can be linked to the
polluting source, such as diesel fuel and gasoline consumption, to the
full extent necessary to equilibrate air quality and other environmental
ambiences. Congestion costs, the last of the major components of a
pricing design for highway use, are partially paid for by the time loss
of those caught in traffic. The costs of time lost due to highway
congestion are enormous: In 2000, the average driver spent 62 hours
sitting in traffic at a nationwide cost of $68 billion in gas and time
lost In Los Angeles, the average driver spent 136 hours stalled in
traffic at an average cost of $2,510.[33] Commuting times were also 20
percent longer than they were a decade ago, about 22 minutes one way
nationally on average but as high as 32 minutes on average in New
York.[34] But not all people's time is valued equally, and people
themselves value their time differently at different times, and it is
unfair to require people to impose their congestion on others.
Therefore, congestion pricing, being explored in several urban regions,
provides a rationing of limited highway space. In a sense, that payment
for space usage, in time or money, is a form of land rent.
Stemming Sprawl Stemming Sprawl: Pricing Measures for Land
Use
Just as recovering the costs of transportation service equilibrates
costs and benefits on one side of the equation, recovering the economic
rent accruing to land value facilitates efficient space configurations
on the other side. Figure 10.2, again conceptually, portrays how the
collection of various transportation user fees as well as the recovery
of land rent corrects the economic distortions that today result in
sprawl development. The shaded area indicates the pricing correctives
necessary to ensure that neither urban nor rural land sites are
dis-advantaged in travel or location choices that individuals make for
either residential or commercial purposes.
As it happens, collecting land rent is a relatively simple operation:
It involves a small computer adjustment in the assessment base of what
is now the local real property tax. The real property tax to an
economist is really two separate taxes: that put on land value and that
put on improvement values. A gradual phaseout of the tax on the
improvement component, shifting totally to a tax on the land, recovers
economic rent in a way that satisfies all the principles of sound tax
theory.[35] It is efficient, neutral, equitable, administrate, stable,
and simple. It is also absolutely foolproof: One cannot hide land or
take it to a remote tax haven. It relieves poor households (who
typically own no land) of any tax burden and rewards those titleholders
who use their sites efficiently. High-value sites are induced to
construct high-value improvements, and low-value sites are left alone.
In this way, central locations, where commercial enterprises typically
locate, pay according to their intensity; home owners, who typically
locate at the periphery of a neighborhood community, pay moderately; and
agricultural land and forestlands pay little if anything. By an
automatic and natural process, the centrifugal forces of. sprawl
development are reversed, and investment is encouraged in core locales.
The higher density resulting affords the necessary ten to twelve
households per acre (or the commercial equivalent) that makes public
transportation service economically viable, lessening the prospect of
automobile dependency.[36]

In addition, a tax on site value (that is, the collection of economic
rent) restores moral principle to tax theory. By collecting rent on that
value that is generated by the collective activity of the community, it
offers the opportunity to relieve tax burdens on value that is generated
by individual effort Put another way, any value that individuals create
by their own bodies and minds is left for them to keep; that which is
socially created value is recovered by the community to pay for its
collective purposes. "Tax what you take, not what you make,"
is one way to say it. "Tax bads, not goods," or "Tax
waste, not work," is another way. At the heart of this approach is
a very profound message: The earth is the common heritage of humanity;
it belongs to everyone. That which grows out of our own personal efforts
and ingenuity is ours to keep, and no part of it should be subject to
taxation.[37] Taxes on income, sales, savings, structures, and things
mat come from the sweat of our brow can be replaced by taxes on land
rent-which, when all forms of it are included, is revenue source that
can fully pay for the full services of government and is nonetheless
essentially burden-less to taxpayers.[38] What economists call the "excess
burden" or "deadweight loss" of the current tax structure
-- by many calculations at least 25 percent[39] -- is reduced to zero,
thereby increasing our collective productivity by that amount That
effectively makes us all 20 percent wealthier.
John Houseman, an actor perhaps most widely known as Professor
Kings-field in the film and long-running television series, The
Paper Chase, later became the pitchman for Oppenheimer Mutual Funds.
In that advertisement, his tag line was "We get our money the
old-fashioned way -- we earn it" That we should earn our
money rather than live off the efforts of others seems a simple enough
moral tenet. But it seems to have lost its cogency in contemporary
economic thought. More than a century ago, John Stuart Mill noted that
landlords grow richer in their sleep without working,
risking 6r economizing. The increase in the value of land, arising as
it does from the efforts of an entire community, should belong to the
community and not to the individual who might hold tide.[40]
Notes
xxxx 1. Brian K. Roberts,
Landscapes of Settlement: Prehistory to the Present (London:
Roudedge, 1996); Spiro Kostof, The City Shaped: Urban Patterns and
Meanings through History (Boston: Little, Brown, 1991).
xxxx 2. Susan Hanson, ed., The
Geography of Urban Transportation (2nd ed.) (New York: Guilford,
1995), 5. See also Elliott Sclar, Access for All: Transportation and
Urban Growth (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980).
xxxx 3. Peter Miller and John Moffet, The
Price of Mobility: Uncovering the Hidden Costs of Transportation
(Washington, D.C.: Natural Resources Defense Council, 1993). This is
somewhat more than the U.S. Department of Transportation's own
calculation. The latter uses only direct measurable pecuniary costs and
estimates that the figure was in the neighborhood of $1 trillion for
1992, about 17 percent of gross national product (converting to GDP
would make it somewhat higher). Since it fails to include externalities
such as pollution, accidents, and other associated costs, it seems a
reasonable estimate (U.S. Department of Transportation, Transportation
Statistics Annual Report, 1994 [Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Statistics, 1994] ,4-5).
xxxx 4. In 1988, a study by the Urban
Institute calculated that $71 billion were borne in out-of-pocket costs,
another $46 billion in lost wages and household production, and $217
billion in pain, suffering, and lost quality of life. Translated into
vernacular, this is a total of $334 billion in lost property, work time,
and injuries and deaths (T. Miller et al., The Costs of Highway
Crashes [Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute, October 19911).
xxxx 5. Walter Hook, "Counting on
Cars, Counting Out People," Institute for Transportation
Development Policy Paper, Winter 1994,28. Another author puts the figure
at 9.2 percent of personal expenditure in Japan versus 22 percent in the
United States (Michael Replogle, "Improving Access for the Poor in
Urban Areas," Appropriate Technology 20, no. 1 [ 1993):
21-23).
xxxx 6. James J. MacKenzie et al., The
Going Rate: What It Realty Costs to Drive (Washington, D.C.: World
Resources Institute, 1992).
xxxx 7. Road Kill: How Solo Driving
Runs Down the Economy (Boston: Conservation Law Foundation, May
1994), 7. This study is a summary of a larger study done by Apogee
Research, Inc., funded by the Joyce Foundation.
xxxx 8. Robert T. Dunphy, "The Cost
of Being Close: Land Values and Housing Prices in Portland's High Tech
Corridor," ULI Working Paper No. 660, October 1998, at
www.uli.org/Pub/Pages/a_issues/660/a_trl44_cost.html (accessed December
2000).
xxxx 9. James Howard Kunstler, Home
from Nowhere: Remaking Our Everyday World for the 21st Century (New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), chap. 3, at
link (accessed January 2001).
xxx 10. See
link
(accessed January 2001). Driving 10,000 miles per year will typically
cost 64.5 cents per mile, or $6,450, and driving 20,000 miles per year
will cost 45.8 cents per mile, or $9,160.
xxx 11. See, for example,
link, listing inter alia Kenneth
S. Deffeyes, Hubbert's Peak The Impending World Oil Shortage
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2001); Walter Youngquist,
Geodestinies (Portland, Ore.: National Book Company, 1997); and
link, maintained by Dr. Jay Hanson
(Cornell University, retired).
xxx 12. George Kennan, Around the
Cragged Hill; A Personal and Political Philosophy (New York: Norton,
1993), 160-61.
xxx 13. Explanation of the Mure to
recognize the law of rent, as understood by classical economists, is
explained in Mason Gaffhey and Fred Harrison, The Corruption of
Economics (London: Shepheard-Walwyn, 1994). See also H. William
Batt, "How the Railroads Got Us on the Wrong Economic Track,"
Torch Magazine, Spring 1998, at
link
(accessed February 2001).
xxx 14. These data come from other work I
have done.
xxx 15. New York Times, March
7,1998.
xxx 16. Charles V. Bagli, "In
Manhattan, a Battle over Nine Acres with River View," New York
Times, December 29,1999; Charles V. Bagli, "Winning Bid to
Develop Nine Acres Near UN.," New York Times, January 2,2000.
xxx 17. H. William Batt, "Value
Capture as a Policy Tool in Transportation Economics: An Exploration in
Public Finance in the Tradition of Henry George," American
Journal of Economics and Sociology 60, no. 1 (January 2001): 195-228
(reprinted in Laurence S. Moss, ed., City and Country [Maiden,
Mass.: Blackwell, 2001]).
xxx 18. Walter Rybeck, "Transit-Induced
Land Values: Development and Revenue Implications," Economic
Development Commentary 5, no. 1 (October 1981): 23-27.
xxx 19. One recent exploration of this is
a chapter titled "Catalytic Government: Steering Rather Than
Rowing," in Reinventing Government: How the Entrepreneurial
Spirit Is Transforming the Public Sector, ed. David Osborne and Ted
Gaebler (New York: Penguin, 1993).
xxx 20. This was explored in powerful
detail in a book that is now regarded as a classic study: Robert A. Dahl
and Charles E Lindblom, Politics, Economics and Welfare: Planning
and Politico-Economic Systems Resolved into Basic Social Processes
(New York: Harper & Row, 1953, updated in 1992).
xxx 21. James G. Coke and John J. Gargan, "Fragmentation
in Land-Use Planning and Control," Research Report No. 18 (prepared
for the consideration of the National Commission on Urban Problems,
Washington, D.C., 1969), 11.
xxx 22. Linda Fantin, "Libertarian
Candidate Says Government Is Root of Most Planning Ills," Tribune
(Salt Lake City), March 28,1998.
xxx 23. Alan Ehrenhalt, "The Trouble
with Zoning," Governing Magazine, February 1998,28-34.
xxx 24. Coke and Gargan, "Fragmentation
in Land-Use Planning and Control," 61.
xxx 25. Peter Pollock, "Controlling
Sprawl in Boulder: Benefits and Pitfalls," Landlines,
January 1998,1 ff., at www.lincolninst.edu/main.html (accessed February
2000).
xxx 26. The studies of Portland's UGB are
myriad, so many that one is better served by surfing the Internet anew
rather than enumerate citations here. The Portland Oregon-tan, however,
has had extensive and balanced coverage of the issues and offers the
best single source of material.
xxx 27. Alan Ehrenhalt points out that "Portland
land prices, 19 percent below the U.S. average in 1985, were 6 percent
above it by 1994, and that while Portland was the nation's 55th most
affordable city just six years ago, it now ranks 165th out of 179."
He points out that the increased land values have encouraged both
in-filling and higher densities inside the growth boundary, while the
individual lot sizes have gone from an average of 13,200 square feet
when the growth boundary was first established to an average 8,700
square feet in the mid-1990s. This increased density has been an
attraction to many residents, and it is now possible for 40 percent of
the workers commuting to work in Portland to rely on public
transportation (Alan Ehrenhalt, "The Great Wall of Portland,"
Governing Magazine, May 1997,20-24).
xxx 28. Urban Growth Boundaries -- New
Report and Factsheet, at link
(accessed January 2001), and
link
(accessed January 2001); Zack Stentz, "Inward Bound," Sonoma
County Independent, July 11,1996.
xxx 29. One square mile converts to
roughly 640 acres. San Francisco covers 30,000 acres (46.8 square
miles), Santa Rosa 22,000 (34.4 square miles), and San Jose more than
100,000 (156 square miles). More than 864,000 acres (1,350 square
miles), an area larger than Yosemite National Park, are publicly owned,
mostly in parks and watersheds; see
link (accessed
February 2001).
xxx 30. David Rusk, Cities without Suburbs
(Baltimore: Woodrow Wilson Center, The Johns Hopkins University Press,
1993), See also Myron Orfield, Metropolises: A Regional Agenda for
Community and Stability (rev. ed.) (Washington, D.C.: Brookings
Institution Press; Cambridge, Mass.: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy,
1997).
xxx 31. City of Columbus, Growth
Statement, 1993,37.
xxx 32. Communication with Dr. Barbara
Brugman, Development Department, City of Columbus, Spring 1998.
xxx 35. Texas Transportation Institute
study, reported in the Christian Science Monitor, June 24,2002,14.
xxx 36. Laurent Belsie, "Commutes Get
Longer, More Rural," Christian Science Monitor, May
31,2002, Iff.
xxx 37. See H. William Batt, "Principles
of Sound Tax Theory as Have Evolved over 200 and More Years," Groundswell,
at link
(accessed February 2001).
xxx 38. Parsons Brinkerhoff, "Transit
and Urban Form," TCRP Report No. 16, Transportation Research Board,
Washington, D.C., 1996.
xxx 39. See www.earthrights.net for
greater elaboration of the theory underlying this approach.
xxx 40. Classical economic theory employed
the word "land" as a factor of production, the others being
labor and capital. Land was taken to mean any valued good in nature and
today includes highly valued items, such as hydrocarbons and hard-rock
minerals, fisheries, water for irrigation and power, the electromagnetic
spectrum, geosynchronous satellite orbits, and airport landing and
takeoff time slots. All these yield economic rent that today is being
captured by private corporate interest but that should be the
entitlement of all humankind according to the theories of what is
coining to be known variously as geonomy, geoclassical liberalism,
Georgian (after the writings of nineteenth-century self-taught economist
Henry George), and natural taxation. For further references to this
school of political economy, see, for example, www.henrygeorge.org,
www.schalkenbach.org, www.urbantools.org,
www.cooperativeindividuaUsm.org, www.progress.org, and the search engine
for all these and more: www.askhenry.org.
xxx 41. Fred Harrison, ed, The Losses
of Nations Deadweight Politics versus Public Rent Dividends (London:
Othila Press, 1998). See also National Center for Policy Analysis, "The
Deadweight Loss of Income Taxes," where it is argued that "die
efficiency loss from current income taxes is more than 30 percent If
Social Security taxes are included, mere is a 50 percent efficiency loss"
(at link
accessed February 2001).
xxx 42. John Stuart Mill, Principles
of Political Economy, bk. 5, chap. 2, sec. 5.
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