Impressions of a Georgeist in Switzerland |
[Reprinted from Land and Freedom, November-December 1939]
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"In the Swiss National Exhibition of Zurich, the section
"Home and People" had an inscription, which looked
inspired by Free-Trade:
"No fuel, no coal, no iron, no gold,
"If we were to depend upon our own raw material only,
"Our life would be similar to that of our lacustral ancestors."
A few numbers will illustrate this truism: The average
value of a ton of imported goods is 175 francs ( = $44)
and that of the exported ton 1,675, i.e., nearly ten-fold.
Without owning iron ore and without owning gold
fields, Switzerland, notwithstanding, produces 70 per cent
of all the watches produced in the wide world! The
watch export of Switzerland represents a global value
of 250 millions of francs a year, i.e., a quarter of all the
Swiss export value, amounting to 800 millions in 1936
and 1,300 millions in 1937.
The import excess of 600 millions on the average is
covered by touring and banking. Georgeians know very
well that an import excess over export isn't a loss,
but a gain. Who would suppose that under such conditions the Federal Government, instead of saving import
from every hindrance by custom-duties, makes the tariff
its largest source of revenue? Sixty-two per cent of a
total federal revenue of 525 millions are custom duties,
not only on luxuries as tobacco, wine and beer malt,
but also on commodities like fuel, automobiles and metals,
n necessaries like sugar, textiles and food.
Henry George insisted in his Protection or Free Trade
hat tariffs are not the best means to raise revenue for
le treasury. It has been proved also by Swiss economists
lat the burden that a tariff causes to the whole of the
economy is about thrice the amount of the custom-duty
return. For Switzerland it is about a billion of francs
in the year, or in the average 250 for every citizen, more
than the average tax and rate burden!
It seems to me that it would be a really patriotic act
to open the frontiers for every sort of goods, so as to free
the citizens from this terrible burden, but enabling also
the treasury to dispose of a larger land value to levy a
land-value tax. Being given that every tax suppression
provokes a corresponding rising of land value, free trade
would certainly be more patriotic than the "Buy Swiss
products!" propaganda which incites to buying dearer,
on the pretext that "money remains in the country."
In the federal budget you will vainly search for any
land tax. Only in the cantonal budgets you see landed
property and agricultural income taxed, but taxed at
the same rate as every other property, consisting of houses
and cattle, and like every other, industrial or professional,
income. Nowhere is there a special land tax according
to size, fertility, value or rent of land.
To contend with work-stoppage, Switzerland (communities, cantons, federal government, corporations and
individuals) spent in the last six years nearly a billion
( = $250,000,000) for getting employment. The best means
to get employment would be a sane land-value taxation
in substitution of federal custom duties (325 millions)
and cantonal rates on property and income (200 millions).
But unfortunately neither the agricultural nor the professional or industrial population have up to today been
prepared for Georgeian ideas and the advantages of
our reform. Not even the first step for such a fiscal
reform is in evidence. There are no statistical data
distinguishing between the land value and the value of
improvements.
The fact that the Swiss cantons like the single states
of the U. S. A. have fiscal autonomy and the right of
referendum, would enable one of the 25 cantonal governments to make the beginning, by the replacement of its
cantonal rates by a land-value tax. It must be emphasized
that such a reform would prove all its efficacy only when
followed by the suppression of the custom duties.
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