.
Adam Smith's Philosophy on Taxation |
| [Reprinted from the
Association for Incentive Revenue Research Newsletter, October 1987] |
INTRODUCTION
Adam Smith is most famous for his book, "The Wealth of Nations",
and of this momentous work two aspects spring readily to mind: his
description of the "Invisible hand" of the market and his four
canons of taxation. These four canons (Smith actually called them "maxims")
have been summarised in four words: equity, certainty, convenience and
simplicity, and tax legislators ever since have tried, with varying
degrees of success, to make their taxes meet these criteria.
Smith's chapter on taxation, "Of taxes", starts: "The
private revenue of individuals arises ultimately from three different
sources: Rent, Profit, and Wages. Every tax must finally be paid from
some one or other of these three different sorts of revenue, or from all
of them indifferently." He then sets out his four maxims and in the
following eighty-two pages describes the various taxes imposed on rent,
profit and wages, measuring them against his four maxims. This is a most
interesting part of The Wealth of Nations because we find that even in
1776 there were few taxes that are unknown today; and there are few
taxes today that were unknown to Adam Smith.
In spite of this, few modern tax legislators seem to have bothered to
have read Smith's chapters on taxation. Had they done so, it is unlikely
that we would be encumbered with the type of taxes that we have today.
Smith is scathing about our three main sources of revenue: company tax
(taxes upon profit), income tax (tax upon the wages of labour), and
G.S.T. (taxes upon consumable commodities) so let us examine in detail
what he has to say about these taxes.
TAXES ON PROFIT
Smith divides taxes upon profit into two: taxes on interest, and taxes
on profit after interest. Of the latter he says that this "is
evidently a subject not taxable directly". Profit "is the
compensation for the risk and trouble of employing stock". If the
owner of the stock does not receive compensation, he will either not
continue his business or he will pass on the tax, "in which case
the final payment of the tax would fall altogether upon the consumers of
those goods."
The taxation of interest appears to be capable to being taxed directly,
but Smith puts forward an argument against this, and he could well have
been writing in South Africa in 1987.
"The proprietor of stock (capital) is properly a citizen of the
world and is not necessarily attached to any particular country. He
would be apt to abandon the country in which he was exposed to vexatious
inquisition, in order to be assessed to a burdensome tax and would
remove his stock to some other country where he could either carry on
his business or enjoy his fortune at his ease. By removing his stock he
would put an end to all the industry in the country which he left. Stock
cultivates land; stock employs labour. A tax. which tended to drive away
stock from any particular country would so far tend to dry up every
source of revenue both to the sovereign and to the society. Not only the
profits of stock but the rent of land and the wages of labour would
necessarily be more or less diminished by its removal."
We are told often enough that disinvestment has more to do with
economics than politics; Adam Smith it seems, would agree.
An off-shoot of "Taxes upon profit", is "Taxes upon the
profit of particular employments," Here Smith is considering taxes
such as liquor licences, trading licences, the special excise duty on
brewers and so on. Again Smith tells us: "a tax .... upon the
profits of stock .... can never fall finally upon the dealers .... but
always upon the consumer .... and generally with some overcharge."
Here we have a theme which Smith repeats a number of times, that many
forms of taxation are a direct cause of price increases.
TAXES ON LABOUR
The next major topic that Smith deals with is: "Taxes upon the
wages of Labour". These taxes are said today to constitute a major
source of state revenue, so it is instructive to see what he said about
them. He deals with this subject in just over three pages, which perhaps
exemplifies the contempt with which he treats it.
"A direct tax upon the wages of labour, ... could not properly be
said to be even advanced by him .... In all such cases, not only the tax
but something more than the tax would in reality be advanced by the
person who immediately employed him."
"In all cases a direct tax upon the wages of labor must, in the
long run, occasion both a reduction in the rent of land and a greater
rise in the price of manufactured goods, than would have followed from
the proper assessment of a sum equal to the produce of the tax partly
upon the rent of land and partly upon consumable commodities."
If these taxes do not cause an increase in the price of labour, then
says Smith, they will cause a fall in the demand for labour. The decline
of industry, unemployment and a reduction in the gross domestic product
are the effects of such taxes. "Absurd and destructive as such
taxes are, however, they take place in many countries." Need one
say more?
There is, however, one more thing to say about the subject. The
salaries and perks of civil servants are not the same as those of
traders and professions which are "regulated by the free
competition of the market." In Adam Smith's opinion the salaries of
civil servants are perhaps higher than required: "the persons who
have the administration of government being generally disposed to reward
themselves .... rather more than enough. The emoluments of offices,
therefore, can in most cases very well bear to be taxed .... and.... is
always a very popular tax."
We have now dealt with taxes on Profit and Wages; the taxes on rent we
shall leave to last. The remaining topic is therefore -- "Taxes
which fall indifferently upon every different species of revenue."
In Smith's view there are only three "species of revenue" --
rent, profit and wages; taxes which fall on all three without falling
specifically on any one source are dealt with under this heading. Smith
classified them into two; capitation taxes and taxes upon consumable
commodities.
INFLATIONARY TAXES
Capitation taxes, of which the poll tax and the wealth tax would be
examples, are probably the worst in Smith's book. They are unequal,
arbitrary and uncertain and their only advantage from the tax gatherer's
point of view is that they are inexpensive to levy. In Adam Smith's day
these appear to have been fairly common taxes.
Smith takes 38 pages to discuss taxes on consumable commodities. This
was more in view of the importance of such taxes in the eighteenth
century, rather than Smith's regard for the principle of the tax. In
fact, Smith dismisses taxes on consumables in the same way that he
dismisses taxes on profits and on wages. He does, however, distinguish
between necessities and luxuries and reserves his attack on this tax for
that on necessities. A tax on luxuries he believes to be in the
interests of the poor, preventing them from squandering their
hard-earned money on such items. But a tax on "the necessaries of
life operates exactly in the same manner as a direct tax upon the wages
of labour. The labourer though he may pay it out of his hand, cannot,
for any considerable time at least, be properly said even to advance it.
It must always in the long-run be advanced to him by his immediate
employer in the advanced rate of his wages.
His employer, if he is a manufacturer, will charge upon the price of
his goods this rise of wages, together with a profit, so that the final
payment of the tax, together with this overcharge, will fall upon the
consumer." Smith knew only too well what an inflationary spiral was
all about! Continuing in this vein, he says: "The middling and
superior ranks of people, if they understood their own interest, ought
always to oppose all taxes upon the necessaries of life, as well as all
direct taxes upon the wages of labour. The final payment of both the one
and the other falls altogether upon themselves and always with a
considerable overcharge."
ALTERNATIVE REVENUE
If Adam Smith is not particularly in favour of any of the taxes
discussed so far, which type of tax is he in favour of? It would be
simple to say the tax on rent, that being the only tax not yet
discussed, but it is not quite that easy. Certainly the tax on rent is
the short answer but how do we know that? Smith deals with this topic at
some length, but it is mainly in other sections in his chapter on taxes
that we find his endorsement of this form of taxation.
In the section on Taxes on Profit and specifically dealing with the
taxation of interest, Smith mentions that there are "two different
circumstances which render the interest of money a much less proper
subject of direct taxation than the rent of land." Firstly the
quantity and value of land can never be a secret and secondly, land is a
subject which cannot be removed.
The fundamental difference between the owner of land and the owner of
capital, is that the owner of land is a citizen of the country, whereas
the owner of capital is a citizen of the world.
In the section on the taxation of wages, Smith discusses how in the
long run such a tax will result in a greater reduction in the rent of
land and a greater increase in the price of manufactured goods, "than
would have followed from the proper assessment of a sum equal to the
produce of the tax partly upon the rent of land and partly upon
consumable commodities." (It must be assumed here that he is
talking about luxuries, given his attack in a later section on the tax
on "necessaries".)
The taxation of rent is a subject with deep philosophical and political
differences of opinion; Adam Smith recognises the problem and his
intellectual genius steers a path of reason through this minefield. As a
true academic he holds himself aloof from enthusiastic endorsement of
any cause. In fact he gives his French acquaintances, the Physiocrats, a
rap on the knuckles for their enthusiasm for the taxation of land, "as
the most equitable of all taxes". Nevertheless it is known that
Smith had a high regard for the leader of this group, Francois Quesnay
and The Wealth of Nations would have been dedicated to Quesnay had he
not died before publication. This is significant because close reading
of the sections on the rent of land reveal Smith's belief that this form
of taxation, if properly administered, is the only tax which meets all
the conditions of his four maxims.
Smith divides his discussion on "Taxes upon Rent" into three
sections: "Taxes upon the Rent of Land", "Taxes which are
proportioned, not to the Rent but to the Produce of Land" and "Taxes
upon the Rent of Houses". "Land" in Smith's terminology
generally meant agricultural land and "Houses" meant
residential, business and industrial property including both land and
the improvements. It is in this latter section on the tax upon houses
that we find Smith's philosophy of taxation coming together. Here he
specifically distinguishes between the "ground rent" and the "building
rent"; with agricultural land the distinction between raw land and
improvements is not as important.
VALUE FOR VALUE
"Ground rents ... are altogether owing to the good government of
the sovereign, which by protecting the industry ... of the people ...
enables them to pay so much more than its real value for the ground
which they build their houses upon." It is this good government
which creates the fund out of which the tax is paid. "All taxes",
said Smith, "ought to fall as equally as possible upon the fund
which must finally pay them." If this fund is created in the first
place by the "sovereign" then no possible hardship can be
placed on those who apparently pay the tax. Why? Because "both
ground-rents and the ordinary rent of land are a species of revenue
which the owner ... enjoys without any care or attention of his own.
Though a part of this revenue should be taken from him in order to
defray the expenses of the state, no discouragement will thereby be
given to any sort of industry. The annual produce of the land and labour
of the society, the real wealth and revenue of the great body of people,
might be the same after such a tax as before."
Adam Smith is indicating here that there is a natural fund from which
taxation can be taken without harming the economy in any way. This fund
is created by the "good government of the sovereign" and so,
in a way belongs to the sovereign. This is a concept which is almost
unheard of today. It was dismissed a long time ago, mainly be vested
interests, who maintained that Smith knew nothing of the modern
industrial world. Taxation of land rents may be suitable for an
agricultural society, but would not raise sufficient revenue for the
government of an industrial country.
The theory has never been tested but it seems inconceivable that the
huge increases in rental value of land would not have been sufficient to
support Smith's concept of a tax that would meet perfectly his four
maxims of equity, certainty, convenience and simplicity and meet the
revenue requirements of modern government. Politicians and economists
have read Adam Smith; it is just that they have chosen to ignore him.
Almost certainly we are poorer for such ignorance.
CONCLUSION
The chief aspect of Smith's philosophy which is overlooked today is his
concept of the three sources of revenue, viz. rent, profit and wages and
his analysis of the effect of taxation on each. Today it seems that such
a concept is of no consequence and the effect of taxation on the
various1 sources of revenue is not a subject for debate. Certainly there
is vast debate on subjects such as direct versus indirect taxation or
the methods of arriving at the quantum of taxable income, but seldom if
ever does one hear a philosophical debate of the simplicity or
incisiveness of Adam Smith's. The horrendous inflationary effect of
taxation on some sources of revenue, a subject Smith deals with over and
over, is not debated today. Perhaps there is a fear that we shall come
to the same conclusion as Adam Smith; that in the final analysis there
is only one true source of taxation, the rental value of the land.
ADAM SMITH AND HENRY GEORGE
In my analysis of Adam Smith's chapter on taxation, I have come to the
conclusion that Adam Smith believed that the taxation of the rental
value of land was the best and fairest method of taxation. It may not be
easy to deduce such a conclusion, but the facts are there, and the more
one reads the chapter on taxation the more obvious it is. Even his
maxims of taxation point to this: in the first maxim Smith says taxation
should be "in proportion to the revenue which they respectively
enjoy under the protection of the State."
Now in Smith's day, "rent" and "revenue" were
synonymous. Certainly revenue only meant income from an investment and
did not include wages and salaries, and in the 18th century most
investments were in landed property. Also his phrase "under the
protection of the State" is amplified later in the chapter when,
dealing with the subject of tax on ground-rents (i.e. site value tax),
he says, "Nothing can be more reasonable than that a fund which
owes its existence to the good government of the State should be taxed
peculiarly."
I am emphasizing this point because there appears to be a perception
amongst Georgists, from Henry George onwards, that Adam Smith did not
really understand the significance of a tax on the rent of land, or if
he did, he did not stress its importance because he was in the pockets
of the landowners. It is true that Smith received a living from the Duke
of Buccleugh mainly for services rendered as the tutor to the Duke's
son, and this living continued for the rest of Smith's life.
Nevertheless an important distinction must be drawn between Adam Smith
and Henry George: Smith was an academic and George was a sailor/printer
turned economic visionary. The Wealth of Nations is, to give its correct
title, "An inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of
Nations"; "Progress and Poverty", on the other hand, is "An
inquiry into the cause of industrial depressions of increase of want
with increase in wealth ... The Remedy." It proclaims a great truth
and is written with missionary fervour. Henry George was not and did not
pretend to be an academic. He was a simple man troubled by the injustice
he saw around him, especially in the great centres of economic wealth;
and to whom the truth suddenly dawned as he stood on a hill overlooking
San Francisco Bay. From that moment, Henry George embarked on his
mission to address economic injustice by the simple expedient of the "single
tax" and that mission is continued by his followers world-wide.
The question that needs to be asked, however, is this: did Henry George
really read The Wealth of Nations, especially the chapter on taxation?
In his book "The Science of Political Economy", he deals at
fair length with Adam Smith, but rather than give an analysis of Smith's
philosophy vis-a-vis his own, he tries to explain why The Wealth of
Nations did not have the impact on economic thinking it should have,
given Smith's own influence and his association with the Physiocrats.
Nowhere does he quote Smith's chapter on taxation; In fact "The
Science of Political Economy" hardly deals with taxation at all. It
is, in fact, largely a complaint that so few others have seen the truth
as George saw it. Henry George should have kept his eye on the ball; so
should many of his followers today. It is not relevant that others do
not see or do not wish to see what you have seen and know. That is their
problem, not yours. Knowledge is one and is indivisible -- you cannot
transfer universal knowledge from one person to another. The knowledge
comes in a moment when the obstacles preventing its realisation are
removed -- in George's case, on a hill overlooking San-Francisco Bay
after pondering the problem for many years before. He then set out this
knowledge in his brilliant book "Progress & Poverty" and
it has retained its freshness because it reveals a universal truth. But
Henry George took his eye off the ball and tried to convert the whole
world. That is why "The Science of Political Economy" has
nowhere near the impact of Progress & Poverty.
Adam Smith also set out universal truths and that is why his book
retains its appeal. Adam Smith said clearly what every Georgist wants to
hear, that "ground rents are a still more proper subject of
taxation than the rent of houses". "Both ground rents and the
ordinary rent of land are a species of revenue which the owner....
enjoys without any care or attention of his own. Though a part of this
revenue be taken from him ... no discouragement will thereby be given to
any sort of industry"; and so on throughout the chapter on
taxation. If politicians and economists choose to ignore this aspect of
Adam Smith's teaching, that is their problem. Nevertheless, Adam Smith
remains today in the forefront of liberal economic thinking; if
Georgists want this thinking spread abroad they must study him property.
Perhaps then Adam Smith's genius will truly come into its own.
|