.
| Hold on to
the Ground Duty: A Message to Fellow Danes |
| Ib
Christensen and Karsten Larsen |
| [Reprinted from Grunskyld,
November 1999; translated by Ole Lefmann] |
(1) The Danish Government is preparing a frontal unheard-of attack on
the fundamental principles of property taxation, which in Denmark first
of all consists of Ground Duty. The Ground Duty is a duty levied on the
value of land without buildings. Any objective economic analysis tells
that the value of land should be taxed most heavily, whereas income and
property both created by labour should be taxed most lightly.
(2) Since 1922 the Danish Taxation on Real Property has been based on
the principle that the community has a superior right to tax on, plan
for, and regulate land. In principle the Governmental assessment
institution has distinguished between the by nature provided and public
created values of land on the one hand, and the labour created values of
buildings on the other hand.
(3) That principle has built up a common understanding and acceptance
of the Real Estate Taxation, and it has become a model for other
countries. However, this understanding has been blurred through the
recent decades because of populist politicians and political parties,
who made an effort to please the interest of private homeowners'
acquisitiveness and agricultural special interests. This led to partial
destruction of the Ground Duty, which, however, doesn't alter the fact
that it basically has been the American economist Henry George's
philosophy and economic theory on public collection of the rent of land
that has been underlain the local authorities' collection of Ground
Duty. George published his principal work Progress and Poverty in 1879.
The book has been translated into Danish under the title Fremskridt og
fattigdom.
(4) George's ideas have especially been promoted by Danmarks
Retsforbund (English: The Danish Justice Party), but also, though more
plainly, by other parties such as Det Radikale Venstre (English: The
Left Wing Radicals) and Socialdemokratiet (English: The Social
Democrats).
(5) Unfortunately the two latter parties have for years contributed to
watering down the Ground Duty. At the end of the 1960'ies the Tax on
Incremental Land values was abolished, and in the middle of the 1980'ies
was put on the Municipal Ground Duty an upper limit of 2.4 per cent of
the public assessed land values. Today, as the Counties have to collect
1 per cent Ground Duty, the maximum Ground Duty will amount to 3.4 per
cent, whereas, as the Municipalities have to collect no less than 0.6
per cent, the minimum Ground Duty will amount to 1.6 per cent.
(6) The Ground Duty collects today approx. 2 per cent of all taxes in
Denmark, compared to approx. 5 per cent in 1960. In spite of the fact
that it is not a rather big amount, one should think that even the
greatest opponent of Ground Duty could feel satisfied. But that is far
from reality, which appears >from the following.
The Government Scheme
(7) The base of the Real Estate Taxation is periodic public assessments
of almost all real estate properties in Denmark. For each property is
made a separate assessment of the value of land and of the value of the
building(s), and put together these values make the total value of the
property. The value of the entire property has until recently been the
base of the so-called Income Tax on Imputed Rentals of the estate, on
which the taxpayer resides. That tax will disappear next year and be
released by a 1 per cent tax on the total value of the properties. The
separately assessed value of land makes, however, the base of the Ground
Duty.
(8) This distinction between the values of buildings and of land is far
more important than generally believed. The fact is that a tax on land
values can never have the same negative effects on enterprise and
production as can any of the other taxes. Land values are certainly not
created by individual persons. Land was given to mankind by nature and
it obtains economic value with the development of society. The value of
land makes an excellent source of taxation which is self-evident to
economists.
(9) When speaking about Real Estate Taxation, it is evident also, that
there is a great difference between taxes on land and taxes on
buildings. If values of buildings have to be taxed, the tax should be
kept on a very reasonable level - probably no more than the 1 per cent
to which the new property tax is sat, corresponding to the level of the
previous Income Tax on Imputed Rentals of the property in which the
taxpayer resides. A high tax on the value of buildings will hamper
improvements of buildings and lead to decline of the standard of
dwellings - an effect that Ground Duty doesn't have and can never get.
(10) The important principle - the distinction between land and
buildings - is the Government now ready to abolish. This contrasts with
the noble traditions of the two parties in the Government, but worst of
all it conflicts with common sense and justice. It all appears from the
report of the Committee sat up by the Minister of Taxation, and
published by the Minister. The report is titled 'Modernising and
Simplifying of the Assessment of Real Estates'.
(11) Certainly it has to be added that the Minister of Taxation, Mr.
Ole Stavad, in his answer to the Member of the Parliament, Mrs. Lise Bo
Nielsen, on September 6th, 1999, has dissociated himself from the
proposal of the Committee, but that is definitely not sufficient to rely
on for feeling safe. Unfortunately the answer of the Minister was far
from being a categorical refusal.
(12) One might wish for the plan of the Committee that it should widen
the base of taxation by imposing property tax with the same percentage
on the values of land and buildings. In a time where unlimited mobility
of goods, services, capital and personnel undermine the base of taxes on
income, wealth, companies, VAT and excise duties, the tax on real
estates remains untouched and must therefore be harnessed.
(13) However, that idea is unrealistic. The private homeowners'
acquisitiveness is still there, and with around 1.2 million homeowners
(of around 3.5 million voters [inserted by the translator]) its
political power is considerable. If the plan becomes reality it will
undoubtedly lead to the same consequence as in USA, Germany and other
places: The political pressure for freezing the public assessments of
and/or the taxes on real estate at an unrealistic and laughable low
level, will become irresistible. And then one will definitely not get
greater revenue in the long term, far from that. The structure of taxes
will be strikingly deteriorated and taxes on income and consume will
have to be increased.
(14) As being a part of this picture it has to be mentioned that the
ministerial Committee proposes the assessment system changed in such a
way that the property owners get an effective possibility to hamper a
reasonable assessment. The burden of proof will be turned round so to
say, which means that the assessment authorities will have to document
the correctness of their assessment versus the owner's more or less
fictitious estimate determined by the owner's wish to get off paying as
little a property tax as possible.
(15) Further comes to that, that it is societal inappropriate to tax
improvements of buildings. It will influence the distribution of wealth
in the society, as the proposal will favour the owners of comparatively
high values of land, and opposite it will disfavour owners of
comparatively high values of buildings. That is a matter of fact.
Members of Housing Co-operatives and owner-occupiers of flats and also
shop-owners have to pay up. The same is due to tenants in general,
whereas farmers on the largest farms take advantage at the expense of
the small farmers, and owners of attractive detached houses and holiday
cottages will be gilded. The anti-social character of the proposal is
more than obvious.
(16) Finally is to be added that "the reform" deprives the
political decision-makers of an especially important instrument for
governing of the economic policy. The existing system with the separate
assessment of land values makes it relatively easy for the political
majority to aim for a tax policy with increased Ground Duty and
decreased taxes on income (at least as looked upon from a technical
point of view, as the apparatus is at their disposal). For instance a
kind of Ground Duty not taxing the present land values more heavily than
today, but in the future taxing the incremental values more heavily.
Such a policy has not been accepted until now, but why destroy this
instrument of the economic policy - an instrument that may be the only
one left over to a small, open economy like the Danish? The political
decision-makers are shooting themselves in the foot if they pass the
proposal of the Committee.
Political attitudes to the right of ownership.
(17) To the non-socialistic parties the idea of the rights of ownership
is especially connected with real estate. They do not at all acknowledge
the idea of public created values. Taxes on land and on buildings are
for them the same thing. But those having a liberal outlook on life
ought to be aware of the fact that a tax on production has to be kept as
low as possible, which will be possible with the highest possible tax on
income not occurring from productive efforts.
(18) When assuming that a "reform" like the one proposed by
the Committee will evoke a drastic hatred towards tax on property, which
will gradually undermine it completely, one should have no objection
against the reform. And one will find support to this attitude in the
course of events in other countries.
(19) To the Socialists it's also as broad as it is long. They will even
find it being a progress that not only the values of land are taxed but
now also - on equal terms - the values of buildings, not bothering
whether or not they are created by efforts of production or not. The
socialistic idea of the rights of ownership doesn't distinguish between
public created values of land and productive created values of
buildings. In the classic Marxism it was exactly private ownership of
the means of production that was brought out as being the source of
exploitation. Land was not looked upon as being of special interest.
(20) The socialistic parties ought to realise, however, that their wish
to tax "immovable property" as one thing may cause that the
tax on property suffers the same fate as did the tax on fortune: it
became abolished. If the Socialistic People's Party and the Unity List
Party accept the new proposal this will be a unique political naivety,
almost a criminal offence. Unfortunately this case is not attracting
much of the awareness of the electorate. That, however, does not
diminish its importance.
(21) As to the distribution of wealth there has during the latest
generation by the undermining of the tax of property (the Ground Duty)
come about a massive transferring of wealth to the advantage of the
owners of real estates and to the disadvantage of the non-owners of real
estates. However, the major part of the owners of real estates have
their main income from wages, transferred income, pensions or
self-employment. Therefore, in reality the advantage of the development
has fallen to those owners who own considerable values of properties,
i.e. those who most of all are affluent citizens having huge income >from
speculation in the values of land and real estates.
(22) Economically the development has favoured passive investment in
land and real estates, to the detriment of active production in
enterprises. That has damaged employment and the economy in general.
A politically inspired work.
(23) Administratively the proposal of the Committee will not imply any
savings as the assessment system will be changed to a control system.
And further the abolition of the separate land value assessment makes it
difficult to calculate the important factor of valuation: the value of
neighbourhood, environment and public service. For instance, a recent
much discussed case in which a large, older but well kept residential
house including site was acquired at a price of Million Dkr 4.1,
immediately after which the owner demolished the old house and erected a
new. The assessment authorities followed up this fact increasing all
sites in the area considerably as they, in accordance with the spirit
and wording of the law, found that the price was paid solely for the
land. Corrections of this type will be impossible in the future.
(24) The report is a political inspired work, which emerges clearly
from the fact that the Committee is dominated by civil servants who are
all in concord. Only the representative of the Association of Duty
Councils (Danish: Skyldr=E5ds-foreningen) has taken reservations, may be
because he is familiar with the point of the matter. However, also the
representative of the National Union of Site Owners has taken
reservations; he represents among others the entrepreneurs who will be
hit directly and the tenants of private owned buildings of flats who
will be hit indirectly. From the report's 6th chapter is quoted his very
relevant objection:
"The transition to tax of values of properties will reduce the
incitement of carrying out improvements and renovations of real estates,
because the increased value of the property immediately will increase
taxation."
But that kind of common sense is obviously in minority in the
Committee.
(25) It is sensational that the representative of the interest of the
homeowners' acquisitiveness (the National Union of
One-family-house-owners) had no reservations against the conclusion of
the report. That might, however, be taken as a cynical calculation of
the proposal provoking so much hatred against the tax on real estates
that it will share the fatality of the tax on fortune. It is also
thought provoking that not a single member of the Committee is
representing the Non-profit-making Housing Estates, the Tenants'
Associations, the Non-profit-making Housing Co-operatives or
Owner-occupiers of flats. But they are of course all among those being
hit by the proposal.
(26) Finally is to be mentioned that none of factual economic knowledge
are represented, neither the Economic Forecasters nor for instance the
Labour Movement's Vocational Council. Is that due to the government's
fear of confronting the proposal with economic expert knowledge and
professionalism?
(27) It also characterises the very quality of the report that the
argumentation is catastrophic thin and affected. The arguments (or what
to call it) supporting the abolition of the separate assessment and
taxation of the value of land is, that people in general find it
difficult to understand Ground Duty, and then incidentally a wish of
simplification.
(28) Simplification is not prescribed in the report, and taxes are
never abolished only because they are unpopular or difficult to
understand. This argument has simply no proper or factual relevance.
Even if it had so, also the Income Tax should be abolished, as very few
people are able to calculate their own personal tax! Taxes like general
income tax, and by the way also company taxes, are far more complicated
than is Ground Duty. An assertion in the report, that many taxpayers
complain especially about the assessment of land values, while the
complainants agree in the value of the entire property, is not at all
documented. In return this assertion is repeated several times!
(29) The report mention, however, some remarks about certain technical
problems with assessment of the value of the sites in areas where just a
few empty sites have been sold. But here again is not consulted any
expert knowledge of assessment of properties for supporting the point of
view. And even if such problems might have some relevance, why is not
written a single line about the possibility of introducing better
techniques or methods of the valuation of land? Undoubtedly because the
conclusion was almost written in advance.
(30) The report was published in August this year (1999), but has been
almost unnoticed by the public media in spite of its far reaching
character. Where are the observance of the political parties and the
economical commentators of the press?
(31) It should not wonder if the course of this matter becomes the same
as the abolition of the Tax on Fortune or the reform of the Job Release
Scheme. Suddenly over night, in a deal about the Financial Budget, the
matter appears as an already decided reality, without any warning or
preceding democratic debate.
(32) The Socialistic People's Party and the Unity List Party are
probably appointed by the Government as being those going to deal the
Danish Ground Duty its deathblow, and thereby in the long run abolishing
all taxation on real property. Hopefully it will turn out otherwise. Is
there after all in the Left Wing Radical Party as much as a microscopic
left over of Georgism, that may induce that party to kill the crazy
plans as soon as possible?
Ib Christensen
- was the chairman of the Danish Justice Party from 1967-74,
1975-78 and 1982-84
- was a Member of the Danish Parliament from 1973-75 and 1977-81
- was a Member of the European Parliament from 1978-79 and
1984-94
- is a member of the Danish Henry George Society and has been so
for a generation.
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Karsten Larsen
- is Master of Political Science.
- is a member of the Danish Henry George Society.
- is a member of the board of the Danish Henry George Society.
- is a member of the International Union for Land Value Taxation &
Free Tra= de.
- is the editor of GRUNDSKYLD, Danish magazine for Politics and
Economics since 1996.
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Ole Lefmann is the Deputy President of the International Union for Land
Value Taxation and Free Trade.
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