[Reprinted from Land and Freedom, January-February 1939]
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While writing and working to gain new friends and supporters
for the teaching of Henry George, should we ignore the fact that there
are millions of acres in this nation, today, on which the holders have
paid no taxes for many years, and which are still controlled or in the
possession of tax defaulting and tax evading holders?
Obviously, it is not only important that taxes be levied on land
values, but it is also important that they be collected. If the comparatively small tax rates that have been levied on land values are
permitted to go indefinitely uncollected, what is the point in seeking
heavier levies?
Schools, roads, etc., formerly paid for by the owners of real property
in the local taxing unit, are now largely being "assumed" by the states.
The states in turn have had no difficulty getting billions for the asking from Uncle Sam. Under the New Deal this totals around twenty-six billion dollars, of which nineteen billion have been outright gifts
and grants. Not only are the taxes that have been levied not being
collected, in many states, due to tax sale moratorium laws, the "realtors" have gotten the legislatures to enact, but there has been a shift
in the tax burden from land holders, to industry and the products
of labor, far greater than is commonly realized.
It is said that over half of all the land in Florida has paid no taxes
of any kind in more than ten years, yet it has not been foreclosed by
the state, and can be "redeemed" by the original title holder, often
without any penalty.
In a baseball game, if the umpire allowed a player to keep the bat
after he'd had three strikes, there would surely be eight unemployed
members of the team keeping the bench warm. The slump has left
a vast new frontier on the doorstep of the states for unpaid taxes.
It badly needs some attention, but industry merely "complains"
that taxes are too high, and doesn't see that landholders have shifted
a big new tax load on them.
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