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| On the
Effects of Taxation on the Rent of Land |
[Extracts from On
The Principles of Political Economy and Taxation, published in
1817]
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A land-tax, levied in proportion to the rent of land, and varying
with every variation of rent, is in effect a tax on rent; and as such a
tax will not apply to that land which yields no rent, nor to the produce
of that capital which is employed on the land with a view to profit
merely, and which never pays rent, it will not in any way affect the
price of raw produce, but will fall wholly on the landlords. In no
respect would such a tax differ from a tax on rent. But if a land-tax be
imposed on all cultivated land, however moderate that tax may be, it
will be a tax on produce, and will therefore raise the price of produce.
If No. 3 be the land last cultivated, although it should pay no rent, it
cannot, after the tax, be cultivated, and afford the general rate of
profit, unless the price of produce rise to meet the tax. Either capital
will be withheld from that employment until the price of corn shall have
risen, in consequence of demand, sufficiently to afford the usual
profit; or if already employed on such land, it will quit it, to seek a
more advantageous employment. The tax cannot be removed to the landlord,
for by the supposition he receives no rent. Such a tax may be
proportioned to the quality of the land and the abundance of its
produce, and then it differs in no respect from tithes; or it may be a
fixed tax per acre on all land cultivated, whatever its quality may be.
A land-tax of this latter description would be a very unequal tax, and
would be contrary to one of the four maxims with regard to taxes in
general, to which, according to Adam Smith, all taxes should conform.
The four maxims are as follow:
1. 'The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support
of the government, as nearly as possible in proportion to their
respective abilities.
2. 'The tax which each individual is bound to pay ought to be certain
and not arbitrary.
3. 'Every tax ought to be levied at the time, or in the manner in which
it is most likely to be convenient for the contributor to pay it.
4. 'Every tax ought to be so contrived as both to take out and to keep
out of the pockets of the people as little as possible, over and above
what it brings into the public treasury of the State.'
An equal land-tax, imposed indiscriminately and without any regard to
the distinction of its quality, on all land cultivated, will raise the
price of corn in proportion to the tax paid by the cultivator of the
land of the worst quality. Lands of different quality, with the
employment of the same capital, will yield very different quantities of
raw produce.
There is no farmer who does not compute beforehand what the
church-tithe, which is a land-tax of this kind is, one year with
another, likely to amount to.' It is undoubtedly true, that the farmer
does calculate his probable outgoings of all descriptions, when agreeing
with his landlord for the rent of his farm; and if for the tithe paid to
the church, or for the tax on the produce of the land, he were not
compensated by a rise in the relative value of the produce of his farm,
he would naturally endeavour to deduct them from his rent. But this is
precisely the question in dispute: whether he will eventually deduct
them from his rent, or be compensated by a higher price of produce. For
the reasons which have been already given, I cannot have the least doubt
but that they would raise the price of produce, and consequently that
Adam Smith has taken an incorrect view of this important question.
M. Say supposes, 'A landlord by his assiduity, economy and skill, to
increase his annual revenue by 5,000 francs;, but a landlord has no
means of employing his assiduity, economy and skill on his land, unless
he farms it himself. and then it is in quality of capitalist and farmer
that he makes the improvement, and not in quality of landlord. It is not
conceivable that he could so augment the produce of his farm by any
peculiar skill on his part, without first increasing the quantity of
capital employed upon it. If he increased the capital, his larger
revenue might bear the same proportion to his increased capital, as the
revenue of all other farmers to their capitals.
M. Say's error in the above passage lies in supposing that because the
value of the produce of one of these two farms, after reinstating the
capital, is greater than the value of the produce of the other, on that
account the net income of the cultivators will differ by the same
amount. The net income of the landlords and tenants together of the wood
land, may be much greater than the net income of the landlords and
tenants of the corn land; but it is on account of the difference of
rent, and not on account of the difference in the rate of profit. M. Say
has wholly omitted the consideration of the different amount of rent,
which these cultivators would have to pay. There cannot be two rates of
profit in the same employment, and therefore when the value of produce
is in different proportions to capital, it is the rent which will
differ, and not the profit. ...
Let M. Say make a due allowance for rent; let him further allow for
the effect which such a tax would have on the prices of these different
kinds of raw produce, and he will then perceive that it is not an
unequal tax, and further that the producers themselves will no otherwise
contribute to it, than any other class of consumers. ...But as a tax on
houses may be considered in the light of an additional rent paid by the
tenant, its tendency will be to diminish the demand for houses of the
same annual rent, without diminishing their supply. Rent will therefore
fall, and a part of the tax will be paid indirectly by the landlord.
'The rent of a house,' says Adam Smith,, may be distinguished into two
parts, of which the one may very properly be called the building rent,
the other is commonly called the ground rent. The building rent is the
interest or profit of the capital expended in building the house. In
order to put the trade of a builder upon a level with other trades, it
is necessary that this rent should be sufficient first to pay the same
interest which he would have got for his capital, if he had lent it upon
good security and, secondly, to keep the house in constant repair, or
what comes to the same thing, to replace within a certain term of years
the capital which had been employed in building it.' 'If in proportion
to the interest of money, the trade of the builder affords at any time a
much greater profit than this, it will soon draw so much capital from
other trades, as will reduce the profit to its proper level. If it
affords at any time much less than this, other trades will soon draw so
much capital from it as will again raise that profit. Whatever part of
the whole rent of a house is over and above what is sufficient for
affording this reasonable profit, naturally goes to the ground rent; and
where the owner of the ground, and the owner of the building, are two
different persons, it is in most cases completely paid to the former.
In country houses, at a distance from any great town, where there is
a plentiful choice of ground, the ground rent is scarcely any thing, or
no more than what the space upon which the house stands, would pay
employed in agriculture. In country villas, in the neighbourhood of some
great town, it is sometimes a good deal higher, and the peculiar
conveniency, or beauty of situation, is there frequently very highly
paid for. Ground rents are generally highest in the capital, and in
those particular parts of it, where there happens to be the greatest
demand for houses, whatever be the reason for that demand, whether for
trade and business, for pleasure and society, or for mere vanity and
fashion.' A tax on the rent of houses may either fall on the occupier,
on the ground landlord, or on the building landlord. In ordinary cases
it may be presumed, that the whole tax would be paid both immediately
and finally by the occupier. If the tax be moderate, and the
circumstances of the country such, that it is either stationary or
advancing, there would be little motive for the occupier of a house to
content himself with one of a worse description. But if the tax be high,
or any other circumstances should diminish the demand for houses, the
landlord's income would fall, for the occupier would be partly
compensated for the tax by a diminution of rent. It is, however,
difficult to say, in what proportions that part of the tax, which was
saved by the occupier by a fall of rent, would fall on the building rent
and the ground rent. It is probable that, in the first instance, both
would be affected; but as houses are, though slowly, yet certainly
perishable, and as no more would be built, till the profits of the
builder were restored to the general level, building rent would, after
an interval, be restored to its natural price.
As the builder receives rent only whilst the building endures, he
could pay no part of the tax, under the most disastrous circumstances,
for any longer period. The payment of this tax, then, would ultimately
fall on the occupier and ground landlord, but, 'in what proportion, this
final payment would be divided between them,' says Adam Smith, 'it is
not perhaps very easy to ascertain. The division would probably be very
different in different circumstances, and a tax of this kind might,
according to those different circumstances, affect very unequally both
the inhabitant of the house, and the owner of the ground.'(25*)
Adam Smith considers ground rents as peculiarly fit subjects for
taxation. 'Both ground rents, and the ordinary rent of land,' he says,
'are a species of revenue, which the owner in many cases 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 the people, might be the same after such a
tax as before. Ground rents, and the ordinary rent of land are,
therefore, perhaps, the species of revenue, which can best bear to have
a peculiar tax imposed upon them.'
It must be admitted that the effects of these taxes would be such as
Adam Smith has described; but it would surely be very unjust, to tax
exclusively the revenue of any particular class of a community. The
burdens of the State should be borne by all in proportion to their
means: this is one of the four maxims mentioned by Adam Smith, which
should govern all taxation. Rent often belongs to those who, after many
years of toil, have realised their gains, and expended their fortunes in
the purchase of land or houses; and it certainly would be an
infringement of that principle which should ever be held sacred, the
security of property, to subject it to unequal taxation. It is to be
lamented, that the duty by stamps, with which the transfer of landed
property is loaded, materially impedes the conveyance of it into those
hands, where it would probably be made most productive. And if it be
considered, that land, regarded as a fit subject for exclusive taxation,
would not only be reduced in price, to compensate for the risk of that
taxation, but in proportion to the indefinite nature and uncertain value
of the risk, would become a fit subject for speculations, partaking more
of the nature of gambling, than of sober trade, it will appear probable,
that the hands into which land would in that case be most apt to fall,
would be the hands of those, who possess more of the qualities of the
gambler, than of the qualities of the sober-minded proprietor, who is
likely to employ his land to the greatest advantage.
If the profits of all trades were taxed, excepting the profits of
the farmer, all goods would rise in money value, excepting raw produce.
The farmer would have the same corn income as before, and would sell his
corn also for the same money price; but as he would be obliged to pay an
additional price for all the commodities, except corn, which he
consumed, it would be to him a tax on expenditure. Nor would he be
relieved from this tax by an alteration in the value of money, for an
alteration in the value of money might sink all the taxed commodities to
their former price, but the untaxed one would sink below its former
level; and, therefore, though the farmer would purchase his commodities
at the same price as before, he would have less money with which to
purchase them. The landlord, too, would be precisely in the same
situation, he would have the same corn, and the same money-rent as
before, if all commodities rose in price, and money remained at the same
value; and he would have the same corn, but a less money-rent, if all
commodities remained at the same price: so that in either case, though
his income were not directly taxed, he would indirectly contribute
towards the money raised. But suppose the profits of the farmer to be
also taxed, he then would be in the same situation as other traders: his
raw produce would rise, so that he would have the same money revenue,
after paying the tax, but he would pay an additional price for all the
commodities he consumed, raw produce included. His landlord, however,
would be differently situated, he would be benefited by the tax on his
tenant's profits, as he would be compensated for the additional price at
which he would purchase his manufactured commodities, if they rose in
price; and he would have the same money revenue, if in consequence of a
rise in the value of money, commodities sold at their former price. A
tax on the profits of the farmer, is not a tax proportioned to the gross
produce of the land, but to its net produce, after the payment of rent,
wages, and all other charges.
A tax on the profits of stock always leaves corn rent
unaltered, and therefore money rent varies with the price of corn; but a
tax on raw produce, or tithes, never leaves corn rent unaltered, but
generally leaves money rent the same as before. In another part of this
work I have observed, that if a land-tax of the same money amount, were
laid on every kind of land in cultivation, without any allowance for
difference of fertility, it would be very unequal in its operation, as
it would be a profit to the landlord of the more fertile lands. It would
raise the price of corn in proportion to the burden borne by the farmer
of the worst land; but this additional price being obtained for the
greater quantity of produce yielded by the better land, farmers of such
land would be benefited during their leases, and afterwards, the
advantage would go to the landlord in the form of an increase of rent.
The effect of an equal tax on the profits of the farmer is precisely the
same; it raises the money rent of the landlords, if money retains the
same value; but as the profits of all other trades are taxed as well as
those of the farmer, and consequently the prices of all goods, as well
as corn, are raised, the landlord loses as much by the increased money
price of the goods and corn on which his rent is expended, as he gains
by the rise of his rent. If money should rise in value, and all things
should, after a tax on the profits of stock, fall to their former
prices, rent also would be the same as before. The landlord would
receive the same money rent, and would obtain all the commodities on
which it was expended at their former price; so that under all
circumstances he would continue untaxed.(26*)
Now, suppose a society to consist of landlords, manufacturers, farmers
and labourers, the labourers, it is agreed, would be recompensed for the
tax; - but by whom? - who would pay that portion which did not fall on
the landlords? - the manufacturers could pay no part of it; for if the
price of their commodities should rise in proportion to the additional
wages they paid, they would be in a better situation after than before
the tax. If the clothier, the hatter, the shoe-maker, &c., should be
each able to raise the price of their goods 10 per cent, - supposing 10
per cent to recompense them completely for the additional wages they
paid, - if, as Adam Smith says, 'they would be entitled and obliged to
charge the additional wages with a profit upon the price of their
goods,, they could each consume as much as before of each other's goods,
and therefore they would pay nothing towards the tax. If the clothier
paid more for his hats and shoes, he would receive more for his cloth,
and if the hatter paid more for his cloth and shoes, he would receive
more for his hats. All manufactured commodities then would be bought by
them with as much advantage as before, and inasmuch as corn would not be
raised in price which is Dr Smith's supposition whilst they had an
additional sum to lay out upon its purchase, they would be benefited,
and not injured by such a tax.
If then neither the labourers nor the manufacturers would contribute
towards such a tax; if the farmers would be also recompensed by a fall
of rent, landlords alone must not only bear its whole weight, but they
must also contribute to the increased gains of the manufacturers. To do
this, however, they should consume all the manufactured commodities in
the country, for the additional price charged on the whole mass is
little more than the tax originally imposed on the labourers in
manufactures.
Taxation can never be so equally applied, as to operate in the same
proportion on the value of all commodities, and still to preserve them
at the same relative value. It frequently operates very differently from
the intention of the legislature, by its indirect effects. We have
already seen, that the effect of a direct tax on corn and raw produce,
is, if money be also produced in the country, to raise the price of all
commodities, in proportion as raw produce enters into their composition,
and thereby to destroy the natural relation which previously existed
between them.
Another indirect effect is, that it raises wages, and lowers the
rate of profits; and we have also seen, in another part of this work,
that the effect of a rise of wages, and a fall of profits, is to lower
the money prices of those commodities which are produced in a greater
degree by the employment of fixed capital. The following argument of M.
Say is founded on the same views as Mr Buchanan's: 'The quantity of wine
or corn which a piece of land will produce, will remain nearly the same,
whatever may be the tax with which it is charged. The tax may take away
a half, or even three-fourths of its net produce, or of its rent if you
please, yet the land would nevertheless be cultivated for the half or
the quarter not absorbed by the tax. The rent, that is to say the
landlord's share, would merely be somewhat lower. The reason of this
will be perceived, if we consider, that in the case supposed, the
quantity of produce obtained from the land, and sent to market, will
remain nevertheless the same. On the other hand the motives on which the
demand for the produce is founded, continue also the same. 'Now, if the
quantity of produce supplied, and the quantity demanded, necessarily
continue the same, notwithstanding the establishment or the increase of
the tax, the price of that produce will not vary; and if the price do
not vary, the consumer will not pay the smallest portion of this tax.
'Will it be said that the farmer, he who furnishes labour and capital,
will, jointly with the landlord, bear the burden of this tax? certainly
not; because the circumstance of the tax has not diminished the number
of farms to be let, nor increased the number of farmers. Since in this
instance also the supply and demand remain the same, the rent of farms
must also remain the same. The example of the manufacturer of salt, who
can only make the consumers pay a portion of the tax, and that of the
landlord who cannot reimburse himself in the smallest degree, prove the
error of those who maintain, in opposition to the economists, that all
taxes fall ultimately on the consumer.' - Vol. ii. p. 338. If the tax
'took away half, or even three-fourths of the net produce of the land,'
and the price of produce did not rise, how could those farmers obtain
the usual profits of stock who paid very moderate rents, having that
quality of land which required a much larger proportion of labour to
obtain a given result, than land of a more fertile quality? If the whole
rent were remitted, they would still obtain lower profits than those in
other trades, and would therefore not continue to cultivate their land,
unless they could raise the price of its produce. If the tax fell on the
farmers, there would be fewer farmers disposed to hire farms; if it fell
on the landlord, many farms would not be let at all, for they would
afford no rent. But from what fund would those pay the tax who produce
corn without paying. any rent?
It is quite clear that the tax must fall on the consumer. How would
such land, as M. Say describes in the following passage, pay a tax of
one-half or three-fourths of its produce? 'We see in Scotland poor lands
thus cultivated by the proprietor, and which could be cultivated by no
other person. Thus too, we see in the interior provinces of the United
States vast and fertile lands, the revenue of which, alone, would not be
sufficient for the maintenance of the proprietor. These lands are
cultivated nevertheless, but it must be by the proprietor himself, or,
in other words, he must add to the rent, which is little or nothing, the
profits of his capital and industry, to enable him to live in
competence. It is well known that land, though cultivated, yields no
revenue to the landlord when no farmer will be willing to pay a rent for
it: which is a proof that such land will give only the profits of the
capital, and of the industry necessary for its cultivation.' - Say, Vol.
ii. p. 127.
In examining the question of rent, we found, that with every
increase in the supply of corn, and with the consequent fall of its
price, capital would be withdrawn from the poorer land; and land of a
better description, which would then pay no rent, would become the
standard by which the natural price of corn would be regulated.
It has, however, been said, that capital cannot be withdrawn from the
land; that it takes the form of expenses, which cannot be recovered,
such as manuring, fencing, draining, &c., which are necessarily
inseparable from the land. This is in some degree true; but that capital
which consists of cattle, sheep, hay and corn ricks, carts, &c. may
be withdrawn; and it always becomes a matter of calculation, whether
these shall continue to be employed on the land, notwithstanding the low
price of corn, or whether they shall be sold, and their value
transferred to another employment.
Suppose, however, the fact to be as stated, and that no part of the
capital could be withdrawn;(41*) the farmer would continue to raise
corn, and precisely the same quantity too, at whatever price it might
sell; for it could not be his interest to produce less, and if he did
not so employ his capital, he would obtain from it no return whatever.
Corn could not be imported, because he would sell it lower than £3
10s. rather than not sell it at all, and by the supposition the importer
could not sell it under that price. Although then the farmers, who
cultivated land of this quality, would undoubtedly be injured by the
fall in the exchangeable value of the commodity which they produced, -
how would the country be affected? We should have precisely the same
quantity of every commodity produced, but raw produce and corn would
sell at a much cheaper price. The capital of a country consists of its
commodities, and as these would be the same as before, reproduction
would go on at the same rate. This low price of corn would however only
afford the usual profits of stock to the land, No. 5, which would then
pay no rent, and the rent of all better land would fall: wages would
also fall, and profits would rise.
It is true, that the man in possession of a scarce commodity is richer,
if by means of it he can command more of the necessaries and enjoyments
of human life; but as the general stock out of which each man's riches
are drawn, is diminished in quantity, by all that any individual takes
from it, other men's shares must necessarily be reduced in proportion as
this favoured individual is able to appropriate a greater quantity to
himself.
Let water become scarce, says Lord Lauderdale, and be exclusively
possessed by an individual, and you will increase his riches, because
water will then have value; and if wealth be the aggregate of individual
riches, you will by the same means also increase wealth. You undoubtedly
will increase the riches of this individual, but inasmuch as the farmer
must sell a part of his corn, the shoemaker a part of his shoes, and all
men give up a portion of their possessions for the sole purpose of
supplying themselves with water, which they before had for nothing, they
are poorer by the whole quantity of commodities which they are obliged
to devote to this purpose, and the proprietor of water is benefited
precisely by the amount of their loss. The same quantity of water, and
the same quantity of commodities, are enjoyed by the whole society, but
they are differently distributed. This is, however, supposing rather a
monopoly of water than a scarcity of it. If it should be scarce, then
the riches of the country and of individuals would be actually
diminished, inasmuch as it would be deprived of a portion of one of its
enjoyments. The farmer would not only have less corn to exchange for the
other commodities which might be necessary or desirable to him, but he,
and every other individual, would be abridged in the enjoyment of one of
the most essential of their comforts. Not only would there be a
different distribution of riches, but an actual loss of wealth.
From what has been said, it will be seen that the wealth of a country
may be increased in two ways. it may be increased by employing a greater
portion of revenue in the maintenance of productive labour, - which will
not only add to the quantity, but to the value of the mass of
commodities; or it may be increased, without employing any additional
quantity of labour, by making the same quantity more productive, - which
will add to the abundance, but not to the value of commodities.
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