.
Property
Taxes and Single Tax vs. Other City Taxes |
[Transcript of a
presentation by Robert Tideman, with responses and discussion, at a
meeting of the Commonwealth Club. Reprinted from The
Commonwealth, Vol.XXVIII, 21 January, 1952]
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PROPERTY TAXES are the traditional source of revenue for California
cities. For a long time they raised most of our city budgets. But in the
last twenty years, under pressure of property owners, sales taxes,
license taxes, gross receipts taxes, etc. have been imposed, and
property taxes reduced.
Only by culling facts can one argue that property taxes have been
rising. Those who do this point with alarm to the rise of city budgets,
tax rates, and tax dollars paid, but carefully avoid mention of the
enormous rise in property values resulting from population growth and
dollar devaluation. They never compare assessed values with market
values.
Tax Rate Seldom Measures Burden
You may recall a few months ago that one of our San Francisco dailies
screamingly headlined the tax of several hundred dollars that might fall
on our homes. The reader was led to believe assessed value was market
value. However, my own home, bought at a bargain for $8500, is assessed
at $1780. The Donahue corner, sold recently for $1,750,000, was assessed
at $425,000. The vacant sites, west of Stockton Street, running from
Ellis through to O'Farrell, recently sold for about $1,250,000, but were
valued by the assessor at $347,000. The vast King Estate in Alameda
County is assessed as agricultural land, far below what home seekers
have paid for sites no different at its rim. The assessment pattern is
generally the same throughout the State. Assessments are so low, the tax
rate seldom measures the burden. The subject of this report is: How
should cities raise there revenue? Some of us have tried to meet
this question squarely. We answer that a direct, annual, ad valorem
property tax, even if increased, is preferable to a sales tax, a sewer
tax, a receipts tax, or any other new taxes. We even hazard arguments
in favor of the property tax. But those who favor the numberless
new taxes do not come out and say so. Instead, their whole position is
against the property tax. They seek to slip these pesky new
taxes in through the back door while we are shaking our heads over the
property owner's complaint.
Growing Population a Calamity?
It is claimed our growing population is a calamity to the property
owner; that newcomers bring little property with them to swell
assessment rolls but demand more city services, so the poor property
owner gets the ax in his tax bill. But if greater population means only
higher tax rates, why does the Bay Area Council point to population
growth as an attraction of real estate here? Because they know
increasing population boosts real estate values. Does it matter then if
the newcomers bring little property? Their very arrival adds to the
annual value in the property under our feet. No one claims this value is
created by the landholders. Then why not call on it to support the
services the newcomers need?
On page 34 advocates of new taxes say ability to pay depends on income,
and when increase in land value is not accompanied by increased income
from land, an increased tax may be confiscatory. Consider the Donahue
corner. It has increased enormously in value, but with its one-story
wooden building down, does not yield even the income from that ancient
structure. Does anyone think if we raised its taxes - or did not
acquiesce in the new sewer tax to relieve that site -Metropolitan would
relinquish title? Of course not. They would come to terms with some
prospective user to get some rent to pay the taxes.
Why Land Increases in Value
Land increases in value because people are willing to pay more for
permission to use it. When a landholder's income does not go up
correspondingly, it is only because he has not come to terms with those
who would like to use it. He is speculating he can get a better deal by
holding out. To argue that land values should not be taxed when no
income is received, is to say that the holding of valuable land idle
should be fostered.
The "sewer-use tax," now under debate by the Supervisors of
San Francisco, is typical of new taxes. Each home owner would pay $4.20
a year. If all the revenue - about one million dollars - went to reduce
the property tax, the rate could be lowered one-tenth of one percent.
Thus, owners of homes assessed at more than $4200 might save more on the
property tax than they would pay in the sewer tax. Many homes are worth
more than $4200 but not five percent are assessed that high, so 95
percent of the home owners would lose through the sewer tax. But the
holder of the Donahue corner, for instance, would save about $425 a
year. Thus, the sewer tax, like other new taxes, would shift more of the
burden from holders of valuable real estate to home owners and
consumers.
Its sponsors say the sewer tax is needed to run the new sewage disposal
plants. But if these plants had not been built, and population growth
had been checked, and the pedestrian count on Market Street had begun to
fall off, wouldn't the downtown property owners have raised a howl?
These plants maintain and increase the value of their land. The property
owners get the financial benefit of these plants, but don't want to pay
for what they get. Here is the "welfare state."
What is true of sewage plants is true of libraries, schools, streets,
parks, firemen, police. All city services and improvements figure in the
sales talk for city real estate. All go to maintain and increase the
rental value of land. Why then should we submit to a sewer tax or other
new taxes while the landholders get something for nothing?
"They Like These New Sales Taxes . . ."
On page 35, above paragraph (a), the proponents of more and more taxes
say that "proposals to limit sources of revenue to taxes on
property
are objectionable." That is to say, they like these
new sales taxes, license taxes, etc., and don't want to go back to the
traditional system by which cities raised their revenue in the pre-New
Deal days. And the inference is that to wipe out these new taxes and to
rely on the property tax again would amount to land nationalization. I
guess we didn't realize our precarious state in the old days before we
got the many fine taxes we now enjoy!
Why didn't the author of paragraph (a) tell us about the "nationalization,"
"bureaucracy," "waste," "inefficiency," "loss
of incentive" and "stagnation" in Wellington, Sydney,
Copenhagen, Johannesburg, or the cities of New Zealand which derive all
their revenue from land value taxes? - or in Pittsburgh and Scranton,
which tax land values at twice the rate on improvements? No such
evidence is cited because there is none. These cities are prospering.
Not Landholders, but Labor and Capital Overtaxed
Anyone honestly troubled about nationalization should attend to the
plight of labor and capital, the active producers of wealth. Federal
taxes fall with full weight on them, and our states and cities in the
last twenty years have been favoring landholders at their expense. Labor
and capital, commerce and industry, are in great danger of
nationalization by taxation.
No one has ever seriously proposed that all taxes be levied on sales or
sewers or any other product or activity or earned reward. For such taxes
all have bad effects. It is because land values are particularly
suitable for taxation that so many wise men from Quesnay to Winston
Churchill, have proposed taxing them especially. Is it not strange,
then, that anyone should point to the "single tax" proposal as
a reason for substituting new taxes for our traditional tax on land?
The advocates of new taxes do not deny the superiority of land value
taxes over sales or sewer taxes. They know they will get scorched if
they try. To evade the issue they trundle out the label "Single
Tax." From the end of this handle they coolly talk of
nationalization, bureaucracy and waste,
while proposing more taxes and tax collectors; they talk of
incentives and of stagnation, while proposing a tax policy that
penalizes production and makes it easier to hold land idle; they
talk of confiscating earnings, while favoring an income tax!
What's at End of This Road?
Not even those who are working hardest to reduce their land value taxes
will like what lies at the end of the road they are taking. What is the
way of life in countries where taxes have been loaded entirely on the
producers of wealth, where land rent is treated as absolute private
property, unqualified by any responsibility for public revenue? Look at
Mexico, India, Iran, Spain, Brazil, or the Russia of 1917. You see
countries where land is held by the few in great estates, without any
financial responsibility to encourage efficient use. You see landlord
and tax collector confiscating so much of the reward of labor and
capital that incentives to work and accumulate tools are strangled. You
see rich and poor a gulf apart, class against class, and the stage ever
set for demagog and tyrant.
This question of who should pay taxes is a moral question at bottom,
and the only spirit in which it can be justly solved is that spirit
expressed seventy years ago by a wise and good and fearless citizen of
this city: "I am for men."
Critique on Single Tax and Increased
Property Taxes
Raymond D. Smith, Realtor Appraiser
I DON'T believe I have ever heard a taxpayer object to paying a
property tax in a proper ratio of his holdings, nor an owner object to
paying a reasonable tax upon his land and his improvements based upon
the benefits that owner receives in police and fire protection and all
the things that go with urban ownership.
It becomes then a matter of equalization of the relationships between
land and improvements. Most people feel that land alone should not carry
the entire load. It should carry as fair a proportion of the load as the
tax assessor may determine.
Tax Assessments Go Up - Seldom Down
The tax assessor assesses upwards but he seldom assesses downwards. In
a deflated dollar market like that of today, the assessed valuation goes
sharply up. But when the assessor gets ready to cut assessed valuations,
he makes a blanket reduction of $100, $500, usually in those areas where
the most votes exist. In San Francisco in 1946 or 1947, assessments of
downtown industrial or commercial properties were drastically increased.
There are few votes in those areas.
But in the residential district, a blanket decrease of $100 was made,
irrespective of the value of land and building.
If the assessors could reassess every year (which would be prohibitive
in cost), I don't believe there would be much criticism of the property
tax.
"Single Tax" Not a Tax Problem Primarily
I look at the "single tax" - placing a tax purely upon the
land - not as a taxation problem but as a social problem - a matter of
trying to establish a new social order. I am a practical man, and I
don't believe it will work because of practical limitations on
assessors.
Our big question in today's discussion is municipal revenue. But I
don't believe people are interested one bit in taxes.
For ten years I have gone to the San Francisco City Hall to appear
before the Finance Committee of the Board of Supervisors, and I have
analyzed our annual budget, item by item, not once but three times.
During Mayor Lapham's administration he called some five of us into his
office during formation of the budget, and the reports from the heads of
the various departments were thrown on the table. Al Smith of the Bureau
of Governmental Research and myself were asked to criticize every item.
We spent days there.
Taxpayers Net Interested
When the budget went to the Board of Supervisors and was referred to
the Finance Committee, I went over that budget with several others, item
by item, line by line. When it went on to the floor of the Board of
Supervisors, the same thing occurred again.
At none of those meetings did anyone ever appear to protest. Al Smith
and I were the only ones there. We were paid to be there. But there were
no taxpayers there. You can't tell me that real property taxes are
onerous when the people won't appear to oppose them.
Look Closely at Non-Governmental Spending
If we are to cut taxes and spending, we must look critically at
nongovernmental services. How much should the ordinary citizen expect to
receive from government outside of actual governmental service?
Take our school system. Some friends are attending a free class on the
study of old china. They learn about dishes and how to read what's on
the back. This class has a paid instructor under the Board of Education.
Is the study of old china a function of government which should be paid
for out of the school budget? I don't think it is. They have classes in
aesthetic dancing. I don't think aesthetic dancing is a fit subject for
public funds.
I am a photographic "bug." There is a large amount in the
recreation budget covering an excellent laboratory at which they teach
photography free and supply chemicals and other things to adults who
want education in photography.
They have a real estate class and offered me a salary once for teaching
there. If a man wants to learn real estate, he shouldn't be entitled to
get it out of my tax dollar.
Welfare Money in Every Budget
There isn't a department in the San Francisco City Hall that does not
have some "welfare" in it. The police department has a boys'
club, and it is a fine thing, and some support may come from police
contributions. But things like that belong to the welfare department,
not the police department.
Your Board of Health budget is loaded with welfare matters of all
kinds: hospitalization, child care. Your recreation department budget is
loaded with free lunch programs. True, they get a subsidy. Is that a
function of government to be paid for out of the taxpayer's dollar?
We must know whether we are paying for governmental functions or
nongovernmental activities.
Public employment must be regulated. We must have some sort of Hoover
plan. Employments are created to increase the importance of the head of
a department and get him more money.
We Need Budget Criteria
Because a budget was X dollars last year, doesn't mean X dollars plus
or minus this year is a proper budget. We must eliminate the philosophy
of building a budget on this sort of basis. We must have some criteria
of measurement.
I don't think real property taxes have reached a maximum, for this
reason. Some years ago I thought of organizing a taxpayers' association
in San Francisco. We need one badly. I spoke to several influential,
large property owners. Without exception those fellows said, "Well,
I am friendly with the Assessor and I like the Mayor. Besides, these
items are deductible."
U. S. Pays the Bill
So long as real property taxes are deductible from the Federal income
tax and the Federal Government is paying from thirty to seventy percent
of them, you are not going to have much opposition to the ad valorem tax
bill.
Some day incomes from these properties will diminish, and taxpayers
will wake up and say, "Look at our tax rate, it is $6.29. Where
have I been all this time?" They've been asleep, but the day of
reckoning will come.
I think the solution to our tax problem lies in a critical analysis of
the operation of our municipal budgets.
Discussion From the Floor
Remarks by J. Rupert Mason
President, International Union for Land Value Taxation and Free Trade
MR. MASON: I've never heard a more able support of the need for the
principles of Henry George than has just been given us by Mr. Smith. I
could easily trace each bad effect he enumerated to a primary cause.
Mr. Kroeger commented about people voting who don't pay taxes. Public
schools have been traditionally supported by means of an ad valorem real
property tax. If a man held half the land values in a school district,
he paid half the school costs regardless of the number of his children.
The question of voting rights irrespective of land holding is as old as
this Republic. I thought that issue had been buried.
Those who oppose raising public revenue by ad valorem land taxes are
putting themselves in bed with Socialists. They are unwittingly
advocating the socialization of earned incomes and the fruit of man's
work by taxation.
I believe it is possible for people to live and work together in a
community, state or nation and enjoy the full fruit of their industry,
untaxed.
Remarks by Joseph S. Thompson
President, Pacific Electric Manufacturing Corporation
MR. THOMPSON: For forty years or more I have advocated the principle
that Mr. Tideman so speedily put before you.
Each of us knows what his own personal and private earned income is.
Did we ever think that there is also a public earned income, a creation
of all of us as a mass for which no one of us is responsible? So much so
that each individual that adds himself to Skid Row, each baby picked up
and slapped to start him crying, raises land value? Land value is the
public earned income.
It sounds socialistic, let us say communistic, to say people as a mass
and not as individuals create land
rental,/i> value - not land value (if you want land, you
can get hundreds of acres in Nevada for $3 an acre) - but land rental is
location value. We created this value - we should collect it.
If we knew we were justified in taking what we create as the people, we
would not collect from those who create, who labor, who organize, that
return which should stay in their pockets. A tax on industry is a fine.
When we tax an industry, we drive it out of the city.
Remarks by F. B. Magrader
Tax Commissioner, Southern Pacific Company
MR. MAGRUDER: When this Section selected a subject, "Tax Problems
of Cities," it was thought that we would stick to the subject and
come up with a final report that would be informative. But the subject
has been so distorted that its own mother cannot recognize it.
Too much time has been given to the Henry George single tax theory. The
question has become: Should the single tax be adopted?
The single tax theory should not have been considered in this study. If
it was desired that it be given consideration, it should have been done
in a separate study.
Remarks by E. R. Ben
Retired
MR. ZION: I'd like to ask Mr. Smith if he attended the San Francisco
City budget meeting where $4,400,000 was appropriated to build a
juvenile home for two hundred juvenile delinquents?
MR. SMITH: I was there and opposed it every step of the way.
MR. ZION: Expenses like that give us our problem in taxation. That is
$22,000 for every child. Can you beat that for outright waste or graft?
You ask single tax advocates to tell why land should pay a little more
taxes, maybe. You should first give one reason why personal property
should pay any tax.
It's like the difference between Ford and Rockefeller. Rockefeller got
his vast fortune from natural resources. He deprived the rest of us,
disinherited us, from a share of these. But Ford added to the world's
wealth. Should the two be taxed the same?
We have too many tax exemptions. Everybody likes to get exemptions, but
when they get exempted they don't come to meetings on tax problems any
more. It used to be, when the San Francisco Board of Supervisors met on
tax problems, the Archbishop had a representative present, and the gas,
water and telephone companies; the railroad and other companies had
their representatives - because their property would have to pay the
taxes.
Then you exempt them, and you lose not only the value of the exemption,
but you lose the careful attention of these citizens to tax and
expenditure problems.
Veterans are another big group that are exempt - and just recently
schools, hospitals and many others. And so it's no longer to their
interest to attend tax meetings.
Adam Smith, John Stuart Mills, Walker, Ricardo - all agreed "rent"
is the excess profit over no-rent land. Henry George was the only one
who followed this up. If this statement is true, every new labor-saving
machine, every new chemical process, increases rent. And it does. None
of the economists will deny it. This is the justification for more land
taxes.
Remarks by Monte Dernham
Attorney
MR. DERNHAM: Mr. Magruder, if I understood him correctly, told us the
single tax should be the issue of a distinct study. It has been the
subject of a distinct study in this Club-fourteen years ago. In the fall
of 1938 there was a proposed Constitutional amendment, Proposition 20,
providing in general for a state-wide single tax.
The matter was studied by this Section. The Club in its entirety voted
against the single tax, 693 to 66.
The question has been dealt with by this Club. It is behind us and
should remain behind us.
MR. MAGRUDER: I didn't say the single tax should be given a separate
study. I said the single tax theory should not have been considered in
this study and if it was desired that it be given consideration, it
should have been done in a separate study.
Remarks by Assemblyman Edward M. Gaffney
MR. GAFFNEY: School tax exemptions have been attacked. In the case of
the parochial and other non-profit private schools, we of the
Legislature looked at tax exemption from a business-like viewpoint.
We found that there are approximately 170,000 children attending the
non-public schools, and that these schools are over-burdened with
taxation. Through a new interpretation in Los Angeles county, this
taxation has been multiplied three-fold and in some parts of the
southland, four-fold.
If all the non-public schools were to close their doors because of
oppressive taxation, the State would have to provide public education
for some 170,000 children at a cost the first year of at least $120 per
average daily attendance, totaling $25,000,000. In capital outlay,
unless we leased the present buildings of the non-public schools (in
addition to the almost $300,000,000 already spent by the State
Allocation Board of recent bond issue funds voted by the people), it
would cost at least $600,000,000 more to build schools for children now
attending private non-profit schools.
Even now our public schools are over-crowded. In some areas children go
to school on half-day shifts; in Eureka, it has been reported, there are
three shifts daily. It should be borne in mind also California is the
only state that taxes non-public schools whereas we should encourage all
schools devoted to the education of children.
JUSTICE A. F. BRAY: I can't stand by and have Contra Costa County
outdone. Assemblyman Gaffney said in Eureka there are three school
shifts a day. For a while during the war in Contra Costa County, we had
four.
Remarks by Robert Tldeman
Director, Henry George School of Social Sciences
MR. TIDEMAN: When I joined the Club a first draft of the Section's
report was being considered, telling how increased population was a "calamity"
to the property owner, and about the dire predicament of our
landholders. I pointed out additional facts and soon realized I was
playing with dynamite. And soon, in reply, came not arguments but labels
- "single tax," "Henry George theory," a "new
social order," and so on.
But the taxation of land values is "old hat" in this State.
The writers of the State Constitution provided for it, and its
advantages are obvious to anyone who studies the subject impartially. It
is certainly not wise or fair to approach the subject as if it were the
mere doctrine of a nineteenth century economist. It has immediate
significance. If we are to get new revenues will we get them from sales
taxes or from land value taxes?
We are asked to believe that, because some men have proposed collecting
all revenue from land value, we must therefore adopt new sales taxes.
That is hardly logical. It is only by giving doctrinaire associations to
perfectly sensible 'principles that they get fenced into a separate
compartment of the mind. Insanity is just that: keeping things in
different compartments of the mind where they cannot interact - avoiding
painful integration.
Remarks by Raymond D. Smith
Realtor Appraiser
MR. SMITH: I don't favor the extension of the tax base in sales taxes
or the other taxes. Governments will spend whatever they can get. The
more tax sources, the more they spend.
We should put our tax eggs in one basket but watch that basket.
One thing that would benefit San Francisco would be for citizens to
organize a budget examination committee like that in Los Angeles.
CHAIRMAN BRAY: The meeting is adjourned.
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