Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-11-02 Thread Fred Foldvary

  No, the whole rationale for taxing land value is that it does not
  matter what the site owner does with the land.  

What you are proposing is a kind of capital tax. I do not have
anything against it, but your face the economic consequences of
taxing capital.

No, because land is not capital.

Fred Foldvary


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Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-11-01 Thread Alexander Guerrero

This statemente is not true, investment decision are no taken for government
advertisement campaigns. Investors ask for, first of all, the rule of law to
be accomplished, clear rules of the game, low taxes, they know hau to
calculate the return of their investment. On the other hand, taxes collected
for this advertisement campaign, recue consumption, investment and make
investment costly, so reduces wealth.
Alexander Guerrero
St Antonys College
Oxford University


- Original Message -
From: Gustavo Lacerda [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2001 2:14 AM
Subject: Re: Tax with positive growth effect


 In the following example, it isn't the taxing itself that promotes growth,
 but its spending.

 If a state uses tax money to attract rich tourists to the area (by
 advertising, for example), that could promote consumption, in such a way
 that the tax promotes growth more than it hampers it. Whereas if there was
 no tax (i.e. if it was voluntary), individual businesses would be
reluctant
 to use their money that way, even if they knew that everybody would be
 better off if everybody invested their share into the collective fund
 (prisoner's paradox).

 I would be interested to know if there are real-world cases of this, or of
 any tax promoting economic growth.

 Gustavo


 At 08:20 PM 31-10-01 +0200, you wrote:

 Has anybody read/heard about a tax which does have a positive effect on
 the economic growth? The professors at my university say so, but I
 wouldn't be so sure so that's the reason I'm asking.
 
 Also I'm writing my course paper about the effects of the fiscal policy
to
 economic growth. Any good links, thoughts, ideas etc. would be
 appriciated.
 
 Regards,
 Kristjan Kanarik





Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-11-01 Thread Alexander Guerrero

I do not agree, since it is not consumption tax, accordingly with the
definition. Whta you are proposing is a kind of capital tax. I do not have
anithing against to, but your face the economic consecuences of taxing
capital.
Alexander Guerrero
- Original Message -
From: Fred Foldvary [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2001 4:39 AM
Subject: Re: Tax with positive growth effect


 --- Alexander Guerrero [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Well before yo tax  idle land, you must be sure that the land
  is wasted,

 No, the whole rationale for taxing land value is that it does not
 matter what the site owner does with the land.  Those who waste it
 will have to pay the same rate as those who maximize rental income.

  And, believe me, this is something which has been
  always very difficult to assess.

 How do you know?
 Insurance companies manage to appraise land value, because they don't
 want the insured to collect on that if the building burns down.

  The big
  question is : Does the land lord like to have idle land?

 If he does, fine; let him pay for that consumption.

 Fred Foldvary


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RE: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-11-01 Thread Kim Cosmos

Just taxing idle land isn't the Georgist tax as I know it. In Australia it
is used by most local councils as a primary source of revenue. The point is
to tax all land based on market value. Thus idle land becomes expensive to
keep. Very expensive in the Georgist model as this is the sole source of all
tax! It sounds very equitable. It is a resource tax not a capital tax. The
greatest part of the retail land value often is position position position.
Thus it encourages diversification and taxes high status areas higher. I
like the idea of only taxing common resources one of which is social
position. Is there a problem with that?

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Thursday, 1 November 2001 6:31 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Tax with positive growth effect


 For a very brief period of time several places in South Carolina tried
 to tax idle land.  The accessor would try to figure out what the most
 valuable improvement to the land would be and then asses based on that.

 It was a horrible failure.  While I don't know of any corruption, you
 can imagine that there was an opportunity for it.  What did happen is
 that landlords would throw up the absolute cheapest building that he
 could in order to avoid the assesor coming up with some idea.

 It turns out that cheap often vacant buildings have all sorts of
 externalities that idle land does not have.  I don't think the
 experiment lasted a full two years.

 Mitch

 - Original Message -
 From: Fred Foldvary [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Date: Wednesday, October 31, 2001 11:39 pm
 Subject: Re: Tax with positive growth effect

  --- Alexander Guerrero [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Well before yo tax  idle land, you must be sure that the land
   is wasted,
 
  No, the whole rationale for taxing land value is that it does not
  matter what the site owner does with the land.  Those who waste it
  will have to pay the same rate as those who maximize rental income.
 
   And, believe me, this is something which has been
   always very difficult to assess.
 
  How do you know?
  Insurance companies manage to appraise land value, because they don't
  want the insured to collect on that if the building burns down.
 
   The big
   question is : Does the land lord like to have idle land?
 
  If he does, fine; let him pay for that consumption.
 
  Fred Foldvary
 
 
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  Make a great connection at Yahoo! Personals.
  http://personals.yahoo.com
 


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Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-11-01 Thread Gustavo home

All I am saying is that it is possible, *in principle*, for the effect of
the increased tourist consumption to overcome the costs imposed by this tax.

The point is that everybody benefits from the advertising investment, and if
this investment was voluntary (i.e. not a tax), it could happen that while
the investment pays off as a whole (i.e. total return  total investment),
it doesn't pay off for the people who made the investment (i.e. return for
investor I = investment by investor I) (e.g. if they were the only ones
investing in it).

Whereas, if the investment was mandatory (i.e. a tax), the return for most
individual investors could exceed their investment. Of course this has
problems, as some businesses may NOT benefit from the investment the are
paying for. Not to mention the ethical problems of taxation.

If you are saying that this is impossible, the burden of proof is on you.

Gustavo


- Original Message -
From: Alexander Guerrero [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2001 2:57 PM
Subject: Re: Tax with positive growth effect


 This statemente is not true, investment decision are no taken for
government
 advertisement campaigns. Investors ask for, first of all, the rule of law
to
 be accomplished, clear rules of the game, low taxes, they know hau to
 calculate the return of their investment. On the other hand, taxes
collected
 for this advertisement campaign, recue consumption, investment and make
 investment costly, so reduces wealth.
 Alexander Guerrero
 St Antonys College
 Oxford University


 - Original Message -
 From: Gustavo Lacerda [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2001 2:14 AM
 Subject: Re: Tax with positive growth effect


  In the following example, it isn't the taxing itself that promotes
growth,
  but its spending.
 
  If a state uses tax money to attract rich tourists to the area (by
  advertising, for example), that could promote consumption, in such a way
  that the tax promotes growth more than it hampers it. Whereas if there
was
  no tax (i.e. if it was voluntary), individual businesses would be
 reluctant
  to use their money that way, even if they knew that everybody would be
  better off if everybody invested their share into the collective fund
  (prisoner's paradox).
 
  I would be interested to know if there are real-world cases of this, or
of
  any tax promoting economic growth.
 
  Gustavo
 
 
  At 08:20 PM 31-10-01 +0200, you wrote:
 
  Has anybody read/heard about a tax which does have a positive effect on
  the economic growth? The professors at my university say so, but I
  wouldn't be so sure so that's the reason I'm asking.
  
  Also I'm writing my course paper about the effects of the fiscal policy
 to
  economic growth. Any good links, thoughts, ideas etc. would be
  appriciated.
  
  Regards,
  Kristjan Kanarik
 





RE: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-11-01 Thread Fred Foldvary

--- Alexander Guerrero [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 How do you estimante market value?

With respect to land value, besides monitoring sales and rentals of
undeveloped land or sites such as parking lots, one estimates the
cost of replacing the building, subtracts depreciation, and that
amount is subtracted from the prevailing market prices in that
neighborhood to estimate the land value.

 and what kind of land you are talking about

All land.

Fred Foldvary

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Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-11-01 Thread Alexander Guerrero

I agree, but you are talking about is price of land, not its value; taht is
market price!!!The difference makes the difference.

Alexander Guerrero
- Original Message -
From: Fred Foldvary [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, November 02, 2001 2:20 AM
Subject: RE: Tax with positive growth effect


 --- Alexander Guerrero [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  How do you estimante market value?

 With respect to land value, besides monitoring sales and rentals of
 undeveloped land or sites such as parking lots, one estimates the
 cost of replacing the building, subtracts depreciation, and that
 amount is subtracted from the prevailing market prices in that
 neighborhood to estimate the land value.

  and what kind of land you are talking about

 All land.

 Fred Foldvary

 =
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-10-31 Thread Brian Moore

How about taxing leisure; which would induce people to work more (or leave)?
- Original Message -
From: Kristjan Kanarik [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2001 11:20 AM
Subject: Tax with positive growth effect



 Has anybody read/heard about a tax which does have a positive effect on
 the economic growth? The professors at my university say so, but I
 wouldn't be so sure so that's the reason I'm asking.

 Also I'm writing my course paper about the effects of the fiscal policy to
 economic growth. Any good links, thoughts, ideas etc. would be
 appriciated.

 Regards,
 Kristjan Kanarik






Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-10-31 Thread Alex Tabarrok

   Holding spending constant, it is certainly true that some taxes are
better for growth than other taxes.  To summarize a large literature
taxes on capital tend to be very bad for growth because of positive
externalities associated with capital, taxes on income are better and
something like a consumption tax is best for growth.

One of the best paper written in recent years (IMHO) is on the
subject of taxes and growth:

Ohanian, Lee and Thomas Cooley. 1997. “Postwar British Economic Growth
and the Legacy of Keynes”, Journal of Political Economy” ,
vol. 3, (105), 1997, pp. 439 – 472.


Alex
-- 
Dr. Alexander Tabarrok
Vice President and Director of Research
The Independent Institute
100 Swan Way
Oakland, CA, 94621-1428
Tel. 510-632-1366, FAX: 510-568-6040
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-10-31 Thread Fred Foldvary

--- Kristjan Kanarik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Has anybody read/heard about a tax which does have a positive
 effect on economic growth?

Yes.  Land-value taxation promotes growth by having less excess
burden, and by inducing more productive use of suboptimally used
land.

You could also force growth by taxing leisure, but that would distort
choices and lead to less overall economic benefits.

See the book Land and Taxation as well as Land Value Taxation
Around the World (Vol 59 (5) supplement, 2000), American Journal of
Economics and Sociology).

Fred Foldvary  

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Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-10-31 Thread Alexander Guerrero

Well before yo tax  idle land, you must be sure that the land is
wasted, and that his owner for some planetary reasons does not want to
invest on it. And, believe me, this is something which has been always very
difficult to assess. Some times you get otherways perverse outcomes. The big
question is : Does the land lord like to have idle land?
Alexander Guerrero
St Antnys College
Oxford University

- Original Message -
From: Ben Powell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2001 9:11 PM
Subject: Re: Tax with positive growth effect


 It wouldn't be growth in a proper methodologically
 individual sense but in the standard notion of GDP
 growth or whatever, I flate sum tax on Raw land both
 developed and undeveloped.  This is what Henery George
 and his followers advocated.  It would encourage
 undeveloped land to be developed.

 Ben

 --- Kristjan Kanarik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Has anybody read/heard about a tax which does have a
  positive effect on
  the economic growth? The professors at my university
  say so, but I
  wouldn't be so sure so that's the reason I'm asking.
 
  Also I'm writing my course paper about the effects
  of the fiscal policy to
  economic growth. Any good links, thoughts, ideas
  etc. would be
  appriciated.
 
  Regards,
  Kristjan Kanarik
 


 __
 Do You Yahoo!?
 Make a great connection at Yahoo! Personals.
 http://personals.yahoo.com




Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-10-31 Thread Gustavo Lacerda

In the following example, it isn't the taxing itself that promotes growth, 
but its spending.

If a state uses tax money to attract rich tourists to the area (by 
advertising, for example), that could promote consumption, in such a way 
that the tax promotes growth more than it hampers it. Whereas if there was 
no tax (i.e. if it was voluntary), individual businesses would be reluctant 
to use their money that way, even if they knew that everybody would be 
better off if everybody invested their share into the collective fund 
(prisoner's paradox).

I would be interested to know if there are real-world cases of this, or of 
any tax promoting economic growth.

Gustavo


At 08:20 PM 31-10-01 +0200, you wrote:

Has anybody read/heard about a tax which does have a positive effect on
the economic growth? The professors at my university say so, but I
wouldn't be so sure so that's the reason I'm asking.

Also I'm writing my course paper about the effects of the fiscal policy to
economic growth. Any good links, thoughts, ideas etc. would be
appriciated.

Regards,
Kristjan Kanarik




Re: Tax with positive growth effect

2001-10-31 Thread Fred Foldvary

--- Alexander Guerrero [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Well before yo tax  idle land, you must be sure that the land
 is wasted,

No, the whole rationale for taxing land value is that it does not
matter what the site owner does with the land.  Those who waste it
will have to pay the same rate as those who maximize rental income.

 And, believe me, this is something which has been
 always very difficult to assess.

How do you know?
Insurance companies manage to appraise land value, because they don't
want the insured to collect on that if the building burns down.

 The big
 question is : Does the land lord like to have idle land?

If he does, fine; let him pay for that consumption.

Fred Foldvary 


=
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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