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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 24, 2022

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Apparently the UK's entire net worth was £10.7 trillions in 2020 according to the ONS, their chief statistic agency. What's remarkable is that a whopping 60% of that is "non-produced, non-financial assets".

That's a fancy way of saying land. Why isn't this fact more well known? Should we expect it to be different for other countries? And why aren't more people talking about Georgism?

I made a top-level comment here a couple of weeks ago that tried to outline some of the major updates on the Georgism discussion in the ratsphere.

(Editing for less strawmanning.) I think that a lot of the problem is that Georgism strikes at the heart of fundamental value differences for folks. Many people seem to equate Georgism with Communism, or redistribution of wealth, which I don't find convincing.

For instance:

@bnfrmt:

LVT is equivalent to the state seizing all land, and renting it back at market rates; it's expropriation on a massive scale.

@Brannigan:

Georgism at heart is about identifying what is often the most precious possession a person can have, that most of the middle class has spent 30 years of their lives working to pay off, to render to their posterity, and stealing it from them despite the fact that they haven't really done anything wrong.

@laxam

"We know better than you how you should use your land", is roughly analogous to, "We know better than you what you should put in your body".

@Westerly

This strikes me as rationalists rationalizing their own class self-interest. The same way EA just so happens to only support democrat politicians, rationalism coincidentally just so happens to work out extremely well for the types of people that are rationalists. Easy to be YIMBY when you are 25 and living in a rented apartment in San Francisco.

@naraburns

My concern with LVT is that I regard most kinds of property tax (as well as income tax) as fundamentally immoral

@The_Nybbler

Still low-effort is "it's communism, but only with land". But given how bad communism has turned out, I think it's sufficient. The Georgist LVT is equivalent to the government owning all the land and leasing it out to the highest bidder.

@MeinNameistBernd

Frankly advocating "georgism" is the "break out the guillotines" limit for me, because the victims are my people and the preparators are /r/neoliberal vampires.

These are not cherry picked responses - all of these had at least 10 upvotes, and in many cases 25+.

Some of the responses were less charitable, which has led to me getting heated on this topic, such as people literally calling me a vampire (and getting 15+ upvotes) for arguing for a type of land reform.

Responses like "LVT is equivalent to the state seizing all land, and renting it back at market rates; it's expropriation on a massive scale." are not knee-jerk emotional responses, and they are light, not heat. That when this light is shed on Georgism, it becomes obviously (to most) a bad thing is a problem with Georgism, not the comments.

How is changing the way land is taxed equivalent to the government seizing all land? None of the anti-Georgists have been able to explain this to me.

An LVT does not have to be 100%, and besides even if it is people still own the improvements aka buildings on the land. What's really being taxed is the 'locational' aspect.

To me this argument is the equivalent of saying "income tax is the state seizing all work" which I just don't find reasonable.

Income tax is the state claiming ownership over work.

Think of it this way ... for any given tax, what would it take for a private non-government actor to implement that "tax". If I was a private actor and I wanted to charge someone rent for getting to use a parcel of land ... then I would need to own that land.

If I was a private actor and I wanted to take a cut out of all the money that someone gained, then I would have to own that person like a slave.

The power to regulate is also a form of ownership.


An alternative interpretation, is that the state doesn't own the things it taxes, it is instead just stealing. The libertarian refrain "taxation is theft" is along these lines. But that is what it boils down to, either the state has ownership, and thus the right to determine how the thing they own is used, or they don't have ownership and they are just constantly stealing.

Would you call yourself a minarchist?

If any government is to do anything, it generally needs to pay for it. If it's going to have the money to pay out, it needs to have some method of collecting money. What would you define as the valid parameters around "government collecting money"?

Anarcho-capitalist. Though I get along well with minarchists and try to avoid arguing with them.

I think even for people who are not minarchists/anarcho-capitalists that it is useful to recognize what government is doing. Governments collect money either by owning everything and charging rent, or they are stealing stuff from people. The government can own everything or steal things, because they have a monopoly on the use of force.

It is worth noting that under anarcho-capitalism, you can't own except to the extent that you can defend it. Much like feudalism really - in fact feudalism evolves from the anarcho-capitalism that existed briefly after the fall of Rome as the competing protection agencies (Knights, a word which derived from the old Saxon word for bandits) established local monopolies (Lords), set up the hierarchical system of arbitration between neighbouring protection agencies that David Friedman advocates (Kings), and cut a deal with the local influencers to propagandise for maintaining the system (the Church).

Under feudalism, the effective tax rate on non-warriors who wish to occupy land was also close to 100%.

Would you say that some level of tax collection is a necessary evil, rather than both unnecessary and evil?

I assume that various tax schemes would fall on a gradient of more-to-less offensive, depending on the details; what type of taxation (if any) would generally be on the less offensive end of the spectrum?

If you want to have a government, yeah taxation in some form is probably necessary.

And yeah the badness of taxation is on a gradient, and not all forms of taxation are evil. The problem is that the less offensive forms of taxation are often not as good at raising massive amounts of revenue.

I think certain use taxes are often ok-ish. Like docking taxes that pay for dredging of waterways. Other use taxes seem pretty messed up, especially when the government has an enforced monopoly on the service. The more necessary the service and the more those taxes are used to pay for random other things the more messed up it is.

Sin taxes are annoying and paternalistic, but I wouldn't call them evil.

Import tariffs that are applied universally on all goods (and not used for protectionist schemes) seem ok as well.

Head taxes feel a little less evil than income taxes, simply because they don't require a massive administrative state to look into everyone's incomes.

If poll taxes were the only tax I would consider them fully reasonable.