I found the least bad way to tax

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 31 พ.ค. 2024
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    Mr. Beat tells the story of Henry George and explains his land value tax and Georgism, while @JacobAClifford quite literally sneaks in to explain why people love a single, land value tax so much. Subscribe to Jacob's channel!
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    #georgism #henrygeorge #landvaluetax
    I hope I made it obvious that I’m biased toward liking Georgism. You Georgism haters out there- I want to hear from you. Tell me why Georgism sucks.

ความคิดเห็น • 6K

  • @iammrbeat
    @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +882

    What are your thoughts on Georgism? Could a single land value tax actually work?
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    • @mr.bowtieYT
      @mr.bowtieYT 2 ปีที่แล้ว +58

      I think it could be beneficial if we still keep a few taxes

    • @ckq
      @ckq 2 ปีที่แล้ว +48

      I think wealth is the new land in that you need wealth to make economic progress so we should only have a (flat?) wealth tax used for redistribution programs.
      Other taxes should just be used to penalize bad behavior and incentivize good behavior.

    • @lmodder6475
      @lmodder6475 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      I think here in the U.S. more states could be open minded about it, and see how all other states react to it. From an Ohioan (Hello Mr. Beat)

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      @@mr.bowtieYT Which ones?

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +39

      @@lmodder6475 It would be fascinating to see an entire state try a land value tax out.

  • @kentslocum
    @kentslocum ปีที่แล้ว +4567

    The fact that I've never heard of Georgism is proof that the landowners won.

    • @robertstephens7251
      @robertstephens7251 ปีที่แล้ว

      Proof that land lords won sounds like something the ccp would’ve said in the 50s to scapegoat any problems that they caused

    • @shzarmai
      @shzarmai 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Indeed, th-cam.com/video/AtdqBU-r8P8/w-d-xo.html

    • @Isochest
      @Isochest 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yep. The land thieves. Feudalism is a must for the Narcissistic power seekers

    • @a_random_person_lol_bruh
      @a_random_person_lol_bruh 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

      The landlords won?☠️ bruh

    • @qhayiya252
      @qhayiya252 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +149

      @@a_random_person_lol_bruh Vic 3 players punching the air rn

  • @ubernerd83
    @ubernerd83 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5841

    Fun fact: the game Monopoly (originally called the Landlord's Game) was created to promote Georgism. Apparently Parker Brothers removed the Georgist rules, leaving only the set of rules intended to show how bad monopolies are, which is why no one has fun playing Monopoly.

    • @HDTomo
      @HDTomo ปีที่แล้ว +85

      Oh

    • @HolyKhaaaaan
      @HolyKhaaaaan ปีที่แล้ว +427

      Do we have any idea what those Georgist rules were?
      Probably something like that each plot of land you own gets taxed or something like that?

    • @spencerjoplin2885
      @spencerjoplin2885 ปีที่แล้ว +141

      Pay each player $X per title you own as you pass Go?

    • @Sebby_04
      @Sebby_04 ปีที่แล้ว +63

      No it was to promote socialism

    • @jupe2001
      @jupe2001 ปีที่แล้ว +470

      @@Sebby_04 lol no, the creator was a staunch Georgist.

  • @ChristopherAbelman
    @ChristopherAbelman 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +327

    The tax code seems overly complex, making it difficult to identify the most tax-efficient strategies for my income and investments. Are there resources available to help me understand relevant deductions and credits that could maximize my after-tax returns?

    • @FinnBraylon
      @FinnBraylon 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      You're right, the code can be a beast. There are definitely resources available to help you understand deductions and credits. The IRS website has a wealth of information, but for a more personalized approach, consider consulting with a tax advisor who specializes in investments. They can help you identify strategies that maximize your after-tax returns.

    • @HildaBennet
      @HildaBennet 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      I love the insight. Professionals could make a really big difference in investing, and I think everyone should have one. There are aspects of market trend that is difficult for the untrained eyes to see. I have made more than 350% through my estateplanner(fa) by alternative investing. The portfolio comes with perks as well.

    • @PennyBergeron-os4ch
      @PennyBergeron-os4ch 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Could you kindly elaborate on the advisor's background and qualifications?

    • @HildaBennet
      @HildaBennet 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Don't be hesitant to contact Sonya Lee Mitchell and follow her directions.

    • @PennyBergeron-os4ch
      @PennyBergeron-os4ch 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It's good you make your own research. and make sure whoever you work with is licensed n verifiable with a repute, this Sonya looks the part but i'd do my due diligence. I set up a call, thanks.

  • @Tucher97
    @Tucher97 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +80

    I once read somewhere that wasn't Reddit that mentions someone once saw a Resturaunt shutdown, they were a kid in like 1997 or something, and they revisit the area in 2019, the place is still shutdown, imagine how many areas in this country that are for rent, lease yet are not being sold or used, just sitting there rotting.
    A few years back, I heard of problems such as "no place to build homes or houses" yet there are ghost towns all over the US.
    Humorously someone tried to pass a construction site that has been under construction for over 7 decades, saying the site is in Europe, but a local of the site said "dude this is in chicago"

    • @gusfring8451
      @gusfring8451 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      -rep furry

  • @aaronkamakaze2967
    @aaronkamakaze2967 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2638

    Shout out to the guy who gave Henry George that 5 bucks. 5 bucks in the 1860s would be like giving someone nearly 200 bucks today. That probably helped him and his family out quite a bit.

    • @Crigence
      @Crigence 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +219

      Damn, that actually really put into perspective how significant that moment was. I heard "asked a stranger for $5" and I just thought "What a bum"

    • @GhostEmblem
      @GhostEmblem 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +302

      @@Crigence Did you miss the part where his first job earned him $6 a month.

    • @phylippezimmermannpaquin2062
      @phylippezimmermannpaquin2062 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +102

      What a chad. Casually gave away that much money for a man in need

    • @magister343
      @magister343 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +80

      the first CPI inflation calculator I found said that $5 in 1860 is equivalent to $185.42 today.

    • @thebestSteven
      @thebestSteven 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +68

      Not too mention, that $5 changed the coarse of history, maybe not as much as Georgists would like, but still by an identifiable amount.

  • @C.J.Kristel
    @C.J.Kristel ปีที่แล้ว +1925

    "The more I learn about it, the more I am impressed with it. Which is why it will never happen".
    Truer words have rarely been spoken.

    • @johnny_thunder_1815
      @johnny_thunder_1815 ปีที่แล้ว +33

      Well that's probably what people in 1910's were saying about Communism and Socialism(both sounded extremely good and were equally unlikely to happen) so you never know

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@johnny_thunder_1815 Georgism cannot into revolution ;(

    • @johnny_thunder_1815
      @johnny_thunder_1815 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      @@wildfire9280 maybe that's a good thing, most of the time revolutions only make things worse than they were, just look at Russia, Iran, Afghanistan etc, and even examples more distant in time - French revolution only made things worse and brought decades of wars to Europe in wich hundreds of thousands of people died and France permanently lost it's leading role in Europe in the process

    • @glint6070
      @glint6070 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@johnny_thunder_1815 I can say with 100% certainty that the ideas unleashed by the French Revolution have shaped the country that you live in
      "Only made things worse" is the fool's game; there are tradeoffs in everything

    • @bogdanstamenic2836
      @bogdanstamenic2836 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

      ​​@@johnny_thunder_1815I think it's unfair to say that the French revolution only killed people and weakened France. I believe that any successful revolution (like the French one imo) causes short-term loss and suffering for a better future over the long term. Things like human rights (laid out in writing), standardization of technology and modern legal codes rose from the ashes of revolution

  • @EvilTaco
    @EvilTaco 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +535

    The thing is nowadays value isn't only produced through large operations that are on land like factories or farming. We have tech conpanies that need a relatively small amount of land to generate huge amounts of revenue

    • @RetroDawn
      @RetroDawn 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +77

      Yes, and the land where those companies congregate goes up dramatically in value and property taxes, in our current system, already.

    • @thonktank1239
      @thonktank1239 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +90

      You might be underestimating the amount of space that those companies use for server farms, and we could even add the space required for the power plants that make them run

    • @watcherofvideoswasteroftim5788
      @watcherofvideoswasteroftim5788 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@thonktank1239 as well as the massive amount of mining and other infrastructures which under a land tax would be passing on that cost to tech.

    • @tedi7103
      @tedi7103 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@thonktank1239 bro, tech companies doesn't necessarily mean crypto farms. All I'd need is like an office and a bunch of PCs and I got a great software development business that earns a ton of money. No massive servers, no huge power usage.

    • @malcolmx61
      @malcolmx61 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@thonktank1239 the average Amazon warehouse is 800,000 square feet. apple has 8 data centers in America ranging from 300,000 - 600,000 square feet. Amazon total square foot usage is over 300 million in America alone, apple is closer to 8-10 million. apple made 115 billon in profit Amazon lost 2.7 billon in 2023. this idea is ridiculously outdated and would do nothing but bankrupt companies that use larger facilities while making tech companies multi trillion dollar companies.

  • @claytondykstra3301
    @claytondykstra3301 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +292

    The more I learn about the structure of our system and it's potential improvements/replacements, the more I fall into the perspective that we already have the answers to live in an efficient and equitable society and the people who benefit from the current system don't want that.

    • @eewweeppkk
      @eewweeppkk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      We do have the a answer's to live in AN efficient and equitable society. The problem is that it isn't the best society depending on who you ask. Everyone's perfect society is different.

    • @matthewkopp2391
      @matthewkopp2391 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The fact that Adam Smith and those that followed him (like Jefferson) were against monopolies and landlordism and passive wealth accumulation
      and politicians on the so-called left and right claim to be followers of Smith and call themselves liberal, shows everyone that they merely use the word „liberal“ is a manipulative propaganda to make their politics sound legitimate.

    • @wiger_
      @wiger_ 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

      ​@@eewweeppkkthe problem isn't establishing a perfect society - that's impossible. the problem is that all potential improvements to the current system are being ignored because it doesn't benefit the elite

    • @eewweeppkk
      @eewweeppkk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @wiger_ No, they are being ignored because your "improvements" are subjective and require resources. As I said, there is no "right" answer or "perfect" society, because the society we all want to see is subjective and varies from person to person.

    • @adrianp7574
      @adrianp7574 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@eewweeppkk what good are those other perspectives of the “perfect world” if for many, it only ever benefits the elites

  • @StyxTBuferd
    @StyxTBuferd 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1584

    So many people told him to touch grass that he actually did it. That's dedication there, Mr. Beat.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +313

      And I'm still out in that field touching that grass (with my phone in the other hand).

    • @ValerietheLovelyDeadlyItalian
      @ValerietheLovelyDeadlyItalian 2 ปีที่แล้ว +53

      @@iammrbeat why is this man not our president wtf are we doing

    • @Vesta_the_Lesser
      @Vesta_the_Lesser ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Whenever I hear someone say "touch grass" my response is "no thanks, I don't want Lyme disease"

    • @swayback7375
      @swayback7375 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Vesta_the_Lesser ok… that makes total sense 🙄
      You might try educating yourself on how you get Lyme disease and how ticks transmit it.
      I pick 100s of ticks off my clothes each spring, sometimes 100 in a day… I’ve had 4 of them find my skin and attach, but it takes 24 hours for them to transmit… and they don’t really live in grass, they absolutely don’t live in mowed grass, by late spring most of them are on another critter and their population drops off like a rock.
      There’s also Chems that will repel them, the most effective is permathrin, which is literally on almost all your food already.
      Knowledge really is power.

    • @clovermite
      @clovermite ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Vesta_the_Lesser It's such a stupid phrase. There is nothing inherently beneficial to the human body about touching grass. The benefit would be in getting vitamin D from sunlight, getting exercise from walking around, breathing fresh air, or socializing with people outside of the home.
      I could grow a small patch of grass in a box a la Rysn from Stormlight Archive, and touch that every 10 minutes while I spend all my time inside. This would satisfy the "touch grass" snarkists while entirely avoiding what their favorite catchphrase is supposed to be promoting.

  • @jwac3io
    @jwac3io ปีที่แล้ว +883

    My instructor at the Henry George School of Chicago said it best: "Whatever you tax you will get less of--unless it's land." When I proposed taxing consumption he said: "Taxing consumption taxes the result of investment, which taxes investment."

    • @TheBigdog868
      @TheBigdog868 ปีที่แล้ว +73

      I agree. It's unfortunate most people aren't going to understand this. Trying to explain second order thinking to them is like telling the dog to go start the car.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      @@TheBigdog868 The term “return on investment” seems well understood, and I’m sure it applies here to what consumption taxes lower.
      Better yet, ask them why we would ever tax sales of negative externality-producing goods. The purpose should be more obvious.

    • @bramvanduijn8086
      @bramvanduijn8086 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      Does your instructor make the distinction between the productive economy and the financial economy? Because if he doesn't, then he might want to do some more thinking about his definition of investment.

    • @milkmessiah5192
      @milkmessiah5192 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bramvanduijn8086 You say that like they aren't intrinsically connected. The financial economy injects massive amounts of money into the productive economy, and the successes of the productive economy creates ROI for financial institutions, money that is then reinvested into the productive economy.

    • @jwac3io
      @jwac3io 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No he didn't
      @@bramvanduijn8086

  • @BalderOdinson
    @BalderOdinson 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

    I live in a community whose largest industry is a university with decently popular sports. This means a ton of renters and visitors. We have implemented a "hospitality tax" on restaurant meals to keep property taxes low. I've long thought that while we were attempting to gouge the visitors, what we've really done is put a huge burden on the students and other renters. I've been wanting to reverse the situation and am glad to find that there is a name for it and thought that has been put in to it.

    • @jimmysthoughts8571
      @jimmysthoughts8571 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So, the solution they came up with so that the rich weren't taxed "too much" was to tax poor people more? I'd be surprised but I've been around too long at this point for this to be anything but the status quo.

  • @Kackpuh
    @Kackpuh 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    That's literally where the game of monopoly comes from. One female professor sometime around the 1890's developed it and it was intended to be played once without land a value tax and once with land value tax by students to show them what happens without land value tax (this version is the modern Monopoly game).

  • @SantaClaauz
    @SantaClaauz ปีที่แล้ว +387

    “I fought the land, and the… land won.”
    -Henry George (1897)

  • @blitzkrieg8776
    @blitzkrieg8776 ปีที่แล้ว +1062

    It actually sounds like a pretty good system, I doubt it would work as the only tax, but it definitely could replace a good chunk of the ones hurting the middle and lower classes.

    • @argh523
      @argh523 ปีที่แล้ว +76

      This system would pretty much only tax middle and lower classes, who pay the tax with their rent and the things they buy, while the wealthy would pay almost no tax compared to what they own.
      Unless the tax is so high only the super rich can even afford to own land.
      Either way, it's a hypercapitalist dystopia

    • @motimobo
      @motimobo ปีที่แล้ว +190

      @@argh523 Rents are already the highest that the market can bear, same with house prices - people pay the most they can possibly afford.
      LVT will come out of the landlords pocket that is guaranteed. (RIcardo's Law of Rents).
      LVT will benefit working people and the middle classes and hard working businesses, instead of a large portion of the nations wealth going straight into the pockets of land owners who haven't even lifted a finger or broken a sweat.

    • @austinblackburn8095
      @austinblackburn8095 ปีที่แล้ว +96

      @@argh523 Not really their is allot of land in the US and everybody owns something. There are 2.43 billion acres of land in the US 72% approximately is owned by private citizens. Current US federal tax revenue is 5.4 trillion. With about 1.75 billion acres of private land it would only take 30 dollars per acre of land to fund current spending. Given the reduced taxes on regular people this helps renters and discourages large financial holding companies holding on to billions of acres of land and doing nothing with it other than speculation.

    • @ozymandias8523
      @ozymandias8523 ปีที่แล้ว +95

      @@argh523 no lmao, middle and lower classes dont hold land to speculatative purposes, they use it to LIVE in there. Rich landlords hold the land just to speculate,wait to gain value because improvement others made around their area and then sell it 10 times more, instead they would hurt their own pockets paying more taxes if they don't use the land efficiently either to live in there or to work there, so more of those landlords will be forced to sell land otherwise they would bleed money 💰, and thus making someone that wants to buy land to have more options making buying land cheaper for people who would actually use it(for his home or business).
      Tl,dr: They wouldn't have to pay rent to landlords, that money would go to government for public services and buying a land, house or work place would be cheaper.

    • @arturow2686
      @arturow2686 ปีที่แล้ว +36

      @@argh523 lol renters aren't paying taxes the landlord pays taxes for his profital use of ground.

  • @magneticlines
    @magneticlines 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +61

    It's an interesting idea. I'd like to know more about a couple things: 1) How does this account for the fact that vacant land can have value to society without being "productive" (a forest is valuable simply as a forest)? 2) Would a perfect Georgist utopia have zero green space in cities?

    • @danielafonso9050
      @danielafonso9050 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      IMHO Forests, like rivers and oceans, and deserts, jungles, etc. should have owners. That's the best way to prevent the property from being completely destroyed. An owner can have insurance to prevent real damage from being done. Now, to my humble opinions of how to answer your question:
      1) Things can have value without being productive. My classical concert guitar is a great example at hand - it's board is certainly gaining in value since it was built. Thankfully, I don't have to pay taxes on it - or else I'd probably have to sell it to do it.
      One of georgism's possible replies is: then it (my guitar, the forest, the trees, the rivers, etc) certainly should be sold to someone that can produce things for it while also increasing in value with time. The problem is, of course, that I don't need a tax to see it as a good option: I can immmediatelly enter in contact with Siccas Guitar and solve this problem quickly. I shouldn't be forced to do something someone else think is right - just as I don't force others to do my bidding.
      2) I don't think that to be the case. Trees, parks, forests, rivers, etc have value. The metropolitan pak, in NY, for instance, is privatel owned - as many other parks around the world. Private property means that you do what you want with your property - even if you want to build up a large park instead of building an industrial district. The tax on land, then, would make it much harder to maintain speculation on land, but also, non-profitable enterprises as well - like a community park, or maybe a meeting hall to play checkers. As with any other tax, it is theft and prevents people from doing what they wanted to do with what they own.
      That said, it is also important to consider other aspects of the land tax. How much of it should be taxed? The land would be valued by who? Should there be a cap or a minimum to how much is taxed, and why? Do some businesses - like residential buildings - be excluded from this, or receive a smaller tax? Who should charge it - federal, state, municipal government? Once we accept that we are going to have a land tax, many other questions arrive. For instance: Brazil has a land tax, it is called IPTU; it is charged by municipalities, it is a percentage over the value the building was last sold plus an inflation metric over every year it wasn't sold, regardless of the actual gained or lost market value of the property, every municipality has a different percentage that fluctuates around 3%. But Brazil has also every other form of taxation, its taxes are burdensome (it has the highest corporate tax in the world, sometimes going over 100% of profits), so it is not the perfect Georgist utopia - a country can simply say, "well, georgism is the least bad tax, so we will charge it too, and drop none of the other taxes".
      That's another reason why all taxes have to be combatted.

    • @evanfreund5651
      @evanfreund5651 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Well, most parks are public land so cities would still have some green space unless the government taxes itself which would be weird

    • @charlielidbury9488
      @charlielidbury9488 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      You could fix that by making them productive. Lets take the environmental benefits forests have by absorbing carbon: with the right carbon credit system you could make carbon consumers profitable, and people would buy the land just to inherit it's carbon credits generated by the forest

    • @jeremyferrante
      @jeremyferrante 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      As I said alsewhere, georgism does not account for externalities that affect common goods, such as climate, air quality, water quality, biodiversity (the societal value of any pre-existing forest for exemple), and all those goods that cannot be owned privately (by nature). Pollution and other detrimental activities DEMAND a tax that equates the marginal value of what has been lost. It is the only way under capitalism to ensure all public goods are not lost in the long term to the individual incentive to create value out of private property. In other words, yes, someone acquiring a forest could pay a tax on land value, but should also pay if the carbon storage capacity of his land is lost to some real estate project. Only this way, the project would be carried out if the value created is greater than the one destroyed (from society's perspective). Hope this helped!

    • @Clarkamadorian
      @Clarkamadorian 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@danielafonso9050 ok, sure, the money used to buy the land may be rightfully earned, but is the value gained from simply owning the land for an extended period of time truly “earned?” LVT would fix this. It’s not a tax in what you earn, it’s a tax on exploiting land as it’s a limited resource.
      Put short, if LVT is just as much theft as any other tax, is gaining value from people around you doing all the hard work while you sit back and let the land gain value from such hard work not also theft? Quite frankly, gaining value off of the people around you sounds like communism.

  • @johnromberg
    @johnromberg 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I like thinking, but I don't like learning much. And in my thinking I often think "there's no way I'm the first human ever to think of this, I probably just didn't learn about it". And here I am, learning about how good ol' Henry was thinking what I was thinking way before I thought of it.

  • @ran__-_5183
    @ran__-_5183 2 ปีที่แล้ว +369

    "The more I learn about it, the more impressed I am with it. Which is why it will never happen"
    Big mood

    • @TheSkyGuy77
      @TheSkyGuy77 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Cynicism is why nothing ever changes.

    • @Schinshikss
      @Schinshikss ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Or just move to the countries that had adopted Georgism, such as Taiwan.

    • @Ashley-1917
      @Ashley-1917 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      It won't be allowed to happen by the establishment. Georgism lacks practicality because it is not radical enough in it's approach.

    • @mihailmilev9909
      @mihailmilev9909 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Ashley-1917 uhhhh idk abt that. How is something being tamer make it harder to implement?

    • @Ashley-1917
      @Ashley-1917 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@mihailmilev9909 Its more difficult to implement because it relies on the consent of the very people who's power it seeks to limit. Georgist reforms will never be passed in a bourgeois democracy because the state is made up of, and serves the interests of the land owning class. As a result, any ideology that seeks to substantially limit the power of the land owning class by means of reform enacted by that very same state, is doomed to fail. By contrast, the more radical ideas of socialism or communism, don't rely on the support of the state in curtailing the powers of the ruling class at all, but rather rely on the revolutionary potential of the working class.

  • @danielroush
    @danielroush ปีที่แล้ว +955

    Interesting. My family owns around 150 acres that I grew up on. We recieve a tax exemption on the property as part of a conservation initiative, since we leave it undeveloped. Something like this might need to factor into Georgism. Otherwise, it might see the total destruction of natural habitats.

    • @adhdegrees
      @adhdegrees 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +169

      This is exactly what I worried about when he was explaining the tax

    • @kylegonewild
      @kylegonewild 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +265

      Land for conservation shouldn't be held by individual citizens to begin with.

    • @adhdegrees
      @adhdegrees 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +93

      @@kylegonewild farmland conservation is a very large portion of North Central Florida's property. Would you strip them of their land?

    • @bekabokuchava4470
      @bekabokuchava4470 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

      @@adhdegreesJust because something isnt under the full ownership of an individual, doesnt mean that individual can't benefit or have a say.

    • @nates9105
      @nates9105 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

      Right... so instead of taxing undeveloped land we classify undeveloped land and developed land on a flat rate. Each classification can be at different levels but it then gives us the ability to tax high income land an appropriate level.

  • @daithi1966
    @daithi1966 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    There is a building in Providence, RI called the Superman building because it looks like the headquarters of the Daily Planet. It is the most prominent build in Providence's skyline. It was also built as a refueling station for blimps, which were competing with planes for air travel at the time. In any event, the property was vacant for over a decade because the owners just sat on it when their prior tenant left. It isn't the only building in Providence that is empty either. You also have areas in towns that are dominated by slum lords. So, don't just tax undeveloped land, but tax the crap out of unused and undeveloped commercial property as well.

  • @THE_MOONMAN
    @THE_MOONMAN 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

    As a vancouverite this sounds like a phenomenal idea to be honest. This sounds like it could solve several issues that are big problems everywhere, but are only accelerated by factors specific to vancouver

    • @alergames147
      @alergames147 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      This is immediately what i thought about when watching this lol

  • @PresAlexWhit
    @PresAlexWhit 2 ปีที่แล้ว +445

    An income tax is a worker tax. A sales tax is a consumption tax. A sin tax is an addiction tax. A land tax is...a land tax. Note that South Korea in their 2022 election had a politician named Lee Jae-myung who supported a LVT and UBI. He lost, but it was very close.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +89

      Lee Jae-myung was an amazing candidate. And well put!

    • @tanker00v25
      @tanker00v25 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      what about all the other taxes like capital gains or mansion taxes?

    • @tomasroberts2016
      @tomasroberts2016 2 ปีที่แล้ว +36

      An income tax is a worker tax.- Couldn't have put it better myself.

    • @ihave3heads
      @ihave3heads 2 ปีที่แล้ว +47

      @@tanker00v25 A capital gains tax is an investment tax. It's also just a horrible tax. When you tax realization of gains people just don't... realize gains... Like imagine you have $1,000,000 in gains on a piece of land. The rent you could charge for it probably went up a lot too. Now, suppose you tax those gains away. Do you ever sell the piece of land or do you just rent it out for eternity? So you still end up with land consolidation. The landowners get richer from the rents and buy more land and so on and so on.
      It's way better to just have an annual land value tax.

    • @tanker00v25
      @tanker00v25 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@ihave3heads a very interesting perspective I must say, thank you for presenting it. Though there are still a lot of different taxes that I would like to hear more about like a second home ownership tax. Seems like it would have an impact and mostly on the rich

  • @JJMcCullough
    @JJMcCullough 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1585

    In Canada, the biggest land owners are the provincial and federal governments. Canada is a very barren, empty country, and the governments control much of this "unused" territory. So how would Georgism apply here?

    • @ryanmcfall1127
      @ryanmcfall1127 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The government pays taxes to itself and wastes money on beaurocracy obviously

    • @ariusae
      @ariusae 2 ปีที่แล้ว +123

      you really listen to ur fans in discord haha

    • @Marlboro_Cone.3883
      @Marlboro_Cone.3883 2 ปีที่แล้ว +147

      I wanna say that I’m a huge fan of your channel
      Barren and unproductive land, will get taxed the lowest because it has the least useful potential and value to be extracted from it. Now that could change if the glaciers and ice on there melts. It could become more habitable, cities and settlements will form there, I’m sure there is oil and other valuable resources, and the land will get taxed accordingly

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +962

      MAKE THE GOVERNMENT PAY A LAND VALUE TAX, TOO. Oh wait. In all seriousness, there's enough private land in Canada that it could still work there, too.

    • @1080lights
      @1080lights 2 ปีที่แล้ว +58

      It doesn't really matter, it'd hardly make any revenue unless there were actually people there using it.

  • @fegtynpax5147
    @fegtynpax5147 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +112

    I have a hard time with this because I've known so many poor farmers that have lost their land due to taxes.

    • @raftguy1376
      @raftguy1376 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +56

      Taxes, or failing to turn a profit? You can blame one, but the reality is its the other. Especially given the many subsidies available for farmers. Not saying farming is easy. It has lots of risks. I know, because I farm. But that’s the nature of it. There’s also lots of very profitable farmers.
      The reality, is that the biggest land ownership these days is by a corporation, not individuals. Breaking that up, or making more tax revenue off of it just makes sense.

    • @davidposton3931
      @davidposton3931 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      How does an increased tax on farm land not result in an increased cost of food?

    • @kerrywsmyth
      @kerrywsmyth 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@davidposton3931 my answer to that is that while food would necessarily be more expensive, a “land tax only” system would leave a LOT more money in the hands of those who own or rent small properties. All my life I’ve been taxed anywhere from 20% all the way to 40% of my income and I live on a tiny plot of land. If I paid only 5% of my income for property taxes, and paid 50% more for food, I would probably be left with more money in the end. That wouldn’t be the case for large property owners. They might find it to be better financially to see their property, which would necessarily lower ALL property values, which is a good thing for young and poor seeking to buy their first property.

    • @BadFeelingsClan
      @BadFeelingsClan 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      ​@@davidposton3931 Because food is already taxed, but in different stages. This won't eradicate taxes, not even necessarily reduce the amout of taxation, what Georgism WILL do is tax in a more efficient and intelligent manner, resulting, therefore, in an increase in the amount of capital available in the hand of investors and less profit for people that hold land for speculation, which increases the cost of rent and decreases land accessibility to the lower strata.

    • @raimonestanol8234
      @raimonestanol8234 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @fegtynpax5147 The tax was to be on unused land, not on farmed land, targeting speculators not farmers

  • @enricodinardo6338
    @enricodinardo6338 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    A couple of statements I find a bit abstract:
    1) "" when we tax cigarettes, people smoke less", what is the evidence? If people are dependent on smoking they might probably be more prone to spend more than quitting.
    2) "Taxing other things that we actually want will decrease their production and consumption", seems too general, first necessity goods are probably less affected. For instance: recently in Italy taxes on tampons and diapers were raised again after a period in which they were decreased. It's quite unreasonable that these goods will be less produced and consumed. The same goes for energetic goods (car gas, home electricity), no matter the taxation overall consumption will hardly be affected

    • @LuisPauloLohmann
      @LuisPauloLohmann 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Here a brief study - with bibliography - about how taxing tobacco helps lowering comsumptions: tobacconomics.org/files/research/415/effectiveness-of-tobacco-taxes_brief.pdf

  • @seandawson5899
    @seandawson5899 2 ปีที่แล้ว +548

    It would have been so funny to just see Mr. Beat running around in that field, with no context to what he is doing. The final product is amazing and full of context. As always, wonderful video Mr. Beat.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +63

      To be fair, there are still some great potential out of context moments in this video. :) And thank you!

    • @seandawson5899
      @seandawson5899 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@iammrbeat someone made a supercut of moments out of context for Atun-Shei, i hope i see one of yours too. As long as it isnt defamatory, they are hilarious. I loved your cameo in his recent checkmate Lincolnite video.

    • @richardday3136
      @richardday3136 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@seandawson5899 LIke a giant cow patty hanging on a boat? th-cam.com/video/6c5xjlmLfAw/w-d-xo.html

    • @mihailmilev9909
      @mihailmilev9909 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@iammrbeat please release the raw footage fo better complilations lol

    • @warrenarnold
      @warrenarnold ปีที่แล้ว

      @@iammrbeat Me: mom i want Mr. Beast
      Mom: we got Mr. Beast at home
      Mr. Beat at home

  • @degustablegerbil
    @degustablegerbil 2 ปีที่แล้ว +156

    When I still lived in France as a child, my mother and grandparents told me a story about how after WWII my great grandfather had planted trees in his field, which is now a beautiful forest, in order to avoid such a government tax on unused, unimproved land (as you can imagine this was because the government wanted to ramp up agricultural output). Neat!

    • @strasbourgeois1
      @strasbourgeois1 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Great story, and smart great grandfather!

    • @Rig0r_M0rtis
      @Rig0r_M0rtis ปีที่แล้ว

      @@strasbourgeois1 I think you made a typo because you wanted to write "smart great government"

    • @neolithictransitrevolution427
      @neolithictransitrevolution427 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      Worth noting that under a "proper" LVT, planting trees would actually have had no effect on what he paid in tax. The point is, in part, to avoid any kind of influence on the market, so the tax is constant, based on the land value, regardless of how you develop it. The reason to plant trees, or otherwise develope the land, is to produce an income that offsets the tax. People who can't find a productive use that offsets the tax are either going to sell to someone who can, or on net many land sales might suppress property values woth higher supply, and as such lower the tax rate, until and equilibrium is reached where people make the same average rate of profit regradless of location.

    • @degustablegerbil
      @degustablegerbil ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Rig0r_M0rtis yeah. Definitely a lot of shenanigans during post war reconstruction

    • @degustablegerbil
      @degustablegerbil ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@neolithictransitrevolution427 right right, it just reminded me of that story regarding unworked land!

  • @rebeccazw3919
    @rebeccazw3919 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I think this is a great idea. The explanation of normal taxes slowing the economy down vs single land tax encouraging it is rock solid!
    But playing devil's advocate at 11:31: not all land should be build on. We also need nature, and that is not protitable.

  • @bistromathics6
    @bistromathics6 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    I thought about a very similar idea sometime in my teens (that would be about 40 years ago, and well before I earned my degrees--the idea seems pretty obvious, really). But I thought about it more in terms of idle assets, not just land. I thought that if there were a practical way to accomplish it, there should be a progressively-increasing (growing each tax period) tax on any owned asset that is not producing value. Frankly, I didn't consider it as a way to eliminate other taxes, but more as a way to reduce urban blight (and, as you put it, "economic rent", at least to some degree)

    • @whoarewe7647
      @whoarewe7647 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I like this idea! If we stopped taxing income, food, property, companies, etc, then we’re more likely to see negative attributes come back into those. Taxing idle land would be a way to prevent things like homeowning for profit rather than homing people.

    • @saberline152
      @saberline152 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@whoarewe7647 income by labour only tho

    • @death2abrahamism
      @death2abrahamism 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I had a similar thought except it was based on percentage of ownership of an economic industry. So if a company owns 90% market share, then they get taxed close to that 90% (maybe capped somewhere at 80-90%?). The idea behind this was to curtail monopolization. The rest of the idea was about redistributing the tax money back out to the natural born citizens whether they be poor or rich. This evenly redistributed cash would be based according to the census of the population. And if people try to take advantage by having lots of children just to pocket the cash, perhaps a per-family-household rule should be used since gaming the system might print more money into existence than needed and can cause a devaluation of it. My idea would affect all economic industries, not just land ownership, but also the Intellectual Property Rights Holders since I consider them in possession of the public culture and therefore could use the the Copyright/Patent laws to go after people for sharing what becomes part of the public culture. I like to think of it as "live by the sword, die by the sword" since if someone wants it all, then they have a responsibility with a price equal to it. Maybe it could be like a new physics law connected to economics, or something.

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 ปีที่แล้ว +200

    "One cannot imagine a more beautiful combination of intellectual keenness, artistic form, and fervent love of justice."
    -- Albert Einstein on Georgism

    • @LordPastaProductions
      @LordPastaProductions ปีที่แล้ว +39

      Albert Einstein was a syndicalist socialist. I am also a socialist as well and I too find Georgism very fascinating. It's nice to know I am not alone in that opinion.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@LordPastaProductions Wait till you hear craziest part.
      “The least bad tax is a property tax on the unimproved value of land.”
      *…-Milton Friedman.*

    • @nana00037
      @nana00037 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@wildfire9280 Asking for clarification, the quote's content means the taxes should be on the parts of the land that were not improved basically ?

    • @abarbar06
      @abarbar06 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      ​@@nana00037 the next part of the quote is "... The Henry George argument from many many years ago"
      Friedman meant precisely what Henry George meant. A tax on land values. Property value = land value + improvements. You just want to tax the land value part of property value, even if the property is improved.

    • @nana00037
      @nana00037 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@abarbar06 aaah I see, thank you!

  • @abarbar06
    @abarbar06 2 ปีที่แล้ว +125

    Fun fact: the popular board game *Monopoly* has its roots in Georgism. Elizabeth Magie wanted to promote the single tax and created "The landlords game" which had two sets of rules (designed to illustrate how land value tax made everyone rich). Well some other company came along and turned the game into the monopoly we know (getting rid of the land value tax part) and it eventually grew to popularity.

    • @cjclark2002
      @cjclark2002 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      They co opted each movement and the reactions against it implies all the intent one needs to know.

    • @abarbar06
      @abarbar06 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@cjclark2002 I'm not following you

    • @cjclark2002
      @cjclark2002 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@abarbar06 that is unfortunate but not my concern, just an observation that one sufficient enough in context clues should understand.

    • @abarbar06
      @abarbar06 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@cjclark2002 Good talk

    • @xald1234114
      @xald1234114 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@abarbar06 I believe he is referring to rainbow capitalism month? where the corporations like to drum up a bunch of ad revenue and traffic by Having rainbow products in north America but not most of the rest of the world. Like check out the middle east twitters of companies like bethesda. It was a meme in 2020 and they still do it. I believe Russian, turkey, and other asian wings of the company also don't go rainbow, because it's not a regionally safe business move. It's always money. MONEY MONEY MONEY.
      Follow the money

  • @jakobrosenqvist4691
    @jakobrosenqvist4691 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    This is the kind of tax that forces people of the old family farmstead. Property tax based on land value forced most of the old families in the archipelago outside of Stockholm to sell their generational homes and now it's all rich people's vacation homes.

    • @EQ_EnchantX
      @EQ_EnchantX 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      No, that is land tax. LVT is taxed based on unimproved lands that do not produce. Farm produce food and are productive, thus low or no tax. Vacant lots that do not produce mean high tax.

    • @goodj111
      @goodj111 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@EQ_EnchantX *tax on land improvement

    • @EQ_EnchantX
      @EQ_EnchantX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@goodj111 Um no. LVT is taxed on land that is NOT improved, AKA unproductive. This incentives improving it or selling it to someone who will improve it.
      That is the whole point of this tax, if you buy land just to sit on the property you will be taxed much higher than if you built something there.

  • @Captainsparkist
    @Captainsparkist 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    No way he got THE Mr. Clifford of Economics fame. Unironically love this guy

  • @caseclosed9342
    @caseclosed9342 ปีที่แล้ว +488

    I would have mentioned China as a country which experimented with Georgism. Sun Yat-sen was a Georgist and that’s why the Republic of China (Taiwan) has the land tax. Singapore also has it as many of its founders were Chinese…

    • @GerardPerry
      @GerardPerry ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Sun Yat-Sen was an opportunist.

    • @Jacob-yg7lz
      @Jacob-yg7lz ปีที่แล้ว +21

      @@GerardPerry Not as much as Yuan Shikai though

    • @swickens930
      @swickens930 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Uhhhh what lol... Taiwan has a housing crisis and Singapore is one of the, if not thee most expensive place to live in the world

    • @andrewmole745
      @andrewmole745 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Not as expensive as capitalist HK.

    • @caseclosed9342
      @caseclosed9342 ปีที่แล้ว +33

      @@swickens930 well, maybe it proves Georgism isn’t as effective as it seems to be. Also, Singapore is expensive but it does offer government programs to save for homes and 90% of dwellings in Singapore are owner-occupied.

  • @RipCityBassWorks
    @RipCityBassWorks 2 ปีที่แล้ว +646

    I think this would work great in American cities: really disincentivize landowners hoarding empty lots where housing is badly needed.

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      True

    • @eriks8726
      @eriks8726 ปีที่แล้ว +90

      It has worked well in the Pennsylvania metros that adopted it - Pittsburgh dramatically outperformed peer cities on construction when the tax was adopted, the Philadelphia tax abatement (a sort of psuedo LVT) led to the construction of tens of thousands of new homes, and it has helped some PA municipalities on the edge of bankruptcy stabilize their finances.
      Pennsylvania is the most pro-land value tax state in the US. Basically every municipality in the state is allowed to use such a tax, which is not the case in other states.

    • @americanhero8606
      @americanhero8606 ปีที่แล้ว +59

      You might be intrigued to learn that there was a generation of city mayors in the US that were "students" of George (they read P&P and wanted to apply the principles). Tom Johnson of Cleveland, Ohio and Hayzen Pingree of Detroit, Michigan are two notable examples.
      But so much of urban land was held by "old money estates" that dominate local politics TO THIS DAY, it was impossible to implement a tax that literally targets their wealth and reduces taxes on the lower classes who continuously worked to earn wages.

    • @bernardoohigginsvevo2974
      @bernardoohigginsvevo2974 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      It might also help with the affordable housing problem.

    • @eric_clover
      @eric_clover ปีที่แล้ว +14

      I agree. This should be a tax applied to cities, but a single land value tax would really ruin the small farm based economy the US agriculture industry is built on.

  • @cakedo9810
    @cakedo9810 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    As one of his former students, 12:00 is absolutely true. We watched his videos quite a few times.

  • @g1rhines
    @g1rhines 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I have a question about what is developed vs undeveloped land. It was mentioned that farms count as developed land, so does 50 acres that is used to grow trees considered a farm? Unlike a vegetable farm that sees people plant and harvest in the same season, the time between planting and harvesting a tree can take a generation, in some cases. So while it may not be actively harvested, it's still useful in that when the wood is mature and harvested it's used for wood products. Does 30 acres of pasture count as a farm if it's being used for grazing? What about when a farm is practicing crop rotation and is growing only nitrogen fixing crops? These cases all have uses, but to the outsider they may look undeveloped do to seeming unproductive for possible a year to 20 years. If the land is developed with road or railway or even a factory, but ends up becoming disused and unprepared because now the land is increasing in value due to scarcity AND it has utilities technically on it but no one wants to buy the land because the cost of repairing or even tearing down the structures outweigh any money that might be made on the land, is this land now considered undeveloped and subject to tax?

    • @contramuffin5814
      @contramuffin5814 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      To answer your question, the definition goes like this: assume that the land that you own is completely undeveloped (ie, no buildings, just a random, unkempt lot). If that is the case, how much would it be sold for? That would be the undeveloped land value.
      The undeveloped land value is based off several factors, but the primary one is location. For instance, if you're in the city, then land (even an unkempt, undeveloped lot) would be very expensive. Therefore, your undeveloped land value would be very high. If you're in rural areas, then land, regardless of if it's undeveloped, is probably pretty cheap. Therefore, your undeveloped land value would be very low.
      So, let's assume that there's a land value tax of, say, 10%. And let's say there's 4 cases:
      1. a farmer in a rural area who grows crops,
      2. a city dweller who runs a restaurant,
      3. a speculator who buys rural land,
      4. and a speculator who buys city land.
      In the first case, the farmer has farmland. Let's say that its undeveloped land value is $500. Then, the farmer pays $50 every year. It's an additional tax that the farmer has to pay, but because the undeveloped land value of the farmland is so low, the farmer should be able to pay off the tax with little issue. The city dweller has a restaurant with an undeveloped land value of, say, $50,000. Then, the city dweller pays $5,000 every year. This is much more difficult for the restaurant owner to pay off than $50, but on the other hand, the city is expected to have more business, so the city dweller could make it work if his restaurant does well. The rural speculator, just like the farmer, pays $50 every year. Again, it's not a lot, but if the speculator doesn't do anything with the land, then the speculator is losing $50 every year. So he'd be incentivized to sell it or find a way to use the land. The kicker here is what happens to the urban speculator. The urban speculator pays $5,000 every year. If he does not do anything with the land, then he will be losing money rapidly. That way, he has to sell the land to someone who wants it, otherwise the speculator will continuously lose money.
      This system allows cities to utilize their land efficiently. If you've been to cities, you'll probably notice there are many run-down locations that have nothing happening. There's so much land that could be used, but it isn't being used. That's due to urban speculators. Meanwhile, the land value tax is much more forgiving for rural areas.
      The one downside of this system is that it disincentivizes things like parks, or other uses of land that would not usually generate income (for instance, a homeless shelter). However, that can be relatively easily remedied by just having tax exceptions for these particular cases.

    • @DavidSartor0
      @DavidSartor0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@contramuffin5814 Subscribed.

  • @kyewong6595
    @kyewong6595 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +573

    I wrote my law school essay on this tax! George wasn’t the first to implement it- but probably the first to write about it in an academic way. As far back as the Yongzheng period in Qing China (and later Meiji Japan), a 3% flat tax on unimproved land was levied and used to pay for education!!
    I got into law school btw

    • @rafaelrondon1813
      @rafaelrondon1813 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      How would this form of tax work for large companies that require very little land to operate? Doesn’t seem like it would work at all.

    • @kyewong6595
      @kyewong6595 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      @@rafaelrondon1813the idea is to incentivize the development of those large corporations that optimize efficiency with little real resource use, so LVT is really good for developing and industrializing economies. In Meiji Japan, the government wanted to incentivize large landowners to develop and more efficiently use their land and facilitate industrialization, or else make huge aristocratic estates held by Daimyo untenable.
      Perhaps a value added tax today may be better able to capture surplus if corporations are already very land and resource efficient

    • @MrChristianDT
      @MrChristianDT 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      It would probably hit hardest on mining companies, landlords, ranchers & oil producers, frankly.

    • @mateusoliveiradeandrade731
      @mateusoliveiradeandrade731 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      @@kyewong6595 exactly though. It can be a good tool for an 18th/19th century economy which is still based on rural production and industrializing with large factories. It does nothing to address accumulation of capital in a financial economy where land ownership is not where most of the wealth is concentrated. It is a tool with a lot of potential, but only in the right circunstances

    • @robert4167
      @robert4167 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Can i read your essay?

  • @L_mattox
    @L_mattox 2 ปีที่แล้ว +590

    As a Georgist, I thank you for using your platform to help bring attention to our ideas!

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +116

      No doubt. I can't go on letting so many good ideas stay trapped in old books.

    • @L_mattox
      @L_mattox 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      @@iammrbeat What a wonderful mission, for a content creator!

    • @Bob-fj7lr
      @Bob-fj7lr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@iammrbeat God this is important

    • @JeyPeyy
      @JeyPeyy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Didn't expect Mr. Beat to get me so hard, but he really managed that with this video. As a fellow Georgist, I'm stoked!

    • @adenjones1802
      @adenjones1802 ปีที่แล้ว

      We must unite brother. The Georgist revolution is at hand.

  • @timothybeach8771
    @timothybeach8771 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +45

    The struggle I have is part of why a lot of people do not qualify to buy a house is the property taxes. The mortgage becomes almost double based on taxes in some places. This would increase rents also.

    • @chasemorgan1668
      @chasemorgan1668 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Those taxes are usually based on the value of the property on the land as well I believe. Part of why empty lots are preferable for land speculation as there is nothing on the land driving up it's taxable value and costing money to maintain. From what I understand, Georgism asks to tax only the value of the empty land, so it could be likely that many people would end up paying less in taxes. (from what I understand. Grain of Salt and all).

    • @LeverPhile
      @LeverPhile 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      ​​@@chasemorgan1668
      The distinction between land and improvements is meaningless, especially in the urban and suburban environments of today. Plus there is a push to preserve open space and natural land.
      Most importantly, if you tax land ownership too much it will hurt everyone including the renters and workers the land value tax is meant to help.

    • @uluccoban8875
      @uluccoban8875 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yeah i was searching for this comment. Wouldn't the land where jobs are at cost too much in taxes? Wouldn't it hurt people who work in growing cities?

    • @ZIbroweed
      @ZIbroweed 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      You would want to own a two story house with a basement and a small yard... Or a house in a jurisdiction where land is valued less by the local government. In those cases you could still afford your home. What you couldn't afford to do is own 100 acres of forest that you're doing nothing with but driving your 4 wheelers on. You'd have to give it up as public land or use it in a way that made it pay for its self.

    • @ZIbroweed
      @ZIbroweed 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@uluccoban8875 The land where jobs are would probably cost more, but you'd pay those taxes with the money you didn't pay in income tax for those jobs. As long as you're working one of those available jobs you're fine. If you're trying to live where jobs are while not working one of them then yeah. You'd want to move further from the jobs you're not working.

  • @kitsunde
    @kitsunde 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As someone who works for a tech company that's fully distributed across multiple countries. We would absolutely love if government revenue specifically came from a land value tax making it the only cost to plan for.
    As someone who goes to the main street and finds that every store is a boring a luxury brand alienating large segments of the population and concentrating prime & historical real estate exclusively to high margin low traffic commerce for the very rich. This system would suck. In the same way as going to the old town in a lot of places that sees tourism is the same shop after shop of low budget trinkets, and have completely destroyed anything that resembles culture.

  • @kittee6409
    @kittee6409 2 ปีที่แล้ว +108

    As a writer, I can 100000000% believe that he dropped to the floor and sobbed after completing his book. Like... Same, dude. Same

    • @maenad1231
      @maenad1231 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Any writer or artist who gets enrichment from creating could probably understand this.

    • @nickandres7829
      @nickandres7829 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Wait, people actually finish writing their books?

    • @kittee6409
      @kittee6409 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@nickandres7829 😂 Also very relatable.

    • @rafaelbalsan4512
      @rafaelbalsan4512 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Haha I thought the same

  • @Gaming4Justice
    @Gaming4Justice ปีที่แล้ว +209

    I am Estonian and the entire time I was thinking "don't we have that?". It is not the same of course but it seems weird not having to pay tax for land that in reality doesn't belong go you, still it belongs to the country.

    • @Coolsomeone234
      @Coolsomeone234 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Australia also has it but only:
      - Small rates for councils
      - Small rates for investment properties over a certain threshold
      - Transitioning over 20 years for one territory
      - Currently a massive fight in another state
      - Ruled out in other states despite very popular leaders because it was super controversial when mentioned

    • @Max_Griswald
      @Max_Griswald ปีที่แล้ว +28

      In the USA, we already have property taxes, so if you own land, you pay tax on it. What seems weird is not being able to actually own land, and therefore being able to get kicked out of your house on the whim of whoever is in charge of the country.

    • @Gaming4Justice
      @Gaming4Justice ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@Max_Griswald I don't know about your laws, but here the government has to follow the law and can't just kick you out from your land.

    • @Max_Griswald
      @Max_Griswald ปีที่แล้ว +28

      @@Gaming4Justice - Until they decide they can.

    • @Gaming4Justice
      @Gaming4Justice ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Max_Griswald Without changing the constitution they can't.

  • @bonovoxel7527
    @bonovoxel7527 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I am interested in Economics and why it's the first time I hear explained this guy in detail?
    Thanks for the content!

  • @EricSmith9000
    @EricSmith9000 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    This makes sense if you want to see humans thrive, develop, and spread. I'm not sure that is the motivation of many policy makers.

  • @anastylos2812
    @anastylos2812 ปีที่แล้ว +183

    There is one large problem: the land must be "improved" to pay for the tax. From an ecological viewpoint that's terrible. Being forced to turn a biodiverse wood or grassland into houses, monoculture farmland etc. might be good from an economic viewpoint but it will destroy nature.

    • @gljames24
      @gljames24 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Georgism may prevent urban sprawl, but a mixed market system that allows for protected land like parks may be better.

    • @adamjonmonroe7188
      @adamjonmonroe7188 ปีที่แล้ว +50

      No, the land does not have to be improved to pay the tax since the owner can simply abandon it. And since nobody will want to buy it either, it will go back to nature, back to wilderness, the frontier.

    • @fletcherspillers9904
      @fletcherspillers9904 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@adamjonmonroe7188 it's more likely they would clear-cut the land and sell the lumber, paying off the tax at the cost of destroying the ecology.
      This is what currently happens across America. Lumber companies buy untouched land, chop down the whole forest, then either replant with non-native fast-growing pine or they resell the barren land. With a Georgist tax it would make this problem even worse, as land owners who want to keep the forests untouched couldn't afford to do so.

    • @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person
      @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person ปีที่แล้ว +22

      Private land yes, but why should all land be privately owned?

    • @DangRenBo
      @DangRenBo ปีที่แล้ว +27

      It's taxed on its value, correct? If land isn't in an urban or farming area, it will not be highly valued and taxes will be extremely low.

  • @TaliyahP
    @TaliyahP 2 ปีที่แล้ว +31

    "Discourage people from holding to land speculative land"
    Gosh we could really use that tax today...

    • @cjclark2002
      @cjclark2002 ปีที่แล้ว

      He was quite ahead of his time and the reactions he got from the robber barons says it all and oh look, the modern day is what he predicted how curious that anarchy loving socialist commie, all the buzzwords still around today what a odd completely unrelated set of coincidences.

    • @Perrirodan1
      @Perrirodan1 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@AstreinW I will pay the rent when you'll fix that damn door!

  • @C0sm0thek1ng
    @C0sm0thek1ng 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

    Sounds like a good idea, I wonder what kind of unintended consequences it could have.
    I'm also trying to imagine what it would look like if we had a combination of the land value tax and the fair tax.

    • @tktspeed1433
      @tktspeed1433 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      I'd guess the worst consequence would be that conservation of old forests etc. Would be disencouraged. Basically, deforestation would probably worsen.

    • @Josh-gi8ht
      @Josh-gi8ht 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      Rampant (over)development, eradication of non-industrial scale farming/ranching, property rights becoming subject to the whim of whatever 12 people happen to be running the local governments that year...

    • @C0sm0thek1ng
      @C0sm0thek1ng 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      ​@Josh-gi8ht I'm not sure if we would see over development, it generally doesn't make sense to make such large investments strictly to avoid taxes. What I do see happening is a massive sell off of unimproved land to virtually zero, due an avoidance of the tax.
      And I'm not sure where you're going with the property rights issue, that could happen without this tax policy.

    • @Josh-gi8ht
      @Josh-gi8ht 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@C0sm0thek1ng Taxing land based off of what could be built there means it basically has to be developed. Only the very very rich can afford to pay 5-10x the tax rate of vacant land to keep a lot vacant. Selling off vacant land doesn't solve the problem either, because it requires someone to buy it. So either way the result is someone developing it.
      On the subject of property rights, basically, it means the government on any of the city, county, or state levels gets to unilaterally decide what gets built on your land. Under the current system, they would have to use eminent domain to take/force you to sell your land, but they at least have to make a case about it being for the good of the community and it requires they pay fair market value for it. Under this, they wouldn't have to. They just say your property should have a shopping center on it, the rate at which you're taxed shoots up and they just have to wait until you get tired of losing money year after year, or they've taxed you into oblivion and you file bankruptcy

    • @C0sm0thek1ng
      @C0sm0thek1ng 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @Josh-gi8ht I still fail to see why everything would have to be developed, there's not enough resources to do that. On the scenario you laid out with the shopping center, I still don't see how that's different from today with zoning laws in cities. We're out of my realm of knowledge/understanding on that one though.
      However, you do bring up a good point, and I don't know why I didn't think deeper about this. Only the wealthy would own vacant land, that doesn't sound like a good idea. 😆

  • @matthewrogers55
    @matthewrogers55 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I read this today and was surprised I never heard about it before. Looked on TH-cam and this was the only video about it!

  • @Kenxclout
    @Kenxclout 2 ปีที่แล้ว +247

    I used to go out of my way to not show how much of a nerd I am for history. Now I don’t care! Great content Mr. Beat 👏🏾

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      BE PROUD :)

    • @senorsombodee
      @senorsombodee 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      It's more fun when everyone knows you're that guy

    • @klh768
      @klh768 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      A lot worse ways to use your time.. or waste your time depending on how your using it.

  • @JoMcD21
    @JoMcD21 ปีที่แล้ว +284

    This George guy sounds like the most level-headed human being of all time.

    • @ADarnSmore
      @ADarnSmore ปีที่แล้ว

      well he actually had sex with dogs (no he didn't i just lied to you for no reason)

    • @andrewprahst2529
      @andrewprahst2529 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      After Mr. Beat?

    • @trout3685
      @trout3685 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Explain why. Stop making superficial statements. You're trying to sound smarter than you are. Do you actually understand this tax system as much as you think you do? I wish we could give real time quizzes to viewers of these types of 'educational' videos.

    • @Isochest
      @Isochest 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Why we don't hear of him is because his ideas implemented would threaten the accumulation of extreme wealth. The present system allows this and Politicians are paid to maintain it

    • @tigertian1251
      @tigertian1251 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Calm down just a comment

  • @weksauce
    @weksauce 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It's not just land, but land was the only obvious example in the past. Excluding others from places and energy ought to be auctioned FOR, in an ongoing auction (so you can just pay more and take the place/stuff). With a huge exception. Arrangements of energy ought to be own-able during the creator's lifetime. And the proceeds from this single auction-style tax need to be redistributed to everyone, equally, because space and energy aren't created by people, and are therefore unearned. Land is just one specific example of space/energy, but the principle that land isn't created/earned applies to all space and all energy. If you want to exclude others from a particular orbit around the Earth or Sun, you need to pay THEM for that PRIVILEGE. If you want to exclude others from using some energy in the form of gold or carbohydrate, you need to pay THEM for the PRIVILEGE. That's CAPITALISM. Free, fair, open, competitive markets.

  • @TV-cv1eb
    @TV-cv1eb 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The issue with a land value tax is it violated the right to property. If you don't pay it and the government will take it from you and kick you out, it in effect means you can't actually own land, but only rent it from the government

    • @stevendj27
      @stevendj27 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I had to scroll far down to see someone finally say this. Thank you!

    • @INT41O
      @INT41O 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That is exactly the point. It's a feature, not a bug. How can anyone 'own' land? It already existed before humans did, so at some point someone just came along and took it.

    • @DavidSartor0
      @DavidSartor0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Doesn't property tax already do this?

    • @varalderfreyr8438
      @varalderfreyr8438 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      What if the tax is paid on point of sale? If you sell a property for more than you bought it, the diferance is taxed by society.

  • @ElasticGiraffe
    @ElasticGiraffe ปีที่แล้ว +364

    As a long-time geolibertarian, I was elated to stumble into this video. Georgism needs all the exposure it can get. It's a beautiful philosophy.

    • @Codewordthecerealkiller0
      @Codewordthecerealkiller0 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Oxymoron
      Georgism is socialism

    • @ElasticGiraffe
      @ElasticGiraffe ปีที่แล้ว +79

      @@Codewordthecerealkiller0 Then either you don't know what Georgism is, or you don't know what socialism is, and that's an inclusive "or."

    • @Codewordthecerealkiller0
      @Codewordthecerealkiller0 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@ElasticGiraffe Both hate private property

    • @ElasticGiraffe
      @ElasticGiraffe ปีที่แล้ว +72

      @@Codewordthecerealkiller0 Thanks for proving my point.

    • @drake1896
      @drake1896 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@ElasticGiraffe thats so vague lmao

  • @HockeyLax50
    @HockeyLax50 ปีที่แล้ว +424

    Biggest concern is that it doesn’t incentivize conservation, only persistent development
    Also, most (if not all) localities already implement property taxes

    • @PopeGoliath
      @PopeGoliath ปีที่แล้ว +56

      This was an issue that floated through my mind during the video, and I was hoping to see it addressed.

    • @drakor98
      @drakor98 ปีที่แล้ว +129

      It does, however, encourage the efficient use of land. If owning giant swathes of land is inefficient then people will individually buy less land to develop. In a way, I reckon it does help with conservation.

    • @Mlpzeldafan011100
      @Mlpzeldafan011100 ปีที่แล้ว +130

      If you paired it with a state park system which manages conservation, it could.
      It incentivises persistent development *on a limited amount of land*, not just "grab up all the land and put whatever on it". That's more what we have now. Georgism would encourage a lot of taller buildings, rather than our sprawls.

    • @mecynogea
      @mecynogea ปีที่แล้ว +29

      there could be tax incentives for natural forested lands to increase motivation of more private land conservation

    • @danielch6662
      @danielch6662 ปีที่แล้ว +35

      Hockey Bro, single value tax. Only one tax. We first replace property tax with land tax (tax land only, not the stuff built on top of it), then we gradually increase land taxes, and simultaneously reduce all other taxes ... sales tax, income tax, corporate tax ... everything. In the end, after about 10 - 20 years, the entire government budget is supported by land tax alone. Every year, to figure out how much next year's land tax is, we take the whole government budget, and divide it by the total value of all land that would be taxed (ie those not owned by the government itself). Add a few percentages to account for people who don't pay.

  • @joshuatayloe8616
    @joshuatayloe8616 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I don't think this could work as the only tax, but it could replace property taxes. I think this would likely work best as a State tax system because the land value between states is not equal. I don't know if there is a system that could replace income or capital gains taxes at the federal level.

    • @BrianThorne
      @BrianThorne 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Income tax is a wartime measure

    • @DavidSartor0
      @DavidSartor0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "land value between states is not equal"
      This doesn't matter; you assess each plot of land individually anyway.

  • @scottmacs42
    @scottmacs42 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    If this ever happens, I can see it getting ruined by inserting language that exempts new land (i.e artificial fill and reclaimed wetlands) and/or clauses that require reimbursing land-owners for acreage lost to sea level rise.

  • @jeremiahlee1175
    @jeremiahlee1175 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    Depressed Mr Beat at the end there just broke my little heart. Everybody on the George train so Beat starts smiling again.

  • @hiei248
    @hiei248 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    Holy shit I've been advocating for a single land tax for 10 years, had no clue about this guy.
    Time to do a deep dive, read his book.

    • @neolithictransitrevolution427
      @neolithictransitrevolution427 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      To be fair, Adam Smith said it to. So did Milton Freidman.

    • @austinblackburn8095
      @austinblackburn8095 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@neolithictransitrevolution427 So basically all the cool people wanted it.

    • @ElasticGiraffe
      @ElasticGiraffe ปีที่แล้ว +5

      It's had strong advocates, many of them well known intellectuals and activists, on the left and the right as well as among libertarians.
      A major blow to Georgism in the economics field was a poorly argued, convenient rejection of classical economics' treatment of land and capital as separate factors of production due to their different economic properties. Neoclassical economists, along with Austrian school, decided that the earth and man's improvements to the earth through labor should be lumped together into a single concept--"real estate"--and treated as an indivisible unit. The "housing" crises that continually plague our economy aren't fundamentally about housing. They're driven by low-interest loans handed out like candy to land speculators.

  • @wallykramer7566
    @wallykramer7566 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The "Land Value Tax" is so different from anything i have considered. I think I will need to think about it for some time.

  • @rodjacksonx
    @rodjacksonx 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hmmm. George had an interesting theory, but I found a flaw already (starting ~11:10)... the idea that taxing land doesn't cause deadweight loss because the amount of land is fixed SOUNDS feasible on paper. But we don't presume that taxing labor doesn't cause deadweight loss just because the number of people working in an economy may be stable; the fact is, people are free to quit their job, get a second job, work more or fewer hours, etc. Even though the amount of hours in a day people have free may be fixed, THEY get to decide the availability of their labor.
    If you tax "undeveloped land," and especially if you tax ONLY that, you will quickly find that everyone will, at the very least, do the ABSOLUTE MINIMUM with their land to get it declared "developed" (even if that means just renting it out to a homeless person who perches a tent on it,) and I speculate that the availability of "undeveloped" land will suddenly dry up--and the more it was taxed, the more that would happen.
    The idea that you could use such a system on its own to fund a government (even one from before the welfare state) seems HIGHLY questionable. As does the idea that it's the "least bad" tax--although I admit it still seems to have a better claim to that than many (possibly most) modern taxes.
    My main gripe overall with George's idea though, is that while it's not as collectivist as Marxism, it's still just a smaller version of it that is still harmful, particularly the idea of "everyone owns the land," which I imagine over time inevitably becomes "everyone owns property." Trying to argue land into being a separate type of property--*communal* property!--as an ideological justification for your theory... no. Not on board.
    (Also, side tangent... what it is about the most ardent advocates of collectivist ideas, even if only piecemeal, being the sort who rush into marriage and family without having the means to take care of them? It's almost as if the natural, unwanted consequences of their bad decisions is the *real* emotional seed of their theories, not cold, abstracted reason, like many would try to say.)

    • @stefanl5183
      @stefanl5183 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      If you ask me, George was just another freeloader looking for society to take over the burden of supporting his family while he sat on @zz. Anyway, there's a reason his ideas have been thrown on the garbage heap of history, and that's because they suck! History is full of idiots, who thought they were brilliant, because they were too ignorant to realize who stupid they really were.

    • @DavidSartor0
      @DavidSartor0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You tax the land in proportion to how much it's worth.
      Developed land gets taxed the same amount as undeveloped land.

  • @zimmy98
    @zimmy98 2 ปีที่แล้ว +54

    Forgive me if I'm misunderstanding, but isn't there still the risk that landowners would simply increase the "economic rent" of the land they own to offset the cost of the land tax? I understand a land tax would encourage the owners of, say, an empty lot in New York City to either develop or sell the land rather than just wait for the value of the land to increase thanks to other nearby developments, but for the landowners of, say, an apartment complex or a shopping center, couldn't they simply pass the cost of the land tax onto their renters, thus making the renters the ones actually paying the tax? Obviously land owners hate Georgism so maybe I'm missing something.

    • @David-hi8ci
      @David-hi8ci 2 ปีที่แล้ว +31

      Couple things in response. First, a major principle of Georgism is the curbing or complete elimination of zoning restrictions. That coupled with a LVT would result in increased residential building, and the increased housing supply would counteract the increase in rent charged due to the tax. Second, yes, landlords would presumably increase rents to compensate for the tax, but there would be far less appreciation of land passively, so landlords would be less incentivized to hold on to extra land and rent it out.
      Say you have an extra house right now. You could either sell it, or you could rent it out to cover the mortgage/other costs and hold it long-term as an investment. Georgism would dramatically reduce the value of land as a passive investment, so landlords would be far less incentivized to rent out surplus land as opposed to selling it. Add the increased sale of land to the increased supply and housing prices and rent prices would drop.

    • @zimmy98
      @zimmy98 2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      @@David-hi8ci Thanks for your response, Georgism seems like a good remedy for the plague of "house flippers" who simply buy houses to sell for a profit rather than for living. Is it fair to say that loosened zoning restrictions along with a LVT would theoretically encourage people/companies to build more multi-family housing rather than single-family housing since they would be able to extract more rent from multiple tenants to cover the LVT? And to your point, dramatic rent-increases would be less likely since other nearby land-owners would be doing the same and thus increasing the housing supply, correct?

    • @ShehuStebe
      @ShehuStebe ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@David-hi8ci that still doesn’t answer the question. Like Apartment buildings that have alot of tenants but are very dense and low in land use (Think old city of Sana’a type beat.) Another example could be vertical greenhouses that run on solar, their output is much larger than normal farms and they use very minimal land. It seems that this policy would work better in less developed nations that rely on little technology in agriculture.

    • @neolithictransitrevolution427
      @neolithictransitrevolution427 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      The answer to this is generally considered to be no. A land lord, in thier position to collect economic rent, charges the maximum of income possible. When you try to rent a house, you compete with other potential renters, and the land lord will (generally) settle on the person willing to pay the highest amount. The renter doesn't care about the landlords cost structure, you don't offer to pay more because your landlord got a higher bill. They pay the most literally anyone is willing to pay.
      In practice, rental controls, long term contracts that protect tenants for eviction, and the like might suppress land rent to a degree, so a change to an LVT might cause an increase rents short term. But generally demand and supply of housing is fixed in the short-term, so price fluctuations based on increased costs are difficult to pass on.

    • @neolithictransitrevolution427
      @neolithictransitrevolution427 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@ShehuStebe And yet it works very well in some of the denses, most developed countries, like Singapore and Taiwan, and is even credited in part with the rapid development.
      The fact that the appartment or vertical farm uses less land would be a benefit under an LVT. Traditional urban sprawl or farming techniques would face higher tax rates, and so the market would have a greatwr incentive to move to the denser, more efficient, development pattern. Alternatively, with out the LVT, the suburban home owner or farmer sees the large amount of land they use as a long term appreciating asset, and factor that into thier long term returns, making the less efficient approach the higher returning one, and disincentivizing capital creation.

  • @tellthemborissentyou
    @tellthemborissentyou 2 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    Originally born Henry George Ramsbottom, he endured extreme poverty and had to sell his surname. He only got a nickel for it. By comparison the Smith family had made a fortune selling their surname many times over. Embittered by seeing the amount of land owned by the 'family formally known as Smith' Henry George wrote his magnum opus under his remaining two first names.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      This is my kind of comment 😂
      Is this from somewhere or did you just come up with it here?

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      These are facts

    • @tellthemborissentyou
      @tellthemborissentyou 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@iammrbeat Yes I have been doing my own research.

    • @nupursharma6869
      @nupursharma6869 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      How do you sell surname?

    • @tripledigit4835
      @tripledigit4835 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@nupursharma6869 it’s like how an NFT works

  • @jonniheinisto9825
    @jonniheinisto9825 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Much thank you for this video, its a good reminder i need to read his books and study his ideas more. I remember coming to very similiar conclusions myself on my own without outside influences of this line of thinking. Then one day, i dont remember if i was actively search-engineing for an economical ideology of this sort or not, but i stumbled upon the concept of geolibertarianism and from there the term of georgism. On quick shallow observation this resonates as exactly the line of thinking i was looking for, but i did not look any further.
    Reminder to self, gotta read at least the mentioned book.

  • @chasetuttle2121
    @chasetuttle2121 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Reminds me of northern Michigan where Dollar General is buying massive plots of land just to use a fraction of it for a shop location.

  • @Alabar3000
    @Alabar3000 ปีที่แล้ว +75

    Neat idea. It definitely has to have some nasty bugs that would cause issues, the biggest being land evaluation. I imagine if people intentionally overvalue land they want, they could potentially force excessive tax on the current owner.
    This may have worked in the past where land was significantly more tied to productivity, but today? A billion dollar company like Google doesn't need much space and would probably just move to cheaper land if the evaluation changed too much. Wealth would be able to disproportionately move to people with intangible goods like media. The only tax those products would see is on the less than a square foot where the data drives would be located.

    • @AnonYmous-yu6hv
      @AnonYmous-yu6hv ปีที่แล้ว +2

      We could tax the digital equivalent of land, which is throughput or storage, users or some combination of several kpis.

    • @1080lights
      @1080lights ปีที่แล้ว +18

      Ok, so if they use less land they don’t pay as much. What’s wrong with that? Is your purpose to find a good way to raise revenue or to be punitive against certain kinds of businesses?

    • @motimobo
      @motimobo ปีที่แล้ว +30

      The fact that Google with it's small footprint would be incentivised to move it's head quarters to an area with lower land values is actually one of the benefits of LVT.
      It drives productive use of the available land. There may be a company that would benefit more from that higher land value location and Google would boost the economy in the lower land value area, so it's a win/win.

    • @thijskroft785
      @thijskroft785 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      @@1080lights this is mostly a problem because the companies with the most money at the moment are tech companies. With this system, they would pay way less money per income then an average farmer would. Meaning that this system doesnt distribute money from rich people to society, but from society to rich people. Essentially... if the goal is to distribute money more equally, this isnt the solution.

    • @yveje9720
      @yveje9720 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@thijskroft785 but there wouldn’t be any other tax and whose to say Google wouldn’t get into the business of farming or manufacturing? If they had the money to own land and pay the tax they could profit on other types of industry

  • @iSirLincoln
    @iSirLincoln ปีที่แล้ว +18

    You running furiously at the camera after saying no was the most hilarious part.

  • @nas1479
    @nas1479 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As many here have pointed out it seems this idea doesn't favor conservation. I live in a rural area and most people out here own forested land. This system would force people into farming or selling off their land to farms since it would be too expensive. Hunting as a past time and a way of life would cease to exist because no one could afford to own hunting land. And to clarify, these aren't speculators or corporations owning this land, it's regular people. I would also like to address that hunting is not an upper class activity like it is in other countries, it's mostly lower to middle class. This would make hunting a privilege to the most wealthy who can afford hunting land, and damage wildlife populations that live across rural private properties as they would be forced out by development.

    • @DavidSartor0
      @DavidSartor0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think the LVT would be very small in rural areas.

  • @SpoopySquid
    @SpoopySquid 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    "As soon as the land of any country has become private property, the landlords, like all other men, love to reap where they never sowed, and demand a rent even for its natural produce." - Adam Smith

  • @yarielrobles9003
    @yarielrobles9003 2 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    Another possible reason for the decline of georgism is zoning laws. Unless we enact some form of zoning reform, the value of land can be directly controlled by local governments who can heavily influence the value of land simply by changing a city's zoning code. For example: imagine you're running for mayor of a city and you narrowly win, despite facing strong opposition from communities in the east of your area, what would stop you from changing the zoning code in those places to artificially drive up the value of land there and break up those communities by placing a tax burden on them that they cannot deal with? It would be a horrifying possibility for our democracy. I'm not saying this to discredit georgism, as I believe that we should heavily weaken, if not outright abolish, zoning laws regardless of what tax system we use; but it's especially important if the value of your land can heavily impact your financial stability.

    • @yankeedoodle5187
      @yankeedoodle5187 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Having an independent commission evaluate the land value would be a good, non-bias way to do that, yeah?

    • @schumanhuman
      @schumanhuman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Zoning/planning laws can massively effect the value of the individual parcel of land, for example if your land is rezoned from agricultural to residential here in the UK the value per m2 can rise to 1000x per m2.
      As well as the potential for corruption this creates (bung local government $$ to change zoning on your land and get the massive uplift) I do agree excessive zoning and NIMBYism creates sub optimal outcomes but the effect on a macro level is actually more limited, studies have shown land price booms and busts were just as bad before modern zoning.
      Even without any zoning, speculation that land may soon become much more valuable perhaps due to a growing city, means land prices can be pushed up, that's fine for current owners, but a farmer trying to buy land get their own farm up and running can be priced out.
      Basically LVT pushes towards best use of land within the limits set by zoning/planning laws. The corruption incentive for rezoning is greatly reduced as the LVT jumps up along with the rezoning. The flip side is does this push people out of their land? Well yes but so does gentrification if you are a tenant
      If we have farmland currently it should be taxed AS farmland for as long as that is the best use, but if there is a growing city and some of that farmland would really have a better use then it is fair to raise the tax so that the landowner either pays for the privilege of keeping land at a sub optimal use, redevelops or sells up.
      This type of thing already occurs via eminent domain laws, it might be reasonable if the LVT rate is high removing the speculative value uplift from rezoning to have a similar element of compensation for the disruption, but ultimaltely there is always an element of planning and decisions taken for the many that conflict with the desires of the individual. LVT doesn't solve that, but the positives still greatly outweigh the potential negatives, LVT and some degree of upzoning would go a long way, beyond that, as much democratic oversight into decisions as possible.

    • @davidfinch7407
      @davidfinch7407 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Zoning laws are necessary for quality of life. Near where I live is a town that had no zoning laws. So a developer came in and built a quarry right next to housing units. Overnight people had to deal with loud excavation noises and clouds of dust, and there were no laws to prevent it. You can imagine other scenarios: add a stinking rubber tire factory or a slaughterhouse next to your house, and you will see the wisdom of good zoning laws.

    • @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person
      @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person ปีที่แล้ว

      Being a Brazilian where Zoning laws aren't as strict, I cannot fathom Americans have to drive a car to walmart to buy groceries and bread, especially given the absurd prices of gas( Here gas was always expensive unlike in the US) because mom and pops cannot open a little market or a bakery in the suburbs. WTF?
      America would kill urban sprawl in a single strike by allowing mixed zoning and going away with laws enforcing single-family housing, giant lawns and in some places, Gagages that must fit two cars in. Maybe some neighborhoods could keep being sprawling suburbia, but it shouldn't be obligatory for everybody.

    • @davidfinch7407
      @davidfinch7407 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Bronze_Age_Sea_Person Most towns have a variety of zoning districts, some of which allow small business and houses to co-exist. In fact, every town has to provide zoning for every conceivable use, so there are also places that are for "single-family residential" only, where I live. I suppose it might be convenient for some things if a market was built right next door to my house, but I'm glad to not have the constant traffic of people going into shop until late at night or the stink of the dumpster wafting over the fence into my back yard. I do drive to the market, but it's less then a mile away, so I'm not too worried about gas costs for that. So yes, I have a garage and a large back yard with apple trees and black berry vines, and I wouldn't trade it to live on a smaller lot in a commercial zone. Again, without zoning laws you might find yourself living next to a chemical factory and your only solution would be to put up with it or move. To each their own, I guess.

  • @sergiocalderon6325
    @sergiocalderon6325 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    I've seen a very similar tax float around a few municipalities that I've lived or worked in, where vacant buildings would be taxed more than occupied buildings. Particularly to prevent or reduce the amount of vacant businesses since many places simply choose to build on undeveloped land

  • @steelhi5267
    @steelhi5267 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    My main concern is farmers. Since Land Value Tax (LVT) focuses more on the value of land and not the improvements made to the land, LVT would cause farmers to pay more for the land they own. With water dwindling for agriculture due to natural sources running dry, planting more crops in a given field is bad for said crops. And since most farmers already plant fields of crops with max output in mind, a LVT would only hurt those who can’t afford it. Yes they wouldn’t have to pay taxes in other areas but the tax on land would be greater than what they are currently paying. If we had a way to make it so farmers who used the land for farmer or grazing could be taxed based on the output and utilization of said land than I feel this would work better, as they would be taxed less for the land in which they own because they are using it for agricultural purposes.

    • @DavidSartor0
      @DavidSartor0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      LVT would probably be a lot less than property tax for farmers, and anyone else in rural areas.
      The land is worth very little; it's only the crops and whatnot that are valuable.

  • @ericsperling9724
    @ericsperling9724 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    If the United States eliminated all current taxes and replaced it with a land tax, how much tax would be needed per square foot/acre to fund the localities, states and federal government? I currently own a house in the Philadelphia, PA suburbs on 0.43 acres of land so how much tax would I owe per year? Also, would land be taxed equally or would more valuable land (land with oil reserves, fertile agro land, beach front land) be taxed higher than less valuable land (swamps, polluted, desert, rockey, mountainous)? Don't they always say location, location, location? Storefront property on Main Street (e.g. Indian Creek Island Road, FL) might be worth more than backalley property on Crime Street (e.g. Kensington Ave, Philadelphia PA). Malibu beach vs. Death Valley?

  • @kyledaily9532
    @kyledaily9532 2 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    Holy shit I completely forgot about Mr Clifford. You helped me pass my AP macro test 4 years ago!

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      He was a lifesaver for my Econ students

  • @TheJudoJoker
    @TheJudoJoker 2 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    Fun fact, on twitter if you see someone with 🔰 in their username or description, chances are theyre a believer in Georgism. That emoji is actually a symbol of a student driver in Japan, but North Americans and Europeans have repurchased to be a sort of icon of Georgism

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Fascinating stuff. I had no idea!

    • @dabuide18
      @dabuide18 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Depends on the context. If it’s car related than that emoji stands for JDM cars. Which are classic japanese sportscars imported from japan

    • @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person
      @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It can be a patriotic Brazilian, as Green and Yellow are the colors adopted by our fellow patriots.

    • @PsychicAlchemy
      @PsychicAlchemy ปีที่แล้ว

      Green for land, yellow for liberty! Personally I kinda wanted the sunrise-over-the-mountains emoji but this works too. Terror among Japanese drivers is a small price to pay for an important economic movement.

  • @professional.commentator
    @professional.commentator 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fascinating video! Never heard of this man, but he sounds like he was way ahead of his time.

  • @duch11
    @duch11 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    They WAY you calculate the tax is really important.
    I worked at the tax agency in Denmark where we developed a system, to calculate it the taxable value using sooo many different variable's, statistical models etc etc.
    It sounds lovely but it is a flawed approach in my opinion, because it is only trying to theorize the value.
    I feel strongly, that the Swedish model for taxing land ownership is way better.
    It goes like this: "Just tax the revenue generated from selling land. Thereby let the market decide the taxable value."
    This is how the Swedish stabilized the property values, and in many ways reduced land value speculation to a minimum.
    I loved the video though, and thank you for your contribution to help inform us all. ❤

    • @jaredgarbo3679
      @jaredgarbo3679 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Taking the market value of land is the correct approach.

    • @dtexdarkus
      @dtexdarkus 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That would also be taxing the improvements people make to the land though

    • @Timmerdetimmerdetim
      @Timmerdetimmerdetim 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      For me the way to calculate isn't much of a big deal as long as it's not anti-social or doesn't have perverse effect. Can you give such example??

    • @YaPinGYouTu
      @YaPinGYouTu 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It may minimise speculation but it doesn’t minimise hoarding, isn’t it? People should be incentivised to use their land effectively or sell it away

    • @Timmerdetimmerdetim
      @Timmerdetimmerdetim 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@YaPinGYouTu The more you hoard, the more taxes are due. what are you talking about? Are you Taiwanese?

  • @somatia350
    @somatia350 2 ปีที่แล้ว +47

    just a note: I am really appreciative on how you respond to all the comments on this video. It makes the channel very involved and I am happy you talk to us fans a lot so thank you :DD

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Well you deserve it. You all are wonderful. :)

  • @Wilson_AI
    @Wilson_AI ปีที่แล้ว +79

    In theory, this sounds amazing and is very Roman by nature. Issue is, this would disproportionately affect farmers more who have less ideal profit margins. Unless we had a multi-tier or graduated system for this type of taxation based on how it fulfills societal needs based on the tier 1 thru 5 production. Like, tier 1 - natural goods harvest - could have the lowest tax rate and things like tier 3 and up which is all value-added productivity would be taxed more.

    • @theonlyalecazam2947
      @theonlyalecazam2947 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      this could be a great solution to suburban sprawl

    • @yrstrly98
      @yrstrly98 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      you'd just need a updated farm bill effectively, written properly to outline such outliers' needs

    • @louisnall3102
      @louisnall3102 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      It’s based on the value of the land owned, not the amount of land owned. If a farmer owns a lot of land, he still wouldn’t be taxed as much as person who owns a lot of land in a city, because the city land is more valuable.

    • @b.r.207
      @b.r.207 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Farms are already subsidized, I don't see why exemptions wouldn't be put in place (aside from obvious exploitation).

    • @smonge98
      @smonge98 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ⁠@@louisnall3102that’s why he said “disproportionate”. Even the most expansive Silicon Valley properties are ‘only’ 30-50 times as expensive as farmland in rural areas. But a farmer needs thousands of acres to make a living, let alone a revenue comparable to a tech company, that needs virtually no space at all or even shares the land in a high rise.

  • @jrnqproductions9939
    @jrnqproductions9939 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Unintended consequences? In my Australian state, a govt. introduced a tax on unimproved, uncleared land. The result? Token buildings. Subterfuge that wasn't real improvement, but looked like it. Clearing old-growth forests for tax credit. A disaster for the environment and water quality and flood and erosion problems from the cleared land, extinction of species that goes on to this day. So there's gotta be controls to try to mitigate all of that. Otherwise? Like many simple ideas, sure, it's great...until it isn't.

  • @tylukov420
    @tylukov420 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Wow, such a hilarious application of early industrial era ideas on post-industrial society. Literally "let's stop taxating Amazon because it does its business in the cloud and make unimaginabely rich even reachier".

    • @varalderfreyr8438
      @varalderfreyr8438 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Why don't you focus on taxing unearned wealth? Land Value is not earned, so we should tax it. Income is earned, so we should not tax it. Easy.

  • @TheRennDawg
    @TheRennDawg 2 ปีที่แล้ว +73

    Dear. Mr. Beat. On Tuesday I began teaching a once a week class on American History. I taught from the aftermath of the French and Indian War to the First Continental Congress. When I taught about the taxes Britain wanted to impose the parents were supposed when i taught that both sides had a legitimate point. They loved that I was teaching it that way and the kids are excited for the next class.i am hoping that they will love History as much as I do and will start to study it on their own.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Yay! I'm so happy to hear that!

  • @IRdatank
    @IRdatank ปีที่แล้ว +211

    In a void, with no consideration to how the world currently works, this seems wonderful. Here's how I see this developing if it were implemented:
    Gov: Alright. We're going to do this Georgism thing.
    *creates new tax on undeveloped land*
    People: Okay. Now you get rid of the other taxes.
    Gov: *crickets*

    • @a.h.s.3006
      @a.h.s.3006 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      Padme: you will get rid of the other taxes, right?

    • @danielch6662
      @danielch6662 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      We would do it in steps. With the land tax going up every year, and other taxes going down simultaneously. Pass a law to cap the total tax collected at whatever it is now. For the next 3 decades, we would only be shifting the taxes around, from other taxes to this land tax.
      We know how much taxable land there is and their values, and for the first year, we set the rate at 0%. Every year, this will go up by 2%, and by law, income tax would be reduced proportionately to *at least* match this amount.
      For example, say the total value of taxable land (all land owned by somebody that isn't the government) is $10 trillion, and 2% of that is $200b. So we would reduce income tax by $200b. Say the total income tax collected $1.5t. So we know that next year, we would reduce the income tax by 13.3%. Whatever your income tax band, the percentage is reduced slightly to get this $200b target. After just 7 years, income tax is nearly zero. We would reduce it to zero on year #8. Then we get started on corporate taxes. That would go to zero in a year or two. Next we start on sales tax. In about 15-20 years, there are no other tax, except for this land tax.
      At the end of it, we would have to pay about 40% - 50% tax on land. But remember, the tax is on the land, not on the house you have on it. And this would light a fire on everybody's behind to work harder on increasing government efficiency and reducing expenditure.
      Something for the left ... rich people would pay far more tax.
      Something for the right ... small government.

    • @abbytran8514
      @abbytran8514 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      @@danielch6662 And when has the government ever gotten rid of any tax? All they want to do is to increase it, while still spending 10 times as much more.

    • @ProtoPropski
      @ProtoPropski ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@a.h.s.3006
      Gov silently increases other taxes in response

    • @ulrichraymond8372
      @ulrichraymond8372 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Daniel CH In that case all buisness will be conducted on govt land. The strategy only works if all land has the same rules including govt land.

  • @darthvader5802
    @darthvader5802 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    Quite couple questions if I may:
    1) how the tax value is determined? You apply the same fee for an acre in California or Montana or NYC?
    Is the value proportional to the land value ? And if it's this way, how do you determine it?

    • @louisnall3102
      @louisnall3102 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      government agencies are already good at determining the value of property for property taxes, so it would generally follow said format but for land. Since its a land VALUE tax, more valuable land in NYC and San Francisco would be taxed more than farmland in Montana.

    • @witoldschwenke9492
      @witoldschwenke9492 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@louisnall3102no they are not! Its arbitrary and unfair and very expensive to administer but it rarely is critical for society that it is like this because they keep the taxes relatively low

    • @TrueGritSociety
      @TrueGritSociety 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@louisnall3102 😂 you really believe government is good at anything 😂😂😂😂

    • @louisnall3102
      @louisnall3102 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@TrueGritSociety I believe they’re good at collecting taxes.

    • @TrueGritSociety
      @TrueGritSociety 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@louisnall3102 People willingly pay them though so its the peoples fault as much as its the government doing a good job at collecting. But damn you got me on this one.

  • @sigmazeta8
    @sigmazeta8 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +66

    I like the idea for the most part. The main thought I had about it was how we would definitely need better laws protecting the environment because land owners would be incentivized to build on their land.

    • @Doccit
      @Doccit 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Yes and no. We only need so much build-up - the land value tax concentrates this build up onto the most valuable land (the land that will get taxed the most if it is not put to its best use). In this way, the land value tax discourages sprawl and hence protects the environment. We would probably get pockets of great density where the land was super valuable and elsewhere the land would be worthless (and hence, untaxed). The tax, if highly rated, would lead to a radical reduction in the valuation of land because the potential to make money form land by speculating on it would be gone. So outside of cities, unimproved land might go to $0. The buildings on the land would always be worth something, but of course the buildings go untaxed. Economists predict that people living in single-family homes outside of cities, under this system, would probably see a reduction in tax compared to what they pay now. Rural farms would pay hardly anything at all. And with no huge tax bill, there is no incentive to build up. The land value tax is hardest hitting for things like surface parking lots and derelict buildings in city centres.

    • @sigmazeta8
      @sigmazeta8 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@Doccit thanks for the thoughtful reply! I hope you’re right about the environment. Ill do some more research.

    • @HoneyBadger1779
      @HoneyBadger1779 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      More laws equals more problems and more Loopholes which require 10 more laws for every law so to speak. The solution is not more laws, it is incentivization. Ruined land (value) and repeated litigation and tort claims for harm are self-motivating.

    • @bunnyben5607
      @bunnyben5607 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Except that's not how it works. Georgism encourages less land to be used overall, i.e. if you build a residential house in a city with a 50 x 50 foot yard, Georgism seeks to increase the tax on that over something like a slimmer house with 20 x 20 ft of yard. Essentially it disincentivizes sprawl, which is the major destroyer of the environment. If nobody owns a piece of land, it isn't taxed. Essentially what Georgism does is concentrate the amount of land humans use.

    • @geoffsmith82
      @geoffsmith82 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@bunnyben5607 I think it would cause more sprawl, because it would work out cheaper to build further out where the land is cheaper - to get the lower tax. It would would also cause decentralisation of industries... ie silicon valley.

  • @kylejohns2685
    @kylejohns2685 2 ปีที่แล้ว +49

    Having being a georgist for so long, I'm really glad that you're covering this.

    • @Parcian-
      @Parcian- ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Me too

    • @doggo6517
      @doggo6517 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What's your opinion on how to calculate land value?
      Especially in a way that wouldn't be a vast and unjust tax on the rural producers by the urban consumers

    • @ElasticGiraffe
      @ElasticGiraffe ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@doggo6517 Either independent boards to assess market value, with an appeals process, or some have proposed a self-assessment system. Georgists, being decentralists, in general prefer the rental value to be locally assessed and locally collected, but it scales exceptionally well. Localities tax landowners; states tax localities; the federal government taxes states, as it did under the Articles of Confederation.
      With self-assessment, the owner would periodically have to specify the amount at which they would be willing to sell the land (setting aside, of course, the value of structures or other improvements), and they would pay LVT derived from that value.
      Both have drawbacks. But it's important to note that land value is already assessed for property tax extortion, er, collection. It's usually a small percentage of the overall "real estate" value, with the value of improvements being a much larger share of the value used for tax purposes. While LVT is virtually unevadable, the assessment process is one area where corruption could sneak in, but unlike in George's day, we have access to open-source GIS software that can keep track of land values quite well, fairly, and objectively.

  • @idk-zj4cz
    @idk-zj4cz ปีที่แล้ว +38

    There's something really weird about seeing Jacob Clifford outside of economics class. His videos are used a lot.

  • @kharris3352
    @kharris3352 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video!! Thanks for making this as I was a bit confused with the Wikipedia article. Thanks!
    I do wish you mentioned how monopoly was invented to demonstrate georgist principles. Really funny, to me.
    Still awesome vid!

  • @user-ur5ke6wj1i
    @user-ur5ke6wj1i 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    They say people remember important moments in their life well, yet no one even remembers their own birth.

  • @VictorSchmidt
    @VictorSchmidt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    Here in Brasil we have a land value tax (two actually, but one for urban and one for rural properties), too. The problem with the rural one is that the value of the land is self reported, which means the owner vastly underestimate the value of their land so that they won't pay lot's of taxes.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Yeah, it being self-reported is a big problem.

    • @yagomizuma2275
      @yagomizuma2275 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ipva?

    • @schumanhuman
      @schumanhuman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      The only way self assessment can work is if the government or others are able to buy out the land at a figure based on the self reported assessment. That was the method Sun Yat Sen in China proposed, but personally I see it is as too disruptive to property rights and not needed when properly funded assessment processes can do the job, though the concept could work well on things like Intellectual property, these are called Harberger taxes.

    • @lukasg4807
      @lukasg4807 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@schumanhuman that sounds terrible. If you could be involuntarily forced to sell your property to whoever had the money, you wouldn't own anything at all.

    • @schumanhuman
      @schumanhuman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@lukasg4807 I agree it's not workable. l I think if the government threatened to buy you out you would have the option to match their bid rent and pay the higher tax, and if they did buy you out you would get the money for the building value which could then purchase another property. Though that leaves the problem of whether the building assessment process is accurate, in fact it's usually harder to assess than land value so it's not really a sensible system all round, for housing at least, but has potential for IP.
      It's better to just get good land asssesments and tax away most of the excess rent, having a decent rate of land tax actually would limit price volatility and in turn create tax stability, currently because house prices are spiking eveyone in the US's property taxes are too, creating demands for it to be lowered which would in turn raise property values and make the instability and bubble worse.

  • @ASMacman
    @ASMacman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +129

    Georgist here! AMA I just wanted to pop in to say that the "single tax" is considered by most Georgists that I know to be an poor platform in modern times. Of course a land value tax is still considered to be the *best* option but not the *only* option. Most of us support income taxes (with a high exemption like anything below median income), carbon taxes, severance taxes, and extreme wealth taxes (because, let's face it, you can't get extremely wealthy without capturing a lot of economic rents). My cabal of Georgists in California are extra frustrated by the fact that a land value tax is effectively ILLEGAL here! So we look for alternative forms of land value capture for public good: real estate transfer taxes, mixed income social housing (rent is the tax that high income households are very willing to pay!), land value increment taxes, special assessment districts to fund public services and transit, no free parking (see Donald Shoup), municipal land trusts, and others. And of course a universal basic income. Most of us are YIMBYs that also support land use reform to allow more housing - it increases land value but also creates much needed housing which is a social good! There are some other Georgists that have a more NIMBY perspective and think it's better to *reduce* land value for some reason. We consider them to be heretics. LOL.
    There are all sorts of "natural opportunities" that can be sources of public revenue that you might not have considered, like electromagnetic spectrum (key to modern wireless telecommunications) and orbits around the earth (as close to a "parcel" of land as you can get in outer space) which is quickly becoming privatized. There are also some cool things that this video didn't touch on like the ATCOR principle (All Taxes Come Out of Rent) which theorizes that all other types of taxes have the effect of reducing land value and that removing them makes land value increase which creates more revenue from land value tax. There's also the idea that public investments in infrastructure increases land value - this is why urban land in big cities is so valuable - lots of high frequency transit, hospitals, schools, and other services.
    Lastly, Mr. Beat talked about the impact that the automobile had on the 20th century and rightly concluded that it allowed people to access land that was further away. The California Georgist Mark Mollineaux (host of the podcast "The Henry George Program") talks about this *a lot*. Basically this new form of personal transportation made more land more accessible to more people in less time! It increased the potential productivity of marginal land where there were more land owners who could compete on price and this came in the form of decades of suburban sprawl! But now in the 21st century we are beginning to see the limits of this: even land in the distant suburbs are becoming unaffordable to most people and you then need to spend hours commuting each day, not to mention housing in inner suburbs and central cities where shorter commute times and more amenities comes at a higher price (a price that more people are willing to pay, I might add!). Like the creator mentioned, this is the reason why we think Georgism has become more popular among young people over the past several years.

    • @ASMacman
      @ASMacman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      More on Social Housing: we're big fans of the style of social housing in Singapore, Austria, and Finland. We support the California Social Housing act which is making its way through the state legislature right now! Call your state senator and tell them to support Assembly Bill 2053!

    • @nunyabidness6651
      @nunyabidness6651 2 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      "Most of us support income taxes"
      You couldn't be more wrong about this and I would thank you not to speak for all Georgists, most would really only support pigovian taxes that target negative externalities, not taxes that harm labor and investment.

    • @legoboy468
      @legoboy468 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I’m a social Democrat, but the more I learn about it the more I’m interested in it. Are there any resources to learn more about the policies you’ve talked about?

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      What are your thoughts on the economist who said that a single, land value tax could theoretically provide 1/3 of a country's GDP?

    • @cauyawolfe4724
      @cauyawolfe4724 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ASMacman Excuse me, I'm very curious as to how Georgist will choose what land to tax. As more of an Distributist myself with the view that government revenue should only be off the basis of charitable donations or with certain functions just straight up replaced by charitable initiatives the huge problem I have with Georgism is that it is essentially taxing the idea of wealth, money that does not actually exist, a flat tax of sorts. Like yes according to the theory of rent land value rises but Goerge himself says that just because the land appreciates does not mean it is productive or useful. But I am also aware he said that land being productive will make it more valuable. My question to you is will you only tax productive land because if so that is basically just a corporate tax and if you will tax all land how will you avoid taxing smallholders who just want to do nothing with their own land? Will this only stop at land or will this expand to investment vehicles like stocks and precious metals? What if the government over relies on this tax like how Texas does with it's property taxes? If you only plan to tax when the land is sold what if no one sells their land? Will that really be enough money to conduct the business of state with? Why not tax regular margin trades? That money is also unearned

  • @Finneagan
    @Finneagan 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Property tax is the WORST kind of tax. All land is effectively owned by the government when it taxed annually. Not only do you have to pay an exorbant sum to purchase it but you also have to pay rent to the government for the "priviledge" of living on the land that you own.

    • @talideon
      @talideon 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It's not a property tax, mind, at least not in the sense you might be thinking of.

  • @STho205
    @STho205 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I grew up studying George, Single Tax and the various turn of the century experiments. I lived in one of those experiments: Fairhope Alabama with the Single Tax Colony founded in 1894, purchasing collective land on Mobile Bay later that year.
    Henry George is class credit in the local university, and reading Progress and Poverty is required to join Single Tax and aquire a parcel.
    I do however own a *deeded home* built prior to 1894 in the middle of the colony property and refuse to join the club....and I have been asked, often.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Oddly I didn't see this presentation for a year. It is very well done.
      You are right that the radical progressives went further and further toward Marxism and even protoFascism around 1910 and Henry just wasn't angry enough to justify riots and revolution to steal land and production from The Man....
      He was in fact a socialist in the opposite vein of Marx. A man that valued individual property use, individualism in production and did not support government taking their cut in any industry that man created.
      Where's the fun in that if you are an angry identity victim with a torch and a club.

  • @awesomesauce980
    @awesomesauce980 ปีที่แล้ว +49

    "Which is why it will never happen."
    What a great and inspiring idea to be crushed by such a depressing and crippling message instead of offering ideas on how to bring it about. Truly is it any wonder it isn't more widespread.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Political nihilism may be self-defeating but you’d be doing a disservice to not point out the landowner lobby, 66% of which are homeowners. Although they’d only be disadvantaged for inefficiency and costing society, they’d trade for a system where they hold advantages they don’t earn and don’t deserve for one where they don’t hold any advantages.

    • @ElasticGiraffe
      @ElasticGiraffe ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@wildfire9280 Corporate landed interests making a fortune in market-distorting real estate speculation would convince landowners that we're coming for their generational family farms and suburban homes with white picket fences. The truth is that the vast majority of residents in both categories would end up paying far less in taxes overall.

    • @kylegonewild
      @kylegonewild 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ElasticGiraffe Good luck convincing the average resident homeowner that a higher tax on their land would be offset by the removal of shit like income tax and sales tax. Honestly, sales tax might be the easiest to argue for if you approached it from the viewpoint of removing currency denominations that no longer have meaningful purchasing power and smoothing out the everyday experience of local commerce. If someone pitched LVT to me and the only thing they said to convince me was "imagine removing sales tax and now all purchases will always be divisible by 5" I would jump on board.

  • @skeletonkeysproductionskp
    @skeletonkeysproductionskp ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Great video, I did this for my dissertation many years ago, wish more people knew about LVT, so thanks for promoting it!!!

  • @xenomorphbiologist-xx1214
    @xenomorphbiologist-xx1214 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    “The supply of land is fixed”
    *Not till we invade Greenland*

  • @samcrawford9996
    @samcrawford9996 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This would increase medium term gains but ultimately it devalues natural areas and marginal agricultural land. This land supports resources that are ancillary to agriculture (such as pollinators, pest predators, decomposers, water filtration, minerals, etc.) and loss of those resources would be catastrophic.

    • @DavidSartor0
      @DavidSartor0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That land has extremely low land value, so building on it isn't much incentivized.
      Anyway, couldn't the farmers just buy the land?

  • @CoughSyrup
    @CoughSyrup ปีที่แล้ว +91

    Well the most immediate problem I see with a land value tax is it would seem to incentivize developing every inch of undeveloped land. There is value in having open spaces and undeveloped land. And nothing says that it would wind up with many more people being land owners. Indeed, it still wouldn't stop supply and demand from increasing the value of undeveloped land as it became more and more scarce, likely pricing out all but the most wealthy from obtaining unscarred, virgin land.
    Its hard to say, though. The dynamic are many and varied. Perhaps some game theory modeling might help answer some of these questions, find stable equilibrium points and find loopholes or obvious exploits that would need to be discouraged (through regulation). And of course, that would not account for the interplay of dynamics we didn't think to write rules for.

    • @gwentarinokripperinolkjdsf683
      @gwentarinokripperinolkjdsf683 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      It would not be that bad if you could give your land to the government and write it off as a loss

    • @Wooooocas
      @Wooooocas ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@gwentarinokripperinolkjdsf683 I was about to suggest the same thing, why would the local government (on city/county levels) be exempt from such system? They would need to invest money gained from taxes to keep up parks, maintain nature reserves or other significant locations, maintain squares and roads, it's all a delicate balance. Furthermore not every land is suitable for blind development, factories are usually built in strategic locations, where the balance in between proximity to workers, logistics needs of the materials coming in (e.g.: sources of raw materials, such as wood/water) and produce going out for distribution.
      It is of course a complex issue and some balancing would be required, yet it does seem to be the best approach yet.

    • @rjframe4410
      @rjframe4410 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      a park is land development, as is a wildlife preserve, etc..some land development is simply leaving it open and protecting it for people to enjoy...IE conservation.

    • @SantaMuerte1813
      @SantaMuerte1813 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@rjframe4410 following that logic couldn't any land speculator just claim their undeveloped land to be a nature reserve to circumvent the land value tax?

    • @rjframe4410
      @rjframe4410 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@SantaMuerte1813 Youd have to have criteria they would have to meet.

  • @mattjones354
    @mattjones354 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    There’s a family where I live in Florida that’s owned and sold land for the last 100+ years. They still own 60% of the land

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      So you're saying they would LOVE a land value tax???

    • @mattjones354
      @mattjones354 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@iammrbeat absolutely lol. They’re riding high right now with housing prices. If you own land in Florida right now you’re basically financially set for life

    • @stevengordon3271
      @stevengordon3271 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mattjones354 They might be set for your life, but their grandchildren will be under water (both financially and literally).

  • @DavidThomas005
    @DavidThomas005 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    love it. definitely a shit ton of loopholes that need fixing, but its a great concept.

    • @DavidSartor0
      @DavidSartor0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Examples?