1st Edition

Land-Value Taxation The Equitable Source of Public Finance

By K.C. Wenzer Copyright 1999
    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    A distinguished interdisciplinary group of scholars examines the merits and shortcomings of Land-Value taxation, and how it compares and contrasts with the conventional property tax. The latter is shown as deterring enterprise to the detriment of employment and as pushing up the cost of improving property with inflationary consequences. The former, with evidence from places where it is already in use, is shown to encourage optimum land use, foster employment, and prevent urban sprawl.

    Chapter 1 Some Reasons That Americans Do Not Listen to Henry George, Kenneth C. Wenzer; Chapter 2 A Modern Theory of Land-Value Taxation, William Vickrey; Chapter 3 Simplification, Progression, and a Level Playing Field, William Vickrey; Chapter 4 Henry George, Economies of Scale, and Land Taxation, William Vickrey; Chapter 5 Propositions Relating to Site-Value Taxation, William Vickrey; Chapter 6 Land Speculation and Land-Value Taxation, Harry Gunnison Brown; Chapter 7 Tax Reform to Release Land, Mason Gaffney; Chapter 8 Fundamental and Feasible Improvements of Property Taxation, C. Lowell Harriss; Chapter 9 Taxing Land Is Better than Neutral: Land Taxes, Land Speculation, and the Timing of Development, T. Nicolaus Tideman; Chapter 10 Interest Originating from Invested Rent: Social or Private?, Robert V. Andelson; Chapter 11 Henry George: A Celebration of Land and Labor, Thomas R. West; Chapter 12 The Rise of the British Land-Taxing Movement: How It All Began, Roy Douglas; Chapter 13 Comments on the Problem of Public Revenue, Damon J. Gross; Chapter 14 The Ethics of Rent, Fred E. Foldvary; Chapter 15 Land-Value Taxation and Ecological-Tax Reform, Hanno T. Beck; Chapter 16 Psychological Perspective on the Land-Value Tax, Herbert Barry III; Chapter 17 Pennsylvania Farmers and the Split-Rate Tax, Alanna Hartzok; Chapter 18 In Defense of the Two-Rate Property Tax, Vernon I. Saunders; Chapter 19 Why Tax Land?, Godfrey R.A. Dunkley; Chapter 20 The Single-Tax Fiscal System, Jerome F. Heavey;

    Biography

    Kenneth C. Wenzer