TulliusCicero 2 days ago

> Not only does it contradict the received wisdom from the YIMBY movement that community input is bad actually

Weird snipe. YIMBYs are certainly skeptical of some kinds of community input, but that doesn't mean they're opposed to all community input or control of everything.

  • roenxi 2 days ago

    It might be more proper to deduce that community vetos are a bad idea although the practicalities of that are complex. I can imagine a situation, for example, where a community bans running a business from a residence and accidentally wiped out a major tech company from being founded. In fact, I suspect that probably did happen in the 90s although for obvious reasons it is impossible to prove.

    We've seen a huge amount of economic success from allowing talented motivated people to do what they think is a good idea without developing a consensus on the proper course of action. That probably scales down into to the small too. Progress depends on letting outliers happen.

    • chii 2 days ago

      > where a community bans running a business from a residence and accidentally wiped out a major tech company from being founded.

      the benefits of the business goes to the private person running the business from their residence.

      But the externalities falls to the community (or at least, shared by the community).

      Therefore, a community wanting to ban a business from a residence is very valid imho.

      However, if the business could either prove there are no externalities, or compensate for it in some way, then there should be room for negotiation, rather than a straight outright ban.

      • strken 2 days ago

        I would suggest that in a lot of cases, e.g. "where does the local slaughterhouse go?" or "should we allow small, affordable apartments for poor people?", there are also significant positive externalities...except, if you live in the area, the benefits don't outweigh the costs. That's what gives NIMBYism its name: the proverbial NIMBY likes to buy a steak dinner on Friday night, provided the cows aren't slaughtered nor the workers housed in their backyard.

        Therefore, a community wanting to ban a business from residence is the kind of problem that can only be dealt with from a higher level of government, which can distribute negative and positive externalities in a more-or-less even way. It is absolutely not "valid", on the assumption that valid means permissible, for a community to defect on its share of the negative externalities while still taking in the positive externalities from the rest of the country.

        • mistrial9 a day ago

          > "where does the local slaughterhouse go?" or "should we allow small, affordable apartments for poor people?"

          Freudian

          • strken 6 hours ago

            That's a deliberate combination of an "undesirable" business and its workers, not some accidental slip-up to be psychoanalysed by an Austrian pervert.

        • MichaelZuo a day ago

          Yeah I’ve never seen an argument that credibly analyzed all positive and negative externalities.

          There’s just a blind assumption that it’s net positive for 100% of the population within a certain area, without any solid basis whatsoever.

      • Jensson 2 days ago

        > the benefits of the business goes to the private person running the business from their residence.

        Typically a business sells services enjoyed by the community. A grocery store shortens the time to buy food and so on.

        • chii 20 hours ago

          > A grocery store shortens the time to buy food and so on.

          a non-patron of the store still incurs the externalized cost of a store (such as increased traffic, noise, etc). A patron of said store has benefits which offsets those externalized costs, but not for the non-patrons.

      • rcpt a day ago

        > the benefits of the business goes to the private person running the business from their residence.

        Throughout my life I have benefited from the fact that I live in a place with successful businesses and a strong economy.

      • charcircuit 2 days ago

        >the benefits of the business goes to the private person

        It's not 0 sum. Someone else, potentially from the community, also gets value in exchange.

        • giantg2 a day ago

          And nobody has stated the obvious but taxes from that business go back to the community too.

        • chii 2 days ago

          that's why i call the cost an externality.

          A business profiting off making goods/services for a community is good and all, but can still produce externalities, for which everyone, including those who _didnt_ participate in the business transactions, would pay.

          • roenxi 2 days ago

            Or benefit from. Externalities can be positive or negative. The median business has net positive externalities.

            • chii a day ago

              positive externalities are charities, or non-profits at least.

              There are zero private businesses which generate positive externalities that they do not charge money for (and if they did, then it's no longer an externality). To do so would mean they leave money on the table! They can only shed negative externalities.

              • waldothedog a day ago

                I’d suggest cafe seating as a positive externality. The people eating are paying for the food, and table. But passersby and neighbors are gaining eyes on the street, the prospective social interactions, etc. The foot traffic might also be enough for another small business to consider open, and thus begin maintaining the store front and street. These things have utility to people who are not paying to eat or drink at the cafe.

              • dmurray a day ago

                > To do so would mean they leave money on the table!

                Generally it means that they can't capture the full value they add.

                If I have a business installing domestic solar panels, I can capture the economic benefit to a homeowner of getting cheaper electricity, but not the broader impact of helping to decarbonise the grid.

                (There might be a subsidy for this business where you live, but that's irrelevant: in principle a business like this can exist and be profitable without capturing all of the value it creates).

              • Panzer04 a day ago

                That's not at all how it works.

                A trade takes place when both buyer and seller feels they gain something from the transaction. In general neither side captures all the surplus value, if they did the trade would not happen.

    • giantg2 a day ago

      Community vetos is essentially all of zoning - a set of rules deterimed indirectly through voting to prescribe what cannot be done.

      The home business example is kind of a red herring. All the zoning I've ever seen does allow for home businesses with a few restrictions or requirements to prevent things like overwhelmed parking.

  • morsecodist a day ago

    It's such a weird comment that has nothing to do with the rest of the article. The YIMBY movement is concerned with people saying no to housing, it doesn't say anything about community input on assessment or anything else. It seems like the author has some sort of ax to grind.

    • larsiusprime a day ago

      What ax? I’m the author and a YIMBY. Read the linked article, that’s the exact title of it, and I largely agree with it! I wrote that line because it contradicted the expectations of a movement I myself belong to, which I found surprising.

      • morsecodist a day ago

        Thanks for replying! I liked the article overall. I guess I read into something that wasn't really there.

      • quantified a day ago

        What does YIMBY have to do with valuing land? I was under the impression that N/YIMBY was about whether projects get done, not land valuation.

      • dejobaan a day ago

        Yeah, Lars isn't really the axe grindy type—I think the tone isn't meant to be negative here.

  • larsiusprime a day ago

    I’m the author and a YIMBY for the record and it’s not meant as a snipe. The link is an article by that exact same title by Jerusalem Demsas

  • rcpt 2 days ago

    The linked article by Jerusalem Demas is worth reading.

    And, yeah, community input is bad.

    • throw0101d a day ago
      • rcpt a day ago

        Community input is bad. Maybe in the 50s things were different.

        But that was a long time ago and the pendulum has swung too far in the opposite direction. Robert Moses could not build today. Nobody can build today. Largely because we have given neighborhood busybodies veto power over all decisions.

        It's a disservice to the people when they democratically vote for something like a high speed rail and then never get it because the voices of local property owners matter more than that of the population.

        • TulliusCicero a day ago

          > Largely because we have given neighborhood busybodies veto power over all decisions.

          This is the real problem. There are forms of community input that are fine, but if you let local neighborhood councils veto any kind of building they don't like, they'll do just that.

    • TulliusCicero a day ago

      > community input is bad

      Community input is bad when it leads to bad results. Kind of a tautology, but my point is just that you can have good community input, it does happen, even if, yes, the general 'local' culture in the US tends to lend itself to NIMBYism.

    • snovv_crash 2 days ago

      It's an incentives issue, not a community input issue.

      If the only value you are able to hold onto is the development you do yourself, then you aren't going to block your neighbours from building up their property.

      • rcpt a day ago

        Members of the community have incentives to prevent high speed rail and apartment towers being built near them. The general population has incentives to build high speed and apartment towers in those neighborhoods.

        But, because of community input, the voice of local busybodies is louder than that of the general population. It is a a disservice to democracy and prevents our governments from functioning in a way that serves the people.

      • username332211 2 days ago

        Incentives have nothing to do with it. Until the community recognizes that other people have rights and that rights are rights precisely because you need no "community input" (which is an euphemism for "political interference") in order to exercise them, the results will be the same.

        While developing a piece of real estate can cause a good deal of damage to the character of a community, ideas are much more dangerous in that regard.

        Why is it then, that we allow for unscrupulous capitalists to disseminate ideas freely? Why isn't there "community input" into the things newspapers are allowed to publish?

        • immibis a day ago

          incentives have everything to do with it and you're describing incentives while saying you're not

  • typewithrhythm 2 days ago

    There seems to be a growing gap between the people who define "community" as the group of people who live in and wish to direct the changes in the area they are in. And the people who define community as the group who receives the benefits of government intervention.

    YIMBYs is a silly term, since its usually a developers talking about forcing changes in someone else's neighbourhood. Considering the input they like, it's only from the second definition of community, notably people not currently in an area, or standing to endure the downsides.

    • morsecodist a day ago

      The idea behind the YIMBY movement is not that community input is bad it's that the community input process structurally encourages input only from people who don't like the project. The point of YIMBY activism is to show up in your own community (your back yard if you will) to say that you do want housing.

      • giantg2 a day ago

        The main problem is that many people do want things, until those things present a negative impact to them personally. Yes, build housing, but do it the next street over. I don't personally know anyone who wants an apartment building or trailer park next to their single family home. The real point of zoning should be to group those types of housing together, but it seems many cities are too fragmented, not to mention that consumer preference is strongly aligned with SFH ownership.

        • morsecodist a day ago

          I agree that people want things in theory but aren't willing support the policies necessary but that's why we need a movement to help change that.

          Also I think it's important to consider what we call a community. We can't consider every single block a community, a community is a town or even a metro area. They use shared water, to to shared schools, and they need to make decisions together because these things are interconnected.

          Is there a genuine market preference for single family home ownership? I'm sure some people prefer to live that way especially because it allows you to take advantage of the ample subsidies we give single family home ownership. But if there was a preference for it we wouldn't need to artificially restrict people's ability to redevelop them into multi family homes. No one would choose to live in them so no one would build them.

          • giantg2 a day ago

            "We can't consider every single block a community, a community is a town or even a metro area."

            And that's how you end up with the interstate cutting off the poor/black section of town from the rest. Of course there are different levels of community, but there tends to be some out-group that gets the short stick. If every neighborhood says no to new section 8 housing, where does it go?

            Yeah, preferences vary by demographic and market, but overall, 65% of people want a SFH and the average preferred size has increased continuously over the past few generations.

            The restiction isn't that people don't want to live there. The restriction is because you're intermingling the people who want SFH lifestyle with people who want multi-family home lifestyle. Of course the SFH current residents are concerned about the potential issues caused by neighbor renters, parking, etc. Even SFH rental properties are similarly looked down on due to the common problems that some tenants cause (noise, lack of respect for property, etc).

            • morsecodist a day ago

              > And that's how you end up with the interstate cutting off the poor/black section of town from the rest.

              It is the exact opposite. Fighting this sort of thing is exactly why I want to get involved. The reason that these projects are put in poorer, less white areas is because we give small groups of individuals (sometimes even one individual if they are willing to file a lawsuit) veto power over projects provided they have the time and resources to use these levers. So people build projects through poorer less white areas because these areas often don't have the time or resources to fight back. In my town the plans were to build two wide fast arterial roads, one through the rich neighborhood and one through the poor immigrant neighborhood. Guess which one had a successful campaign to shut it down?

              The whole concept of zoning was created, not to concentrate uses as you say but to enforce racial segregation and horde wealth among land owners.

              > If every neighborhood says no to new section 8 housing, where does it go?

              Exactly! We do have this happen because of this hyper-specific veto levers so we are left with section 8 housing pushed to the worst parts of towns.

              People want a single family home but is it because they want the shape or because society is arranged such that it is functionally the only way for the middle class to build wealth and feel a sense of housing stability? And would they still want it if the subsidies were removed and they had to internalize the costs? I am sure that some people really do want it, probably a lot but it seems strange to use that as a reason to put your thumb on the scales.

              I get that people are concerned but I feel like all of society is negotiating things like this. Some people feel uncomfortable seeing people with piercings or tattoos, should we ban them or restrict the places they should go? Everything is a trade off but I don't feel good treating certain types of people like they are toxic waste that needs to be contained.

              • giantg2 a day ago

                "It is the exact opposite."

                Not considering each neighborhood is how we get here. If you treat the city as a whole as a community, you lose the granularity and it ends up as you describe - the rich veto in their area.

                But what is your solution? The section 8 housing or other universally unpopular projects have go somewhere. Do you think the SFH owners in the poor part of town want it in their backyard? It has to go somewhere. It's not about containing people like toxic waste. It's about existing individuals not wanting to deal with a reduction in their estavlished quality of life over statistically founded concerns (not appearence related but project specific, such as traffc fatalies, noise, etc).

                "People want a single family home but is it because they want the shape or because society is arranged such that it is functionally the only way for the middle class to build wealth and feel a sense of housing stability?"

                Does it matter? Is there a solution that would make a difference? For most people, this isn't really building wealth because you need to live somewhere, so that wealth isn't available to use. From my experiences and talking with others, it is mostly because of the stability, freedom, and not having to deal with bad neighbors as closely. I'm not sure what costs you are referring to that wouldn't apply to other types of housing. The only real subsidy homeowners get would be the property tax deduction. Maybe some developers worked out deals that indirectly benefited homeowners, but so too for the apartments. Where I'm at, you have to pay to install utilities from the street, pay taxes to support the infrastructure, etc. In fact, SFHs tend to pay more taxes than condos and apartments, subsidizing the schools and other property funded programs.

                • morsecodist a day ago

                  > Not considering each neighborhood is how we get here

                  I am not saying we shouldn't consider each area as important I just don't think we should structure policy so tiny areas are incentivized to fight each other and the loser is where everything "bad" gets built. Also I pointed to a clear mechanism by which this sort of thing leads to inequitable outcomes, what part of that do you disagree with?

                  > But what is your solution? The section 8 housing or other universally unpopular projects have go somewhere. Do you think the SFH owners in the poor part of town want it in their backyard?

                  I feel like I have a solution here and you haven't proposed one. My point is that we should be more permissive with where we build affordable housing, including and especially in more exclusive areas. What is your solution?

                  I think towns or metro areas should come together, decide what they want for the region together, turn that into a set of rules that will bring about those outcomes, and then stick to those rules. If there are problems with the rules they can be revisited but not by making special exceptions for each individual project. I want to get close to John Rawls' veil of ignorance where people are setting rules based on what they think is fair and not based on their own interests. Obviously, it is impossible to achieve this ideal but I think a higher level conversation is more conducive to this kind of decision making.

                  > Does it matter?

                  It totally matters because if it is the result of policy then it is something we can change. There are numerous costs. Yes the individual needs to pay for utility hookup but in general water systems and roads are more expensive per housing unit if each segment of shared infrastructure serves fewer people. Zoning policy in general increases the supply of single family homes relative to multi family homes, decreasing their cost. 30 year mortgages are guaranteed by the government and home appreciation gives home owners a huge tax exemption when they sell their home. These apply to condos as well but loans are difficult to get for some forms of multi-family housing and they still put their thumb on the scales in favor of home owners at the expense of renters who are much more likely to live in multi-family housing.

                  • giantg2 a day ago

                    "I am not saying we shouldn't consider each area as important I just don't think we should structure policy so tiny areas are incentivized to fight each other and the loser is where everything "bad" gets built."

                    I'm not disagreeing with the result. What is the solution to the factions not fighting? I haven't heard one so far, so I'm disagreeing with your stated cause of it.

                    "My point is that we should be more permissive with where we build affordable housing, including and especially in more exclusive areas."

                    That's not a solution because there's no path to achieving it and ignores the established legal processes, such as appeals, that society has decided are fair. As you've pointed out, the exclusive areas fight it. My solution isn't worth going over in detail again, but has been raised in similar discussions on here. Basically, these problems are the result of population distribution. Creating incentives to repopulate and employ shrinking cities will provide the best overall results through economic reinvigoration of places like the rust belt, take advantage of vacant housing, and have less barriers to development of new housing.

                    "It totally matters because if it is the result of policy then it is something we can change."

                    It wasn't posed as a policy issue. It was posed as an architectural vs stability issue. Stuff like not dealing with bad neighbors or landlords can't be cured with policy anyways. Many utilities charge a connection cost per building, where you have an apartment building paying lower per resident fees than a home. And higher density often requires larger infrastructure, so it's not just cost per stretch.

                    "Zoning policy in general increases the supply of single family homes relative to multi family homes, decreasing their cost."

                    Maybe that's happened in your area, but not around here. Most of the townships around here permit higher density housing in many areas, but it's rarely built. The predominate thing bring built is single family. The zoning does nothing for the cost - the cost of a townhome is significantly cheaper than a single family home. The mortgage guarantee applies to mortgages on other residential property types as well. The tax break when selling also applies to other residential properties like condos and townhouses. I have friends and family who live in condos and townhouse- loans were not difficult to get at all. There's no merit here to support that SFHs are favored over higher density ownership.

                    "they still put their thumb on the scales in favor of home owners at the expense of renters who are much more likely to live in multi-family housing."

                    I'm not sure what you mean here. Many areas even have rent control and rent assistance. I don't see anything being done to benefit home owners at the expense of renters.

              • TulliusCicero a day ago

                Sad that you're being downvoted, because you're exactly right.

                If you give local neighborhoods too much power over what gets built, guess what's gonna happen when the thing has to be built somewhere? That's right, it'll automatically go to whoever has the least political power, whoever will fight it in court the least.

                And who has the least political power, in terms of neighborhoods? We all know the answer.

          • bombcar a day ago

            In areas where you can “build what you want” (eg semi rural or similar) there does seem to be a strong preference for SFH, followed by duplexes (though I rather call them 2x townhomes) followed by rowhouse-like things in 4 or 6 or more, followed by actual big condominium buildings.

            And based on pricing, it seems that most would pick the SFH if they could afford it.

            Of course, in a city with transit and traffic pressure the calculus may change.

            Where I am there’s basically NO redevelopment pressure, as you can find empty land within a mile.

        • TulliusCicero a day ago

          > I don't personally know anyone who wants an apartment building or trailer park next to their single family home.

          I used to live in Munich and I'd be fine with it if it took the form it did there. We lived in a 'quiet neighborhood' in what amounted to a backyard duplex, where in front there was a 6-unit apartment building, with car parking underground. None of the ugly surface lots you see in the states.

      • typewithrhythm a day ago

        It's a bullshit disingenuous media tactic trying to make people outside an area who would benefit from a project appear just as valid as the community members opposing it.

        The fact is it's not actually your backyard just because you've added that label to yourself. (See the DPRK)

    • natmaka 2 days ago

      > "community" as the group of people who live in and wish to direct the changes in the area they are in

      IMHO it is the genuine and most adequate 'community', because the less abusive way to decide is subsidiarity ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsidiarity ). Constraining people who live near the potential site makes them at best suspicious, they will better memorize this constraint than any benefit from other projects.

bobajeff a day ago

It would be great if any place in the world could solve the problem of land speculation and unaffordable housing. So far every country/province around the world even countries without real private land ownership (China) are dealing with the same problems in more of less the same ways.

Maybe Land Value Taxes can solve the problem but I'm beginning to think that these problems are part of our characteristics as a species in ways that might be nearly impossible to successfully solve.

  • ty6853 a day ago

    The biggest land horder in the USA is our government, they own ~25+% of the land and refuse to let people homestead anymore, no matter that much of it is far better than the land I 'homesteaded' for a high bid in literal desert shithole where people are willing to pay lots of money to be in bumfuck nowhere with far worse positioning than much of the BLM and national forest land. It's brilliantly clear people would homestead this land if it were opened and be a significant relief valve.

    Our government literally just sits and sits and vast quantities of land that goes barely used for the lols, while our young people would happily build a shack on a piece of it instead of being relegated to hopelessness.

  • SwtCyber a day ago

    Worth trying, even if it won't be perfect

lordnacho 2 days ago

How do people separate their land value from the development value?

If I see an Apple shop across from a parking lot, it may not be immediately obvious that the land part of the valuations should be similar. I could see the crowd systematically getting this wrong.

Having said that, it's not a damning criticism. I think LVT is a good idea, and people are generally going to know what piece of land is worth more than another. You can then stitch the relative values to some sort of exchange-based anchoring to give your map real dollar values.

I do tend to think a Harberger system makes a lot of sense, though. Maybe something a little bit like:

- Everyone puts a value on their land. We take the total, figure out what percentage needs to be taken, and everyone pays their share of the tax take accordingly.

- Your land is for sale at the price you put, but you can change up the price if you don't want to sell it, and thus pay up extra tax. If you have land set at 1M and someone comes and offers 1M, but you don't want to sell, you can pay the tax at whatever price is too high for him, eg 2M would double your tax. The offer needs to be firm so that you have an actual choice, someone can't just double your tax bill on a whim.

  • giantg2 a day ago

    "Your land is for sale at the price you put, but you can change up the price if you don't want to sell it, and thus pay up extra tax."

    This is how you end up with homeless seniors and disabled people. In my opinion, we shouldn't be working up schemes to force people out of their property. Otherwise you get a developer that comes in and offers you a price you literally can't refuse, pushing the market entirely in favor of the wealthy.

    • WillDaSilva a day ago

      If they sell their land, then presumably they'd receive a substantial windfall with which they could buy a new cheaper place, or rent. If they don't receive a substantial windfall, then the amount they were paying for the LVT must've been low.

      • giantg2 a day ago

        "If they sell their land, then presumably they'd receive a substantial windfall with which they could buy a new cheaper place, or rent."

        Not really. You might be forcing someone out of a 2.5% mortgage into a 6% mortgage on a new property, incurring property transfer taxes, moving costs, loan underwriting, and other fees. You very well could lose money in some situations. Your argument also assumes they are not in the cheapest homes already. If they are, they could be forced out of the geographic area altogether if there are no cheaper homes (and inherently rents will be more expensive than the cheapest mortgages under that system).

      • HDThoreaun a day ago

        Land is worthless under LVT. Its entire revenue stream is captured by the tax, an asset without revenue is definitionally worthless.

    • detourdog a day ago

      My experience is that if a community feels that land is underutilized they will simply tax at the value the community would like to see the land used.

      We had a family farm that had our taxes go from under $4,000 to around $25,0000 in a single year. There was no warning it just happened. We ended up selling the farm in a few years at a value it was being taxed.

      I also think that NIMBY/YIMBY is a strawman argument used to keep the conversation from developing.

      • firejake308 a day ago

        > NIMBY/YIMBY is a strawman argument designed to keep the masses distracted

        Distracted from what? I do in fact view NIMBYs as the biggest roadblock to expansion of housing supply, so I must be part of the distracted masses you're referring to. What am I missing?

        • detourdog a day ago

          I live in a small New England town that definitely faces housing shortages. Our planning board (which I have served on) has occasionally blamed NIMBYism for poorly thought out housing plans. People trying to point out the short sighted thinking are easily dismissed as NIMBYs.

          One example would be allowing mobile homes with HUD certification. Advocates for this idea would argue that it would provide affordable housing which is true if one looks at initial costs of just shelter. The problem is that currently HUD divides their housing standards by geography and north west Massachusetts and Virginia are considered the same region. This causes the insulation requirements are really inadequate for our winters. This was further complicated by mobile home providers supplying air sourced heat pumps as the heating and cooling. The mobile home was then able to marketed as energy efficient. The problem was that heating system would be completely inadequate without intense insulation upgrades.

          The HUD certification comes along with the inability for any local building codes to be enforced. In 2006 as a town we voted to impose "Stretch Codes" for energy efficiency. We voted for that knowing it was going to add at 25% for any building project in town.

          My opinion was that the result would unsustainable electric bills and inadequate heating for our vulnerable population. I believed that we would create a two tiered housing system and our vulnerable population would have inadequate housing. I have nothing against mobile homes and believed we could use mobile homes as housing under the current building codes if they had permanent foundation and were sheathed in an extra layer of insulation.

          I saw the label of NIMBY as dismissive and distracting from actual issues and the conversation never developed.

          I have experience with both air sourced heat pumps and insulation in our area. I have developed an abandoned school into studio apartments that use heat pumps exclusively for heating.

          I find catchy labels like NIMBY and YIMBY close to meaningless and hamper dialog and the development of ideas.

          Thank you for the comment I updated it to sound less conspiratorial.

          Your mileage my vary.

          • bombcar a day ago

            Mobile homes and their ilk are horrible in fifteen billion ways, and it’s not a NIMBY thing.

            Maybe in Southern California they can work but most everywhere else you end up spending lot rent + heating and it’s more than an apartment would be.

            • phil21 a day ago

              They might be horrible but they are far less horrible than nothing.

              Tenement housing is pretty horrible but way better than not being able to afford anything.

              Boarding house rooms are horrible but better than not having a low cost/low commitment option while you figure things out.

              Pretty much all of these existed a generation or two ago where I am from but are now completely gone and outright banned by city code. All done by supposed do-good era who had the best of intentions in mind.

              We have completely removed the bottom rung of housing for anyone who needs to get started or fallen upon hard times. Once you fall you are simply not getting back up again.

              Sometimes perfect is the enemy of good enough for now. I’d much rather live in a trailer home in Minnesota (and have!) than a tent or homeless on the street or in my car. There were very few other options available at the time. Less so now. Dealing with frozen pipes and only being able to afford to marginally heat one bedroom to 50 degrees during a cold spell is luxury to some folks.

            • giantg2 a day ago

              One scenario they're good for is if you own the land and need something to save up for a few years when planning/building your house. Although with the advances in modular and tiny houses, they don't seem to be the best option for that anymore either.

              • bombcar a day ago

                They can work in some cases, but they should almost always be considered temporary housing (as they quickly cost more to maintain than they’re worth).

                Of course some modular homes that have a technical mobile part are a different story.

                Around here the “live while building” is usually done with a garage with a small apartment above it.

            • detourdog a day ago

              The biggest drivers of housing cost from my POV is that our stringent building codes results(due to thorough inspections) in high quality homes.

              The other driver is that there is plenty of affordable(good deals) in neighboring towns 15 minutes aways.

    • rcpt a day ago

      Wait you don't have homeless seniors where you live? Here in California they are everywhere.

      This is despite Prop 13 and all the laws on top of it that are designed to keep seniors in their forever homes. Feels like maybe handouts to real estate investment is not the way to give people a roof over their head.

    • beeflet a day ago

      seniors and disabled people can't just live somewhere cheaper?

      I think they should be pushed out by the wealthy. If you're holding onto residential land in a developing city, and someone wants to build a skyscraper there they should be able to buy you out at a reasonable price. You shouldn't be able to hold land hostage while also paying low property tax

      • giantg2 a day ago

        It sounds like you want to just move the undesirables to a ghetto (in the real sense of the word). Why shouldn't someone be able to buy a home and live there until they die if they can pay reasonable taxes? Redevelop the land as the population turns over instead of marginalizing people.

        "You shouldn't be able to hold land hostage while also paying low property tax"

        What property are you holding hostage that I can liberate from you?

        • beeflet a day ago

          >Why shouldn't someone be able to buy a home and live there until they die if they can pay reasonable taxes?

          Because the taxes aren't reasonable. Land is a limited resource.

          Imagine a regulation that limited factories by taxing them on the amount of smog they produce. Your argument is like saying "old factories should be able to produce smog at the same tax rate as when they started, it's unreasonable to expect companies to just rebuild factories around new technology"

          >What property are you holding hostage that I can liberate from you?

          I don't own any property. But if I did, you would be free to liberate it for a pretty penny.

          Parting with friends is a sadness. A place is only a place.

          • giantg2 a day ago

            "Because the taxes aren't reasonable. Land is a limited resource."

            Taxes seem high to me in my area. Land is a limited resource, but not as limited as you are implying. There is plenty of land in other areas that could be developed. Instead, we have people with a preference for homes in existing areas favoring using the government to force people out.

            Your smog example is completely off base and doesn't represent the way the taxes work in many areas outside of California. My taxes go up every year and will eventually be reassessed for additonal increase. However, that assessment goes up based on reasonable evaluation and not on someone potentially targeting you or your property by bidding it up.

            "I don't own any property."

            I assume you live somewhere. Perhaps you will be forced out when a wealthy company buys up all the rentals and raises rents.

            • bombcar a day ago

              People don’t realize that all property tax levied is paid for … by people.

              If you put a $10m/yr property tax on the local Walmart, that money simply comes from slightly higher prices on everything (or most non-nationally advertised things).

              Landlords aren’t paying property tax out of the goodness of their hearts, they’re paying them out of the rents, and if they go high enough they’ll either raise rents or sell-abandon the building.

              Which may be the goal, after all.

              • giantg2 a day ago

                I think the even more hidden thing is that taxes are more about policy than revenue. If it was just about revenue, then they would tax it at the source - income tax on people and companies. But just imagine the reaction people would have when 50% of their paycheck was gone. They even hid the cost of social security and Medicare by making the employer pay half so it doesn't show on the paycheck. Break it up and people don't add it up and you can use it to control their behavior on different subjects.

                • bombcar a day ago

                  John Marshall - “The power to tax is the power to destroy”

                  Much more now taxes are behavioral rather than income for the government (especially given the deficits). And credits are explicitly so.

                  At least income taxes stop when your income stops. Many others don’t.

      • snarf21 a day ago

        Serious question: What about when you are old? Okay being forced to live in a one room shack in the middle of nowhere just because you are retired?

        • ty6853 a day ago

          I live in the middle of nowhere where lots of people build one room shacks in the desert, because we allow that here. You can build whatever the fuck you want. Some are living in mud huts (yes in the USA).

          They shouldn't be forced to do it, but they seem to love it. You'd be suprised how many people would prefer a one room shack given the option, lots of people don't actually want the kind of houses zoning and codes require in more dystopian parts of the US, they would rather spend that money on leisure or their children, or their own health.

          • BeFlatXIII a day ago

            That's great for everyone who likes asceticism, but what about everyone else?

        • rcpt a day ago

          How about being forced to stay put forever in the same two story 4 bedroom house in a busy job center?

      • ty6853 a day ago

        Implementing Georgism before deregulating land use seems like putting the cart before the horse.

        It's quite likely that once you can legally build a skyscraper on any piece of earth you own, that resorting to a tax extortion fest for old people in desirable areas will seem far more absurd than it already does.

        High land values are in large part because zoning requires oversized land ownership for a token to build a housing unit, creating mass artificial demand. The other piece is in places like some of California the regulatory / licensing / permit costs cost more than it cost me to build my whole house.

        • beeflet a day ago

          Is it putting the cart before the horse? those zoning laws are a result of property owners trying to benefit from the unimproved value of the land by locally restricting the supply of property.

          If you cut off the profit motive by disenfranchising property owners in this respect, the building regulation will return to the level needed for (actual) public safety and wellness (as opposed to just racketeering).

          • HDThoreaun a day ago

            Under LVT there are huge inventive to keeping your land value low. Densifying causes land values to increase so rational actors who dont want to move will oppose density.

            • beeflet a day ago

              If the value of their land is low, you can buy them out for cheap and change the local regulation.

              • bombcar a day ago

                Only if you can force them to sell.

                The world is full of land that is held by sellers who won’t sell it “for what it’s worth” - for any number of reasons.

                Heck, moving hassle alone means you’d need to hit me with a 50% premium to get me to sell my house, because I don’t want to move right now.

            • rcpt a day ago

              You can not control the value of your land.

              • giantg2 a day ago

                Of course you can. You can put all sorts of deed restrictions on it, foster some sort of habitat for protected animals,turn it into a wetland (protected), etc.

      • jjav a day ago

        > seniors and disabled people can't just live somewhere cheaper?

        > I think they should be pushed out by the wealthy.

        This pretty well summarizes why there is so much opposition..

        Seriously? Dump the elderly and disabled on the street to favor the very rich?

  • Aurornis a day ago

    > How do people separate their land value from the development value?

    This was already done in every place I’ve ever lived. The local assessor has rules and algorithms for valuing land and valuing structures for tax purposes.

    Insurers do the same.

    It’s so common that I’m confused about why it’s a sticking point in these conversations. I think a lot of LVT proponents don’t even understand that land is currently taxed in many (most?) places. Switching to a pure LVT would just make the structures free from taxation and redistribute the missing tax revenue on to the pure land value.

    Great for people with big, nice, new houses who would get to shift some of their tax burden to their neighbors with smaller, older, less nice houses on similar land.

  • ajb a day ago

    Improvement value is commonly estimated, eg by insurance companies. Eg, you insure your building for 100k even though the market price was 300k, because it would only take 100k to rebuild it. So you then know that the 'unimproved' value was 200k. (This ignores dilapidations etc that you'd also have to account for).

    • bombcar a day ago

      This often undervalues the land as a side note - because an empty lot is more valuable than the same land under an “undesirable” structure (because demolition comes at a cost) - even if it’s perfectly serviceable.

  • jstanley a day ago

    But just because my land is worth £100k doesn't mean I should be forced to sell the house that is on it for only £100k!

    If you must have that sort of system, there probably ought to be an obligation on the buyer to first pay to have the entire existing structure demolished.

    • ajb a day ago

      That seems a rather pyhrric right. You don't actually get any value from them destroying your house.

      I think the offer is supposed to be on the improved value (IE including the value of the building) but the tax is on the unimproved value, so you do get the value of your house if they buy the land.

      Perhaps more reasonable would be, if we imagine a new Georgist city on undeveloped land, to require that every building is detachable from the land; IE it is attached to its foundations, by twistlocks, like intermodal containers, with the utilities also being supplied via some standardised connector. Not only would you then just be able to move your house to somewhere else, but it would have several other advantages. It would be a universal argument against NIMBYism - if you don't like new infrastructure being built near you, you can just move your house elsewhere. It would make it less disruptive to build new infrastructure anyway, as houses could be moved out of the way instead of being demolished.

      • jstanley a day ago

        The point of the system where you have to accept an offer at your supposed valuation is that it forces accurate valuations.

        If you now say that we need to provide two different valuations (land + structure) but we're only taxed on one, don't you think we'll find that everyone lives in very expensive houses on worthless plots of land?

        • ajb a day ago

          No, because it's much easier to independently value a house

          What are you suggesting as an alternative?

          - Both taxation and offer on the improved value - this is consistent, but it's no longer Georgism so it doesn't solve the problem of how to estimate and tax the unimproved value

          - Both taxation and offer on the unimproved value - this is now unfair to the owner as you're not paying for the value of their house, and also they have the incentive to include the value of the house in the land value

          • jstanley a day ago

            > What are you suggesting as an alternative?

            No mandatory acceptance of offers, land valuation by fiat.

      • beeflet a day ago

        >to require that every building is detachable from the land; IE it is attached to its foundations, by twistlocks, like intermodal containers, with the utilities also being supplied via some standardised connector.

        WHAT? This is ridiculous. What happens if someone buys the land out from under your skyscraper, and you can't afford to move it a couple blocks over? Do you live in a LEGO world?

        • ajb a day ago

          It's a thought experiment, being angry at it doesn't add any value.

    • beeflet a day ago

      >But just because my land is worth £100k doesn't mean I should be forced to sell the house that is on it for only £100k!

      Then you could "value" the land at £200k and pay a higher property tax to secure that preference. In other words, your property is more valuable, to you.

      >If you must have that sort of system, there probably ought to be an obligation on the buyer to first pay to have the entire existing structure demolished.

      I think you are right, which is a problem. Or you could stipulate that all the buildings are demolished before the land bought in this manner is used.

      I think this system would evolve into people overvaluing their land to be between the land and the land+building value, and then keeping a public offer for the land+building value. That strategy would minimize the land-only sales and encourage buyers to buy the entire building instead.

      • jstanley a day ago

        > In other words, your property is more valuable, to you.

        That's fine, but then it becomes a property tax rather than a land value tax.

    • giantg2 a day ago

      You could technically separate the house from the land using separate deeds and deed restrictions. That could create an interesting workaround that would effectively render the value of the land useless for most lots, thus avoiding the taxes.

    • lordnacho a day ago

      Hmm that's a good point actually. Gets hard to separate the land from the stuff on it.

  • pydry a day ago

    The calculation of land value isnt the hard part. There's a good description of how on the wikipedia page.

    The hard part is that its implementation would cause a significant (& possibly violent) backlash from land owners intent on defending their privilege.

    • Aurornis a day ago

      The value of my land is already evaluated separately from the value of my house by my county.

      I already pay a land value tax. I also pay a tax on the house.

      The same goes for commercial properties here.

      Is this really not common? I constantly see internet claims about how it would cause violent uproar from evil land owners if we taxed land value, but as a land owner I can tell you it’s already happening.

      Switching to a full land value tax would just redistribute the taxation entirely on to the land and make the structure tax free. That would be awesome for the people with giant, new construction houses around me but not so good for those of us with smaller, older construction buildings in the same neighborhoods. It would be really bad for the old people living out their final years in their modest old houses which need a lot of repairs (and therefore have low structure grades in the tax system and low structure taxation).

      • pydry a day ago

        >Is this really not common? I constantly see internet claims about how it would cause violent uproar from evil land owners if we taxed land value, but as a land owner I can tell you it’s already happening.

        LVT does exist in several places in the world but it's usually around ~3-5%. Unusually for most taxes, it can be raised probably to almost 100% without any economic ill effects, but the land ownership classes would raise absolute hell.

        This is how their propaganda mouthpieces reacted in the UK at the proposal: https://archive.ph/6gtRC

        >That would be awesome for the people with giant, new construction houses around me but not so good for those of us with smaller, older construction buildings

        Not sure why you feel specifically singled out, but ok.

        It would be most awesome for people living in high density apartments and least awesome for people who live in crappy low density housing in high value areas which ought to be converted to apartments.

        >It would be really bad for the old people living out their final years in their modest old houses which need a lot of repairs (and therefore have low structure grades in the tax system and low structure taxation).

        Only if you pretend that those people can't move, and they would. Those people would just downshift to apartments in response - this used to be a lot more common anyway - my grandmother did this.

        If you want somebody to feel sorry for, though, feel sorry for old people living out their final years in rented accomodation. If you rent, by definition, you have to pay LVT (to a private landlord), and if you can't pay - to the street for you.

  • immibis a day ago

    Let's suppose I have a billion trillion dollars and I hate all people who live in Springfield. Could I just bid ten million on every Springfielder's house and they all get forced to move out with no choice?

    • giantg2 a day ago

      Yeah, imagine pissing off a person and they put a bid in just high enough to raise your taxes but not high enough to make selling worth it.

      • beeflet a day ago

        ideally this would always happen equally everywhere, such that everyone is forced to list an accurate price.

        If you are low-balling the price to save on taxes, you run the risk that someone swoops up your property for cheap.

        • giantg2 a day ago

          This situation isn't about an accurate price. This is an example of how to abuse the process to increase someone's taxes without the intention of buying.

          • beeflet a day ago

            The whole point of this system is price discovery.

            You can't submit bids in this system without the intention of buying, if you have the highest bid you're forced to buy.

            • giantg2 a day ago

              Wealthy people with enough money could still submit offers that are calculated not to be accepted with the fallback being actually accepting.

              • asielen a day ago

                Basically a new variation of SLAPP lawsuits. It puts a ton of power in the hands of wealthy individuals and corporations.

              • avidiax a day ago

                A practical implementation of such a system would allow arbitration by the courts, have limitations such as a minimum bid increment (e.g. 10%), etc.

                If you can demonstrate that the purchase offer is made because of personal animus, or the buyer has no reasonable and specific plans for the property (i.e. the billionaire buying out a small town without a workable business plan), then the courts would overturn it.

                Ultimately, billionaires have lots of ways to mess with someone they don't like. If we don't like that, we should circumscribe what billionaires can do with their power.

                • giantg2 a day ago

                  And it would still be costly. 10% bid increments is vastly different than today and would lead to property inflation. Going to court is costly. There are plenty of examples of how unfair the courts can be when people with lots of money face off with normal people. It wouldn't have to be billionaires. You could even have private equity abusing the system to manipulate the market in their favor.

        • immibis a day ago

          That's fine when it's a megacorp with a team of analysts to pick the best price. Business is cutthroat, and in exchange for a business sometimes getting to win against its competitors, sometimes their competitors also win against them.

          It's not fine for grandma. She doesn't have a team of analysts, she just wants her house. The main criticism of capitalism is that it's bad for the little people. Replacing it with something else that's also bad for the little people isn't really any better.

          You could try to find compromises like locking the family home until death or voluntary sale... then you have extra complications like making it legal for someone to start a small business at their family home without also creating a grey market for people to rent their family homes for other people to start businesses in (or just to live in) and getting the system we already have.

    • lordnacho a day ago

      They'd love that, wouldn't they? You'd have to pay them and I would think ten million is way more than you'd get for your house.

      • giantg2 a day ago

        For $10M? Maybe. But the real scenario is they hire analysts to figure out what price in taxes you can't afford and bid the house price that will force you to sell at the lowest cost to them.

tax 9 hours ago

> Just ask people what the base land value of each location is.

This “step 1” mentioned in the article doesn’t scale, as for example to get enough individual-reported valuation data for each parcel of land that one would have to get an entire community to “vote” (answer) on the land value for each part of their jurisdiction (for example the entire county of San Francisco). For areas outside of one’s jurisdiction (to reduce bias by asking people to vote on land value outside their jurisdiction), the amount of information one has is limited and thus the reporting can be biased. The safest way to get the best valuation of any asset, is to take a playbook from the financial markets for whereby buyers have a direct incentive to best judge the valuation of the asset of any financial instrument for in order to maximize profit from the direct sale of the said asset. However, with the above valuation method cited in the article that there is no direct incentive for people to get correct or incorrect about their answers to land parcel valuations.

Furthermore, the part which LVT doesn’t address well is the valuation adjustments for the property built on the land itself, for example a good Leed certified building with a “good view” versus a run-down building requiring maintenance would have different valuations for which only a property taxation system (based on market value of the property value) will be able to infer. However, overall having a world where built properties on valuable parcels of land can be monopolized, just “seems” wrong.

randallsquared a day ago

I'm pretty close to a geolibertarian, given that it's otherwise hard to allocate uncreated value, but this method of valuation seems really arbitrary. If some outside developer wants to buy a piece of land that the owner would rather not sell for the community-derived price, and both are stubborn, and eventually it's sold for 10x the Somers system price, then the value of that land is (evidently) far above the community consensus. There has to be some way of getting this updated value besides everyone who lives in the area this month spending more weekend afternoons arguing about it.

> That strip is the most valuable piece of real estate in the whole city, a fact anyone who’s lived there for any amount of time knows intuitively. Take a moment and imagine yourself attending such a meeting in your own town, what would your answer to [what the most valuable stretch of street frontage in this city is] be?

I am astonished that the author thinks this is intuitively obvious.

Anyway, some kind of "registering a value for property is the same as putting in an offer to buy/sell that property" is needed to avoid subjective and perceptively unfair valuations.

SwtCyber a day ago

The irony is that this 100-year-old process actually solves some modern challenges

flomo 2 days ago

Back in the 1990s, I lived in the midwest. The state built a freeway through a bunch of cornfields, and long before the road was even done, there were suburban subdivisions sprouting up. My professor points this out, and says this highway had been in the regional plans for 20+ years, and 'capitalists' had bought or optioned all this farm land decades ago. That form of land speculation makes sense to me, but I've never been able to reconcile it with Georgism.

  • bombcar a day ago

    In those cases what I’ve seen is as long as the land stays farm land, it is taxed at a low farmland rate, and the moment that the land is subdivided and sold houses on it it gets taxed at the much higher single-family home rate.

    However, the price to buy the land starts to head towards what it will be worth it developed as soon as the freeway becomes real.

  • SwtCyber a day ago

    Georgists would argue that the rising land value came from public investment (the highway), not private effort, so the unearned gains from speculating on that land should be taxed. The idea isn't to stop people from buying land, just to capture the value society created.

    • euroderf a day ago

      Likewise for subway extensions.

keybored 2 days ago

> As soon as the land of any country has all 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. The wood of the forest, the grass of the field, and all the natural fruits of the earth, which, when land was in common, cost the labourer only the trouble of gathering them, come, even to him, to have an additional price fixed upon them. He must then pay for the licence to gather them; and must give up to the landlord a portion of what his labour either collects or produces. This portion, or, what comes to the same thing, the price of this portion, constitutes the rent of land, and in the price of the greater part of commodities makes a third component part.

Wealth of Nations

scotty79 2 days ago

I think cars and now navigation mess this up a lot. But it could be great for walkable areas in the cities.

twelvechairs 2 days ago

Land valuation is not hard. Its been done for decades in a stable way in places as diverse as Australia, Hong Kong, Hungary and Kenya.

kemotep a day ago

As an advocate for the Single Tax this is a great article explaining a land valuation method I had never heard of before.

This would work locally, maybe even up to the county level but how would we reach a consensus at the State and Federal levels?

Here is a link to a Federal study of land value: https://www.bea.gov/system/files/papers/WP2015-3.pdf

There is roughly 1.4B acres of private property that is worth $21,200B or $14,763/acre on average. At a 100% LVT of this average would generate ~20 Trillion in tax revenue. Giving the Feds 8, States seem to spend a total of around 3 or let’s say 4 to put towards debt payments, and then another 5 for local governments. Leaving 3 trillion to redistribute as a people’s dividend which with something like 150 million tax returns submitted each year would be something like $20k per household/tax payer.

This would 100% cover all costs of the government with a Single Tax. No more sales taxes, capital gains, corporate taxes, etc. And as someone who lives on less than an acre paying a fraction of $14,000 for taxes would be such a massive tax cut for me and most people I know.

Tragically this would cause most land in the US to have zero or negative market value, leading to massive distortions and trillions of dollars of wealth destruction. In addition farms would have onerous tax burdens also destroying them. Leading to them either needing to be nationalized or require significant (90+%) tax breaks.

So completely unrealistic and highly disruptive so will never be adopted. But with this Somner method maybe we could get closer to adopting the Single Tax.

  • adverbly a day ago

    > Tragically this would cause most land in the US to have zero or negative market value, leading to massive distortions and trillions of dollars of wealth destruction

    Would it though? Nothing is actually destroyed. The land is still there so it's basically just a redistribution. Why not issue some bonds to existing land owners or something as compensation? That's what Britain did when they made slavery illegal? It might delay the benefits to the state by a few decades, but well worth it to fix incentives I would think...

    • kemotep a day ago

      If we said an acre of land in New York City is only worth $14,000 and an acre of land in middle of nowhere North Dakota was equally worth $14,000 that it wouldn’t have some kind of distortionary effect?

  • sokoloff a day ago

    Did you just look up the total value of land and assume that that same total amount of value could be assessed as a land-value-tax each year?

    I can’t read your post any other way, but it is so spectacularly unreasonable that I can’t imagine that’s a thing you think is remotely feasible.

    • kemotep a day ago

      You’re reading too much into the half-assed back of the napkin math I used. The simple dumb end I posit is compared to the Somer method in the linked post. The Somer method is night and day. The point is that the numbers add up to fully fund all levels of government with more than enough left over to service debt and payout a dividend. Even a stupidly self-destructive implementation would on paper fund the entire system. But we shouldn’t do it that way, no one would accept it, and it would have second order effects I talk about in the original comment.

      • sokoloff a day ago

        For clarity and avoidance of doubt: you believe there’s a way to raise over $20T each and every single year from land value taxes alone?

        • kemotep a day ago

          No. All levels of governments in the United States spend somewhere around 14 trillion though so we need to look into raising some kind of tax to cover that or make significant cuts or probably more likely both.

          In my opinion a Land Value Tax is the simplest way to raise the most money in the least bad manner and using back of the napkin math, even if it is an order of magnitude off, seems to have the possibility of raising a significant amount of that money while on the surface not being onerous to the average person.

          Certainly the reality is that the vast majority of private land use is for agricultural purposes and would need to have special considerations with regards to a Land tax to avoid destroying that industry.

  • andrepd a day ago

    Land is just one (the most historically significant) of the factors that should be charged a Single Tax. Others are perhaps even more important in a modern economy: natural resources (minerals, water), and crucially externalities in general (pollution, other abstract societal harms).

    • kemotep a day ago

      The Single Tax is just that. And extracting (or not extracting) natural resources off the land would either count towards or against the unimproved land value depending on how we value it in that specific context.

      The second tax you bring up is pigouvian sales taxes and those should absolutely be implemented. They are the second least bad kind of tax.

      But of course the Two Tax Movement is not what Georgism is referred to as.

    • beeflet a day ago

      it's not really a "single tax" then is it?

      I agree but some things like pollution are hard to quantify.

    • AnimalMuppet a day ago

      Yeah. It's not 1900 anymore; value doesn't primarily come from land. So in today's economy, for example, maybe we should tax patents, copyrights, and domain names. These days, those things are more important than land.

protocolture 2 days ago

Georgism always struck me as a method to shift homelessness onto the elderly and enrich removalists.

The absolute ideal method of retirement is home ownership. Its cheap and desirable for the home owner, and it requires the least services provided by the state until things seriously deteriorate. I once met a woman who was being forced out of her home. She bought it when it was behind a naval shipyard covered in rusted warships. The city bought the land off the military, turned it into a lovely park and opened views from her front windows directly to the water. This caused her land valued rates to increase (she said her property had reached 200 times what she paid for it. 30,000 to 6 million. But she also owed quite a decade of rates to the council and wasn't sure what she would have left over) to well beyond what she could afford, and ultimately with only pension for income it became untenable.

I really don't mind development, coming to the old lady and offering her a big payday for her to leave that she takes willingly, replacing her inner city house with higher density. But Land value as a mechanism to forcibly move on the elderly and hand their inner city character homes over to richer people who don't increase housing density is completely ass backwards.

You get stuck in a cycle of paying taxes -> improving services -> improved services increase land value -> increased land value increases taxes. Its absurd. It honestly becomes an optimal strategy to elect local officials who ruin the neighborhood and decrease value.

  • somnic a day ago

    Someone getting forced out of their home in exchange for a few million dollars isn't exactly the most tragic story out there, and increasing tax revenue to pay for better amenities is hardly a bad thing by my reckoning. The aforementioned rich people are a bit less richer, because now they're paying those rates.

    Most plans to implement LVT at scale that I've seen include provisions to increase the rate slowly over years and decades, and allow deferred payments for the elderly upon sale or from their estate because yeah, a lot of people made plans to retire based on the present tax regime. Younger people saving for retirement can plan on putting retirement savings into productive assets rather than land speculation. I'm also not entirely clear on why a pension that pays for everything except housing is fine, but providing housing for the elderly is a problematic level of state intervention.

    • sokoloff a day ago

      For me, the difference is choice. An elderly person voluntarily accepting a multi-million dollar buyout is a wildly positive story (as would any other voluntary conclusion).

      It’s the involuntary “beat it, Grandma!” that people find objectionable.

    • snarf21 a day ago

      I wonder if a scheme where you could "lock in your rates" would work. Instead of just waiting for reassessment or whatever and having no way to know how it will increase in the future or hoping it stays the same for a long time, maybe you could agree to a X% yearly increase and pick how many years. So you lock in 2% increase for the next 20 years. This could be especially nice for the elderly and allow a compromise for tax revenue. Each property owner gets to decide whether to hedge or not. (This would just be for non commercial properties only.) This is just a hair brain idea off the cuff, just thinking out loud.

      • beeflet a day ago

        Perhaps land ownership could be renewed on different time bases, where the longer deeds have higher taxes? For example, you could own a property for 1 year at a lower rate or 10 years at a slightly higher rate, and 20 years at an even higher rate.

        This would allow you to pay a premium for a more stable tax rate. Perhaps you could accomplish this in the private sector through some type of "property tax insurance"?

      • avidiax a day ago

        This is a more reasonable version of California's Prop 13.

        A fairer system would be to allow unaffordable property taxes to be deferred indefinitely, while accruing fair interest, with the property as the collateral. "Unaffordable" would be means tested. When the owner dies or sells the property, the remaining property tax is paid from the sale of the property. This creates the possibility of properties being underwater, however, so there would have to be provisions to call in the property if the ratio gets too bad.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978_California_Proposition_13

    • protocolture a day ago

      >Someone getting forced out of their home in exchange for a few million dollars isn't exactly the most tragic story out there

      Separating someone from the place they had all their kids because they cant afford the tax is pretty bad. Especially when the property hasn't gotten any better. People shouldnt be at the mercy of subjective, third party evaluations of their wealth. This is why progressive taxation waits until gains are realised.

      >Most plans to implement LVT at scale that I've seen include provisions to increase the rate slowly over years and decades

      Never seen this, I always see Georgists lamenting home owners whose land has increased in value as evil and deserving.

      >providing housing for the elderly is a problematic level of state intervention.

      Providing housing for the elderly is fine. But if they are already self sufficient, forcing them into alternate housing is disgusting.

  • kubb 2 days ago

    > The absolute ideal method of retirement is home ownership.

    I'm sorry, but I have to intervene, because this is a stunningly strong claim.

    > Its cheap ... for the home owner

    Homes are unaffordable for most people today, to the point where renting can be more cost effective than buying. Housing consumes a lot of income which acts like a hidden tax - a drain on the economy.

    > it requires the least services provided by the state until things seriously deteriorate

    1) Things deteriorate when people can't afford housing. Labor and services become more expensive. 2) Not requiring the state to be involved is an ideological advantage, not a practical one.

    > But she also owed quite a decade of rates to the council and wasn't sure what she would have left over

    This is an anecdote and as such has limited value, but it's made even less useful by you not knowing the exact sums and percentages. It doesn't justify your sweeping claim in the slightest.

    You also seem to be talking about property tax, not LVT.

    > Land value as a mechanism to forcibly move on the elderly and hand their inner city character homes over to richer people who don't increase housing density is completely ass backwards.

    There's not much wrong with moving for retirement. We don't like to do it, and residential property owners should to some extent (for a number of years) be exempt from land value tax, but the alternative (hoarding valuable land) is much worse.

    > You get stuck in a cycle of paying taxes -> improving services -> improved services increase land value -> increased land value increases taxes.

    Services don't improve just with tax, but with the influx of capital and development to the area, available jobs, etc. You're using an incomplete model to reason about it.

    Some of the other benefits of LVT worth mentioning are that it 1) incentivises owners to use the land productively (density!), 2) discourages land speculation, 3) reduces urban sprawl.

    • adverbly a day ago

      > There's not much wrong with moving for retirement. We don't like to do it, and residential property owners should to some extent (for a number of years) be exempt from land value tax, but the alternative (hoarding valuable land) is much worse.

      Totally agree. People need to live where jobs are! That's the main determinant of where you live!

      When you're retired, you don't need to commute any more so forcing others to have to live further away and commute past you is a large burden being placed on productivity. We want to tax unproductive behavior so this is an entirely reasonable thing to me. All things being equal, retired people should be incentivized to move when they retire!

      • PopAlongKid a day ago

        >People need to live where jobs are! That's the main determinant of where you live!

        Retired people need to live where shopping, health resources, and their offspring (if any) are.

        • avidiax a day ago

          > Retired people need to live where shopping, health resources, and their offspring are.

          Their offspring can't afford to live near them, and can't afford the time to visit with such long commutes.

          Maybe if retired people moved, instead of staying where their job was 30 years ago, their kids could visit, and they could even afford more healthcare.

      • immibis a day ago

        People also like stability and it's bad to make people's lives unstable without a really really good reason. Kicking elderly people out of their homes to save a few minutes commute for each other person doesn't seem like a good exchange. I'm sure you can come up with utility numbers that make it look good, but it still seems bad.

        • adverbly a day ago

          > People also like stability

          People liking something isn't how we should determine our incentive structure. People like gambling and smoking, but that doesn't mean they're good!

          If something is a drain on productivity, we want less of it. In fact, this very argument is why LVT is so awesome! You can tax land without reducing its supply meaning it has zero deadweight loss! This is why economists love LVT, and why many call it the "least bad tax".

          • immibis 14 hours ago

            If all you want is productivity, raise food prices until the poor die of starvation.

    • sokoloff a day ago

      > Homes are unaffordable for most people today, to the point where renting can be more cost effective than buying.

      Around 65% of housing is owner-occupied in the US. That doesn’t entirely preclude it from being “unaffordable for most people” but it is evidence against that claim.

      • kubb a day ago

        The U.S. Census Bureau's American Housing Survey (AHS) collects data on when owner-occupiers moved into their homes [1].

        Out of 86 million owner-occupied homes, almost 80% (68.3 million) were moved into before 2019, before the affordability crisis. The number of owner-occupied houses that were moved into between 2022-2023 has declined by half from 2020-2021. Meanwhile, rentals raised by 50% in the same time frame.

        This is evidence to the claim that house ownership is getting less affordable, and it's more solid than just looking at ownership percentage, because it shows a trend. However, even the ownership percentage number looks really poor in comparison with U.S.' greatest rivals, China, who have a 96% home ownership rate.

        [1] https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/ahs/data/interactive...

    • protocolture a day ago

      >I'm sorry, but I have to intervene, because this is a stunningly strong claim.

      You might be different, but I have never met a retiree who wanted to rent. Its leisure time. Have a shed, build shit, store your caravan, host the grandkids.

      >Housing consumes a lot of income which acts like a hidden tax - a drain on the economy.

      Yeah that sucks, lets not increase the burden of home ownership with a larger, overt tax.

      > Things deteriorate when people can't afford housing.

      Yes, like the elderly being unable to afford housing with land value based taxes.

      >You also seem to be talking about property tax, not LVT.

      Property taxes determined by land value. It doesnt gain special properties as an acronym, and it doesnt decrease when it becomes the primary source of state or federal income.

      > but the alternative (hoarding valuable land) is much worse.

      Hoarding land is largely caused by valuable land grants from the government to property developers. It doesnt require some great big alternative taxation system.

      >Services don't improve just with tax, but with the influx of capital and development to the area, available jobs, etc. You're using an incomplete model to reason about it.

      Yes, land value increases via lots of terrible reasons to increase taxation thats very true.

      >incentivises owners to use the land productively (density!)

      Zoning laws are the big issue here, you are already incentivised to do this.

      >discourages land speculation

      Government land release and zoning reform discourage speculation.

      • kubb 15 hours ago

        You remain unconvinced, but I feel not for the right reasons.

        For now, just consider that all of these benefits of house ownership will be unavailable to the current and future generations, because they won’t own, won’t have grandchildren (no space to raise kids), won’t have the means to retire and won’t have a shed to tinker in. Partly because of housing costs.

  • ETH_start a day ago

    Your assessment is deeply flawed. A land value tax does not make home ownership expensive. It makes land consumption expensive. If you live in a condo unit in a 40-story tower, you pay almost zero land value tax because you use very little land.

    But if someone wants a sprawling estate, they should expect to pay more — especially in areas where that land could otherwise support hundreds of homes, jobs, or services. That’s the point. Land in high-demand areas is a scarce public resource. Using it efficiently — through dense development — lets more people benefit from the opportunity, infrastructure, and services that come with central locations.

    Land value tax encourages exactly that. It doesn’t punish ownership — it rewards efficient use.

    • protocolture 20 hours ago

      > A land value tax does not make home ownership expensive. It makes land consumption expensive.

      Distinction without a difference, a home includes the costs of the land it sits on, at least until you find a way to teleport a home to cheaper land without a cost.

      >But if someone wants a sprawling estate, they should expect to pay more

      LVT isnt about taxing sprawling estates more than other homes. Its about charging tax based on proportional value of the land being occupied. Land value is largely informed by factors that home owners cannot control.

      >It doesn’t punish ownership — it rewards efficient use.

      It does both, and it very obviously does both.

    • RandomLensman a day ago

      It disincentivizes ownership of anything but the most high value land use. Unless there are a lot of regulations (like today) limiting use of land in particular areas, the highest value use version of housing might not be great to live in (if housing were even to be the highest value use in a lot of places).

      For example, the current condo in a 40-story tower might well be far less valuable than some tiny serviced flats.

      Efficient use might be a very unpleasant target to go for.

      • immibis a day ago

        > It disincentivizes ownership of anything but the most high value land use.

        So basically what we have today already, but at least a little bit fairer (but still pretty unfair, like what we have already today).

        • RandomLensman a day ago

          Not sure I understand how it is basically like today?

          • immibis a day ago

            It disincentivizes land ownership for everything but the highest-value use?

            • RandomLensman a day ago

              How is that the case now, though? What taxation regime are you thinking of?

              • immibis a day ago

                I'm thinking of capitalism, where businesses compete to make the most profits.

  • keybored 2 days ago

    Home ownership rates in socialist and former countries are higher than in the West.

    • jhbadger a day ago

      Only if you count "home ownership" as just owning your apartment (many Eastern-bloc countries sold cheaply their state-owned apartments to their residents after 1989). At least in the US, "home ownership" largely implies owning a single-family house with a yard. That's the (perhaps unsustainable) "American Dream".

      • keybored a day ago

        > Only if you count "home ownership" as just owning your apartment

        Why in the world wouldn’t it?

      • keybored a day ago

        > At least in the US, "home ownership" largely implies owning a single-family house with a yard. That's the (perhaps unsustainable) "American Dream".

        scoffs At least in my canton, "home ownership" largely implies a three-story house in the hillside overlooking the Alps with the nearest 200K+ city within 15m travel distance. I'm sorry to say that what you present is more comparable to being unhoused.