This revised edition of Robert V. Andelson's" Land Value Taxation
Around the World "is the first title in the new series 'Studies in
Economic Reform and Social Justice', sponsored by" The American
Journal of Economics and Sociology,"
Andelson has provided an interdisciplinary, international
collection of essays, which has been in the making for twenty
years. This is not a book on the history of economic thought but
rather a book about the theory and practice of land reform and an
historical summary of efforts to apply land value taxation in
different countries around the world.
The collection is built around the premise that to tax an
activity is to discourage it, and that when people improve land
that is under their control, governments should not tax those
improvements. Only when land appreciates through no effort on the
part of those who manage the land should the government impose a
tax. Since land is inelastic in supply, such a tax will have
minimal distortionary effects on the economy. These insights are
not well understood around the world but they do sometimes guide
tax policy and often when they do, they produce salutory effects on
economic development. Contributors to this collection argue that
patterns of economic behavior are similar regardless of race,
religion, or geographical location.
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