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Date: | Wed Jun 14 08:45:09 2006 |
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This is a reply to Peter's question about the
difference between George and contemporary economists
on the difference between land and other property.
The term "land" is obsolete in my opinion. Economists
like the Austrians (except for Rothbard), Davenport
and Knight sought to expel the notion of land as a
distinct factor of production. But Ronald Coase went
beyond these to argue that it is best to define land
as a factor of production in the following way.
"We may speak of a person owning land and using it as
a factor of production but what the land-owner in fact
possesses is the right to carry out a circumscribed
list of actions. The rights of a land-owner are not
unlimited. It is not even always possible for him to
remove the land to another place, for instance, by
quarrying it. And although it may be possible for him
to exclude some people from using "his" land, this may
not he true of others. For example, some people may
have the right to cross the land. Furthermore, it may
or may not be possible to erect certain types of
buildings or to grow certain crops or to use
particular drainage systems on the land. This docs not
come about simply because of government regulation. It
would be equally true under the common law. In fact it
would be true under any system of law. A system in
which the rights of individuals were unlimited would
be one in which there were no rights to acquire."
(Coase 1988: 155)
A lot of confusion regarding the land value tax could
be cleared up if people defined land it terms of legal
rights to control the performance of actions. Defined
in this way, there is no significant difference
between land and other property.
Coase, R.H. (1960) "The Problem of Social Cost." The
Journal of Law and Economics. 3: 1-44. Reprinted in R.
H. Coase. (1988) The Firm, the Market, and the Law.
Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press.
Pat Gunning
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