Wednesday 25 January 2012

Killer Arguments Against LVT, Not (192)

Here's a round-up of the week's squealing. It's all fish/barrel stuff, so see how many factual or logical errors you can spot:

From HousePriceCrash 21 Jan 2011 (discussing an article in The Telegraph):

Libertas, never one to allow facts or logic to get in the way of a good rant:

3. These people will simply move their main home to another country. Maybe the wealthy will move to Florida where the sun is nicer and there is no State income tax*?

9. The council tax is unfair, period. A tax on property means that you do not own your property. Government will foreclose on your property if you do not pay up, so you are a slave to them to a certain extent and there is no security in your property if your income dries up.

So yes, it is unfair that the rich pay less Council tax, but the proper direction is to get rid of it completely. It is an unjust tax which is particularly harmful to families and those on fixed incomes**.

If Westminster quitted bombing half of the middle east into the stone age and bailing out the mega-rich for slight losses, we could once again fund local government through general taxation, as we did before Thatcher bought in this neo-feudalist serf property tax.***


Jerry doesn't quite understand the way the world works either:

17. ... as usual Mark your arguments are completely opposed to common sense.

In a society with a monetary system (ie not a barter society) you can only tax money. Someone living on a piece of land can only pay your Land Tax if they have income. Your land tax is just a round-about income tax. Because an individual has land, you would impose a tax on them, forcing them to work the land, thereby paying your land tax out of their income.

Where your land tax falls down, and pure income tax succeeds, is for those people who can not produce any income form their small piece of land. They are forced to find jobs elsewhere to pay your land tax, which is effectively a tax on their forced income, but completely unrelated to it. That's why no society today (that I know of) uses land tax instead of income tax.****


* Fact: The property tax on a $300,000 home in sunny Florida is around $3,955 per annum. So the tax on a $3.2 million mansion (equivalent to the £2 million threshold for the Mansion Tax) would be somewhere in the order of $40,000 per annum.

** Logic fail: the interests of "families" and people "on fixed incomes" (which is NewSpeak for pensioners are diametrically opposed). If we do a like-for-like comparison of a family (i.e. mum, dad, both working, and a couple of kids) and the pensioner(s) in the identical value house next door, it must be quite clear that if we scrapped taxes on income and replaced them with taxes on land values, this would be a tax saving for the family and a tax increase for the pensioner(s). Or maybe the family are currently stuck in a flat and the pensioner(s) are still in 'the family home' with two unused rooms; if we replaced taxes on income with taxes on land values, the chances are that the family and the pensioner(s) would swap places, thus ending up with a similar tax bill as before, but the family have the benefit of the larger house and the pensioner(s) have a saving on their heating bills.

*** Fact: Thatcher/Major replaced the older, much higher Domestic Rates which raised around a tenth of all tax revenues with the short lived Poll Tax, which was in turn replaced with the much more modest Council Tax which only raises five per cent of all taxes, and bumped up Employer's NIC and VAT to make up the shortfall.

**** Logic fail. You can re-write that whole bit of gibberish substituting 'rent' or 'mortgage payments' instead of 'Land Tax' and it makes just as much (or as little) sense.
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In contrast, here's a proper professional article showing how to really whip up public opinion:

Vince Cable’s notion of a so-called 'mansion tax' first saw serious conference discussion back in 2009. Since then, and following the formation of the coalition, it’s been repeatedly stomped on by Cameron, Pickles and Shapps, only to pick itself up, dust itself down and schlep on, zombie-like, towards its next kicking.

In its latest form, it’s a kind of hybrid: part council tax super-band, part brand-new wealth tax calculated annually on a property’s value at 1% on the excess above £2 million. So, if your property’s worth £2.2 million, you’ll be asked to stump up £2,000. It’s not clear how often your property’s value would be re-assessed.


Some of the comments are a hoot though, and who should make an appearance towards the end of the thread as it currently stands..?

"It does not follow that people who live in two million pound houses and above have the necessary income to match.

Take the case of a widow, Husband had a very good job, He dies Widow is left with very large house which she can not sell at present or she may be of an age where she does not want to move anyway and why should she or perhaps she has be left to look after five or six children. How does she pay the tax, mortgage the property perhaps, she would not get one at present.

So how does she pay the tax?


I dunno, is that a rhetorical question or is the man indelibly stupid?

15 comments:

Snarfangel said...

>Take the case of a widow, Husband had a very good job, He dies Widow is left with very large house which she can not sell at present or she may be of at an age where she does not want to move anyway and why should she or perhaps she has be left to look after five or six children. How does she pay the tax, mortgage the property perhaps, she would not get one at present.

Theoretical arguments are all well and good, but I think we should be given the name of this poor widow, so we can actually tell what will happen.

Or maybe we should simply one-up them, and mention a poor widow with *seven* children, who can't afford a house with a yard close to work, because some rich guy has it as a third home.

Mark Wadsworth said...

Snarf, nobody knows her name or where she lives, but she must be very, very old, because the same Poor Widow has been used as an excuse since the early 1900s.

I like your counter-example.

It's like L saying "LVT is against families and 'people on fixed incomes' [which I believe is PC-speak for 'pensioners']".

Quite clearly, the interests of families with two working parents and pensioners are diametrically opposed.

Families would be far better off with just LVT and no income tax, and pensioners would be better off with just income tax and no LVT.

Derek said...

Not the Poor Widow again. She's getting more print space than Kim Kardashian! Of course rumour has it that with all her appearance fees, the PW isn't quite as P as she'd like us to believe.

Bayard said...

"Maybe the wealthy will move to Florida where the sun is nicer and there is no State income tax?"

The stupidity behind this statement is breathtaking. So the wealthy will leave a land where there is high income tax and low property taxes to go to a land where there is no income tax (and therefore, one presumes, high property taxes) because the property tax in the first state is increased? Who are these stupid rich people? Please can he send me their addresses; I might be able to persuade them to "invest" in a few schemes I have in mind.

Anonymous said...

I do wish that poor widow would get her act together - that big house, lots of rooms (judging by those 5 or is it 6, children) and she needing dosh desperately to meet her LVT .. if she could just get some of the sprogs doubling up in the bedrooms [I know the word has been put about that "some people" regard sprogs having to share as as evidence of extreme poverty, but the widow has already admiited being poor but unable to sell her home, so...) and then she could rent out the now spare bedrooms, probably in her big big house, bedrooms with en suite facilities, and get some cash that way ... It must be a nice and sought after area so, well £100 per room per week seems easily achievable ...

ps - I know the insurance companies are basically licensed thieves, but you would think, what with the 5 or is it 6 kids, plus that big house to run, that the departed hubby would have had some form of life insurance just in case he, as was indeed sadly the case, popped his clogs ...

Mark Wadsworth said...

Derek, yes, she's been stuck in that Mansion since the early 1900s, and even then was complaining that it wasn't her fault that the house had gone up in value from £100 to £200 in value since her dear departed husband bought it sometime before the telegraph was invented.

B, yes, but the best bit of that was the idea that they'd "move their homes". Wot? Physically?

Anon 18.07, as i said yesterday, the Homey hypocrisy is staggering. If it's a single mum with five sprogs in a council house, they can't wait for her to be turfed out, but if it's a single mum in a mansion, then they want her to stay there at all costs.

The flipside of LVT is market rents in council housing of course (which would only affect council housing in south east and London, AFAIAA), I'm deaf to special pleading from either side.

Richard Allan said...

About the PWB being around since 1900, "The Corruption of Economics" quoted Alfred Marshall as saying that LVT should be brought in after 100 years to ensure there were no distortions of that sort. Of course that centenary has long since passed.

Mark Wadsworth said...

RA, fair enough, when the tax is finally introduced, I'll ask people to tick a box on their tax forms asking whether they think there should be an exemption for Poor Widows In Mansions.

The PWIM's will then be exempted, and their total bill will be added pro rata to those of people who ticked the answer "Yes", so everybody can choose between paying flat 7% or approx. 9% to include a contribution towards the tax break for PWIM's. It's basic maths that one person's tax break is another man's tax burden, and it'd be nice to see who actually puts their money where their mouth is.

Bayard said...

"the chances are that the family and the pensioner(s) would swap places"

The chances would be a damn sight higher if it wasn't for stamp duty. Another way in which the current tax system militates against proper distribution of housing.

Mark Wadsworth said...

B, yes of course.

Stamp Duty is on the list of taxes (also IHT, CGT, TV licence*, IPT, non-dom levy) which will be scrapped and rolled into LVT on Day One (along with Council Tax and Business Rates, obviously).

* Those who say the BBC should be sold off are confusing "revenue raising" with "public spending", it's two separate topics.

Anonymous said...

Not being up on acroynyms, and having failed lamentably to find an answer on the web that fits the context - so I'm probbaly not that clever at "googling" or "yahooing" then - with Kidney Lymph Node and the fact that in international airspeak it is the recognised code for Kowloon Airport ... KLN ?

Mark Wadsworth said...

Anon 13.01, it's just my lazy way of saying "Killer arguments against LVT, Not".

Anonymous said...

Thanks - I had surmised that the K probably stood for Killer -

Rob said...

Next week she'll have three puppies and a goldfish.

Anonymous said...

UHT - Unassailable Home-ownerist Truth