The Fallacy of the Three-Legged Stool
From "State Tax Notes" Dr. Bill Batt takes on an old chestnut. Does a healthy tax base and economic growth really require a smorgasboard of taxes? Batt disagrees. (In html format.)
By permission of William Batt, Ph.D.
[Reprinted from State Tax Notes, Vol.35, No.6, 2 February 2005, pp.377-381]
Tax students, especially at the
state level, ply their trade by invoking one metaphor above all others: the
three-legged stool.[1] It rests on the claim that a sound and successful tax
regime for any government needs to rely on a three tax bases: income, property
and sales. This is repeated so often that it passes today without much
examination.
There seem to be mainly three arguments for this:
- that taxes should be drawn from as wide an array of sources as possible so as not to overburden any one base or sector.
- that the spread of tax burdens over a number of bases will ensure greater stability and reliability.
- that reliance upon a wider
number of revenue streams minimizes the downside consequences which all
taxes impose on the economy.
It is even claimed that revenue streams should rely on each such base in
roughly equal proportions, lest structural imbalances will otherwise eventuate
that jeopardize public support of government. There are of course exceptions.
States that have rich mineral wealth have the luxury of imposing taxes that
relieve them of the need to rely equally on the "big three." So also
for states that have a rich tourist industry or that can rely heavily on
gambling revenue. But a state is open to the charge that its revenue structure
is unbalanced, unfair, or worse unless such special circumstances warrant.
Such wisdom is found most frequently in the literature of various tax study
commissions periodically constituted over the past thirty years. Many of the
staff directors of these bodies have circulated from state to state as
traveling emissaries, and it is not surprising therefore that their official
reports often bear a striking resemblance to one another.[2] Typically they
address matters such as the extent to which various taxes conform to the
venerable principles of sound tax theory (discussed further below), their
competitiveness with other political jurisdictions, and the balance of revenue
streams.
The Montana Committee study,[3] chosen here simply as a typical illustration,
makes special effort to argue that "elements of a high quality revenue
system are complimentary rather than contradictory. Taxes should complement
each other so they provide a way to have all economic activity and wealth
contribute proportionally to supporting government services. Taxes should not
be just a number of different methods to generate revenue from the same
economic activity or wealth; thus taxing some segments of society very heavily
and others sparsely."
It goes on to argue that "a high quality state revenue system reflects the
limitations and financial responsibilities that state government places upon
local governments. State policy makers should be explicitly aware of the costs
that state mandates impose on local governments, and local governments should
have the authority to raise sufficient revenues to meet these obligations. If
local governments lack the revenue bases necessary to provide services mandated
by state government, state policy makers should consider statewide solutions to
avoid extreme inequities. As an example, in some instances, state government
could consider subsidizing local governments to reduce local tax burdens or
increase service levels for governments that lack enough taxing capacity to
meet some state standard of services. This approach however, should be weighed
against the principle of local autonomy. In which local voters decide which
services they want to receive and raise the money to pay for them."
The Montana
study reflects the conventional wisdom that "a high quality revenue system
relies on a diverse and broad based range of sources. One of the goals of a
quality revenue system is economic neutrality to prevent the distortion of
individual and business behavior. If reliance is divided among numerous sources
and their bases are broad, rates can be made low in order to minimize the impact
on behavior. A broad base itself helps meet the goal of diversification since
it spreads the burden of the tax among more players than a narrow base does.
And the low rates that broad bases make possible can improve a state's
competitive position relative to other states. When possible, we should try to
balance our tax systems through reliance on the three-legged stool of income,
sales, and property taxes in roughly equal proportions, with excise, business,
gaming, and severance taxes, and user charges playing an important
supplementary role. In any instance, every attempt should be made to avoid
excessive reliance on any single revenue source."
The power with which the three-legged stool analogy has underpinned tax policy
is in fact rather disconcerting, because a close examination of its premises
shows that they are very questionable. These benchmark measures of a tax regime
are scrutinized here in order to cast doubt on the claims so often made on
their behalf.
Taking first the argument that spreading the tax burden over as wide a base of
sources as possible, it is best to begin by noting that revenue streams can be
drawn from only three elements of the economy: land, labor, and/or capital.
Standard textbooks for Economics 101 typically start with recognition of these
factors, even if they usually give insufficient attention to land as a
component. Classical economics, culminating particularly in the tradition of
Henry George, includes in the idea of land any and all components of value not
created by human hands or minds. It therefore means not just locational sites
on the earth's surface that might be bought and sold as real estate, but other
elements of so-called "natural capital" as well: the electromagnetic
spectrum, air, water, fish in the ocean, mineral wealth, airport time slots,
and so on. Those elements have a market price, and can be - indeed are - often
subject to taxation. It is important to note, however, that taxes on such land
are capitalized in the market value of their worth; they cannot be passed
forward or backward because their supply is essentially inelastic.
This is important, as will be noted below, because imposing such taxes incurs
no excess burden on their use or upon the general economy. Taxing such bases is
totally neutral and completely efficient. Indeed, it is the failure to tax land
as stated that leads to economic distortions and cause an economy to function
at a sub-optimal level. Land, whatever its form, has a market value only to the
extent that a human presence exists to make use of it, and it acquires that
value due to the accretion of economic rent, the return on labor and capital,
that comes to rest on such factors.
Taxes on labor and capital, in contrast, are always shifted. Studies of
so-called tax incidence seldom trace the flow of tax burdens beyond the first
or second of the shift. Textbooks and research studies will note that
particular burdens - for instance, a tax on the sale of goods - will be partly
borne by the vendor and partly also by the consumer. The vendor in turn sees
that tax incorporated into the price he pays for the product at the wholesale
level; the consumer sees his burden reflected in the relative cost of living of
his tax jurisdiction - which in turn affects the price of his home and his wages.
The shift in taxes, as economic theory makes clear, are ultimately converted to
rent, and that rent, as capitalized in land prices, is its final resting place.
It is a truism of classical economics as carried through in the present day
tradition of Georgism that all taxes come out of rent -- an adage that
has come to be abbreviated as ATCOR.
What this insight means is that all taxes not first imposed on landsites and
collected from the rent that rests thereon are instead passed through the
economy from one party to another until they ultimately come to rest on land.
The passing along of tax burdens not only creates distortions in economic
transactions; it also constitutes an excess burden and an inefficiency that
handicaps economic performance. Taxing capital makes it more expensive and
leads to less saving and investment; taxing labor, in the same way, depresses
wages and discourages enterprise. Contemporary economists and conventional tax
theorists well recognize that taxing labor and capital is detrimental to
economic vitality -- politicians thrive on repeating this ad nauseum.
Currently the Republican party seems best able to exploit resentment about the
negative impact of taxes. But it is not alone in failing to appreciate the
nature of tax shifting. What all fail to realize is that there are exceptions
to the rule that taxes are destructive: any tax imposed on an inelastic base -
that is, any form of land -- constitutes no distortion or excess burden
whatsoever.
Far from spreading the burden of distribution over a wide array of tax bases,
the ideal tax, then, should be imposed solely on those factors of production
that form an inelastic base, i.e., that constitute forms of land - whether they
be locational sites, natural resources, the spectrum, time slots, or others as
they may arise in the future. Land, in any of its forms, is totally inelastic.
Will Rogers
in his pithy way said it well, "Buy land. They ain't making any more of
the stuff." Mark Twain said it too.
A second claim among advocates of spreading tax burdens over the "big
three" bases (and sometimes more if possible) is that it insures greater
reliability and stability of the revenue streams supportive of government
services. To be sure not all government services require stable budgets - motor
vehicle licensure varies with the state of the economy as do the needs of
social welfare programs and some offices related to capital investment. But
most programs do need to rely on predictable and stable financial support,
particularly education, health, and public safety. With revenue streams based
on formulas that vacillate from year to year, it becomes difficult to provide
for public needs, and the continual struggle over fiscal designs in the
political arena is frequently costly.
Economic cycles are accepted as a given in both government and business
circles. But there is compelling evidence that such cycles have their roots in
the tendency for elements of the financial community to speculate in real
estate, fostering bubbles in their market prices that ultimately must be
reconciled with the real demand.[4] Because the market price of landsites is in
good part a function of the settling of rent, the recapture of that rent in the
form of taxation would both stabilize those markets and remove the cause of
those regular cycles. By collecting only a miniscule element of land rent, and
instead collecting revenue from labor and capital, economic cycles are
amplified and exacerbated, to say nothing of their effect on productivity.
Evidence of the stabilizing effect of taxes on landsites in the form of
economic rent collection is shown best by the fact that those nations and
states that rely most heavily on land taxation are least subject to cyclical
tendencies[5] and intermittent recessions. Japan, which imposes no tax on urban
land, has yet to recover from the crash in hits real estate market almost
fifteen years ago.[6]
The third claim, that reliance upon a wider number of revenue streams minimizes
the downside consequences that all taxes impose, requires an extensive
examination of the various options available. What, first of all, are those
aspects that must be avoided? What are the standards against which various
taxes can and should be measured? These are typically listed as anywhere from
four to even seven depending upon their description. Mostly commonly are
neutrality, efficiency, equity, administrability, simplicity, stability,
sufficiency.[7] Tax theorists typically measure revenue structures according to
any or all of these criteria:
Tax neutrality refers to the influence (or absence of such) that any particular
design has on economic behavior. Typically taxes are perceived as a damp on
economic activity -- taxing income reduces the incentive to work, taxing sales
discourages retail transactions, and taxing savings reduces the propensity to
save. The more a tax is perceived to be neutral the less the identifiable
distortions it imposes on the economy. The common assumption of most tax
theorists is that all taxes impose distortions; it's simply a matter of which
ones are least burdensome to economic health. A tax which imposes no
distortions is ideally best.
Tax efficiency is much like tax neutrality, and is the measure of how much
shifting of behavior it imposes, resulting in what is called "excess
burden," or "deadweight loss" on the economy. Tax economists
usually hold that the best taxes are those that are shifted little if at all.
Because the elasticities (a technical word for the slope of supply and demand
curves) of each are very different, a tax on land values and a tax on
improvement values have very contrastive effects on socio-economic choices.
Using a tax base that has little or zero elasticity is the best way of assuring
that taxes are not shifted. Zero elasticity is another way of saying fixed
supply.
The principle of equity is central to any discussion of tax design. Tax design
requires concern with both what is fair and the extent to which it must
sometimes be compromised to satisfy the other principal criteria. Fairness can
be evaluated according to what is termed "horizontal equity" -- the
extent to which those in similar circumstances will pay similar tax burdens,
and "vertical equity" -- how well those in different classes bear
different burdens in the tax structure. It is this latter perspective that
leads to the use of terms like "proportional,"
"progressive," and "regressive" in referring to tax
structures. A tax is progressive with respect to income if the ratio of tax
revenue to income rises when moving up the income scale, proportional if the
ratio is constant, and regressive if the ratio declines. There is an ancillary
question of whether taxing to reach greater equity should employ measures of
income or of wealth, difficult as this is to measure. Such questions of equity
are a matter particularly central when discussing the property tax. This will
be discussed further below.
Administrability refers to the ease with which a tax can be administered and
collected. Taxes which distort the economy are inefficient but so are taxes
that cost lots to administer. This is measured not only in the direct costs of
tax avoidance and accounting expenses, but in the level of evasion and
cheating, and by the cost of government auditing and policing. When the
taxpaying public perceives that a tax is easily evaded, cumbersome, and unfair,
it loses its legitimacy and calls government itself into question.
This is why the principle of simplicity is important: the more complex the tax
design, the more lawyers and accountants will find loopholes, encourage the
appearance of unfairness, and drive up the cost of its administration. People
know that with simple taxes other parties are also paying their fair share, and
all this enhances the legitimacy and therefore the compliance of the tax system.
Stability refers to the ability of a tax to produce revenue in the face of
changing economic circumstances. Income and sales taxes, for example, vary
greatly according to phases in the economic cycle; the property tax, in
contrast, is highly stable regardless of the state of the economy. This is one
reason why school administrators have typically been supportive of using the
property tax base rather than some other tax to support school services.
The certainty of a tax's collection ensures that the number and types of tax
changes be kept to a minimum. Frequent changes in tax rates and bases interfere
with business decisions and the ability to make long-term financial plans. This
concept reinforces the need for stability because an unstable revenue system is
more likely to require continual adjustments.
In assessing the value of a tax it is also important, of course, to understand
its potential to bring in revenue for the purposes of government, usually
deemed revenue sufficiency. Income, sales and property taxes, along with
corporation taxes to a lesser extent, have come to be regarded as the
workhorses of the American revenue structure. But, as anti-tax politicians are
quick to note, the higher these taxes are, the more they impose a drag on the economy.
This is why one should ponder whether to consider raising taxes which have
demonstrable distorting effects.
To be sure, all of the "big three" taxes do indeed have negative
consequences. This is because all three are imposed largely on capital and
labor; only a minor component of taxes on property constitute collection of
economic rent. Yet students of the real property tax readily acknowledge that
it has two components: that imposed on land values and that imposed on
improvements. When the improvements are taxed at a lower rate or when that levy
is totally removed, the tax constitutes a collection of rent alone. Because
that land is part of an inelastic tax base, it is totally neutral, completely
efficient, simple to understand and to collect, a stable tax base, and easily
administrable. This last is particularly important: in recent years it has
become possible in principle to assess land value by computer algorithms
(called computer-assisted mass appraisal, or CAMA), obviating the need for assessors
altogether. Isobars can be drawn on maps showing land values similar to how
elevations in land topography are shown on geographic maps. A traditional
criticism of conventional property taxation, that assessment was often
arbitrary and subjective, no longer need be a compelling criticism.
The one criticism often levied against the conventional property tax is its
regressivity. This is in fact belied by the facts. Only two empirical studies
have ever been done on the subject, but both concluded that the real property
tax is mildly progressive.[8] When the two elements of the property tax are
taken separately, it becomes even clearer why this is so: the land component of
real property, being inelastic, cannot be shifted to tenants, and is borne
solely by the titleholder to the property. When it comes to incidence of
payment, the roughly 35 percent of all American households who rent and do not
own (largely poor people) bear no tax burden whatsoever. Only the improvement
part of the real property tax is in any way shifted to tenants. Even among the
homeowning element of the American population, studies have shown that a shift
of the tax to land values typically lowers the burden on about two thirds of
all households. This is because landsites on which homes are situated are
typically not in the highest land value neighborhoods, and it is business and
commercial sites - particularly the underused land parcels in those
neighborhoods - that typically bear a larger burden.[9] So that in fact a tax
on land values is really a profound shift in the direction of progressivity.
If one realizes that houses, just like cars, refrigerators, computers and other
manufactured items, depreciate in value and that only land increases in market
value due to the factors of inflation and rent accretion, it will become clear
that the remedy for onerous real estate taxes is downtaxing buildings and
uptaxing landsites. The result of doing so will stabilize tax burdens for those
who otherwise resent their payment. In the unusual cases, especially during
transitions, when titleholders of limited income cannot manage such
obligations, taxes can easily be deferred until owners "cash out" by
selling or dying when such debts can be settled. Sales of appreciated landsites
typically provide estates with adequate wherewithal to both pay any back taxes
and give a capital gain too.
The upshot is that a tax on land value alone -- totally neutral, efficient, certain, progressive, stable, and administrable -- measures up so well that it looks like the perfect tax! It is even argued that a land tax is "better than neutral," in that it actually fosters the kind of economic activity that fosters vibrant communities.[10] It also has very positive environmental effects inasmuch as it reverses the centrifugal forces of suburban sprawl development and stimulates and facilitates investment in urban cores.[11] Evidence on this matter supports the claim that taxing land alone is a more appropriate solution to both tax issues and spatial configuration issues than any other remedy. In the final analysis, studies show that very few states measure up to the one-third -- one third -- one-third standard in any case. Political and other factors aside, there are good reasons for a state's not abiding by such rules. It is only due to misunderstandings that faith in the big three taxes constituting the three-legged stool have come to prevail. When these taxes are measured by the extent to which they conform to the conventionally accepted principles of sound tax theory, they appear wanting. By shifting to the collection of economic rent, manifest mainly in the form of land value taxation, governments will better succeed not only in overcoming the prevailing resentment against current taxation policies but provide better financial support for those services which are the rightful province of public obligation.
REFERENCES
[1] There is no difficulty in citing such references, in textbooks or online. A quick search of the web turns up the following as illustrations: A Fiscal Crisis in State Budgets: Are Taxes in Western States, WRDC Public Policy Information Brief, No. 2, July, 2003; A Theory and Reality: Arizona's Tax Structure, by Marshall J. Vest, Eller College of Business, University of Arizona, n.d.; A Ranking Maine's Business Climate, by Charles Lawton and rank O'Hara, Maine Center for Economic Policy, July, 2004; A Report of the (Ohio) Committee to Study State and Local Taxes, March, 2003; AComments from the Utah Education Association on State Tax Policy, n.d.; A [State of] Washington has the most unfair tax system by Polly Keary, in Real Change, 4/29/04; and A Look behind the rhetoric of tax reform, by Andy Brack, [South Carolina] Statehouse Report, Dec. 7, 2003.
[2] There are several studies of the work and value of tax study commissions, easily available online. One such is by Therese McGuire, "Toward State Tax Reform: Lessons from State Tax Studies," Prepared for the Finance Project, November, 1995, at www.financeproject.org/toward.html. Some states that have enlisted such projects are enumerated in that paper, but far from all of them.
[3] A Universal Guiding Principles of Taxation, Prepared for the Tax Reform Committee, Created by HB461, 2003 Legislative Session, Report issued August, 2003, and available at www.discoveringmontana.com/revenue/content/5foryourreference/studycommittees/taxreform/guiding principlesoftaxation.doc.
[4] See Mason Gaffney,
AThe Philosophy of Public Finance, especially, pp. 188-192, in Fred Harrison
(ed.), The Losses of Nations: Deadweight Politics versus Public Rent
Dividends. London:
Othila Press, 1988.
[5] See, for example, David Richards, "Land Markets and Business Cycles in the UK and Australia,"
at www.cooperativeindividualism.org/richards_land_markets_uk_and_au_01.html ; Bryan Kavanagh, "The
Recovery Myth, Prosper Australia,
1994; and John
M. Quigley,
"Real Estate and Economic Cycles," International Real Estate Review,
Vol 1, #2 (1999).
[6] See, for example, Mason Gaffney and Richard
Noyes, "The Income Stimulating Effects of the
Property Tax," in Fred
Harrison (ed.), The Losses of
Nations: Deadweight Politics versus Public Rent Dividends, London: Othila Press,
1998; and studies of Asian rim countries' comparative reliance upon land
taxation.
[7] Professor Fred Foldvary -- www.progress.org/archive/foldvary.htm -- has
been especially articulate in reviewing the links between land values, land
taxation, and economic cycles.
[8] For a discussion of what students of tax policy regard as the principles
which should guide their design, see, for example, George Break,
"Taxation," Encarta Encyclopedia by Microsoft, 1993; "Principles
of Taxation, in Light of Modern Developments," Washington: Federal Tax
Policy Memo, The Tax Foundation; "Principles of a High Quality Revenue
System," Tax Notes, March 21, 1988; and David G. Davies, United States
Taxes and Tax Policy, (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986), pp. 17-19.
State studies cited above also typically list any or all of these criteria. I
have seen accountability, balance, certainty, competitiveness, and
complementary included as well.
[9] See Peter Mieszkowski, "The Property Tax: An Excise or a Profits Tax," Journal of Public Economics 1 (April 1972): 73-96, cited and discussed extensively by James Heilbrun, "Who Bears the Burden of the Property Tax?" in Lowell Harriss (ed.), The Property Tax and Local Finance, Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science, Vol 35, #1 (1983), pp. 56-71, and Henry J. Aaron, Who Pays the Property Tax: A New View, Washington: the Brookings Institution, 1975. See also Harvey S. Rosen, Public Finance, 2nd Edition (Homewood, IL: Irwin Press, 1988), pp. 483-489; Mason Gaffney, "The Property Tax is a Progressive Tax," Proceedings, National Tax Association, 64th Annual Conference, Kansas City, 1971, pp. 408-426. [Republished in The Congressional Record, March 16, 1972: E 2675-79. (Cong. Les Aspin.) Resources for the Future, Inc., The Property Tax is a Progressive T ax, Reprint No. 104, October, 1972].
[10] For further discussion of this, see the work of the Center for the Study
of Economics, based in Philadelphia
- www.urbantools.org.
[11] T. Nicolaus Tideman, "Taxing Land is Better than Neutral: Land Taxes, Land Speculation, and the Timing of Development," in Kenneth C. Wenzer (ed.), Land Value Taxation: The Equitable and Efficient Source of Public Finance. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1999. H. William Batt, "Stemming Sprawl: The Fiscal Approach," in Matthew Lindstrom and Hugh Bartling (ed.), Suburban Sprawl: Culture, Theory, Politics. Lanham Md: Rowman and Littlefield, 2003.

