Showing posts with label Taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taxes. Show all posts

Friday, April 16, 2021

Video on Land Value Taxation to Be Included in Waukegan City Council Livestream on April 19th, 2021

     Original post, written and published on April 16th, 2021:

      The links below lead to the YouTube channel WaukeganTV.

     At 7 P.M. Central Standard Time, on Monday, April 19th, 2021, the Waukegan City Council will hold a meeting that will be livestreamed at one of the addresses above. I recommend opening both links right before 7:00, and then looking for anything that says "livestream".
     That broadcast will include a video I made regarding how Land Value Taxation could fix Waukegan's tax problems. That video is already available on YouTube, and will remain available, at the link below.

     For viewers in Lake County, the live broadcast of the Waukegan City Council meeting can be seen on local Comcast channel 17.



     The three-minute video is based on my recent research on property taxes and other topics. You can read that research at the following links:





     Post-Script, added on April 19th, 2021:

     The meeting was broadcast on the link below, but without audio. As of the evening of April 19th, the video can be accessed at this link (without audio), between the 2:26:16 and 2:32:00 marks.
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkSDh8BdgXU

     Audio will be added to that WaukeganTV YouTube video at a later point. Updates will be available here shortly.





     Post-Script, added on April 23rd, 2021:

     The full meeting, edited for time and including the audio from my video submission, has been posted to WaukeganTV's YouTube channel. It is available at the link below:
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxuTD85iZ4A

     Watch from 21:00 to 24:00 to see my video, or watch from 20:00 to 25:00 to see what happened in the meeting immediately before and after my video was shown.
     




Written on April 16th, 2021

Edited and Expanded on April 19th and 23rd, 2021

Saturday, April 3, 2021

City Governments Could Make Revenue-Sourcing and Land Use More Efficient by Taxing Vacant Lots and Abandoned Properties

 

Table of Contents


Part I: Preface

Part II: Letter

1. Introduction to Georgism
2. Understanding Georgism
3. Land Value “Taxes” as User Fees
4. The Waukegan Budget
5. Implementing L.V.T. on a City-Wide Basis
6. Why Georgism?
7. “An Economic Miracle”

Part III: Post-Scripts





Content

Part I: Preface


     I wrote the following letter to Waukegan mayoral candidate Ann Taylor, in an e-mail, on April 2nd, 2021.

     The letter outlines why – and how – I recommend that the City of Waukegan implement Henry George’s Land Value Taxation to solve the city’s budget issues.
     I provided Taylor with the three images at the end of this article, as appendices to my message.

     The Democratic primary for the 2021 Waukegan mayoral race takes place this coming Tuesday; on April 6th, 2021.






Part II: Letter



1. Introduction to Georgism

     I've been trying to bring the Green and Libertarian parties closer together, with the economic school of thought known as Georgism, named for Henry George. Libertarians would like it because it would simplify taxes and free production, while Greens would like it for its focus on maintaining land and environment in good quality.

     Basically Georgism would involve a tax on unimprovement of land; through what's called Land Value Taxation. This would involve getting rid of sales taxes, income taxes, [and] investment taxes (because they tax production). Taxing production, income, and sales, means we'll get less of those things, meaning less tax revenue will become depleted over time. This will make it necessary to find other revenue sources, preferably ones that don't deplete themselves.

     The current taxes on production (and harmless economic behaviors), would be replaced with taxes on waste and destruction. These taxes would primarily target the despoilation of land, speculation on land prices, and on land hoarding.

     Economist Art Laffer theorized, in his description of the "Laffer curve", that people will stop producing as much if you tax them at too high a rate. Laffer was correct that this principle applies to income and production, but we must go further, and apply the idea to the taxation of land as well.

     If you tax something, you get less of it. So if we tax income and sales, we will get less of those things, because people will avoid the behavior in order to avoid the tax. If we tax the waste and destruction of land, then people will stop wasting and destroying land, in order to reduce their tax burden.

     Land Value Taxation could be described as a tax, but it could also be described as a use fee, or as a fine. It could help to think of L.V.T. as a fine and a tax at the same time. L.V.T. could function as an intentionally punitive tax.

     This may result in self-depleting revenue streams from land taxation, but that will only happen if the new taxation scheme is successful at deterring unwanted behaviors. Furthermore, the revenue decreases will reflect the fact that government budgets can be responsibly reduced. Once stolen rents have been captured by the city, and redistributed to the community in a way that solves the city's problems, the need for government will decrease, and the need for more tax revenue will decrease along with it.



2. Understanding Georgism

     There are several ways to think about Georgism which helps us understand it. First are the slogans: "Tax land, not man", "Tax bads, not goods", and my own "Tax destruction, not production".

     Another is the idea that the tax on unimproved land value would function as a fee, paid by the renter of the land, as a user fee to compensate the community for the cost of protecting or insuring the property. Another is that the value of the unimproved land can be calculated by estimating either the cost to the community to protect it, or else the cost of restoring the land to its original natural state.

     Basically Land Value Taxation is a tax on unimproved land value, rather than on improvements. Improvements are things like additions we make to our houses, but more generally includes all houses, buildings, labor and capital, and mixing of labor and capital. All of which occurs on top of the land, out of which all natural and mineral resources, and land and water, come, to be mixed together and refined.

     When land is cheap, labor and capital become cheaper, and it becomes cheaper to mix labor and capital (which is the essence of all production). So when land is taxed in a way that is designed to minimize and punish waste and the pollution of the land, and businesses are taxes in a way that is designed to minimize pollution, we will have cheaper production with less harmful health effects associated.

     With less harmful health effects, medical costs will go down. Medical costs will have also gone down because taxes on doctors' and nurses' income will go down and be eliminated, and because sales taxes on medical goods will also be eliminated. Profits from sales of medicine should be taxed, however, if the seller is a monopoly, because that is not an ordinary sale.

     There are a lot of ways to explain Georgism, and lots of types of taxes may be discussed in the process. However, Land Value Taxation was formerly known as “the Single Tax on land”, so the fact that land despoilation and unimprovement can be taxed in many different ways, complicates things a little bit,

     Establishing a Georgist economy would likely involve taxing land blight, fining all major polluters, taxing land speculation, taxing land hoarders, taxing profits of monopoly companies, taxing slumlords, and taxing abandoned construction projects. Also, imposing Pigouvian taxes, which are taxes on unnecessary transaction costs (like ATM fees).

     These may all seem like very different types of taxes, but they're all taxes on what are, basically, different forms of theft, but more specifically theft of land value (or theft of some other form of value, through the use of the benefits offered by unnatural monopoly power).



3. Land Value “Taxes” as User Fees

     Georgism is not exactly a pollution tax, because Georgism wants to tax land despoilation, which is not just environmental degradation of the land, but any and all forms of damage and value degradation of the land. To be clear, allowing land to stay at the same level of quality, would not be taxed, nor would improving it; but allowing the land to decrease in quality would be punitively taxed.

     Land Value “Taxes” (or fees) would function as a user-fee-based system, allowing the community to transact with property owners (later, renters) on mutually beneficial terms. Nobody should get away with profiting at the community's expense.

     When land value is stolen from the community - and not reinvested into the community government and/or spent by the people in markets - then the cost of producing stays high. The cost of producing will stay artificially high, as long as we continue to tax environmentally harmless productive activities (such as income from labor, sales and purchase and consumption, and investment that doesn't come at public expense). We can replace those taxes, with fees and fines and liens against people who allow land to fall into disrepair, decline, and blight.

     Basically, I advocate keeping user fees and utilities taxes, and funding the government mostly through Land Value Taxation and user fees, because Land Value Taxation is a form of user fee. It is a fee, paid by the land renter (formerly owner) to the community, for protecting and insuring the given parcel of land.



4. The Waukegan Budget

     I looked at the preliminary 2021 budget for the City of Waukegan, and noticed some issues. First off, I think the figure at the end, giving $185,154,700 as the budget total, is about $14 million too high. I say this because I believe that the figures $6,077,000 (the property tax for the firefighters' pension fund) and $8,535,000 (the property tax for the police pension) are doubled.
     I was only able to account for $171,683,000 in that budget. I'd like to speak to whoever does the budgets, about that. Unless you know what that is about. I have the document I'm talking about, it's from the city's website.
     [Note: That document is available at the following link: http://www.waukeganil.gov/DocumentCenter/View/4459/Proposed-2020-2021-Budget. I was referring to pages 41 through 56 of that document.]

     Anyway, I assumed that the city budget is $171,683,000 in total, and will remain that way for the next four years, for simplicity's sake. Then I broke down all the sources of revenue, and ranked them by total amount. I split them into "OK taxes" (including use taxes and fees, government's secure sources of revenue from investments and interest, and other acceptable taxes) and "bad taxes" on productive, harmless, voluntary activities (as well as fees for services for which the government gets paid but arguably doesn't provide any real service).

     The green spreadsheet image shows a suggested set of budgets from now to 2025, to phase-in Land Value Taxation while replacing taxes on production.


[Click, and open in new tab or window, to see in full resolution.

Note:
Not all of the totals, for the years 2022 through 2024,
add up to $171,683,000 as was intended.
This chart should be consulted for illustration purposes only.]



[Click, and open in new tab or window, to see in full resolution.

Note: This chart is based on the green spreadsheet shown above.
It shows how Land Value Taxes would be phased-in
while taxes on productive behaviors would be phased-out.]





     I could easily re-adjust these projections based on future budgets, and in anticipation of future growth of government. But if this tax reform works, then growth of government might no longer be necessary to solve the city's problems.



     I wrote this article explaining how Georgism could help Lake County in particular. It would certainly lead to wiser, more efficient land use, at the very least. Altoona, Pennsylvania still has Land Value Taxation. It has also helped Singapore use land area efficiently.
     http://www.lclp.org/articles/geolibertarianism/




5. Implementing L.V.T. on a City-Wide Basis

     If I were running for mayor, I would announce that income, sales, and investment taxes are no more; that user fees, taxes on the unimproved value of land, and voluntary contributions should alone fund the government.

     I see that there is a “Vacant Registry Fund” in the proposed city budget. If I were running for mayor, I would advocate that the Vacant Registry Fund, and its ability to register vacant structures and impose fines upon the owner, be expanded. I would expand this fund into a fund for the registry of vacant lots, abandoned buildings, and blighted lands” (or something shorter).

     In this registry, I would include all blighted and polluted lands, vacant lots, abandoned homes, incomplete structures, [and] halfway-done construction projects that are merely eyesores. Potentially, you could even include workplaces where virtually no useful economic activity is taking place, and slum apartments where landlords are doing virtually no maintenance work. All of these properties could be taxed justifiably under Georgism. Single-floor buildings, parking lots, and other wastes of area and economic potential, could be taxed as well.

     I would then announce that property taxes must be reformed, so as to begin taxing homes and economically active commercial properties at progressively lower and lower rates, while the actual owners of parcels of land are made into renters. Their taxes would be based on the quality of their land, rather than on their property value. Taxing land at a higher rate than buildings, is called split-rate taxation.

     If split-rate taxation, and the expansion of the Vacant Structure Register into a sort of “Vacant Structures and Lands Register”, turn out successful, then it's possible that the duties of this program could eventually be handed over to an independent, depoliticized, or quasi-governmental agency.

     I would recommend this, to protect it from profit motives and keep it a permanent program (to protect it from being changed by the fleeting opinion of narrow majorities). If administered as a non-for-profit cooperative corporation, the entity could be called a Community Land Trust (and community water and air trusts could exist as well).

     Such an entity could even operate on market principles, allowing the community to vote in online “artificial markets” to decide how much land parcels are worth. This idea is called Geo-Libertarianism.



6. Why Georgism?

     As long as property taxes remain in place, without reforming to Land Value Taxation, people will refrain from improving their property, for fear of higher taxes. Land Value Taxation would do wonders; in terms of simplify taxes, making taxes make sense again in order to restore people's trust in government, freeing people's entrepreneurial spirit, and allowing for the beautification of homes without worries about gentrification. It could also decentralize government, and potentially reduce antipathy between high-skilled and less skilled workers.

     Georgism would enable the community and the market to function as one and the same, by recouping – through redistribution - the costs of stolen unimproved land value which was stolen by speculators and land hoarders. This will bring about less government interference in the marketplaces for all goods besides land, which will in turn allow for the drastic simplification of taxes and work alike.

     Simplifying taxes - and eliminating the need for ordinary low-income working people (and everybody else who makes their money without profiting at public expense) to file income taxes - will help facilitate the balancing of government budgets, and help end public governments' financial crises.

     Solving those crises will help reduce the city's dependence on foreign governments for revenue, which usually carries with it a responsibility to implement certain policies which may not always be helpful, but are accepted begrudgingly in order to receive those funds. I would recommend replacing intergovernmental taxes, replacement taxes, and home rule taxes, with Land Value Taxation; because eliminating those taxes will help reduce the city's political and financial dependence on foreign governments. Becoming politically and financially less dependent upon the county and state, will help the City of Waukegan experiment more in regards to L.V.T..



7. “An Economic Miracle”

     Focusing on how to source revenue ethically and efficiently, would also help shift the focus, in budget balancing, from the “we need to tax X because we need to spend it on Y” model, to a model based on “spending money on Y may be necessary, but taxing X to fund Y is only acceptable if X and Y are related to each other, and if X is a harmful behavior that makes it seem necessary to spend money on Y in the first place".

     The closer we move towards a system where government can't tax or fine people unless they do something wrong (including harm the community's ability to make use of land and common resources), the closer government will come to honoring the principle enshrined in the Fifth Amendment and Thirteenth Amendment; i.e., that no private property shall be taken for public use without just compensation, and that no involuntary servitude (including rendering of income from labor) shall be required except in cases wherein someone has been convicted of a crime.

     If you help to implement these changes, people will say that what happened in Waukegan was an economic miracle. That's what they said about what 12 Pittsburgh suburbs did, when they experimented with LVT between the 1980s and 2000s. These towns' successes with LVT wasn't able to outlast the 2007-09 financial crisis, unfortunately; but they did see less land waste, less homelessness and unemployment, and more production, as a result.

     Economist Mason Gaffney says that Land Value Taxation could fully fund government by itself; as land constitutes approximately 1/3 of the economy.
     I'm not sure what level of Land Value Tax would be necessary here, however. More research, and experimentation, and consultation with the city's economic advisors, would be necessary, before determining that.
     In Australia, just a 6% tax on unimproved land value is recommended, to solve the country's budget problems, but that might not translate to the issues faced by a small American city such as Waukegan. 
     [Note: See the second post-script, at the end of this article, to read about why I recommend a 16% tax for Waukegan.]

     Here's a video about land use in Australia:

     I can connect you to Georgist economists if you would like, I know a few through Facebook. One named Adam Jon Monroe lives in Chicago. He stresses that basic income and pollution taxes would not be part of a Georgist system, as Henry George supported a free market for everything except land (i.e., he supported free movement of labor and capital, and free markets and free trade for all things related to labor and capital).

     I'm at 608-417-9395 if you have any questions.






[Click, and open in new tab or window, to see in full resolution.
This image was not designed by the author of this blog.]





[Click, and open in new tab or window, to see in full resolution.
This image was designed by the author of this blog,
and previously appeared on this blog at the following address:
www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/11/georgist-economics-illustrated-with.html.]







[Click, and open in new tab or window, to see in full resolution.

This image was designed by the author of this blog,




Part III: Post-Scripts


First Post-Script, Written and Added on April 6th, 2021:

     In the above letter, I stated that I would like to end the city's sourcing of revenue from proceeds from rental income and capital leases, while phasing-in Land Value Taxation to replace it. I would like to amend that idea slightly; to the following.

     The following taxation powers, which the city currently has, should be combined: 1) the city's rent-charging and capital leasing powers; 2) its ability to impose liens; 3) its ability to charge taxes on hotels and motels; 4) its power to assess property taxes; and 5) its power to collect funds for a registry of vacant lots.
     The agency resulting from this union of tax powers could be named something like "the Land Tax Revenue Service" or "the Land Revenue Service". If it would be helpful, another agency could be created, to encapsulate all other sources of tax revenue.

     In order to bring the city's tax code in compliance with Land Value Taxation, the Land Revenue Service would then have to curtail the third and fourth powers mentioned above; by 3) restricting the levying of taxes on hotels and motels solely to unoccupied units which are in declining states of maintenance; and by 4) restricting the levying of property taxes to taxes on non-improvements rather than improvements.
      Such a "Land Revenue Service" - or L.R.S. - would eventually fund a Community Land Trust; a non-for-profit corporation that would manage land on behalf of the community. Once complete, a Community Air Trust and Community Water Trust could be created as well, to allow hydrogeographers and marine biologists and pollution experts (etc.) to find the specific agencies which are relevant to their particular interests regarding ecological preservation.

     But first, the L.R.S. would have to obtain databases of abandoned and vacant lots and buildings, and lands in declining state of economic and environmental value, in order to perform an adequate assessment regarding which lands can be taxed, and how much revenue can be gleaned from the taxation of despoiled and unimproved land value.
     Approximately $100 million in unimproved land value would be necessary to tax annually, in order to fund the Waukegan city government at its current spending levels. But Waukegan's approximately $1.9 billion G.D.P. - coupled with Georgist economist Mason Gaffney's observation that one-third of the G.D.P. is untaxed land rent - means that there is probably closer to $633 million in untaxed rent, generated each year, which could fund city services.

     In order for city governments to be streamlined, and their budgets made balanced and sustainable, the powers to tax property, hotels and motels, vacant lots, and rentals of government property, and the power to impose liens for non-payment of taxes, must all work together.
     They must work together so well that they become indistinguishable from one-another. They must be complemented, in sourcing the government's revenue, by fee-for-service models and utilities fees; again, until there is little discernable difference between the two, and it becomes clear that Land Value Taxation is a fee-for-service model.
     This must continue until government budgets are funded solely through different categories of Land Value Taxation, fee-for-service models, and voluntary contributions. This will allow participation in government services to occur on a maximally voluntary and free-market basis, allowing supply and demand to meet at a reasonable price, minimally affected by the economic activities of government.
     If successful, and if Land Value Taxation becomes so popular that support for it becomes nearly universal, then Land Value Taxation will be on its way to becoming a fully voluntary tax. It's not fully avoidable, though; but it's a tax that you can easily avoid, as long as you don't waste, hoard, or destroy public or common resources or socially created value that you yourself did not create.
     Does that sound like a fair deal?



Second Post-Script, Written and Added on April 8th, 2021

     Given Waukegan's 88,000-person population and its $21,500 income per capita, I assume that Waukegan's G.D.P. (gross domestic product) is approximately $1.9 billion per year.
     Georgist economist Mason Gaffney estimates that one-third of the G.D.P. is tied up in untaxed rent on unimproved land. If that is true about Waukegan, then I would estimate that there is about one-third of $1.9 trillion in untaxed land rents in Waukegan, which comes out to $633,333,333.33.
     The target amount which I provided for the Land Value Tax, in the fourth year of my budget proposal, was $102,500,000.00. That number is 16.1842% of $633 million (the value of land rent which is available to be taxed).
     This is why I would recommend that unimproved land value should be taxed at 16.1842% of its value, during the fourth and final year in the process of gradually replacing approximately 60% of government revenues with Land Value Taxes.
     I would recommend that, during the first four years, unimproved land be taxed at 4.04605% of its value; and then 8.0921% the following year; then 12.13185% the third year; and finally 16.1842%, where it should remain until the city decides that its overall budget should decrease.

     





E-Mail to Ann Taylor written on April 2nd, 2021

This article was first published to this blog
on April 3rd, 2021

Post-Scripts Written and Added on April 6th and 8th, 2021

Table of contents edited on April 8th, 2021

 

Monday, February 8, 2021

Achieving Stability During a Budget Deficit: Four Pillars of Fiscal Solvency

     The diagram below shows that there are four things Congress can do to attempt to solve a budget deficit. These are four tools that Congress can use to fill the gap between how much tax revenue the government is taking in during a given year, and the full cost of the annual budget.


     These four tools are: 1) Increase taxes; 2) Increase borrowing; 3) Reduce spending; and 4) Inflate (or "print money").



Note: The federal government can use all four tools,
but the state governments can only increase taxes,
increase borrowing, and reduce spending.
State governments do not have the power to inflate the currency.


     I have depicted the "reduce spending" pillar broken, because the overall federal government budget continues to increase every year, meaning that this tool isn't being used (except on the micro level). 
      This can only mean overreliance on increasing taxes and borrowing, and on printing money.
     Through understanding the graphic above, we can see how to overcome that overreliance. Making proper use of the "reduce spending" tool, will allow Congress to increase taxes and borrowing less than it was planning to increase them. It will also allow Congress to get by without resorting to inflating the currency (and thus devaluing the dollar) as much as it was planning to inflate.


     The federal government's budget deficit from the year 2020 was a whopping $3.1 trillion; that is, the federal government took in $3.1 trillion less in tax revenue, than it spent on its programs and projects.
     Let's round that $3.1 trillion off to $3.2 trillion (the nearest multiple of $800 billion) to make things simpler. Let's also assume, for the sake of simplicity, that we want Congress to rely on each one of its four tools, in equal dollar amounts.
     This would mean setting a baseline of 25% reliance each - or just under $800 billion each, considering the current deficit - in order to balance the budget, and make revenues and spending meet.


     Thus, by simply dividing the current (or future) deficit by four, we know what Congress should do:

     1. Increase tax revenues in a manner which will result in the raising of an additional $800 billion this year.
     2. Borrow $800 billion more this year than the federal government did last year.
     3. Reduce spending by $800 billion as compared to last year.
     4. Inflate by $800 billion (i.e., announce a new "Quantitative Easing" program, and authorize the Federal Reserve Bank to purchase $800 billion worth of U.S. Treasury bonds).



     This may not be a popular set of proposals, but based on the severe deficit and debt problems, and the statistics and the number of tools available, we can at least conclude that these proposals constitute a logical, sensible, pragmatic, "moderate" position on the matter.
     In my opinion, politics would probably be a lot simpler if this set of proposals were viewed as the baseline or "centrist" position, and if the political parties were split along the lines of the degree to which a politician or party advocated overreliance or under-reliance on any particular one of the tools.
     The importance of inflation and borrowing is under-emphasized in the media. Political propaganda tells us that Democrats want to spend more money, while Republicans want to spend less. The truth is that neither major party is seriously considering the severe budget measures which it will require to get us out of the huge hole in which we find ourselves (nearly $28 trillion in debt).


     It should be noted that the four-step formula which I have articulated above, is only good for filling the gap between spending and revenue, and getting rid of the deficit.
     Actually paying off the debt will require achieving a budget surplus for many years in a row, and using that money to reimburse the nations and bondholders who loaned the government those funds.
     Fortunately, though, the same tools can be used to achieve a surplus, which can be used to fill-in the deficit. I have recommended paying-off $1 trillion dollars a year, as soon as a $1 trillion annual surplus can be achieved.


     To fill a $3.2 trillion hole in the federal government's budget, and generate a $1 trillion annual surplus, simply add one-fourth of one trillion dollars ($250 billion) to the target amount assigned to each one of the four tools.

     1. Increase tax revenues in a manner which will result in the raising of an additional $1.05 trillion this year.
     2. Borrow $1.05 trillion more this year than the federal government did last year.
     3. Reduce spending by $1.05 trillion as compared to last year.
     4. Inflate by $1.05 trillion (i.e., announce a new "Quantitative Easing" program, and authorize the Federal Reserve Bank to purchase $1.05 trillion worth of U.S. Treasury bonds).


     It is my hope that this diagram and article will inspire a new wave of debate regarding how the government should best attempt to balance the budget, and restore fiscal solvency to our tax base and to our currency.

    



Written and published on February 9th, 2021

Inspired by content included in a congressional affairs class taught by
University of Wisconsin at Madison professor David T. Canon
between 2005 and 2009

Friday, February 5, 2021

Solving Overwork and Unemployment: How to Create a Functional Labor and Tax Platform in Eight Easy Steps

     American tax and labor policies are in a state of dysfunction, inactivity, stagnation, and chaos. We must restore functionality and logic to the American economy and its labor market as soon as possible.

     Unemployment, being overworked and overburdened with pressure to accept overtime hours, and struggling to scrape together enough work-hours to qualify for benefits and make ends meet, have all become severe problems in the United States.

     In order to fix this problem, each our overtime laws, our minimum wage laws, poverty threshold laws, and laws on tax credits and basic income, need to work together. Laws on taxes and labor need to be crafted in a coordinated manner which makes sense, with each policy measure logically proceeding from, and being justified by, and making room for the other related policies being implemented, in order to help fulfill the conditions necessary to achieve those policies' goals.


     The following is a set of proposals regarding laws on taxes, labor hours, poverty levels, and related topics. But it is also a set of instructions for those wishing to legislate on economic matters.

     You can come up with your own proposal like this; by going through each of the eight topics, and choosing your favorite proposal from among the two or three choices listed below them. I have called these options are the “Conservative”, “Progressive”, and “Libertarian” plans, which in some cases feature combinations or alterations. [Note: I do not mean to suggest that all conservatives would be likely to support the proposals I've termed "conservative", however; I only mean that the "conservative" reforms are the most conservative reforms, of the reforms I've proposed below.]
     I suggest highlighting your favorite proposal, crossing everything else out, jotting down a few notes based on what's left, and adding your own ideas.

     This proposal can also function as a political survey.


     I recommend selecting either the “a” option for all questions, or the “b” option for all questions, or the “c” option for all questions. I say this because consistency is important, given that the whole idea of this article is to provide a framework for achieving an interlocking set of proposals that make sense together.

     But libertarians and conservatives, conservatives and progressives, and progressives and libertarians each have a specific set of things that they agree and disagree about; therefore I will not discourage my readers from mixing and matching. Just keep in mind that the consistency will be diminished, and the problem may not be fully solved as the result of your choices.


     Feel free to e-mail me at jwkopsick@gmail.com if you have any questions or suggestions about this proposal and survey, or if you would like to tell me your response to the survey.


     Notes about the statistics referenced in this article:

     The 6.7% unemployment rate figure (which I use to estimate a 26.8% "real real unemployment rate") is cited because the unemployment rate was 6.7% in December 2020. In January, that rate decreased to 6.3%, so adjustments should be made wherever necessary, when updating these statistics to generate policy suggestions conforming to the new economic reality and the new statistics coming out.

     The 34.5 work-hours per week figure is based on statistics from 2019.
     The original statistic was 34.4 hours per week, but I have rounded that to the nearest half an hour, for simplicity's sake. More precise numbers should always be used to generate final policy proposals. This article should be used only as a template and place-holder, until closer to the election for which it will be developed and perfected.     




     1. Reduce the standard number of work-hours per week which the government intends to be the standard number used in regards to the pertinent federal labor laws:

     1a. (“Conservative” or “simple/basic” option, only solves half of the problem but could also be a major first step towards finishing the job): Reduce the standard number of work hours per week from 40 to 34.5, the average number of hours worked by Americans.

     1b. (“Progressive” or “complex/extra” option): Reduce the standard number of work hours per week from 40 to 27.2, to account for the number of unemployed people who would start working if they could, which issues from the fact that “real real unemployment” (i.e., U6 or U7) is at approximately 26.8% (so it would require reducing the 40 hours a week by 26.8%, down to 27.2 hours per week).

     1c. (“Libertarian” option): Repeal all laws which establish or suggest a uniform or target goal as it pertains to desired number of work-hours per week (This would be difficult without eliminating vast numbers of government workers).



     2. Repeal or amend overtime laws to reflect the need to reduce competition for labor-hours between temporary and gig workers, underemployed people, and seasonally and structurally unemployed workers (etc.) vs. overtime workers with secure jobs:

     2a. (“Conservative” option, assuming that 1a was followed and completed): Keep overtime laws, but make overtime start at 34.5 hours per week, without increasing the “time-and-a-half” pay requirement for overtime work.

     2b. (“Progressive” option, which might make the problem worse): Keep overtime laws, but make overtime start after 34.5 hours per week, and increase the “time-and-a-half” pay requirement for overtime work to 175% or 200%.

     2c. (“Libertarian” option): Repeal and eliminate overtime laws altogether, thereby reducing external pressure and incentive to work overtime.



     3. Set a goal to achieve an average American worker income:

     3a & 3b. (“Progressive-Conservative” option): Set a goal to achieve an average American worker income of $34,500 per year.

     3c. (“Libertarian” option): Repeal all laws which establish or suggest a uniform or target goal as it pertains to desired average American worker income.



     4. Raise the poverty level (up from $12,760 per year, per single-person household):

     4a. (“Conservative” option): Raise the poverty level to $17,250 (equal to half of the $34,500 per year goal).

     4b. (“Progressive” option): Raise the poverty level to $34,500 (the average annual income goal).

     4c. (“Libertarian” option): Repeal any and all laws establishing or suggesting any sort of poverty level or uniform poverty threshold.



     5. Increase the minimum wage, to adjust for cost-of-living increases and other economic factors which need updating:

     5a. (“Conservative” option): Set a $17.25 per hour minimum wage. (This is based on the premise that many people may still choose to work for forty hours a week or more, and thus might not need $20/hr. At fifty five-day weeks per year, that comes out to an annual income of $34,500 per year).

     5b. (“Progressive” option): Set a $20 per hour minimum wage (to account for the fact that 34.5 hours of work per week, for $20 per hour, for fifty five-day work-weeks per year, comes out to $34,500 per year).

     5c. (“Libertarian” option): Repeal and eliminate minimum wage laws altogether, in order to remove and criminalize all external suggestions on prevailing, minimum, and maximum wages, which may not only be unnecessary, but which also distort the market by distorting price signals for wage labor. Allow the labor markets to dictate the prevailing wage, and let the free-floating prevailing wage to be the only wage rate that is considered “average”, or remotely “official”, in any way.



     6. Create a tax exemption for poor people which is based on the average annual income suggested by the new minimum wage and standard number of work-hours:

     6a & 6b. (“Progressive-Conservative” option) Exempt all 18-year-olds (most of whom lack proper tax documentation) - and all people 19 and older whom disclosed their taxes the previous year - from all taxes, as long as they do not earn more than $34,500 per year, and can prove it.

     6c. (“(Geo-)Libertarian” option) Exempt everyone from taxes, except for people and businesses which profit from the despoilation of land, and from the improper solicitation of taxpayer subsidies and monopoly privileges. Eliminate all taxes which are levied based on quantity, and only enforce tax laws against those who use violence and/or destruction to earn their livings.



     7. Establish an alternative minimum tax payment that gives taxpayers some choice in regards to how they are taxed:

     7a & 7b. (“Progressive-Conservative” option): Establish an alternative minimum tax payment of $17,250, or up to $17,250, per year; and require that taxpayers choose between the following: 1) report that your annual income was over $34,500 and pay taxes; 2) report that your annual income was under $34,500 and receive an exemption from taxes for that year; or 3) keep information about the amount you earned private, but disclose the sources, and pay the alternative minimum of $17,250.

     7c. (“Libertarian” option): Repeal and eliminate the alternative minimum tax payment.



     8. Provide a basic income (or refundable tax credits which occur on a routine basis), or else pass additional non-refundable tax credits.

     8a. (“Conservative” option): Pass non-refundable tax credits for people with sick, young, old, and disabled dependents, and for people earning slightly more than $34,500 per year but may still need and/or qualify for assistance.

     8b. (“Progressive” option): Pass a universal basic income guarantee for all residents earning less than $34,500 per year; providing a basic income equal to $17,250 per year ($1,437.50 per month).

     8c. (“Libertarian/Friedmanite” option): Pass a Negative Income Tax proposal which builds on the voluntary tax information sharing proposal. Those who elect to provide the amounts in their tax receipts, shall receive refundable tax credits of an amount which is equal to 50% of the difference between the amount they earned in the previous year, and $34,500.



Written and published on February 5th, 2021

Edited on March 17th and April 22nd and 23rd, 2021

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

E-Mails to Illinois State Legislators About Tax Revenue Sourcing and Land Value Taxation

     The State of Illinois currently suffers from a budget deficit, public debt, a pension crisis, and widespread disagreement about what to tax and how to solve the state's budget woes. I believe that Henry George, and his idea of Land Value Taxation, could do a lot to solve these problems.

     I wrote the two following e-mails on October 6th, 2020, on the advice of the Lake County tax assessor, in order to communicate to my elected representatives what I think the solution should be. The first is addressed to a Democratic member of the Illinois State Assembly, and the second is addressed to a Republican member of the same body.

     The introductions, and names of the particular lawmakers, have been removed.



First E-Mail (to Democrats):


     My name is Joe Kopsick, I'm a 33-year-old voter from Waukegan. I'm also running for office.

     I was wondering if you've ever heard of Henry George or his idea of Land Value Taxation. George had a big influence on the Democratic Party in the 1880s, and almost became the mayor of New York City. I think George's ideas could do a lot to help Illinois's tax problems.

     Illinoisans are currently debating how to prevent property taxes from rising when property values rise, and how much to tax income. Instead of talking about how much to tax income, I believe we should be talking about whether to tax it at all.

     I also believe that we should pay less attention to the issue of whether "Is the tax funding something worthwhile", and more attention to "is it helpful, efficient, and ethical to tax this source of revenue in the first place?" If we keep taxing production, we will deplete our revenue base. But if we tax things we want to discourage, like destruction, then the need for government solutions to that destruction, will decrease, while the size of the budget decreases too. Government will enter the picture, solve the problem, and then go away; instead of sticking around forever to permanently administer programs that were originally intended only as temporary fixes.

     It's not that I think it's wrong to tax billionaires. It's that we should be taxing people for acquiring wealth through illicit or fraudulent purposes that take advantage of taxpayers; we shouldn't be taxing them solely for earning money, as if doing so were a crime. The people who pay the highest taxes, should be the people who acquired their wealth through destroying and wasting, or polluting, or selling things they didn't produce. People who produce and earn through their own hard work and effort, should either be taxed less than they are now, or else not at all. Or else they should be taxed solely in proportion to how much they owe the taxpayers for providing forms of assistance that helped them acquire their wealth.

     Capital gains taxes, and corporate income taxes, should of course be regarded as different from earned income that results from laboring in exchange for wages. But we must understand that imposing higher and higher taxes on income and property, will eventually have the effect of punishing or discouraging people from being more productive or increasing the value of their homes.

     This idea is called the Laffer Curve. Henry George's idea is basically just the Laffer Curve, but applied to land taxes and property taxes, instead of income taxes.

     Lawmakers must understand that most people don't like paying taxes; and for that reason, we should avoid taxing forms of voluntary exchange which we have no logical reason to discourage if we want people to prosper. I believe that earning income, and buying and selling, are harmless forms of productive economic activity, which should not be punished.



Second E-Mail (to Republicans):


     My name is Joe Kopsick, I'm a 33-year-old voter living in Waukegan. I'm also running for office.

     Are you familiar with the Laffer Curve (named for Reagan adviser Art Laffer)? It's the idea that if a person is taxed at too high a rate, they will eventually stop producing, in order to avoid taxes.

     I think the tax code should change, to reflect the fact that most people don't like taxes, and will try to avoid them. I think we should be taxing wasteful and destructive activities, in order to penalize them on purpose; instead of accidentally penalizing productivity, by confiscating people's money through income taxes, and by taxing sales.

     Earning money and buying and selling are are productive activities that harm nobody, and so in my opinion they should be completely untaxed, or at least taxed at a lower rate than they are now. [Raising expected revenues from other sources of revenue could easily replace the gaps in funding which would be caused by the elimination of income and sales taxes.]

     I believe that we should shift from a system based on taxing income and sales and the improvements we make to our homes, to a system based on taxing the non-improvement of land.

     Taxing unimproved land value at a higher rate than the rate at which we tax buildings, could even help solve the property tax problem. Property taxes would stop going up just because property values go up. This would also solve most of the gentrification problem.

     Several Pittsburgh suburbs tried this system for a while and had a lot of success with it (in decreasing unemployment, and decreasing the number of unoccupied properties that are just taking up space and have no economic activity happening on them).

     I think this idea could potentially get Democrats to understand how destructive the income tax is, and understand that they really are discouraging productivity and earnings. And once the Democrats understand that, bipartisan compromise with Republicans will be a more realistic prospect.



Conclusion of Both E-Mails:


     Does this make sense to you? Are you interested in learning more about Henry George and Land Value Taxation? If so, please e-mail me at jwkopsick@gmail.com, or call me at 608-417-9395.

     This is a personalized e-mail and not an automatically generated message; I am contacting you on behalf of myself, not on the behalf of any organization.

     Thanks for reading, I look forward to your response.


     Joseph W. Kopsick

     608-417-9395

     jwkopsick@gmail.com

     Waukegan, IL 60085









E-Mails Written on October 6th, 2020

Introduction Written on October 8th, 2020

Originally Published on October 8th, 2020



Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Taxing Businesses for Using Public Resources and for Benefiting from Taxpayer-Funded Privileges

Introduction

     The proposal below is a suggestion as to what business tax rates ought to be, based on the notion that a business should be taxed in accordance with how much assistance it receives from the public, the commons, and/or from taxpayers.
     The idea behind this is one of free enterprise; that a business cannot call itself truly “private” unless it provides most or all of its needs by itself, without the assistance of the government or the state. The goal of the tax proposal below, is to impose punitive taxes, in order to discourage the use of public resources.
     Such resources include taxpayer-funded privileges, monopoly rights, and other unfair advantages which businesses would not have in the absence of the state. Since the state is a mechanism which uses coercion, threats, and violence to extract taxes, it is unfair for businesses to enlist the state to extort from taxpayers in a manner which would be illegal if the businesses did it directly. The state hands taxpayer funds, and lucrative contract deals, over to selected cronies; in a process which is sometimes called either “picking winners and losers”, “economic interventionism” or “Keynesianism”, “crony capitalism”, or “redistribution from the poor to the rich”.
     If and when subsidies and bailouts and other privileges are being offered to businesses, it will be necessary and proper to tax such businesses, in order to provide fairness; whether through a social safety net, or through administrative reforms which could increase the opportunity to compete.

     The rationale for choosing the tax rates, is that: 1) all tax rates combined add up to 100%; 2) the most egregious offenses against principles of responsible enterprise are taxed the most heavily; and 3) the second-least egregious offense is taxed at twice the rate of the least egregious offense, and the third-least is taxed at three times the rate of the least, and so on.
     This means that if a business takes every possible opportunity to use public resources which are afforded to it, then it must pay 100% of its profits going forward (or of its earnings going forward; or of its accumulated wealth, in the event of a revolution, or the repeal of the ban on ex-post-facto laws).
     The time frame in question could be annual – meaning that the proposals apply if a business has committed an “offense against free enterprise” in a given calendar year - or the time frame could be all-time, or cumulative, or any other temporal variable.
     I am leaving the matter of what to tax, and when to tax it, unresolved, in order to make this an open-ended proposal, which is not intended as a particular law, but instead as an open-ended framework. I am doing this in hopes that my proposal will inspire others to build upon it, to make it as specific as will be necessary to develop it into a complete plan for reforming the way we tax business (and tailor-made to the particular legislative and logistical needs of the jurisdiction in question).


Proposals

     #1. If a business discriminates against customers, while maintaining public accommodations open to the market-going public and substantially affecting interstate commerce, and while receiving taxpayer funds, then the business's total amount of taxable wealth, should be subject to a tax of 8.74545%.
     #2. If a business receives bailout funds from the Department of the Treasury, then that business should be subject to a tax of 8.345454%.
     #3. If a business receives lucrative contracting deals from the government, then that business should be subject to a tax of 7.945454%.
     #4. If a business wields a collusive or unnatural monopoly, according to the Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Competition, then that business should be subject to a tax of 7.545454%.
     #5. If a business is a for-profit entity which was created by government or an agency thereof, then that business should be subject to a tax of 7.145454%.
     #6. If a business receives assistance in declaring bankruptcy, from the Department of Justice and its bankruptcy courts, then that business should be subject to a tax of 6.745454%.
     #7. If a business receives corporate subsidies from the Department of Commerce, and/or any state chamber of commerce, then that business should be subject to a tax of 6.345454%.
     #8. If a business offers publicly traded stock, which is being traded by any public official(s) capable of regulating an industry which is relevant to that stock, then that business should be subject to a tax of 5.945454%.
     #9. If a business receives finance or insurance from the Export-Import Bank, of goods it produces which are purchased in foreign countries, then that business should be subject to a tax of 5.545454%.
     #10. If a business receives trade promotions and trade protections from the Office of the United States Trade Representative, then that business should be subject to a tax of 5.145454%.
     #11. If a business receives a corporate charter, or a limited liability corporation (L.L.C.) designation and protection, from a Secretary of State's office, then that business should be subject to a tax of 4.745454%.
     #12. If a business benefits from favorable government regulations regarding professional licensing standards, in a way that “grandfathers-in” old established companies and “job creators”, then that business should be subject to a tax of 4.345454%.
     #13. If a business receives intellectual property protections (such as patents, copyrights, and trademarks) from the U.S. Office of Trademarks and Patents, then that business should be subject to a tax of 3.945454%.
     #14. If a business benefits from the easy credit and low interest rates which are offered by the Federal Reserve System, then that business should be subject to a tax of 3.545454%.
     #15. If a business receives discounts on public utilities (such as roads, sewage and waste disposal, and electricity and other forms of energy) for buying in large amounts, then that business should be subject to a tax of 3.145454%.
     #16. If a business receives small business loans from the Small Business Administration, then that business should be subject to a tax of 2.745454%.
      #17. If a business benefits from favorable zoning laws which allow wealth to be created, earned, and stored far from where people are trying to take it home to, then that business should be subject to a tax of 2.345454%.
      #18. If a business receives physical property protection from the police, then that business should be subject to a tax of 1.945454%.
     #19. If a business receives bank deposit insurance from the F.D.I.C. (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation), then that business should be subject to a tax of 1.545454%.
     #20. If a business receives public utilities instead of providing its own utilities, then that business should be subject to a tax of 1.145454%.
     #21. If a business receives physical property protection from the U.S. Armed Forces, then that business should be subject to a tax of 0.745454%.
     #22. If a business occupies land in a manner which makes the ground beneath the surface unusable or inaccessible to the public or to others, then that business should be subject to a tax of 0.345454%.

     Additional Proposal: File criminal charges against businesses which commit offenses #1-#8, in addition to taxing them at the rate mentioned. Their privilege to receive the same sort of privileges in the future, could additionally be curtailed, to help reduce the chance that the businesses will continue to exploit the opportunities offered to them.



Post-Script

     This proposal was inspired and influenced by my April 2016 infographic “Government is the Source of Corporate Privilege”, and by Andy Craig's idea to abolish Secretary of States' offices in order to prevent the creation of new corporations by the state, which inspired that infographic.
     That infographic, which lists ten types of artificial business privilege and their sources in government, is available at the following link:

     To learn more about why I believe that monopolies and recipients of taxpayer funds should be taxed whenever such funds are being offered, please read my May 2019 article “Rent, Profit, Interest, Usury, and Taxing Monopolies”:




Written on September 22nd, 26th, and 29th

Published on September 29th, 2020

Monday, August 31, 2020

Message to Progressives and Environmentalists in Lake County, Illinois Regarding My Campaign


     What follows are excerpts from posts which I made to the Facebook Groups “Lake County IL Environmentalists”, “Clean Air Lake County Community Support”, “Northern Illinois Progressive Candidates, Electeds, and Activists”, and “Illinois Against the TPP” on August 29th, 2020.


     Hi everyone. I'm running as a write-in candidate for U.S. Representative from Illinois's 10th district (the northeast corner of the state).
     I support peace, a fair and free economy, taxing destruction and waste instead of harmless productive activity, and balancing budgets through reducing unnecessary military expenditures not necessary to our defense.
     I also support promoting local solutions to environmental problems, to guard against the risk that the E.P.A. could continue to be put up for sale to corporate and pro-pollution interests.
     Furthermore, fixing our economy will make it easier to decrease our national debt. I also support amending the 13th Amendment to get rid of as many forms of involuntary servitude (i.e., slavery) as possible, both within the criminal justice system and outside of it.

     I want to reform taxes so that they focus on environmental issues. I will promote Land Value Taxation, one of the two revenue sourcing systems which Howie Hawkins has proposed for funding the Green New Deal. The other revenue sourcing system, the Negative Income Tax, is also a step in the right direction as far as improving income taxes goes, but I'd eventually like to eliminate all taxes on earned income (unearned income is a different issue though).
     With Land Value Taxation, local governments would be urged to increase natural resource extraction fees, and increase taxes on land degradation and blight (as well as vacant land, abandoned properties, land hoarding), while reducing taxes on income, sales, consumption, and building value).
     Additionally, I support Community Land Trusts (C.L.T.s) as well as community air trusts and community water trusts. C.L.T.s should be created, in each county in America, as voluntary associations which are non-profit and untaxed. They would be untaxed because they would be the entities doing the taxing of land; charging land occupancy fees and land degradation fees. C.L.T.s would help align each community's economic future with its future need for ecological sustainability. 
     I believe in dual federalism, triple federalism, and subsidiarism: the most local authority possible, should handle environmental issues, as long as that authority is competent enough to handle the issue. Not all environmental problems are nationwide issues; some of them are local. Furthermore, no county would willingly allow itself to be polluted. That is why we must ensure that the federal government never has the right to determine which areas may be polluted, or have nuclear materials stored, without that community's consent, and without proper compensation for the adverse health effects. Federal environmental standards can help, but having environmental standards is not SO important, that such standards should OVERRIDE local and state environmental regulations, if those regulations can be better than the nationwide standard. That is why localities must be free to set higher environmental standards than the national standard.
     For each community to have a C.L.T. (a non-profit, untaxed voluntary association which help guard against the risk of the E.P.A. continuing to be bought and sold by pro-pollution interests. I would align myself with environmental conservationists, and also the decentralists within the Green Party, but I would also promote C.L.T.s as a quasi-"private", somewhat property-rights-oriented solution to environmental problems (because they would be non-profit and untaxed, and therefore unaffiliated with the state and federal governments).

     I also support bioregionalism, the idea behind the Cascadia independence project. I believe that bioregionalism will help prevent unnecessary federal intrusion into local environmental problems, and restore local rights without allowing states to use states' rights as a justification to dismantle environmental protections.
     If I am elected to Congress, I will spread awareness of Land Value Taxation, Community Land Trusts, and bioregionalism on a national level. This will help the current generation of environmental law students, and other voters, get a free education about these little-known ideas, and start a conversation about what needs to become an important topic in American political discourse: ENVIRONMENTAL TAXATION.
     These ideas are important because they could reduce unemployment, reduce waste of land, decrease economic inequality, and reduce environmental degradation, all at the same time.

     I want to help create a free and fair economy by building a Mutualist Party, while offering new and unique alternatives to traditional neo-liberal policies like those of my opponent Brad Schneider, like re-orienting taxation to focus on environmental issues (such as the need to tax blight and land degradation).
     On trade issues, I support "alter-globalization", in which we would have 1) localized social safety nets, alongside 2) open and fair trade, not unregulated free trade, and 3) free movement of people. We would also have 4) cultural and economic globalization, but not global government; and 5 & 6) the consumer would have the right to fully boycott (and unionize) and refuse to purchase all products (repeal Taft-Hartley).
      Please consider writing-me in against Democrat Brad Schneider and Republican Valerie Ramirez-Mukherjee. Read sections 13 and 14 of my platform to learn more about my views on the environment and Land Value Taxation (which is also part of my plan to balance budgets, lower prices on goods, and increase the purchasing power of the dollar).




     See this link to learn more: http://www.facebook.com/groups/586988188625917/






Written as separate posts on August 29th, 2020

Edited together and published on August 31st, 2020

How to Fold Two Square Pieces of Card Stock into a Box

      This series of images shows how to take two square pieces of card stock (or thick paper), and cut and fold them into two halves of a b...