130 ECONOMIC ESSAYS IN HONOR OF JOHN BATES CLARK
ily,
Wise
Normally all costs are expected to be paid eventually out of
he income from the use of land. With land, however, we observe
hat many people are induced to meet the ripening costs by the
xpectation of recoupment out of an increment in land value.
Do this observation is formulated the so-called law of ripening
costs in land utilization. The costs falling upon the holder of
land during a period of ripening use are soctally mecessary and
are properly chargeable to the increment in land value resulting
rom the change in use.* =
Valuation of Land. The valuation of land implies the making
of an estimate of the expected net income from the use of land
over a period of years. In England the value of land is often
expressed as “twenty or twenty-five years purchase” of an annual
income. In the United States the expected series of annual
incomes is summarized in one figure which represents the present
alue of the succession of incomes and is called the capital value
or selling value of the land. This process of capitalizing land
income into a capital value is considered the heart of the problem
f land valuation.
he value of land is the sum of the present worth of future
ncomes. Since men are so constituted that they are impatient
or income, these future incomes are less desirable than a present
one, and consequently are discounted. The rate of discount or
rate of impatience for the community is usually the prevailing
rate of interest. However, the rate of impatience may vary with
practically every individual. Usually complicated methods of
calculation are dispensed with and the annual income is divided
by the rate of discount, the quotient being the capital or selling
alue of the land.
urther complications in the valuation process are introduced
hen the future incomes or the rate of discount are expected to
increase or decrease as time goes on. Moreover, it is recognized
that market values do not always coincide with values determined
by this method of capitalizing the net income, because various
ersonal and psychological factors sometimes disturb the cal-
A parallel in public utility economics is found in the “net deficit
theory” by which losses sustained during the period of developing a going
usiness are capitalized into the rate base.
e should examine also whether the recoupment of ripening costs out
of value increments is not merely another way of saying that the common
practice is to discount income expectations in order to meet the heavy
expenses of developing the services of land into a going business