V1
Preface
task. There are probably not a dozen persons in
England who could pass an examination on the prin-
ciples which determine the distribution between the
various localities of the proceeds of the national taxes
allocated to them by the Local Government Act,
1888, and the Acts which have followed it; there are
probably several thousand practical local administra-
tors who believe that if the cost of paying and clothing
the local police force is increased, the locality will
recover half the cost from the imperial exchequer—
which has not been true ever since 1888.
In the first edition 1 scarcely discussed the merits
of the system of rating, and indeed rather rashly
expressed the opinion that the mferences to be drawn
from the history were obvious. As it turned out,
many readers drew inferences which seem to me
neither obvious nor correct. In particular, some of
them appeared to draw the astonishing conclusion
that a system which grew up, as the phrase is, “of
itself,” that is, was established by the practice of
thousands of communities, and their experience
through several centuries, must necessarily be bad,
and ought forthwith to be abolished in favour of some
fanciful modernised * restoration’ of the primitive
arrangements which it gradually displaced. I have
therefore, in the seventh chapter, tried to answer the
question whether the existing system fits in with our
ideas of justice, and in the eighth chapter I have
discussed at greater length its advantages from an
sconomic point of view. I fear that some readers
will be shocked to find that I can speak as favourably
as I do of an institutiont which causes so much grumb-
ling. I would ask them to remember that it is