178 History of Local Rates
are obviously directly opposed when they make their
bargain for rent, a rent once settled, even if it can be
revised every year, or even every quarter, is not
regarded as a thing to be lightly altered. Every
occupier expects to have to bear the brunt of
any small change to the detriment of the property
he occupies, and to reap for a considerable, if often
somewhat indefinite, period, the profit of any small
change which makes his occupation more valuable.
The consequence is that there is not much differ-
ence between the feeling of an occupier who is the
owner of the property he occupies and one who is not.
Both, so far as enlightened self-interest governs them,
are of course inclined to favour such expenditure, and
such expenditure only, from the local exchequer, as
will bring them in commodities or services which they
value more highly than what they could buy with the
money if it had remained at their private disposal
instead of being contributed as taxes. Now if com-
modities or services which cost a penny in the pound,
but which occupiers generally value at sums more
than equivalent to a penny in the pound, are pro-
vided from rates in any locality, the value of fixed
property in that locality will tend to be raised.
Hence the effort of the occupiers to spend rates profit-
ably for themselves is favourable at the same time to
the owner who is not an occupier. What they do in
the well-founded expectation of immediate benefit for
themselves, he himself would do for them at his own
immediate expense for his own ultimate benefit, if there
were no machinery by means of which they could do
it. In actual fact it constantly happens that in the
absence of suitable local government machinery for the