GROUND RENT A SOCIAL PRODUCT 21 11,000 than has Jones over the facilities afforded by society for the promotion of private business. IX.—The Tax Imposed by Time A representative real estate man of Boston has said that the lifetime of the best new buildings in the city cannot be figured to exceed two score years, and that with swiftly accelerating changes they will have to give way in forty years to a new and better order. Granting these facts, if during the forty years the new buildings shall yield to the landlord interest upon their cost and 2\ per cent annually for depreciation, he is at no disadvantage from the necessity of tearing down and building greater, while both labour, which builds buildings, and business, which uses buildings, will be greatly benefited by such a process. What a paradise any American city might be made if built over new every forty years! Yet the users of the buildings can well afford to pay 2\ per cent a year for such a luxury. Any sensible readjustment and equalisation of taxation should take this annual depreciation directly into account as a tax imposed by time upon all pro ducts of labour, a tax so heavy as to seem an instant excuse for exempting them from all other taxes. On the other hand, while time is engaged in the destruction of the building, it is occupied in the con struction of the land value. A conspicuous example of the contrariety of this time agency is found in the biography of a once modern building that in 1870 supplanted a colonial residence which for several years previous to 1809 was the residence of John Quincy Adams.