32 THE A B C OF TAXATION rid himself of the mortgage interest that he has to pay through raising his tenant’s rent by a corresponding amount. Mortgage interest is a lien held by an individual; similarly a tax may be clearly conceived as a lien held by the State. Both affect the relation between the property owner and lien holder; neither has any bearing upon the relations between owner and tenant. “Tax” is simply the name of that part of the gross ground rent which is taken by the State in taxa tion, the other part going to the owner; the ratio these two parts bear to one another has no effect upon the gross rent figure, which is always the sum of these two parts, viz., net rent plus tax. The greater the tax, the smaller the net rent to the owner, and vice versa. Ground rent is, as a rule, “all the traffic will bear”; that is, the owner gets all he can for use of his land, whether the tax be light or heavy. Putting more tax upon land will not make it worth any more for use, will not increase the desire for it by competitors for its tenancy, will not increase its market value. To illustrate, let us consider the case of a piece of land for which the landowner gets $i ,000 rent from the man who uses it. First: The owner, let us say, pays over to the city in taxes $100 of this $1,000 rent. Is there any indi cation that this $ 100 tax has any influence in fixing the present rent at $1,000? Second: Fet us suppose that next year the city decides to take another $100 of the $1,000 rent in taxes. Could the owner then add the $200 tax to the tenant’s rent, making it $1,200? Third: Fet us suppose that the following year the tax is increased by another $100 and so on, by an annual