VALUE OF LAND AN UNTAXED VALUE 45 The beauty of this illustration is that (in a classi fication which excludes duplication by certificates or mere legal evidences of property, like stocks, bonds, etc., and includes only actual tangible property) While land stands as always for everything except the products of labour, a house is here made to stand as the representative of any and all products of individual labour, that is, for everything except land, and the illustration thus becomes all inclusive. If you have had the patience to follow it under standing^ you may rest assured that you have mas tered a basic principle of taxation, and have solved one of the most perplexing problems of political economy. What the Authorities Say of The Third Leg of the Single Tax Tripos, viz.: That the Selling Value of Land Is an Untaxed Value. “The land tax, which is next on the list, should equally cause but little controversy. It is persistently claimed as a burden Upon land, or land owners; but this will not bear scrutiny when w e inquire out of whose income the tax is paid, or what way it causes pressure, so that its reduction or abolition would be a benefit to the community. “As a fixed charge upon land for generations, it is now past all controversy a rent-charge. In many instances it has long since been redeemed, the property having subsequently changed bands; in others, inheritors of property have acquired it under the burden, and have calculated their income minus the tax, while purchasers, in buying, invariably allow for it. To reduce” (abolish ?) “it now would be to present the landowners of England with a capital sum of nearly £30,000,000. Their estates, relieved of the burden, would become at once so much u^ote valuable, and if they did not sell, they would pocket an additional income which they never inherited or paid for.”—Sir Robert Gijfen, “Essays in Finance ” First Series, p. 242.