THIRD BOSTON OBJECT LESSON 85 put is squarely upon the shoulders of ground rent, what the land is worth for use, its gross annual value. Take, for taxation, a portion of ground rent, and you have a basis for assessment that is stable, in that it is a value not affected by taxation. The selling value, or the assessed valuation, is not the shoulders, but the rump, or the small of the back, that will “slip the yoke,” as the farmers say, as soon as real estate moves. By fact and reason we are, not led, but driven, to the conclusion that more than 1650,000,000 of capital invested in Boston land to-day escapes entirely the burden of the tax which is assessed upon capital invested in buildings; and the happy landlord of land and buildings bears no land tax burden, shifts his buildings tax upon his tenant, and thus himself entirely escapes the tax burden. This statement is a corollary, or consequent, of the accepted economic principle, that the selling value of land is reduced by the capitalised tax that is laid upon it. This view is in literal harmony with the substantial agreement of the economists, that the only direct tax (with the possible exception of taxes on incomes and inheritances) — the tax which cannot be shifted or evaded — is a tax, not upon the assessed valuation of land, nor upon the selling value of the land, but upon ground rent, or its capitalised value, the gross value of land. Chambers of commerce, merchants’ associations, Manufacturers, and dealers are constantly seeking to find or make the best and largest market for their commodities. The best market, it is fair to say, is the largest number of persons who are able to buy the ^ares they want. The greater the number of people