THE A B C OF TAXATION
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but it is of far greater importance to understand
clearly what is the source of ground rent, and especially
to what extent it may be regarded as a social product.
Inasmuch as all the contributions representing these
activities, so far as enumerated, are from the
treasuries of the people, it is correct and proper
to say that ground rent is chiefly and peculiarly a
social product.
From one point of view (that of demand) it may
be said that the value of all commodities is a social
product. But when we come to consider the other
side of the value problem, we find that most other
commodities, e. g., houses, increase or decrease at man’s
will, according to the principle of cost, the value being
a resultant of a balancing of social desire against
social cost.
With land it is more generally true that the
quantity either cannot be increased at all or can
be increased only at increasing cost; and hence the
practical determinant of the value of land is almost
entirely in the social and private activities that make
the use of land desirable.
VI.—The Maintenance of Ground Rent
So far as the cost of streets, lights, water,
sewerage, fire, police, schools, libraries, museums,
parks, play-grounds, steam and electric railways,
gas and electric lights, telegraph and telephone
companies, subways, ferries, churches, private
schools, colleges, universities, public buildings, well
appointed houses, stores, and office buildings is
what constitutes the cost value of the land, just
so far the maintenance of all this public or