3§
THE A B C OF TAXATION
provide at your own expense, but for the use of which
you can afford to pay in proportion as you use them.
It is these outside things, available by their proximity,
for which you are called upon to pay I300 a year.
To enumerate some of them specifically, they are, in
a town or city lot, right and ease of access to water,
health inspection, sewerage, fire protection, police,
schools, libraries, museums, parks, play-grounds, steam
and electric railway service, gas and electric lighting,
telegraph and telephone service, subways, ferries,
churches, public schools, private schools, colleges,
universities, public buildings — utilities which depend
for their efficiency and economy on the character of
the government; which collectively constitute the
economic and social advantages of the land; and
which are due to the presence and activity of popu
lation, and are inseparable therefrom, including the
benefit of proximity to and command of facilities for
commerce and communication with the world — an
artificial value created primarily through public
expenditure of taxes. In practice, the term “land”
is erroneously made to include destructible elements
which require constant replenishment; but these
form no part of this economic advantage of situation
or site value.
(c) In other words, you are to pay I300 a year for the
value of what the law calls the “ rights and privileges
thereto pertaining,” specified in every deed of land
conveyance. This I300 is ground rent, “what the
land is worth for use.”
Proposition 2.— Assuming this piece 0} land to he
free from all charges and incumbrances, and assuming
the current rate 0} interest to be 5 per cent per annum,