90
THE A B C OF TAXATION
because, unless the owner can get a rent sufficient to
pay interest on the cost of the house, over and above
taxes, no more houses will be built, until they become
so scarce as to force rent to a point that will cover the
cost of maintenance.
How can taxation be confiscation? Etymologically
the words have nothing, and colloquially almost
nothing, in common. To confiscate is, according to the
Century Dictionary, “to adjudge to be forfeited to the
public treasury by way of penalty” —the meaning is
inseparable from the idea of forfeiture. To tax, on
the contrary, is “to levy money or other contributions,
as from subjects or citizens, to meet the expense of
government.”
Is it just to allow the landowners’ investment, now
exempt, to remain exempt? Does either legal equity
or ethics require that the land should be exempt from
an increased tax, or that its owner should have even
partial, much less total, immunity from the burden of
taxation? Because a new tax upon land would reduce
proportionately the selling price, should owners of
land for that reason continue to go scot free?
The advance in Boston’s tax rate per thousand for
1907 ($15.90) is $3 over that of 1897 ($13.00.) The
capitalised value of this increase, $650,000,000 multi
plied by $3 per thousand, multiplied by twenty
years (the number years purchase), is $39,000,000.
Do we hear that Boston has confiscated $39,000,000
worth of her citizen’s land in the last ten years?
Boston has to-day some $560,000,000 of new land
value, which it did not have fifty years ago. Mean
time the tax rate doubled from $8 in 1856 to $16 in
1906. The capitalised value of this $8 increase in