52
THE A B C OF TAXATION
tion of ten, twenty, or thirty years hence are very
slightly discounted to-day.
Therefore, the assertion that the above programme
"would visit the whole burden of the reform upon
present owners ” is erroneous and confusing, especially
when the burden of a three hundred dollar thirty years’
depreciation is offset by an appreciation of perhaps
more than $1,500 (as is the case in Boston) which
offset is rightfully a part of the economic situation.
Many laws, tariff laws among others, do not pretend
to insure against sporadic cases of possible injustice
but the universal law remains that, with civilisation,
the value of land increases.
(c) The statement of the book on this point comes
far short of covering the actual condition. The facts
that the “selling value of land is an untaxed value”
and that “the burden of a land tax cannot be made to
survive a change of ownership” have indeed so increased
the demand for Boston land that in value probably
more than three-quarters of it is to-day in dead hands
or in the hands of trustees and syndicates which can
not die, all of whom refuse to loosen their grip upon
this “preferred stock” except at exorbitant speculative
prices which would yield income far under other lines
of investment.