* Quoted from the Ford Franchise Tax Act of New York.
8
THE A B C OF TAXATION
public a full and fair equivalent for the privilege
conceded to it.
The monopolies and special privileges which should
properly share with land values the burden of taxa
tion, may be partially enumerated as follows: the
private appropriation of natural resources such as
gold, silver, copper, iron, and coal mines, oil fields,
and water powers; all franchises of steam and electric
railways; all other public franchises, granted to one
or several persons incorporated, from which all other
people are excluded, and which include all “rights,
authority, or permission to construct, maintain, or
operate in, under, above, upon, or through any streets,
highways, or public places, mains, pipes, tanks, con
duits, or wires, with their appurtenances for conducting
water, steam, heat, light, power, gas, oil, or other
substance, or electricity for telegraphic, telephonic,
or other purposes.”*
The reforms contemplated by the single tax would
leave the State and the individual to deal together
exactly as individuals deal with one another in ordinary
business. Persons desiring special privileges would
rent them from the State or the municipality, just as
they now rent them from individuals and corporations,
and on similar terms, fixed from year to year. When
paid for in this way, the special privilege feature
would be eliminated. Then there really would be no
special privileges, and there would be need of no other
taxation. Hence, we say, the least the public can
do is to tax and collect upon these special privileges,
including ground rent, a sum sufficient to defray
all public expenses.