(September-October 2010 GroundSwell)
PRESENTATION TO THE NEW
YORK TRILEVEL TASK FORCE ON JOBS: LAND VALUES TAXES AND STATE BANKING
By Scott
Baker, New York, NY
(Scott Baker
is the president of Common Ground-NYC chapter. Websites: http://www.commongroundnyc.org/,
http://groups.google.com/group/common-ground-nyc)
On October 8,
2010, I responded to an invitation to speak to members of the New York Trilevel
(city/state/federal) Job Creation Task Force, in Borough President Scott
Stringer's office, along with other community organization leaders. Politicians
attending included: Borough President Scott Stringer (host); Assembly Member
Keith L.T. Wright; NYC Councilmembers Dan Garodnick (who represents my district
and with whom I've spoken to before and who might have been responsible for
putting me on the mailing list), Robert Jackson, and Margaret Chin; State
Senators Malcolm A. Smith (President of the State Senate), Robert Jackson, and
Bill Perkins; a representative from U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand's office.
I was
fortunate to be allowed to speak first. Typically, during two hour recorded
semi-public meetings like this, the main panel members will slip away as the
meeting runs into overtime, and this was no exception. I'm glad I had the opportunity
to speak first and to the entire panel. The meeting was recorded and should
appear here at some point: http://www.nysenate.gov/event/2010/apr/23/new-york-state-tri-level-joint-legislative-task-force-hearing-jobs-21st-century.
While most of
the speakers focused on how their particular organization could help provide
jobs, or at least income, in novel ways, at Common Ground-NYC, which I was
representing as president, we chose to focus on how to restructure the economy
so that the natural opportunities that already exist could become available to
people. As Georgists and Geoists everywhere know, there are things that need to
be done, and people that want to do them. The only thing standing in the way is
money. So, I took this invitation as an opportunity to show where the money is
and how it could be freed for both private and public sector opportunities. This
may sound like an obvious thing to local politicians, but judging by the
reception, and the Q&A that followed, it was not.
Land Value
Tax was new to most of them, but they were interested and I was asked how this
would work. It is not really new to Scott Stringer's office, as he and Josh
Vincent worked on a paper a few years back on LVT, available form the Borough
President's site here: http://mbpo.org/free_details.asp?id=52.
Without
getting into New York City's (let alone the state's) arcane and often conflicting
6-tax class system, I simply made the point that Common Ground-NYC, using NYC
Department of Finance figures, had calculated that there is a bit less than
half a trillion dollars of Ground Rent in the city alone, to tax, and that a
roughly 8%/year tax would enable the city to get rid of nearly all other taxes
(there are social reasons for perhaps keeping some "sin" taxes,
though this is not Georgist. I never actually used the word Georgist, using
Geoist instead).
I left the
task force with supporting documents including: Mason Gaffney's "The
Hidden Taxable value of Land: Enough and To Spare"; Lindy Davies' "New
York City Property Taxes: From the Ridiculous to the Sublime" ; NYC Common
Ground's "Tax and the City"; The Map of Land Values from the NY
Federal Reserve; Professor Steven Cord's Top 23 LVT studies, and his larger
238-Study Document.
Since I am
also an active member of the 177-member online Public Banking Group - open by
invitation only - this was in addition, an opportunity to talk about creating a
State Bank for New York, as North Dakota has had since 1919, and to leave them
with statements from the Bank of North Dakota (BND) and an article showing
their current billion dollar surplus and 5% unemployment, numbers that New York
can only dream of.
I pointed out
to them that there is ample money in the state's Comprehensive Annual Financial
Report to set up a reserve - that would never be loaned out - to fund a State
Bank (over $110 Billion). Senator Bill Perkins in particular seemed interested
in that, and I intend to follow up with him by mail and phone on both the LVT
and State Bank ideas. My last point to him was that if the 2008 $155 Billion
State Pension fund had been invested in a State Bank, making in-state,
non-securitized, on-the-books loans to small businesses and individuals, the
fund would not have lost $40 Billion from 2008-2009 - over 4 times what the
so-called budget deficit for New York State was that fiscal year. This seemed
to both impress and to scare him and the other panel members. I further
reminded them that while agency money cannot be spent, it can be invested
differently, and in this case, more prudently.
I am now
following up with them with written letters and some additional info to further
answer their concerns. Hopefully, this is an opportunity to finally move the
needle in our direction. Here is the text of my 4-minute speech, which I also
left with them.
PRESENTATION TO THE
TRILEVEL JOINT LEGISLATIVE TASK FORCE
By Scott Baker, president of Common Ground-NYC.
Greetings,
members of the distinguished Trilevel Task Force. As president of the local
chapter of the north American Geoist organization, Common Ground-NYC, I would
like to speak to you today
about the job-stimulating effects of the Land Value Tax (LVT).
The LVT would
shift taxes from wages, sales, and capital, onto natural resources (referred to
as Land in classical economics). While taxes on wages, sales, and capital (real
capital, like factories, buildings and cars etc.) discourage the production of
all of these, taxes on Land actually encourage the use of new Land because they
force landowners to either develop the land or to sell it to someone who can,
in order to pay the LVT. According to Common Ground's research, there are over
22 square miles of vacant land citywide. This land isn't being used for
affordable housing or for new businesses that can boost the city's revenues. By
simplifying the tax system to the LVT, you also reduce company overhead and
remove the incentive for lobbyists to inundate politicians looking for tax
breaks and subsidies. More production and less corruption: a winning
combination anywhere.
238
peer-reviewed studies show the efficacy of the LVT. They are proof that the LVT
always works if proper assessments are made and the LVT is applied uniformly to
all land, regardless of what is built upon it. The opportunities for job
creation this simple but profound change in the tax code would make are
time-tested and dramatic. Many of our existing buildings, like the Empire State
Building, were built at a time when we had something much closer to a Land
Value Tax than we have today. We can return to that productive time.
I would also
like to talk about the possibility of creating a State Bank, like North Dakota
has had since 1919. From the Bank of North Dakota's (BND) website: "All
state funds and funds of state institutions are deposited with Bank of North
Dakota, as required by law." These monies are loaned through a network of
community banks in a harmonious relationship that benefits both the banks and
the citizens of North Dakota. The BND sailed through the crisis of the last
couple of years with a profit, unlike so many other larger banks, which had to
be bailed out.
New York State
could also establish a bank that would extend loans to small businesses and
individuals to create new opportunities and recreate a competitive credit
environment. New York has ample "seed" money to fund a State Bank
from abundant reserves in State and municipal agencies, variously estimated to
total nearly half a trillion dollars. The introduction to the state's
Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) for 2009 cites a budget deficit of
$8 billion. However, in the same report, there are net Fiduciary assets, worth
$111 billion (pg. 42). Alarmingly, the loss from equity and bond investments,
and management fees, totals $40 Billion, (pg 84), a figure over 4 times greater
than our budget gap! For the privilege of mismanaging the people's investments,
the state paid a whopping $773 million administration cost - none of which went
to our citizens (pg. 43).
This is only
the tip of the iceberg. The state has thousands of various government CAFRs
with investments like this. What the citizens of New York need is a
comprehensive and independent accounting - and analysis - of how to maximize
these funds for the public benefit.
Some of these
monies could be used to invest in state needs, such as infrastructure, while
taking only prudent risk. Today, I ask the task force: which types of
investments are more risky - the kinds of investments made by investment banks
which lost $40 Billion last year, or the kinds of investments made in state and
local needs, which are not securitized, nor divvied up and resold to foreign
investors, and which instead provide good jobs in the state for those who need
them now more than ever? Local is not only better for the state, but better for
the bottom line too.
In short, the
State is not broke. Even according to current under-assessments from the New
York City Department of Finance, and crunched by Common Ground's proprietary
Real Estate Database, there are at least half a trillion dollars in city land
values alone, ready to be properly taxed, to go with the half trillion in all
the State's CAFRs.
With this
money and resources, and by untaxing wages, capital, and sales, jobs can be
created by the people, for the people, of the State. It's just a matter of
determining the best use of all available resources.
I believe in
the can-do spirit and ability of the American worker and entrepreneur, but I
also believe government has an essential role to play in making conditions
favorable for that spirit and ability to assert itself. A Land Value Tax and a
State Bank would both go a long way towards creating the environment that would
make New York a leader in job creation for the country. It would be consistent
with the best of our traditions, including the American tradition of creative
problem-solving.
(Scott Baker
may be emailed at ssbaker305@yahoo.com. GroundSwell does not have space for his
Bibliography, but it is available from him on request.) <<