All posts by Bryan Kavanagh

I'm a real estate valuer who worked in the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) and Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) before co-founding Westlink Consulting, a real estate valuation practice. I discovered, by leaving publicly-generated land rents to be privately capitalised by banks and individuals into escalating land price bubbles, this generates repetitive recessions and financial depressions. We need a tax-switch: from wages, profits and commodities onto economic rents/unearned incomes, if we are to create prosperity and minimise excessive private debt.

JEFF KENNETT ON 3AW TODAY

Former Victorian Premier, Jeff Kennett, who has a regular spot on Neil Mitchell’s 3AW radio show displayed this morning that he’s a sad case – a very shallow fellow.

Though premier of a state, Kennett apparently didn’t discover, or doesn’t want to own up to discovering, the treasure trove the economic rent of our natural resources represents.

Callers rang in complaining about the privatising of our roads, the level of taxation and our rapidly escalating gas, electricity and water charges.

Kennett was left floundering to the effect that if people want more and better services, they had to be prepared to pay for them.

Sure, Jeff, but it’s all about FROM WHERE you draw your revenues! You don’t understand this?

I think you know the 1% is free-riding on OUR land and natural resource rents–you do understand resource rents, don’t you, Jeff?–but I’ve only ever heard you agree with the 1% that their state land tax is too high.

So the community doesn’t have any interest in capturing more of the rent from skyrocketing land prices that arise simply from existence of community and community infrastructure, Jeff – NOT from anything the 1% does?

C’mon! You’re a sad case, either ignorant of economic rents, or in the thrall of the 1% who control the greater part of them.  Just like Neil Mitchell.







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You say we need more funds to tackle poverty, homelessness, health, education and infrastructure? I say instituting the Henry Tax Review is a BIG step towards solving those problems.

THE REMEDY TO RACK AND RUIN IS INCREDIBLY HARD TO PROMOTE …

… MUCH HARDER THAN GETTING PEOPLE TO BELIEVE IN POLITICAL PARTIES AND CHARITY

Maybe Georgists’ lack of success is because activities such as films about Henry George simply won’t cut it, unless balanced against the life of a powerful counter-party, such as Edward Gibbon Wakefield, whose story included abducting three heiresses.  Wakefield represents both the 1% and the perfect foil for Henry George, managing to roll Wakefield’s own sociopathic misdeeds into the dictum that land must be sold at “sufficient price” if people are to be kept subservient and in their place.

The 99% might well be able to identify with that one!

Hey, Downton Abbey people!: Edward Gibbon Wakefield, Sir George Grey, Henry George – there’s a series in it!







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STOP RESOURCE RENTS TRICKLING *UP*

So we were conned about the “trickle down” effect. In the name of “creating employment”, the movers and shakers and their financial hacks, especially the financial hacks, took it all and laid waste to world economies.

They don’t accept this responsibility, of course, but we’ve been well and truly rorted, or scammed as the Yanks say.

The one-third of the economy that is the economic rent of our natural resources–owed equally to each and every one of us–was permitted to filter up to the 1%, such that they now own 40% of the wealth of the USA, and probably something similar in Australia.

President Obama scratches his head over it and endeavours to get Democrats and Republicans together in Washington to put things together again. Fat chance unless someone is prepared to suggest public capture of the unmentionable: natural resource rents!

The Henry Tax Review tried to educate us to this fact in Australia, but when the Rudd government endeavoured to institute one aspect of it, the mining tax, the 1% had Kevin Rudd sacked.

It’s time the 1% paid their fair share.







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THE POOR WIDOW AS STOOGE FOR THE 1%

UNEARNED INCREMENTS AND REALITY IN CALIFORNIA’S RECALL ELECTION

Mason Gaffney, 24 August 2003

Published in “Insights”, a regular column in GROUNDSWELL, September 2003

California homeowners are wallowing in unearned increments beyond the dreams of avarice, while its governments are courting bankruptcy.  Warren Buffett  dared  point this out, and overnight changed from the Oracle of Omaha into the Numbskull of Nebraska because he does not understand the “reality of California politics,” the oxymoron du jour.

Most candidates for Governor fled like startled deer.  Buffett’s sponsor, well-tailored Mr. Muscles, recalled meeting a tearful widow who said she would have been taxed out of her home were it not for Prop 13.  Poor thing, her home had risen in value.  No one asked her name, or whether she knew what she was talking about, or had her claims audited – being a tearful widow “on a fixed income” insulates one from reality checks.  The press chimed in with pix of poster oldsters, gazing from their multi-million dollar perches over the blue Pacific, fretting about Buffett’s solecism and its possible effect on them, never mind anyone else.

Fact is, unearned increments ARE income, at the time they accrue.  Illiquid?  They are better than cash income because you can turn them into cash by borrowing on them, and pay no income tax on the cash.  If you have trouble with that, the tax man himself will arrange it for you by placing a tax lien on your appreciated home, rather than foreclose and evict you.  This helps explain why we never actually see one of these evicted widows suffering from unearned increments – they are maudlin figments for mythmakers.  The evictees we do see are renters who couldn’t pay, and had no equity to mortgage.  Who cries for them?

Several rich candidates would pay more under a revived property tax than they pay in income taxes.  Mr. Muscles, like previous Hollywood idols, gets most of his income as land appreciation.  This income is not taxable unless he sells, and not then if he hires good lawyers, which of course he does, to play his cards right.  Arianna Huffington lives in a $7 million home, but reports little net taxable income.  Warren Buffett himself, like the owners of so much California land, resides and reports his income out of state.  These facts should tell us something about who pays most of the property tax, but no candidate is inferring principles from mere facts.

Governor Gray Davis, supposedly fighting to close a deficit, chimed in endorsing Prop 13, citing the mythical widow again to explain why non-residential property, about 2/3 of the tax base, should enjoy low rates.  Faced with a negative poll, he backed right down from his “land tax on wheels,” the higher vehicle registration fee.  No one has said a word about a severance tax on oil and gas, although California is the only major producing state without one.  No one has crusaded for a severance tax on water withdrawals, although it would solve both our revenue and water crises in one stroke. No one has said word one about taxing the taboo lands used for golfing, timber, or farming.

Only Cruz Bustamante has proposed any specifics.  He would begin dismantling Prop 13 – still not menacing the mythical widow – by raising assessments on industrial/commercial property.  A whispering campaign right off has it that Bustamante is leading an Hispanic conspiracy to take over the southwest and turn “white, European” Americans into a minority to kick around.  We observe mixed marriages on every hand, and Spain is still European, but this is California, where “reality” means mythology.  May Warren Buffett continue to get in our faces with facts.

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Things are seldom what they seem; skim milk masquerades as cream … – Buttercup and Captain Corcoran, HMS Pinafore.







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By their deeds shall you know them (Matt 7:16)

Dear Pope Francis,

Congrats on getting the big gig.

You will have seen that, more than ever, these savagely greedy times call for the BIG ONE.

I trust you have the intestinal fortitude.

In Cura Pastoralis Pope Gregory the Great (540-604) was prepared to put it boldly and succinctly:-

Those who make private property of the gift of God pretend in vain to be innocent. For, in thus retaining the subsistence of the poor, they are the murderers of those who die every day for the want of it.

But Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum tried to obfuscate. Of course land can be bought and sold, it declared: it’s quite OK to buy and sell anything with honestly-earned money. Henry George politely reminded Leo this argument also re-justifies chattel slavery.

Hoping you can do better, Francis.  It would provide necessary assistance to one of your Jesuitical colleagues who tries in vain to assist Australia’s indigenous people.

Yours faithfully,

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A PHILOSOPHER’S TAKE ON ECONOMICS

I’ve just finished reading John Tippett’s uplifting exposition “A philosoper’s take on economics”.

How satisfying to read a book which explains simply, logically and coherently why economies are currently failing: economic justice no longer exists. Civil freedom may have been granted to us, but we are denied economic freedom by distributional systems which pay obeisance to greed.

Tippett early on exposes the rotted carcass of modern day economics for what it is, and how those economists who tip their hats to Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations need to read his earlier The Theory of Moral Sentiments if they are to understand those preconditions which must apply for Smith’s invisible hand to function effectively.

A philosopher’s take on economics is a must-read for those who see “twenty-first century economic affairs, right across the world, are in a mess” but don’t quite understand why.

However, it will be a challenging book for financial and economic analysts to read; too challenging for most. They have so much nonsense to unlearn, and that’s always difficult.

Only Georgists will be able to place John Tippett’s thoughtful linking of philosophy to economics back into the bookshelf with their heads held high.







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