Flaws in Labour's plans can be traced to the absence of a coherent philosophy of property rights. This is evident from the plan to abolish feudal tenure.
What the Scottish Executive calls "A simple system of land ownership" will replace feudal superiorities, "and vassals will own their land outright". A knowledgeable land tenure expert recently succinctly expressed the absurdity of the government's position:
The present tenure system is a sophisticated structure of rights which includes every citizen through his or her relation to the Crown. It is to be replaced by a crude model that excludes the majority of people.
Feudal rights as bent to favour landlords must be consigned to history. But it was feudalism in the breach - not in its original form - which betrayed the rights of the people who occupied the land of Scotland. Its early form suited the conditions at the time. It is the anachronisms, which offend modem sensibilities, that need to be abolished.
But feudal tenure recognised the social rights of every citizen. The present "conditionality" of land-holding - proprietors hold land subject to the higher rights of the community - must not be sacrificed.
Scotland needs a democratic debate to define a new philosophy of property rights. The paramount challenge is to identify in practical terms everyone's equal right to land within a model of responsibilities that guarantee justice and economic efficiency. Without that philosophy it will not be possible for Parliament to develop coherent land laws.
Reform is not just about access to rural acres. It is about the power and relationship between the individual and the community. The power that is intrinsic in land intrudes into every corner of everyone's life. That power works with or against people's personal and social interests depending on whether the rules of engagement are fair. At present, they are not.
Housing
High urban land prices contribute to the rural crisis. They encourage
salaried town workers to buy country properties. This prices farm workers
out of homes. There is no reform worthy of the name that ignores land in the
hearts of cities.
Disruption caused by unaffordable housing is illustrated in Edinburgh today. Spiraling property prices induced by the creation of Parliament has led to a call from unions for additional wages to cover the rising cost of accommodation. Average house prices have escalated by 63% over the last three years, to a level only £8,000 behind London. That increase is in the cost of land: bricks and mortar can be trucked in to equate supply with demand - that's what keeps house prices affordable. But that solution is not possible for land sites in locations where people need to live and work.
Speculation
The largest capital gains are reaped in towns, and they send economic shock
waves to the farthest islands of the West coast. Land speculation includes
the trading-up activities of wage-earning home-owners; but it is a
pathological activity. It nurtures the mentality of the casino economy.
People seek to accumulate capital as fast as possible, so that they can
retire from work and live off the value produced by others. This is the
starkest indication of alienation: our culture does not encourage people to
view work as a fulfilling experience.
But while income from man-made capital is earned, this is not the case with gains from land. Privatised land-rents are at the expense of the community in myriad ways. Speculation drives urban sprawl, for example. Remove the incentive to speculate and hoard land, and the rate at which we concrete green acres would slow to a sustainable pace.
Enterprise
Links between land and industry are not monitored by policy-makers, with
tragic results. An example is the destructive use of interest rates in the
boom/bust phase of the business cycle. As the economy "over-heats",
government raises the cost of borrowing money. This hurts everyone, but the
policy discriminates disproportionately against some. Most people in
Scotland are losers, every time.
Marginal locations in geographically peripheral areas - bearing the high costs of public infrastructure and relatively lower productivity (eg., lower soil fertility or higher transport costs) - mean that many people there just manage to make a living. Add an increase in interest rates, and they are punished out of existence.
But what drives the boom that governments fear will lead to bust?
Intensive speculation in land always precedes a major recession. Asset prices are driven up, which provoke higher interest rates. So land speculation by the few surfaces as trauma inflicted on the many. That's how government - blind to the dynamics of the land market, and so deploying inappropriate policies - can destroy jobs and reduce living standards.
Public Investment
Taxation is an abusive tool in the hands of government. This is illustrated
by the way taxpayers are forced to pay for public goods that enrich
landowners.
Inadequate investment is not due to a shortage of capital. The problem originates with the distribution of the benefits from public spending. Difficulties - such as the funding of Britain's new cross-channel railway system - occur because part of the value created by infrastructure investment is not included in prices charged for the use of services. This extra value - created, say, by a new road or a bridge over a river - is known as an "external economy". But that value does not go begging: it is capitalised into higher land prices.
For the sake of efficiency, user charges (the cost of a train ticket from London's King's Cross to Glasgow Central, say) should equal the "marginal" costs of public services. But this means the prices paid to use public services do not capture (or "internalise") the "external" value. This throws the responsibility onto government. It alone can recoup that value through fiscal policy. In doing so, it would be able to finance the full cost of investment without adding to debt.
The failure to combine user-charges with fair public finance over burdens taxpayers, under-finances public services and enriches landowners who receive windfall gains. Who says there is no such thing as a free lunch? The leakage from public purse into private pockets offends the principle of fair dealing in the market economy. It can be corrected only if everyone who gains from public spending pays for the benefits received. Road congestion charges are an example of land-rent payments. The principle needs to be extended if fairness is to be the cementing principle in land use and public finance policies.
Poverty
The world owes no-one a living, but work and the earth's free resources
should enable everyone to live fulfilled lives. But our laws restrict access
to the means of life, granting the privileged minority a monopoly over the
earth. This is the root of poverty. "Social inclusion" will remain an
illusion until access to the bounty of the planet is democratised. If people
paid rent to the community to use nature's resources which would eliminate
the need for taxation on wages - poverty would evaporate like a Highland
mist on a summer's room.
Licensing of pelagic or river fishing, game rights, and natural energy are proper subjects of public rent charges. Other examples include the use of the airwaves for broadcasting, the pollution-absorbing capacity of the environment, and airport landing rights.
Ecology
The land of Scotland is wrought with ecological mismanagement. The root of the
problem is the roughshod use of nature encouraged by governments that failed to
act as stewards of the commons. The surest way to make people respect
nature is to require them to pay for its use. Rental charges encourage
conservation.
Earth requires that there be due return for all things taken: similarly, that all things brought forth shall be properly allotted. The inequitable use of the earth's bounty is unsustainable. this is the mirror image of the state's theft of private income through iniquitous taxation.
Our analysis of contact between land and people's private and public lives leads to one conclusion: major problems stem from the failure to treat publicly-created value as public revenue. Scotland's Parliament is not yet tarnished by such failures. That's why it must resist piecemeal, quick-and-easy policies. In-depth research into the land question would identify synergistic solutions.
Take local democracy. It is cramped by dependency on grants from central government. Power ought to be devolved to local government and other community bodies, to create a resilient, interlocking system of democratic units. As the McIntosh Commission reported in June: "We would urge local government to renew itself ... We seek a new culture of continuous renewal and improvement which will permanently change the face of Scottish local government". But that outcome is possible only after public finance has been democratised.
Only 20% of revenue is raised locally through taxation. Not surprisingly, citizens are frustrated with the democratic process. The McIntosh Commission stressed that accountable democracy and revenue raising go hand in hand. The local property tax needs to be restructured, and there is a wealth of evidence that favours one reform. The empirical evidence comes from countries like Denmark, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and Pennsylvania in the US. Buildings need to be untaxed: that would encourage urban renewal and conservation of greenfield sites. And the rent of the land provides the buoyant and progressive fiscal base for a re-invigorated community.
Everyone would gain from tax reform: there need be no losers. The rent of land and natural resources constitutes the natural source of public finance. This was the principle at the heart of feudal tenure. It was also the basis of societies before the middle ages. And economists of the Scottish Enlightenment, like Adam Smith and William Ogilvie, endorsed this policy for an industrial Britain. It happens to be the only viable policy for post-industrial society.