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by Gormo
816 days ago
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> The argument is that good business spots are a limited community resource that it makes sense to tax, like radio spectrum. I'm not sure I follow the reasoning here. How does the existence of economic scarcity imply that it makes sense to tax anything? > If you can make good use of the space you're taking up, go ahead, but you should compete fairly with other uses of the space. But that's already inherent in the nature of scarcity -- the more demand there is for a scarce resource, the higher the price is. So businesses making use of high-value prime real estate are already paying more for it. The law of supply and demand already does what you are proposing. How does paying additional fees to a separate institution with its own perverse incentives add anything to the equation? > the largely automated facility wasn’t the best use for a prominent Main Street site This was the personal opinion of a local bureaucrat who thought his personal opinion should be policy. That's why the company is suing. |
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Land in the right place is not merely economically scarce, it's economic land.
> But that's already inherent in the nature of scarcity -- the more demand there is for a scarce resource, the higher the price is. So businesses making use of high-value prime real estate are already paying more for it. The law of supply and demand already does what you are proposing.
Supply and demand doesn't work for land because there's no new supply. No matter how much the price goes up, people aren't going to make more.