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The
Depression: the importance of a formula
The
formula P = R + W + I is more important to humanity than E =
mc2, but only a few people understand its
ramifications.
It shows
that poverty is man-made, as are 'business cycles', economic
recessions, and the economic depression that our political
leaders dutifully repeat we are not about to experience. (They
prefer to lie, "to maintain confidence", rather than to solve the
economy's great structural weakness.)
The
little equation mocks their efforts to ‘run’ the economy. It
demonstrates the manner in which planet-friendly economic activity
is currently suppressed in favour of the promotion of land
monopoly, speculation, urban sprawl and
environmental pollution.
It’s all
in the formula, whose
implications also remain
undiscovered by modern economists
. Were they to make
the effort to get their heads around it, it would be akin to the
discovery of new continents. Monetary theorists, too, might well
contemplate its import in respect of lending and
interest.
It is
economics' distributional formula: production (P) is distributed
between the factor incomes rent (R), wages (W) and interest (I) as
the respective returns to land, labour and capital. Whereas wages
and interest are both costs of production, rent is a
community-generated surplus in the production
process. But we fail to capture the surplus that simply
arises from the existence
of community and public infrastructure, allowing it instead
to be
privately expropriated, and capitalised into increasingly
unaffordable land prices, and mortgages that cannot
be repaid.
'The
labourer is worthy of his hire', of course, so wages ought
to be the full return to labour (which combines
with natural resources to create wealth), just as interest
should be the full return to capital (employed
by labour to create wealth more efficiently).
'Ought',
'should', but isn't. So?
Let’s
transpose the formula, as Henry George did.*
P – R = W
+ I
That is,
production less the annual value of our natural resources
for public
revenue leaves wages and
interest: intact. They are not residual after taxes,
superannuation and a Medibank levy have all been summarily
deducted. Labour and capital are left to retain their full
reward.
Once we
understand and act upon the ramifications of P = R + W + I by
paying into the public coffer the annual value of the
land and natural resources over which we have been granted
exclusive use, an ample and naturally
growing fund becomes available for education, health, social
welfare and public infrastructure. We would rapidly reduce
household debt, close the widening poverty gap, slash fraud and
crime rates and come to experience real personal and financial
freedom.
Taxation
destroys. The Land Values Research Group's report, "Unlocking the Riches of
Oz: a case study of the social and economic costs of real estate
bubbles (1972 to 2006)", shows that since 1972
the Australian economy has been suppressed to the tune of $1
trillion by the deadweight costs of taxation, including compliance
costs, inflation and recessions, so that GDP should now be $2
trillion instead of $1 trillion. The technique and estimates given
in the report's spreadsheet are conservative, insofar
as they assume the capture of only one half of the annual
value of Australia's land. Obviously, trading off an even greater
level of taxation for a higher proportion of land value
capture would assist further wealth creation. Moreover,
the
application of a higher charge on the use and abuse of
landwould help ensure that
additional GDP growth is environmentally friendly.
The
failure to act upon this critical formula not only escalates
land prices, inflation and poverty, but also diminishes
science, society and the environment. Of course, the formulation of
any so-called bill of rights which lacks a preamble concerning
the responsibility of all citizens to pay into the public purse
the
annual value of their land sets the
current economic travesty in concrete.
As
Treasury officials, the Reserve Bank, politicians, economic
analysts and credit rating agencies wrestle ineffectually with
their duties, the Land Values Research
Group has developed a barometer over the last 20 years
which
would assist their decision making. It shows the total value of all
Australian real estate sales divided by GDP for each year - and
accurately forecasts the direction of the economy. Insofar as
the rent that has
notbeen collected for
public revenue is represented by the land component of real
estate sales, the index traces the misuse of rent by providing a
surgical socio-economic picture of Australia's boom bust
society.

It is
now impossible to repay all the debt invested
into inflating the recent massive residential real estate
bubble. Therefore, Australia faces the first economic
depression of the 21st century. The LVRG's expertise over 65 years
has been studying the cause and cure of economic recessions
and depressions, but most
economists, blinded to the scientific rationale
of P = R + W + I, believe that bailouts and interest rate
reductions might offer some sort of solution to the unfolding financial
collapse. They won't.
Our expert opinion?
There is no solution other than urgently slashing taxes,
and making up the difference in revenues from
publicly-generated land values.
In order to establish
the credibility of the formula and to warn of the recessions that
arise from this void in the study of economics,
the
Land Values Research Group has employed its
predictive capacity at least four times since 1987:-
Forecast
1:
“That is, as
land prices rise sharply across the board, it can be accepted that
the productive side of the economy will wilt – that unemployment
will increase and the return on capital will wane. It is
empirical study of this law which allows Georgists to predict the
recession which will follow the peak of the next worldwide land
boom in 1991/92.” Getting it Right
at Local Government, Bryan Kavanagh, The Valuer, July 1987,
p.561.
Outcome: We experienced
a worldwide recession in 1991.
Forecast
2:
“1995/96: (Projected)
Share markets fail, creating financial and social disaster.”
The Recovery Myth: A Positive Response, Bryan Kavanagh, Land
Values Research Group, 1994, p.9.
Outcome: Asian
real
estate markets peak in 1994, followed by an Asian
depression in 1996/7; worldwide share markets also
decline in October 1997.
Forecast
3:
“Closer study on a
state by state basis (Chart 7) shows Queensland to
be still experiencing a strong real estate boom – its sales
surpassing those of Victoria, and very nearly equalling
those of New South Wales for the first time on
record. This is partly explicable in terms of the recent
northern drift of tens of thousands of stunned Victorians seeking
economic refuge over the Queensland border. But as
real estate activity far outstrips production in that State, a
sharp economic decline appears to be also in store for
Queenslanders.” The Recovery Myth: A Positive Response,
Bryan Kavanagh, Land Values Research Group, 1994,
p.15.
Outcome: Whilst not
strictly a technical recession in economic terms, Queensland
nevertheless experienced a major slowdown in economic activity
in 1996/97, following the bursting of its real real estate
bubble.
Forecast
4:
“The
volume of debt contained within the height and breadth of the
recent residential bubble offers a strong degree of confidence to
suggest that Australia will
experience a severe economic recession within two years of the
graph retreating back below the 19% bubble line.”
Unlocking the Riches of Oz: A case study of the social and
economic costs of real estate bubbles (1972-2006), Bryan Kavanagh,
Land Values Research Group, 2007, p.15.
Outcome:
?
If we
take history as a guide, politicians and policymakers are more
likely allow us to suffer the depredations of another economic
depression rather than make this simple adjustment to revenue
systems.

*See
Henry George, Book III/The Laws of Distribution, Chapter 2
"Progress and
Poverty: An inquiry into the cause of industrial depressions and of
increase of want with increase of wealth … The
Remedy"
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