ckaihatsu wrote:
According to your stated politics it would be the national *government* / state that would administer all parcels of land -- you're ultimately a *statist* for this reason.
Truth To Power wrote:
Government administers possession and use of land in any case because that is what government IS: the sovereign authority over a specific area of land. If a "statist" is someone who is willing to know the fact that a state has to be very bad indeed to be worse than no state, then yes, I am a statist.
So, as usual, the *status quo*, and there's a problem with that. Policy-wise, for example, there's the unjustifiably-punitive international sanctions still in place from the U.S., and also the unresolved issues of immigration, and abortion, etc.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
Since you often discuss monopolization you may want to familiarize yourself with the (highly controversial) *benefits* of monopolization, as over any given parcel of land, or any other 'natural monopoly' like broadcast spectrum allocation.
Truth To Power wrote:
I am aware that secure, exclusive tenure is often beneficial: civilization would be impossible without it. But those who get that benefit at others' expense should make just compensation to those whom they exclude.[/quote]
Yeah, whatever, but you're back to your backstop of *the state* -- whatever it says, you do. Just keep that in mind, regarding further words.
I appreciate the 'collectivization' aspect of overall state administration -- compared with today's financial / economic situation -- as any pro-republic person would, to get the fledgling country past its most vulnerable point.
Regardless, it remains sick, as in sick-and-depraved, that economically expanding equity capital should be channeled into the little ritualistic *games* of purportedly capitalist economic competition. All of the scandals and meltdowns of the last 20 years throw into stark relief that equity capital isn't up to the task, and *rentier* capital is outright *vampiric*.
Let's maybe talk equity capital and rentier capital, over coffee, sometime, since your conception of economics *requires* them, regardless.
Would your conception of things be so different as to prevent your own kind of 'Evergrande', or garden-variety overfinancialization -- ?
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
It's strange that you bemoan the landowning 'privilege' of private-interest rent-seeking -- which is an inescapable claim on government-provided social subsidies to the renter, as you describe (also a claim on wages and revenue), but then you basically *sanction* this government administration / bureaucratic establishment of land-parcel-commodification for the private sector.
Truth To Power wrote:
Advantageous land is scarce, and all have equal a priori liberty rights to use it. Yet secure, exclusive tenure is indisputably in the economic interest of the community. How can the community most justly and efficiently reconcile these conflicting considerations? I simply propose that those who get the benefit of secure, exclusive tenure make just compensation to the community that provides it, and the community make just compensation to its citizens who are thus deprived of their liberty rights to use it. If you think there is a better way, describe it, and I will explain why it is inferior.
I just did -- you seem to think that just having a baseline of emergent property / rental values is a sufficient basis for a political economy. You're such a force of fandom for the ground-level valuations that you don't / can't even acknowledge matters of *scale*, like corporations and mergers-and-acquisitions.
I think you just made yourself 'land guy'.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
If you're so concerned with government *favoritism* and officially sanctioned rentier-type 'privileges' of usage that tend towards monopoly-control, then why aren't you calling for some kind of *land reform*, at a minimum -- ?
Truth To Power wrote:
That is exactly what I am calling for, one more profound and radical than you can possibly imagine.
Well, feel free to give it a name and describe it a little bit. I'll be here, of course.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
It's starting to sound like crocodile tears -- either you're half-heartedly criticizing nationalist government administration of natural-monopoly-type commodities, like land, or else you're being outright *hypocritical* by not-suggesting an improvement-minded politics.
Truth To Power wrote:
I'm not criticizing the fact that government administers possession and use of land, I'm criticizing HOW they do so.
Which is fine, of course, and you're obviously for more centralized bureaucratic control, which I see as nominally better than capital markets, but is still basically *Stalinism*, and capitalism, since it's constrained to the boundaries of the nation-state.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
We've been over this on past threads -- using land for food production is basically a social 'must', so food production itself isn't really *sufficient enough* to be 'capitalism', since the extents of a backwards *feudalism* could accomplish food production alone.
Truth To Power wrote:
And not all communities need to produce their own food. HK, Singapore, etc. certainly can't.
Let me rephrase -- I'm saying that a decent political economy would have to surpass mere *food production*, or else it would be no better than feudalism and certainly wouldn't be capitalism, with all of its signature dynamism and growth and such, historically.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
Capitalism really implies some kind of *surplus production*,
Truth To Power wrote:
No, it's only about private ownership of land and capital goods.
As I've been explaining, the framework you've been describing has no *dynamism* to it. Look where things are *right now* -- this period is termed 'late capitalism' because it's so sclerotic and self-hindering:
Effects on the economy
In the wake of the 2007-2010 financial crisis, a number of economists and others began to argue that financial services had become too large a sector of the US economy, with no real benefit to society accruing from the activities of increased financialization.[19]
In February 2009, white-collar criminologist and former senior financial regulator William K. Black listed the ways in which the financial sector harms the real economy. Black wrote, "The financial sector functions as the sharp canines that the predator state uses to rend the nation. In addition to siphoning off capital for its own benefit, the finance sector misallocates the remaining capital in ways that harm the real economy in order to reward already-rich financial elites harming the nation."[20]
Emerging countries have also tried to develop their financial sector, as an engine of economic development. A typical aspect is the growth of microfinance or microcredit, as part of financial inclusion.[21]
Bruce Bartlett summarized several studies in a 2013 article indicating that financialization has adversely affected economic growth and contributes to income inequality and wage stagnation for the middle class.[22]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financialization
---
Truth To Power wrote:
The defining characteristic of privilege is that unlike, say, a factory, whose owner can only increase his wealth by producing value, relieving scarcity, and making others richer, the owner of a privilege increases his wealth by the abrogation of others' rights, making them poorer. So the problem with privilege is not that it makes its owners richer -- we all want to be richer -- but that it makes others poorer. And to correct your misstatement, natural resources like land are not unproductive, only their owners are.
ckaihatsu wrote:
and particularly of *crafts*-type / industrial production, meaning tangible commodities and sought-after services, ultimately for *export* -- mercantilism, and, later, the export of *capital*, meaning imperialism.
Truth To Power wrote:
No, let's stick to the definition, and not get tangled in stupid Marxist fabrications.
Okay, let's cut-to-the-chase, shall we -- ?
You're for a *centralization* of government *zoning* over all land, with the status-quo capitalist political economy.
There's nothing to prevent your political economy from *hyper-financialization*, like subprime mortgages in 2008-2009, or Evergrande today.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
Natural resources like land are definitely not productive -- it requires human *labor*, particularly, to transform raw nature into a saleable commodity in the first place, anyway, all of your 'administrative' concerns aside.
Truth To Power wrote:
They are productive in the sense that producers have to use them to relieve scarcity. IP monopolies, by contrast, are counter-productive: they reduce production and aggravate scarcity. That is the relevant distinction.
What's your definition of 'producer' -- ? Is it the one who sells their physical labor in the field, for a wage (sharecropper), or is it the person who handles the *capital* and accounts around all of this?
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
That's at the *national* level, right?
Truth To Power wrote:
The level of government is not relevant.
But yours is a *nationalist* entity since you've alluded to that formulation. *Any* government has to manifest at *some* level, or levels, so yours can't just be 'disembodied' and ghostly.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
So here again your politics requires an 'administrator', or an entire governmental *administration*, yet you're scarce with details on any of this. Hmmmmm!
Truth To Power wrote:
That's up to individual communities' legal and historical circumstances and democratic choices. I'm just identifying the correct solution, not how to implement it, because that is a contingent local matter.
Okay, I'm done fucking around. (grin)
Who provides 'peace', through 'security', over all of the included terrain -- ? Who's in charge around here!
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
But how could it be *otherwise* -- ?
Truth To Power wrote:
By people somehow finding a willingness to know facts, and voting accordingly.
Nope, sorry, the Western Enlightenment patrician democratic ideal is just that -- oppression at the hands of *landowners*, and from all capitalists, generally. The *economics* are hardly changed from previous modes of class exploitation and oppression.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
You *know* that it's a *symbiotic* relationship between the ruling class and its governmental bureaucratic elite (they don't produce any commodities themselves).
Truth To Power wrote:
It doesn't have to be.
Yeah, it does, for the reason of *financialization* (above), in particular, but mostly because capitalism is exploitative and oppressive of most people.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
How about weights-and-measures -- ? (Anything else?)
Truth To Power wrote:
Lots of things.
So it's a *phantom* government that only does land zoning and property records and that's it. Fun.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
How is your 'government' *funded*, again -- ?
Truth To Power wrote:
Junior governments by location subsidy repayment (LSR) and national ones by seigniorage and Pigovian taxes.
Uh-huh -- again, that pays for about the *statue*, only, and that's about it.
---
Truth To Power wrote:
There are libel laws, etc. Admittedly, the age of the Internet makes enforcement problematical, as so much can be done anonymously.
ckaihatsu wrote:
So would you be 'pro' or 'anti', regarding Silk Road -- ?
Truth To Power wrote:
I don't know much about it, but I suspect it would not be a high priority in a democracy.
I ask because you seem to be all 'pro-social' and whatever with your government presence in your model and such, but 'democracy' is only a *buzzword* because you're tight-lipped on any *functioning* of this ghostly outline of a political economy.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silk_Road_(marketplace)
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
So this isn't saying much, *politically* -- you're saying 'the face value of the land parcel will default to indexing the current market rate for its *rental*, so that the valuation, even if just nominal, is still 'officially' provided and available, 'automatically' (yet not exactly technologically). Got it.
Truth To Power wrote:
No, I would definitely advocate using IT to measure market location rents.
That's trivial. More to the point is that the valuation *itself* would be logistically robust, and would 'nominally' exist regardless of sales volume or current ownership, due to it being indexed to the *rental* data, which would presumably be refreshed more often through time.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
So, *politically*, your statist governmental administrative bureaucracy has to *enforce* this kind of thing, as for 'trespassing', etc. How would the 'favoritism' / corruption that you bemoan be *prevented* with this approach, exactly -- ?
Truth To Power wrote:
The usual way: eternal vigilance.
Yeah, again, it's sounding more and more like a *campaign promise* -- there's very little in the way of how you would *fund* this model of yours. You'll always have the threat of localist *warlordism* breaking out since there's no overarching authority to speak of.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
What would prevent the entire *industry* (of land provisioning, by a nationalist entity) from being constantly *fought-over*, as in the sense of runaway *warlordism* -- ?
Truth To Power wrote:
Civilian control of the military.
And what about military *syndicalism*, like the 'military industrial complex' -- ? That's not democratic, yet it exists within the purported democratic system of political accountability.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
This also doesn't cover the real-world history of statist colonialist *genocide* of indigenous populations, for the original 'sourcing' of land into the land-commodity.
Truth To Power wrote:
No one ever produced land, so indigenous populations have exactly the same right to it as everyone else.
Spoken like a true politician. It's a bit *late* for what you're saying, now.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
You previously acknowledged that the system is a *plutocracy*,
Truth To Power wrote:
The current system, yes. I'm proposing abolition of the principal privilege that makes it a plutocracy.
Would you be abolishing *wealth inequality* and *income inequality* in the process?
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
so how do you reconcile *that* description with this one, of the *gentry*-based popular representation?
Truth To Power wrote:
There's nothing "gentry-based" about it. You simply made that up.
The gentry would tend to *prevail* in the kind of representation you're indicating -- those who have the means to not-work for a living have more time for *politics*, and the political (nationalist) industry.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
And who would have ultimately authority over any given piece of land -- would private interests (of potentially $1 leasing) override 'public' interests for a piece of land -- ?
Truth To Power wrote:
The ultimate authority is of course the geographic sovereign government.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
Would this government be able to use 'eminent domain', and, if so, over what conditions?
Truth To Power wrote:
Eminent domain would be kind of irrelevant, as the land would have only a derisory exchange value.
How can you be so *certain* -- ? I'd imagine things would be dynamically similar to the emergence of *finance* here-and-now, and with all of the accompanying catastrophe.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
And then *operational* costs -- what *then* -- (!)
Truth To Power wrote:
I have no idea what you think the problem is. Governments have operating as well as capital budgets, and land rent depends on both.
Could the government issue bonds?
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
(Government is a little more than just a statue that's made once and then just sits there.)
Truth To Power wrote:
No idea what you think that is apropos of, either.
You're just not trying hard enough. (grin)
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
Who enforces *trespassing* laws -- ?
Truth To Power wrote:
The same people who do it now.
ckaihatsu wrote:
(Maybe I happen to like finding camping spots. What if I inadvertently *overstep* one or more times, and someone has a cause for a complaint?)
Truth To Power wrote:
Mind your manners.
Very gentry.
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
How is 'the community' entity defined?
Truth To Power wrote:
All citizens living in the geographical area over which a given government is sovereign.
Okay, but certainly there's more than *one* 'community' within the given geography of the country. Does the 'government area' have more than one community? How does one community know itself as distinct from the next?
---
ckaihatsu wrote:
What role(s) would this national bureaucracy of yours have, exactly
Truth To Power wrote:
What do you mean? It would administer the same sorts of things governments administer now, except that the revenue and land tenure systems would be just.
ckaihatsu wrote:
-- is it a confederation or is it federalism?
Truth To Power wrote:
It doesn't matter.
Hmmmm, it *would* matter -- I'd like to see more regarding the levels of 'community', and 'nation', here. Here's for reference:
Multi-Tiered System of Productive and Consumptive Zones for a Post-Capitalist Political Economy