Theories of Rent
As per the
theory of David Ricardo land that is infertile will never produce rent and
therefore has to remain fertile to the owner of the property. According to him
the land that doesn’t yield any rent is not worth cultivating. However,
Ricardo, the great classical economist remained true to land only as the only
scarce factor of production that if infertile produces no rent to its owner.
The modern economists
however rejected this theory on the grounds that rent is not the only factor of
production any other factor of production that is scarce produces rent. The
modern theory also states that rent is the surplus over the transfer earning of
whichever factor of production. For them rent arises not out of fertility of
land, but due to the scarcity of land as land is fixed and cannot be increased
on this planet. This means that greater the demand for land the greater will be
its rent and vice versa. This again means that the supply of land is inelastic.
Further, the
modern theory of rent also explains that the land is subject to the law of
diminishing returns and this inevitably follows that if the land subsequently
starts yielding less produce or becomes less fertile then it yields less rent
and hence the demand for land goes down.
The quasi
theory of rent introduced by Alfred Marshall states that there are other
factors to be considered while ascertaining rent. He says that any income that
is derived from machines or other tools of production yields rent to the owner even
though this may be short run and not in the long run. This means that whenever
there is rise in demand for machines then they produce something similar to
rent. Again, the supply of machine (due to the time taken for making them) is
limited in the short run the demand for the same is inelastic while in the long
run they may remain quite elastic. This is again because a machine manufactured
for one use cannot be utilized for another purpose. Therefore, the machine
produces quasi rent in the short run to the owner.
The above
theories have been introduced with the intention of defining what land is and
what other factors of production are. Again, the theory states which factors of
production yields rent and which does not and how they earn a return for their
owners. The same has been said about labor too in the modern theory where a
labor earning a fixed amount z will have to be paid the same elsewhere equal to
the opportunity cost or transfer earnings. The amount the labor earns above the
amount z is his rent.
Post Modern Economic Theory of Rent
The above
theories might have served their purpose quite well in the past, but the
society is passing into a more dynamic area of activities where there is need
to get an overall picture as clear as possible as far as the factors of
productions are concerned and whether there is need for ascertaining the same
in lieu of the interaction between three utmost important factors of production
namely ‘LAND’, ‘LABOR’ AND ‘CAPITAL’. Since, the dawn of civilization these are
three most important factors that were considered to be within the term
‘economic activities’. It is also implied that when one of these three is
missing whether directly or indirectly then there is no proper economic
activity. This also means that if one of them is set aside then there is no
proper economic activity, but a connivance of the bureaucracy to form a rot
within the society. Of course one might argue that selling or purchasing food
items, stationery, machines and financial businesses between individual persons
and other activities do not employ labor as such and yet are done without any
hindrance to the society. It is however not so as each of these activities and
other like minded activities are engaged in economic activity after having gone
through the process of land, labor and capital to produce the ultimate product
for which there is trade and are not scarce commodities in the long run.
However, when
a scarce commodity is economically transacted without its having undergone any
interaction with other factors of production, and thus it remains so in that
form for a length of time, then that factor is said to be hoarded or in the
process of being hoarded. In other words, any factor of production that is not
brought into circulation through continued economic interaction is said to be
not good factor from the society’s point of view. Economic interaction would obviously mean
interaction with land, labor and capital.
This theory is
important from the society’s side that there is continuous economic activity
going on between the scarce factors of production and other generally available
factors of production. This in turn would result in better yields, more crops,
more industries and more employment.
Scarce factors
are rare and not easily available due to it being limited in supply. Land is
one such important factor and hence must be judicially involved in the
betterment of the society through increasing production of crops and industrial
goods for employing people living within the society.
Thus, this
theory defines land as a scarce product limited in supply and is very fertile
at all places, times and seasons. Further, all land wherever
these may be situated yields rent in one form or other. This theory also
states that rent is in the form of tangible or intangible benefits or both and
each owner always enjoys a surplus over the transfer earnings. Again the same
is true for all other scarce product whose demand remains very high due to the
very shortage of such factors in the society.
Before
detailing with the above we must first look into the state of art of technology
around the world that makes it possible to turn even impossible things into a
possibility. This may not have been the case a few decades earlier, but there
is revolutions going in research and technologies world wide that makes almost
anything possible. Therefore, this gives us reason enough that all land which
are scarce can be made fertile with the state of art of technology available
with us. Again, any piece of land found in the inaccessible area of earth can
be brought into cultivation through the help of technology or can yield rent
due to the reason of economic fertility factor alone. Here, fertility again is
not used in crop fertility alone, but a much broader term and meaning ‘economic
fertility’.
So what is the
term ‘Economic Fertility?’ Economic fertility with respect to land means all
lands are fertile to the crops and plantations, fertile to the industries,
fertile to mining, fertile to forests and parks, fertile to sports and adventure, fertile to residents and
fertile to the labor employed on it. This again implies emphatically that there
is no waste land on this planet and all have potential to yield a return and
hence ‘rent’. Here the word industries would encompass all activities of
manufacturing, technology, IT, holiday resorts, tourism industry, construction,
power and any other activity that yields return to the owners. However, passing
a power transmission line overhead and such things are not economic activities
except at the source where they originate. Although technology cannot increase
the quantity of land available it can easily render a land as economically
fertile in one or more above cases. The only exception that may perhaps be
counted are the pathways interconnecting one land with the other and no more
and that too based on a standard length and breadth called pathway in a
country.
Now
here there is clear emphasis on land where labor is employed and this is also
for residential land occupied for the owner, his or her tenant or their
relations. The land under such occupation with a permanent shelter as per the
act of the government of the respective country should be called residentially
fertile land as the same employs the owner and his family, tenant and his
family or the relations. When the land is under such stated occupation it is
inevitable that the land is under cultivation as part of it will be under some
crop or other while the other part shelters the owner as labor along with his
or her family to look after the yield . Even in residential tall apartments it
is implied that the residents in unison have already contributed to the
fertility through collective taxes and surcharges to the government and have
the potential of cultivating terrace crops in their balconies and spaces. However,
residential land should not cross a bare minimum threshold of say four times
the size of residence (average size as per the country’s law), and the
remaining extended land should be treated at par with that of the other four
basic fertile group of land and must be declared as fertile and eligible for
any below said economic and social activity.
Basic fertile groups of land
The four basic
fertile types of land are fertile crop and plantation land, industrial land, industrially
idle land and forest land including small parks to be used for public. The definition of land if brought into these
fold makes it easier for the government to tax and enact rules and regulations
for the scarce factor of production of earth. Further, this would enable a lot
more idle land or in our definition idle industrial land to be brought to the
fold of either industries or agriculture so as to provide food security to the
people and pave way for gainful employment to people. It is imperative that all
crop and plantation lands are intensively and extensively cultivated and not
just a few grasses are grown here and there. Without any restrictions
whatsoever all other land if lying idle with shrubs and bushes and other
parasitic plants ought to be provided in the group of forest and park lands for
environmental and social reasons.
Lands that are
declared forest and park lands even if detached from any main forest or parks
and are still in the midst of the town and cities should be introduced as such
with a bare minimum of ten cents in Indian conditions. Isolated pieces of land
if found to remain idle for as long as even six months without proper
interaction of labor, capital and land as the main factors of production should
be declared as industrially idle land.
The
implication of this theory would enable labor to be employed fruitfully and
generate crops or plantation that would otherwise strain to make land as fallow
land to be later stored and hoarded for value alone.
Those owners
who wish to keep land as it is are allowed to do so and must be seen to be
receiving rent from them in the form of a very important tangible asset known
as ‘status’ ‘prestige’ and the appreciable value of the land they hold. Here,
rent is an appreciable difference of a scarce asset over its previous value and
is independent of any surplus earnings and transfer earnings.
Industrially idle land
All
industrially idle land if segregated can be brought under the preview of the
government to charge special yields for the substantial rent earned by the
owner on his property by the virtue of remaining idle. Status and prestige with
ego cannot be had with scarce commodities or assets as economic returns and
social returns are a must for the society to function justifiably. Therefore,
all industrially idle land should be taxed by the government as they would
likely to have been active as an industrially fertile land on a bare minimum
basis. The bare minimum basis is the criteria that all industrially idle land
should be levied with an average of work by one labor on current standard wages
on every five cent land for a period of one year. This means that the wage of
the worker working under average wage rate of the area or the region on a daily
basis multiplied by the number of days in the year. This will be the tax that
the government should demand for the rent earned by the owner. The larger the
land so also the rates and they ought to be calculated as one worker working
full time on each of the five cent of land. This means that for 100 cents of
land the labor employed for the purpose of calculation ought to be 20 workers.
It is
immaterial whether the land under crop would yield less or more when compared
to industries, as the basic assumption is that the land ought to be properly
utilized and not allowed to strain to non-productive purposes and must be able
to satisfy the society’s basic needs for food, employment and environment
protection.
The above
factor if brought into consideration inevitably follows that land even on top
of Mt Everest, The Alps or the Sahara Desert would provide rent to owners if
they purchase part of it as they would get rent in the form of status and
entertainment value. Therefore in principle all land otherwise should be under
the protection of forest reserve and parks so that the rent derived in the form
of oxygen and providing ecological balance is for the vital benefit of the
whole society.
Implication of the theory
The following
are the direct implication of the theory:
§ Land, Labor and Capital are
not independent of each other in any way and their interaction is a must for
the society at large
§ Land is a scarce asset and
therefore there will be no remote control of the same without justifiable yield
or produce under any one of the four basic groups of land namely (1) crop and
plantation land, (2) industrial land, (3) industrially idle land and (4) forest
reserves and park lands.
§ Categorization into the
above four types would lead to better governance and transfer of land as well
as better taxation procedure.
§ All industrially idle land
although fertile economically have been deliberately turned to idle land by the
owner for his or hers whims and fancies
§ The present strain on land that
entails it to be easily declared fallow or waste land will be avoided and there
will more strain on the reversal manner as all idle lands will be straining to
yield and become economically fertile with the implementation of latest
technologies.
§ It is assumed that land
which has become industrially idle land will attain ‘hoard level’ as it will
never try to yield crops, industries or employment.
§ Land lying industrially idle
with rotting factory sheds should also be considered industrially idle land for
the purpose of taxes as the same gives rent to the owners in the form of status
§ Any hoarded land is a bane
to the society if does not yield any return in the form of taxes
§ The above categorization can
bring several industrially idle land into crop fertility and thereby reduce the
food inflation
§ Again the above
categorization would yield revenue for the government in the form of investment
and employment and thereby reduce the country’s fiscal deficit
Hoardings of Land and other scarce commodities
Just like land
all other factors that are scarce in supply in relation to their demand on
earth can be hoarded for future appreciable value. Any commodity like gold,
silver, diamonds or other precious minerals and metals can be stored and
hoarded by people for their value increase in the future. Here, economics is
primarily interested in the value of these commodities in the larger context of
the society than in their individual value worth. A scarce commodity for an
individual having a lot of emotional appeal and attachment can be hoarded and
stored, but the same if not generally a product that are scarce in relation to
its physical supply then the commodity is of no importance to economics.
It is seen
that although scarce commodities by their very virtue of being a scarcely
available factor do improve the living conditions of people when they are
brought out in circulation at a future date. Yet the same scarce commodity if
allowed to be retained for a considerable long time or passed from generation
to generation in a society may yield no tangible gain for the people apart from
its appreciable value for a handful of a few people who have had the good luck
to hoard them quite early at a low price. The dilemma that arises with the
hoarded commodities that are scarce in relation to their demand is that the
same commodity may be the main cause of poverty amidst plenty in some
countries.
Take the case
of a typical Indian situation here. A couple who had half starved themselves by
slowly and steadily purchasing gold as and when their wages could afford have
accumulated ten sovereigns of this metal in the form of jewelry. Their
malnourished school going children can just about make out that the metal is of
yellow color and not green or blue. When the situation becomes difficult and
unbearable the couple neither let go the gold nor try to think out practical
ways of making the best of it by either pledging or undertake any other work.
This may be a rare instance, but the example shown here justifies that the gold
held simply in hand neither produces anything tangible or allows proper
thinking for taking other productive risks. The same is the case with gold and
other precious materials kept inside the lockers of banks, places of worship or
any other. In this example the couples need not sell the gold, but can make use
of its smaller portion or dust to keep them going.
Scarce
materials locked indefinitely for a period of time can usher in poverty in the
midst of plenty in countries which thinks it as a part of its culture. However,
the government can take steps in bringing the same into circulation.
Scarce
commodities are scarce due to their inelastic supply and these occurs both due
to hoarding tendency among the people as well as the bureaucratic connivance in
facilitating the process of hoarding. Banks and other financial institutions
are part of this process.
Hoarding as
such over a period of time gives very little benefits to the society and the
same is not an economic activity as there is no periodical interaction with all
the three main factors of production LAND, LABOR and CAPITAL.
Doesn’t the
Central Bank of country hoards gold as reserve? Here, the Central Bank of a
country doesn’t hoard gold, but the same is a participant in keeping the
currency’s current value stable for any possible disaster on value in the
future due to inflation, fiscal deficit and current account deficit.
What about the
gold hidden in bank lockers by individuals? Such gold in lockers are hoarded or
otherwise they must have been made a participant in keeping the currency
balance as stable. It can be done if the bank which has these lockers pledges
them to the Central Bank or to other foreign banks to stabilize its currency. If
not, then in difficult financial crisis or looming large fiscal deficit the
value of the currency will take a beating. However, this trend can be arrested
and the currency value appreciated if there is growth in GDP. This means that
the value of a country’s currency is directly proportional to the growth in the
economy and is inversely proportional to the value of the total hoardings.
This would
mean that when the hoarded wealth of the country goes up then its currency
value goes down as the wealth is never interacting with any of three factors of
production namely Land, Labor and Capital for a period of time. It can be
explained thus:
C = k/H
Where C is the
value of currency and H is the Hoarded wealth of the country. ‘k’ is the
constant rate of interaction at which C & H are inversely proportionate. This
means that the value of C goes down when the H the hoarded wealth goes up and
vice versa. In order to thwart the heavy down slide of currency in relation to
the hoarded wealth, the banks can pledge their vault and lockers of gold for a
definite period with the Central Bank. During such time no locker would be
allowed to be opened by individuals or groups during that specified period of
time. The Central Bank then either gives collateral security of the same or its
own reserve gold to the other nation with whom the country has bilateral trade
or multilateral trade.
This is not
necessary if the economy grows strongly and the hoarded wealth is insignificant
factor in the value of the currency. However, there is no reason to believe
that there is no pressure on the currency as hoarded wealth lying with
individuals or the country always and continuously exerts a pressure for
devaluation while the growth trajectory lifts the currency from falling
further.
A country can
for better international trade cut the value of its currency so as to increase
its exports. It must be remembered that in international trade when one country
lowers the value of its currency then it also affect the other country or
countries that trades with it. In order to justify this, the country X that
lowers its currency value contracts its own economy (size of its budget is
contracted). The earlier budget is scrapped and a new budget is adopted to give
reason for the currency cut and also a percentage of its hoarded wealth in the
form of gold, land and other scarce commodities are made accessible to the
aggrieved country Y on whom there is direct implication due to trade advantage
by X. The percentage of accessible
wealth will be proportionate to the value of the cut proposed by the first
country in relation to X country’s hoarded wealth. This will bring in
equilibrium in the bilateral or multilateral trade between the countries. If
not then it results in anomalies of trade.