Taxes on Rent
Source: David Ricardo, On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation, Chapter X, "Taxes on Rent" • Course status: full course day for the Ricardo principles course
Key terms
Ricardo asks whether a tax aimed specifically at rent can be passed from landlords to farmers or consumers. His answer depends on a strict definition of rent: the surplus earned by more productive land over the least productive land in use.
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Economic rent | The surplus from the original and indestructible powers of land |
| Marginal land | The least productive land in use; it earns no economic rent |
| Differential surplus | The extra output from better land using the same labour and capital |
| Tax incidence | The class whose real income finally bears a tax |
| Capital improvement | A building, drain, fence, or other investment that must earn an ordinary profit |
| Progressive country | Ricardo's term for an economy extending cultivation and accumulating capital |
The central distinction is between a payment for land itself and a return on capital placed on the land. Everyday leases can call both payments "rent," but they do not behave alike when taxed.
Begin with the margin
Suppose equal amounts of labour and capital produce 180, 170, and 160 quarters of wheat on three grades of land. The 160-quarter plot is the margin: it must remain worthwhile to cultivate even though it pays no rent.
| Land | Wheat output | Output at the margin | Economic rent |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. 1 | 180 | 160 | 20 quarters |
| No. 2 | 170 | 160 | 10 quarters |
| No. 3 | 160 | 160 | 0 quarters |
same labour and capital
No. 1 180 quarters | surplus above margin: 20
No. 2 170 quarters | surplus above margin: 10
No. 3 160 quarters | surplus above margin: 0 <-- price-setting land
A tax on economic rent reaches only the 20- and 10-quarter surpluses. It does not add a cost to land No. 3, because No. 3 pays no rent and therefore owes no rent tax.
Why the corn price does not rise
The marginal producer regulates the corn price in Ricardo's model. Because that producer faces neither rent nor a tax on rent, the cost of bringing the last required corn to market is unchanged.
The landlord cannot simply increase the rent charged on better land. Competition among farmers already makes its rent equal to the difference between its output and the output at the margin. Taxation does not enlarge that physical difference.
rent before tax = output on better land - output at margin
rent after tax = the same physical difference
the government takes part of the rent;
the tax does not create a larger rent to charge
Worked miniature
Keep Ricardo's three plots and impose a 25% tax on economic rent.
| Land | Gross rent | Tax at 25% | Net rent to landlord |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. 1 | 20 quarters | 5 quarters | 15 quarters |
| No. 2 | 10 quarters | 2.5 quarters | 7.5 quarters |
| No. 3 | 0 quarters | 0 quarters | 0 quarters |
| Total | 30 quarters | 7.5 quarters | 22.5 quarters |
The farmer on No. 3 still produces 160 quarters under the same conditions. The regulated corn price therefore has no reason to change. Government revenue comes from the landlord's former 30-quarter surplus, not from a higher price paid by consumers.
Try the calculation with a 50% rate. Net rent becomes 10, 5, and 0 quarters, but marginal production is still untouched. In this simplified model, changing the rate changes how the differential surplus is divided; it does not change the price-setting cost.
New land does not face the tax
Ricardo tests the rule by extending cultivation to land No. 4, which yields only 150 quarters.
The tax did not block No. 4 from entering, because land pays no rent at the moment it becomes marginal. No. 3 begins to earn rent only after No. 4 becomes the new reference point.
This separates two events:
- Moving to less productive land can raise corn's cost and price.
- Taxing the rent created on better land reduces landlords' net rent.
The first event creates the differential surplus. The second divides it between landlord and government.
Two taxes hiding under one label
| Taxed payment | What it rewards | Present at the margin? | Ricardo's incidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pure economic rent | Superior productive power of land | No | Landlord |
| Return on improvements | Capital invested in buildings and fixtures | Yes, potentially | Consumer of raw produce in a growing economy |
This is the chapter's difficult turn. "A tax on rent falls on landlords" is true only when rent is carefully defined. A badly designed tax on the whole lease payment partly becomes a tax on capital.
Landlords and tenants would have an incentive to separate the contract:
land payment -> rent of the soil
building payment -> rent of buildings
capital supplied -> loan or annuity
Changing the label does not change the economics. Ricardo's point is that the return on capital must be distinguished from the surplus of land, whether or not a lease records the distinction neatly.
Compare Chapters IX and X
Chapter IX taxed raw produce; Chapter X taxes pure rent. The margin reveals why their incidence differs.
| Question | Tax on raw produce | Tax on pure rent |
|---|---|---|
| Does marginal land pay? | Yes | No |
| Does marginal cost rise? | Yes | No |
| Does corn price rise? | Yes | No |
| Can money wages respond? | Yes, as necessaries become dearer | Not through this mechanism |
| Who bears the characteristic burden? | Consumers and, through wages, profits | Landlords |
ASK FIRST: does the tax touch the no-rent margin?
YES -> production cost changes -> trace price and income adjustments
NO -> differential surplus changes -> landlord's net rent falls
This question is more reliable than asking who writes the cheque. A tenant may remit a tax administratively, yet deduct a pure rent tax from the payment owed to the landlord. Legal payment and economic incidence remain different.
Margin diagram
The diagram is the entire chapter in one screen: identify what the payment rewards, then ask whether it enters the cost of marginal production.
TAX ON "RENT"
|
+-------------+-------------+
| |
v v
PURE DIFFERENTIAL RENT RETURN ON IMPROVEMENTS
| |
absent on marginal land may be needed at margin
| |
corn cost unchanged required capital return rises
| |
v v
LANDLORD BEARS IT CONSUMER MAY BEAR ITKey takeaways
- A pure tax on economic rent falls wholly on landlords in Ricardo's model.
- The landlord cannot pass it on by raising rent because the differential surplus is unchanged.
- Marginal land pays no rent and therefore no pure rent tax, leaving the price-setting cost unchanged.
- Bringing worse land into cultivation can raise price, but that is caused by the new margin, not by the rent tax.
- Ordinary lease "rent" may include a return on buildings, fixtures, and improvements.
- Taxing the return on those improvements can discourage investment or raise the price of raw produce.
- Tax incidence depends on the economic function of the payment, not its contractual label.
Checklist
- [ ] Can you calculate rent as output above the marginal plot?
- [ ] Can you explain why a tax on pure rent does not raise marginal cost?
- [ ] Can you show who bears a 25% tax in the three-plot miniature?
- [ ] Can you distinguish the entry of worse land from the taxation of rent?
- [ ] Can you separate economic rent from the return on farm improvements?
- [ ] Can you explain why two payments called "rent" can have different tax incidence?