> I don't see how having regular auctions to determine what the land is actually worth is compatible with true land ownership. You auction the land to determine the tax, someone pays more than the current lessor, then that highest bidder gets to lease the land from the government and kick out the old lessor. Where does ownership of land and ability to sell it and profit from improvements come into play?
Nobody's actually suggesting randomly auctioning off people's land at periodic time intervals.
> Nobody's actually suggesting randomly auctioning off people's land at periodic time intervals
You might be surprised if you visit r/georgism.
But the point is that if you don't do auctions, you don't know how to price the LVT, and you don't actually know if the resulting inefficiencies are more significant than the core problem with taxing productive land use that Georgism tries to address.
> You're arguing with ghosts.
You're selectively arguing with a fraction of a comment.
Nobody's actually suggesting randomly auctioning off people's land at periodic time intervals.
You're arguing with ghosts.