|
Land Tax,
Cumberland
The Land-Tax explained and considered.
... ...
Mr URBAN.
THE Land-Tax seems by some to be a subject very little
understood. When the parliamentary settlement was made (upon
the faith and credit of which, nine tenths of the land in
England has since been bought) certain poor counties
were to pay a certain sum, when the lad (sic) tax was at
4s. in the pound; which land in those counties was
rated at a certain purvey, to provide the said certain sum;
so that a purchaser, from the purvey of the land he was
contracting for, could ascertain how much he must pay when
the land tax is at 4s., in the pound (for every
purvey in the county raises 100l.) therefore, for
instance say, as the purvey of the estate in question is to
100l. one general purvey, so is the proportion he is
to pay, to the sum to be raised by the county when the land
tax is 4s. in the pound; in other words, the
purchaser must pay so many crowns as the county rasies
hundred pounds.
We will call this an exemption from the land-tax (perhaps
not 6d. in the pound upon the value) I say the
purchaser paid for this exemption, and bought it on the
faith of Parliament, as stockholders bought their stock,
upon the faith that they would not be taxed, altho' they are
as liable to it, as these lands; and the usual price of
these lands, if freehold, is forty years purchase.
Again, he that bought lands in the counties that pay
land-tax, bought them lower in proportion, from 25 to 35
years purchase upon the gross rent, the neat (sic) income
being what a purchase considers, and the lands bought 25
year purchase, produce no more nett, than those bought at 40
years purchase per cent, on the purchase-money; this
is well known to Gentlemen in the House, who have lands of
both sorts.
Hence it is plain, that if a law should pass, for the whole
nation to pay a tax of 2s. in the pound, exempted
lands would immediately sink 10 per cent. in value,
and the 4s. land that is eased of 2s. would
rise 10 per cent. in value, just as a tax of
2s. in the pound on the stock dividends, would sink
the value of stock 10 per cent., and an act passed to
grant them 2s. in the pound more than the dividends,
would raise the value of the stock 10 per cent. and
thence I infer, that 2s. in the pound, levied upon
all the land in England, would not be an equitable
tax.
My property lies in Cumberland (let every man speak
for his own county) I now proceed to shew you, that besides
the impropriety of taking (call it an exemption) from a man,
which he has bought and paid for, the said county really
cannot pay 2s. in the pound ;and tax, because the
landholders do not lay up 2s. in the pound of their
rents, in three years, so cannot pay such a sum every year.
There is a ridge of mountains, that goes from the Irish
Sea to the German Sea, on the North of which this
county lies, by which situation we are deprived of much
benefit of the sun which you enjoy; the middle of
February is the middle of our winter, & the
farmers must have one half of their straw and two thirds of
their hay at that time, or their stock perishes. We cannot
turn out horses and cows to grass till the beginning of
June, at which time the grass begins to fit: add to
this, that the winds and incessant rains, the latter end of
the year, from Michaelmas, caused by the situation of
those mountains, make it very unfavourable for goods to be
exposed.
As soon as you pass these mountains, and get into
Cumberland, you perceive the air changed to a light,
thin, cold air, very unfavourable to vegetation; hence the
land is kept so cold and spungy, that we cannot sow oats
before April, bigg (the substitute for barley) before
June, and the wet and frost in winter is very
unfavourable for wheat, so that our lands, with the vast
quantity of manure we must employ, more than is necessary
south of the mountains, costs one third at least more to
till them than yours do, and does not produce half the crops
yours produces; this makes our crops come so dear, that I
may venture to say, of all the many thousand pounds paid for
bounty of corn, I never heard of a single guinea being paid
bounty
|