Title: The Public Finance
1The Public Finance of Private Communities and
Private Transit Fred E. Foldvary Dept. of
Economics Santa Clara University ffoldvary_at_scu.edu
2We can recover from smart growth with private
communities. Entrepreneurs seek to maximize land
rent, which optimizes the land use.
3General Principles
- Optimal price marginal cost.
- Civic works create site rentals.
- Marginal benefits decline.
- Optimal quantity MC MB.
4Spencer Heath, 1957, Citadel, Market and Altar
Hotel services like a city, but voluntary.
Hotels compete. Services paid from the room
rentals.
5Spencer Heath MacCallum
- The Art of Community, 1970
Society suffers from schizophrenia. The same
agency that performs public services also
performs disservices, cannibalizing society with
taxation.
6William Vickrey
- Price services e.g. transit at marginal cost,
including congestion costs. - Build if rent generated is greater than cost,
when users pay MC, often free. - Rent pays the remaining costs.
7Fred Foldvary, 1994
- Public Goods and Private Communities
- There is market success providing public goods,
in theory and in practice. - Demand is revealed by rent.
- No free riders users pay rent.
- Condominiums, residential associations.
8Replace zoning and regulations
- Covenants and easements.
- Association deeds and bylaws.
- Proprietary governance.
- Allow secession and tax substitution.
9Private streets and transit
- Cars pay congestion, pollution charges.
- Jitneys, vans, have curb rights.
- Public transit charging MC if generates rent,
quantity at MC MB. - Streets owned by civic associations.
- No proxie taxes, e.g. on gasoline.
10Replace taxes
- Voluntary user fees, with electronic tolls and
meters. - Community assessments.
- Congestion and pollution charges.
- Private and voluntary services.
11Mass democracy fails
- Rent seeking by special interests.
- Tyranny of the median voter.
- There is no general will.
- Rational voter ignorance not worth knowing
better. - Candidates must have the money.
12Small-group voting
- Little need for campaign money.
- Can personally meet and know candidates.
- Bottom-up power and money.
- Complements private communities.
13Conclusion
- Replace dysfunctional mass democracy with
bottom-up small-group voting. - Replace zoning with covenants.
- Replace taxes with fees, assessments.
- Privatize transit, streets, roads.