Jazz musician Eric Felten has a piece in the Wall
Street Journal on how taxes but an end to the era of Swing music. In 1944 the
federal government created a “cabaret tax” that added a 30% tax to the tab of
anyone in an establishment with either dancing or singing. Felten says it “is no coincidence that in the back half of the 1940s a
new and undanceable jazz performed primarily by small instrumental
groups—bebop—emerged as the music of the moment.”
He asks: “How differently might the aesthetic impulse behind bebop have been expressed if it had been allowed to develop organically instead of in an atmosphere where dancing was discouraged by the taxman? Jazz might have remained a highly sophisticated popular music instead of becoming an artsy niche.”
Consider how taxes have change architecture.
New Orleans has two oddities in the housing market, the Camelback house and the Shotgun house.
He asks: “How differently might the aesthetic impulse behind bebop have been expressed if it had been allowed to develop organically instead of in an atmosphere where dancing was discouraged by the taxman? Jazz might have remained a highly sophisticated popular music instead of becoming an artsy niche.”
Consider how taxes have change architecture.
New Orleans has two oddities in the housing market, the Camelback house and the Shotgun house.
The Shotgun house is said to have earned that label
because one could fire a shotgun through the front door and have the pellets
exit the house through the back door. It was narrow but long, one room wide at
most. You would enter into the living room and find a door from that room into
the bedroom behind it and there was another door into the kitchen behind it.
The rooms would be in a long row with no hallway at all.
Similar was the Camelback house. This was basically a
Shotgun house with a second floor but not as you might expect. At the rear of
the house would be stairs going to the second floor. But the second floor never
extended to the front of the house. People said this truncated second floor
looked like the hump of a camel, hence the name.
Both of these oddities are the creation of local
government policy.
Some have argued that the Shotgun house exists because
land in New Orleans, where they are mostly found, is scarce. But the extended
length of these homes would not justify that argument. After all a house that
is half as wide but twice as long still covers the same amount of land. Lots
could have been wider but less deep and still have used the same amount of
land.
The alternative theory, and a popular one, is that the
houses were narrowly built because land width was a factor in taxation. The
wider the house the more highly taxed it was. It was noted that such narrow
houses were frequently built in poor areas. Exactly what we would expect. Taxes
drive up the cost of housing and the people least likely to afford housing are
the poor, so they would need creative means to avoid the taxes.
The Camelback house was routinely taxed as a
single-story house because the second floor was only partial, which is why they
were designed that way.
This would not be the first time architecture was
distorted by taxation.
Amsterdam is famous for it’s very narrow, tall, long
buildings with narrow, steep stairways. This was done because property taxes
depended on the frontage of the residence.
Anyone who has gone up or down those stairs will tell
you that it impossible to bring in furniture. So, many Amsterdam houses were
built with hooks at the top front with windows that were almost as wide as the
house. Furniture would be lifted by a hoist to the window and then pulled
inside
The length or height of the house didn’t matter, only
the width so, of course, homes were very narrow. The narrowest in Amsterdam is
found at 7 Singel where the front of the house is barely wider than a front
door. The entire frontage is just one meter wide.
In England taxes made housing worse for people for a
very long time. Politicians wanted to tax income but they weren’t sure how to
do it back in the late 1600s. People felt that government knowledge of one’s
income was an intrusive violation of their privacy. So the politicians decided
to tax windows instead.
The assumption was that wealthy people had bigger
houses with more windows. And, since glass at the time was not cheap they also
assumed this indicated wealth. This tax was introduced by King William III on
New Year’s Eve in 1696 until 1851. One result was that even as glass dropped in
price English housing often remained dark, dingy, and lacked fresh air. In some
of the older buildings you can see where windows that once existed were bricked
up in order to lower the taxes.
The phrase
“daylight robbery” did not originally mean a robbery conducted in the light of
day, it meant the robbery of daylight from homes through the window tax.
The repeal of the widow tax in 1851 was largely influenced by the great classical liberals of the day, Richard Cobden and John Bright, the leaders of the Anti Corn Law League and proponents of free markets. A letter from Cobden to Robertson Gladstone lays out Cobden’s idea for the budget. Francis Hirst, in 1903, wrote “Within a little more than a generation the whole of Cobden’s ‘National Budget’ was adopted.” Cobden told Gladstone: “There is the window tax, which, although it does not, like the Excise duties, operate as a direct impediment to productive industry, is open to the fearful objection, that it 'obstructs the light of heaven;' and, in these brief words, we may read its inevitable doom. London, Bath, and other large cities are pressing the abolition of this tax annually upon the House, through Lord Duncan, and you must not think of excluding it from your 'National Budget.'”
The repeal of the widow tax in 1851 was largely influenced by the great classical liberals of the day, Richard Cobden and John Bright, the leaders of the Anti Corn Law League and proponents of free markets. A letter from Cobden to Robertson Gladstone lays out Cobden’s idea for the budget. Francis Hirst, in 1903, wrote “Within a little more than a generation the whole of Cobden’s ‘National Budget’ was adopted.” Cobden told Gladstone: “There is the window tax, which, although it does not, like the Excise duties, operate as a direct impediment to productive industry, is open to the fearful objection, that it 'obstructs the light of heaven;' and, in these brief words, we may read its inevitable doom. London, Bath, and other large cities are pressing the abolition of this tax annually upon the House, through Lord Duncan, and you must not think of excluding it from your 'National Budget.'”
Taxes distort any market and music and architecture are just two examples.
Apologies: We apologize about the odd spacing. Blogspot has turned to total crap in recent years and text is constantly screwed up. Spacing between paragraphs is no longer consistent. A text all in the same font will appear in different fonts in different paragraphs for no apparent reason. We greatly regret starting our blog here, but when we started it worked well. Now that Google has taken over it is crap and we hope to replace it with a new page at some point.
Apologies: We apologize about the odd spacing. Blogspot has turned to total crap in recent years and text is constantly screwed up. Spacing between paragraphs is no longer consistent. A text all in the same font will appear in different fonts in different paragraphs for no apparent reason. We greatly regret starting our blog here, but when we started it worked well. Now that Google has taken over it is crap and we hope to replace it with a new page at some point.