In the late 1800s and early 1900s, a
populist single-tax movement emerged that sought to levy a single tax on the rental value of land and natural resources, but for somewhat different reasons. This "Single Tax" movement later became known as
Georgism, named after its most famous proponent,
Henry George. It proposed a simplified and equitable tax system that upholds natural rights and whose revenue is based exclusively on ground and
natural resource rents, with no additional taxation of improvements such as buildings.
Geo-libertarians advocate land
value capture as a consistently
ethical and
non-distortionary means to fund the essential operations of government, with the surplus rent being distributed as a guaranteed
basic income. This is traditionally called the
citizen's dividend, which is intended to compensate members of society who have been deprived by legal title of an equal share of the earth's spatial value and equal access to natural opportunities. Related taxes derived in principle from the land value tax include
Pigouvian taxes to internalize the
external costs of pollution more efficiently than litigation, as well as
severance taxes on raw material extraction to regulate the depletion of unreplenishable natural resources and to prevent irreparable damage to valuable ecosystems through unsustainable practices such as
overfishing. ==Income and consumption taxes==