Money as a record Is income inequality necessarily unjust?
We may not be able to identify thief or victim, but it is a trivial matter to identify those who benefit from such transactions having taken place and those who are harmed by them. In the absence of an identified thief and victim, what could possibly prevent us from simply assuming those who suffer now are de facto victims? — Isaac
This point "it's trivial to identify who benefits and suffers from past transactions", is asserting that wealthy people have benefited and poor people have been injured?
Economic value is best thought of as the maximum return the seller can generate. — Isaac
Free market prices are such that quantity supplied and quantity demand are the same. Real markets are unfree to varying degrees. The distance of real prices from equilibrium prices is a function of unfreeness. Why is your view superior?
the price of the resource they collectively own will still be set my the minimum that person is willing to receive, not the amount the purchaser is willing to pay. Their willingness to pay doesn't figure in the calculations at all because they simply must, on pain of death, pay whatever the minimum available price is. — Isaac
If the seller doesn't turn his property investment into a positive return, then he doesn't make money, so hunger kills him. If the buyer doesn't acquire housing, then exposure kills him. What is the salient difference between buyer and seller position?
Say all landowners set the price of fields at £6,000 an acre. One landowner thinks he might rake in all the sales by accepting £5,500. That then is the price of land. The willingness of farmers to pay that price never entered the equation, they simply have to because they must have land to make food to eat. — Isaac
The willingness of farmers to pay £5,500 rather than £6,000 is exactly what influences the lower price. The defecting landowner thinks, "Farmers are more willing to pay £5,500 than £6,000, so I will lower my price to increase the likelihood of a sale." It's incontestable that more people are willing to buy a product at a lower price than a higher price. Are you pointing out that the lower price is too expensive for some farmer-buyers?
Assume a single landlord owns all farmable properties. He decides to sell each acre plot for £0.001. Most farmer-buyers can "afford" land. Unfortunately, the "line" to buy is so long that most farmer-buyers never get land. What model do you suggest for distributing usage of farmland?