'Scotland continues to be stuck with the most concentrated, most inequitable, most unreformed and most undemocratic land ownership system in the entire developed world' (historian James Hunter, 2013).
A compulsively readable account of how Scotland has come to have a more concentrated pattern of private landownership than almost any other country in the world, how the landed elite has managed to survive for centuries up to the present day, and the reforms that are needed to address inequalities in land tenure.
Andy Wightman has written a powerful book that on first publication caused the Inland Revenue to investigate tax avoidance by Scottish landowners hiding behind trusts, offshore companies, and companies registered abroad. Some of the country's wealthiest landowners are listed as 'directors' of companies that 'own' their estates, companies registered outside Britain, e.g. in Liechtenstein. The loss of revenue to the Treasury amounts to millions of pounds and is nothing other than tax avoidance. Nor do these estates, together with sporting estates and privately owned forestry, pay any council tax or business rates thereby receiving public services completely free of charge and ensuring that the rest of the population has to pay for the shortfall.
Now it can be argued that landowners are merely taking advantage of historically poor fiscal management on the part of local and national government. The fact is that due to their position in society, the old boys' network essentially, they are in a position to influence the maintenance of these systems to their own advantage. As Wightman says, "Arrangements whereby the wealthy can avoid tax whilst the poor must pay have no place in a fair society." Another example of fiscal mismanagement, but on a European level, is that EU farming subsidies amounting to £millions, aimed at helping those struggling to make a living from agriculture, are often given instead to the landowners from whom they rent their farms. Some of these 'gentlemen farmers' own sporting estates and aren't involved in farming at all. They may simply rent out multiple farms on their land.
The reasons why this situation arose historically are many and complicated. On mainland Europe, "peasant" uprisings divested the crowns and nobility of their lands centuries ago but this wasn't mirrored in Britain and particularly not in Scotland. Lands that had been distributed by the Crown (e.g. David I, Robert the Bruce) to thegns and lords in return for military support were misappropriated (euphemism for stolen) by the nobility who assumed ownership through time. British nobility wrested political, landed and military power from the Crown in the 17th century creating a powerful hegemony that the peasantry were never going to succeed in overturning. Thus we have an entrenched class system in Britain which keeps the rich wealthy and the poor poor.
It's fair to say that Wightman has his own axes to grind but he has brought these issues into public awareness. He is a pedantic and thorough researcher, ferreting out fraud and dishonesty sometimes centuries old, and he has helped to inform the introduction of a wave of radical land reform law implemented in recent years by the Scottish Government. For this, he should be well and truly thanked but there is still some way to go before the historical tendency for the law to favour the haves over the have-nots will cease. The poor still have no lawyers.
This is a very superficial summary of a book that encompasses a very wide range of issues. Many, such as the misappropriation of commonties (land and property held for the common good), should be of interest to anyone living in Scotland. You may even find the knowledge gained to be of personal advantage. Essentially, if you live in Scotland and care about your country, I strongly recommend that you read this book. It will either shame you or anger you into supporting all efforts to reform our country's remaining abysmal land laws.