The Effect of Shifting the Property Tax Base from Improvement Value to Land Value: An Empirical Estimate

1977 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard L. Pollock ◽  
Donald C. Shoup
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cameron Murray ◽  
Jesse Hermans

Property taxes are a common revenue source for city governments. There are two property tax bases available—land value (site value, SV), or total property value (capital improved value, CIV). The choice of property tax base has implications for both the distribution and efficiency of the tax. We provide new evidence in favour of SV being both the more progressive and efficient property tax base. First, we use three Victorian datasets at different levels of geographic aggregation to model the SV-CIV ratio as a function of various household income measures. At all three levels, a higher SV-CIV ratio occurs in areas with higher incomes, implying that SV is the more progressive property tax base. Our range of results suggests that a one percent increase in the income of an area is associated with a 0.10 to 0.57 percentage point increase in the SV-CIV ratio. Second, we use historical council data to conduct a difference-in-difference analysis to compare the effect of switching from a CIV to SV tax base on the number of building approvals and value of construction investment. We find that switching from CIV to SV as a property tax base is associated with a 20% increase in the value of new residential construction. This is consistent with the view that changes to land value tax rates are non-neutral with respect to the timing of capital investment on vacant and under-utilised land, which we also demonstrate theoretically.


1990 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 554-565
Author(s):  
B. Bruce Bare

A per acre property tax model is proposed for taxing plantation-grown timber in western Washington State. The taxable assets consist of the bare land value plus the reforestation investment necessary to establish the timber stand. Under this system, an annual ad valorem property tax, or a harvest yield tax that substitutes for all, or part, of the annual ad valorem tax is levied on the full value of the tax base. Thus, unlike the traditional case where an annual property tax is levied on modified bare land and timber values to reduce the deferred yield bias associated with long-lived timber crops, the tax base under the proposed system requires no comparable modification. A variety of input scenarios are used to compare the numerical consequences of applying the proposed tax system with those of a land only, a land plus timber, and a harvest yield tax system; all levied at full value. Further comparisons with Washington's existing forest tax system, which is composed of an annual ad valorem property tax on a legislatively mandated statutory bare land value and a 5% harvest yield tax imposed in lieu of an annual ad valorem property tax on maturing timber, demonstrates how highly modified Washington's current system has become to accommodate forest owners and temper the deferred yield bias the property tax theoretically fosters.


AERA Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 233285842199114
Author(s):  
Phuong Nguyen-Hoang

Tax increment financing (TIF)—an economic (re)development tool originally designed for urban cities—has been available to rural communities for decades. This is the first study to focus solely on TIF in rural school districts, to examine TIF effects on school districts’ property tax base and rates, and to conduct event-study estimations of TIF effects. The study finds that TIF has mostly positive effects on rural school districts’ property tax base and mixed effects on property tax rates, and that TIF-induced increases in tax base come primarily from residential property and slightly from commercial property. The study’s findings assert the importance of returned excess increment if rural school districts in Iowa and many other states are to benefit from TIF.


1964 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 253-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
BENJAMIN B. BRIDGES,

1981 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 449-470 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter S. Fisher

State gram programs aimed at equalizing local government fiscal capacities and metropolitan-wide programs for the sharing of property tax bases are very similar in terms of objectives as well as operation. The Twin Cities tax base sharing system, which has served as a model for numerous other proposals, has some serious deficiencies; a proposal for eliminating these defects is developed by viewing tax base sharing as a set of fiscal capacity equalizing grants. Alternative formulas are evaluated, and the merits of tax base sharing at the state rather than metropolitan level are discussed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 151-163
Author(s):  
Randall White

In the more recent past, property tax reform in the City of Toronto has been thwarted by suggestions of "progressive elements" in the single residential tax base, that hold out prospects of regressive shifts in the residential tax burden in the wake of a reassessment. Study of the evolution of the tax base in five city neighbourhoods since the early 1920s indicates that these progressive elements are largely an unintended consequence of historical changes in neighbourhood real estate markets. Moreover, what potential there is for regressive tax shifts could be offset significantly by some updated form of a partial graded dwelling house exemption in the City's traditional property tax system. The urban history of the Toronto property tax, however, does illustrate the political and technical challenges of property tax reform through market value assessment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 27
Author(s):  
Gabriel Kayode Babawale

Property tax has remained a subject of recurrent debate amongst policy makers, scholars, public officials, real estate valuers, and other stakeholders, virtually everywhere over the years. The contention centres on issues such as the tax base, tax incidence, efficiency, and particularly, equity or fairness, among others. Qualities like ease of collection, difficulty of avoidance, accountability, and transparency etc., that ordinarily mark out property tax as a good tax in principle, are often compromised by controversial policies and mal-administration, particularly the latter. The new Lagos State Land Use Charge2018 (LUC, 2018) came into force effective January, 2018. Ina similar version that its immediate predecessor, the Land Use Charge2001 (LUC, 2001), attracted spontaneous and widespread protests on promulgation, the criticisms and protests that greeted the passage LUC (2018)has been vehement and remained unabated until the government was forced, like it did with the erstwhile law, to succumb to substantial but arbitrary reductions in rates and allowances across board (at two different times to date) but without a formal amendment to the law; an exact replica of what transpired under the erstwhile law and which opened it to abuse and arbitrary implementation with its compliance and revenue yields implications. The last of these reductions which took place in August saw a whopping 50%, and 25% cut in assessed rates on commercial properties and industrial properties, respectively. This study employed the doctrinal research methodology whereby the valuation or assessment aspect of the LUC (2018) was diagnosed with a view to finding amicable resolutions to the equity problem that virtually crippled the effectiveness of LUC (2001) over its seventeen years of existence and is already threatening the survival of the new LUC (2018). Keywords: assessment criteria, equity and fairness, Land Use Charge (2018), property tax.


Author(s):  
P. G. Sorokina ◽  
◽  
O. V. Leonova ◽  
L. Yu. Volchenko ◽  
◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Tax Base ◽  

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