Impact of the Property Tax

Impact of the Property Tax
Author: United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee
Publisher:
Total Pages: 50
Release: 1968
Genre: Economic policy
ISBN:

Prepared for National Commission on Urban Problems by Dick Netzer.

Land and Building Taxes

Land and Building Taxes
Author: Arthur P. Becker
Publisher: Madison : University of Wisconsin Press
Total Pages: 348
Release: 1969
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

"Proceedings of a symposium sponsored by the Committee on Taxation, Resources and Economic Development (TRED)."--T.p.

Economic Effects of Land Value Taxation in an Urban Area with Large Lot Zoning

Economic Effects of Land Value Taxation in an Urban Area with Large Lot Zoning
Author: Ki-Whan Choi
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2006
Genre: Cities and towns
ISBN:

LVT (Land Value Tax), unlike other taxes, causes no distortions in economic decision-making and therefore does not compromise the efficiency of a market economy. While there have been various challenges to this conclusion, it seems that the neutrality of LVT has been proven in the literature. Although it has been established conceptually that LVT is non-distortive, it is important to empirically test the effects of LVT reform in diverse aspects. Unlike other studies, this dissertation examines the economic, spatial, and welfare effects of LVT reform in a second-best situation employing an urban (and spatial) CGE (Computable General Equilibrium) model. In addition, it examines the distributional effects among different income groups and the short-term aspects of LVT as well. The feature that the present dissertation incorporates as the second-best situation includes LLZ (Large Lot Zoning). The computation and the assumptions about parameters for the current CGE model are made based on demographic, physical, and economic features of the Atlanta urban area in Georgia. The results suggest the following: (1) LVT reform is economically feasible, (2) the tax on land rent stabilizes prices and contracts the CBD (Central Business District) and urban boundary in the economy where the CBD and urban area are endogenously determined, while the tax on land rent is purely neutral in the economy where the CBD and urban area are fixed, (3) LVT reform increases the money-metric welfare of residents by about 20% of the tax revenue in the economy where residents are landowners, while LVT reform increases the money-metric welfare of residents by about 45% of the tax revenue in the economy where the lands are owned by absentee, (4) LVT reform more increases the money-metric welfare of the less-income groups that own the smaller land area, which is contrary to the case of LLZ, (5) LLZ and property tax can cause the sprawl of an urban area, but at a very low elasticity of substitution between land and the other factors (0.1), even switching from the land tax to the property tax (or graded property tax) can contract the urban area, (6) LLZ, in the long-term during which housing capital and urban boundary are not fixed and in the economy where residents are landowners, can improve the welfare of households, while LLZ worsens the welfare of households both in the economy where the lands are owned by absentee and in the short-term during which housing capital is immobile in any economy, (7) When we consider that housing capital is immobile, the increase in the money-metric welfare due to LVT reform becomes weak, compared to the case with perfectly mobile housing capital.

Taxes on Immovable Property

Taxes on Immovable Property
Author: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Committee on Fiscal Affairs
Publisher: Paris, France : Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development ; [Washington, D.C. : Sales agents, OECD Publications and Information Center]
Total Pages: 216
Release: 1983
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Survey of taxes on immovable property. Reviews the major policy issues raised in the taxation of land and buildings and compares the main provision of property tax systems in 15 OECD Member countries.