.
Land Value
Taxation and Housing Development
Effects of the
Property Tax Reform in Three Types of Cities |
| [An excerpt reprinted
from the Amercian Journal of Economics and Sociology,
January 1990, Vol. 49, Issue 1] |
Abstract: The effects of land value taxation on housing development in
3 disparate cities - Pittsburgh, McKeesport, and New Castle,
Pennsylvania - were examined. The cities were representative of 3
different types of city: central city, suburban city, and relatively
isolated city, respectively. It was argued that shifting taxes from
buildings to land would have different effects in the different types of
cities. A liquidity effect, caused by increases in the land tax rate,
was expected to operate in all 3 types. An incentive effect, caused by
decreases in the tax rate on improvements, was expected in central
cities and, possibly, in relatively isolated cities. However, it was not
expected to be important in suburban cities. The results found that an
incentive effect was present in Pittsburgh, but not in the other 2
cities. There was no evidence of a liquidity effect in any of the
cities. The results suggest that land value taxation is a desirable
strategy for central cities seeking to encourage development and attract
households. Because households are relatively mobile within metropolitan
areas, LVT may permit central cities to attract households that would
otherwise locate in nearby suburban jurisdictions.
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