.
| [Reprinted from California
Homeowner, June, 1968] |
The impact of taxation and fiscal policies in general upon urban growth
structure is sometimes overlooked in the generation of city plans.
Failure to account for these taxation effects can result in development
of urban patterns in unintended and disadvantageous ways.
In our private enterprise economy we depend upon a market price system
to stimulate production of goods and services by its direct reflection
of consumer demand via prices that the buyers pay. The "goods and
services" provided by the various levels of government seldom have
the benefit of such direct interest in its product since its "marketplace
demand" relies mainly upon the political process and the judgments
of departmental administrators - including tax appraisers and city
planners.
Legislators and administrators influence industrial activity and
housing sites, the market for both public and private products (such as
land or buildings) with control levers of taxation and expenditures.
Policies viewed as economic abstractions and cash flows are translated
into the geographical facts of location and distribution of
commercial/industrial activity and housing sites. The city planning
problem with respect to taxes gets entangled with these
politico-economic issues:
(1) the search for easily-collected taxes by legislators and
administrators,
(2) the short-run viewpoint of some taxpayers,
(3) municipal jurisdictional boundaries.
ASSESSORS TEND TO IGNORE HIGHEST AND BEST USE OF LAND
An easily-collected tax is not always the "fairest" in terms
of ability-to-pay. With respect to property taxes this has usually meant
the appraisers, for example, will prefer to set taxes "objectively"
on the value of land and improvements as they now stand. They look upon
"subjective" taxation on the basis of earning power or
potential highest-and-best-use as a basket of snakes. This method
requires some Solomon-like distinctions with respect to commercial and
residential use as well as with current and future zoning practices.
While the complexity of the latter approach, with main emphasis on the
intrinsic land values, can be appreciated it is still believed by many
economists (including the writer) to be a more effective way of using
market processes to gradually eliminate central city slums. Such a tax
approach would also permit a more rational functioning of economic
activity in the core area. Land-value taxation is more likely to reflect
the potential earning power of a property which is attributable to its
location; it removes the tax penalty on improvements. Pittsburgh
presently taxes land at full value while improvements are taxed at half
value to encourage new construction.
The present "easy" and "objective" (abnormally low)
tax has a perverse effect upon urban planning by keeping slum property
or vacant land prices artificially high perpetuating the downhill slide
of the central city, and shifting its legitimate share of taxation to
other parts of the city. A higher tax on these well-located lands would
permit their prices to decline to normal levels and encourage
highest-and-best-use as determined in the market place. As a recent
article in Harper's Magazine, May 1968, on the effect of the present tax
approach points:
"Land speculators deliberately keep land idle
because of the low taxes. The homeowner, along with apartment and
commercial property owners, pays higher taxes on his improved land, in
effect subsidizing the land speculators who simply wait for the entire
community to push up the price of their land."
A PUBLIC EXPENDITURE SHOULD BECOME AN ASSET NOT AN EXPENSE
The short-run viewpoint of some taxpayers stems in part from the
failure to treat public expenditures on the same basis as business
expenditures. When a corporation invests in "machinery or buildings
one assumes, correctly, that the purpose is to make its operations more
productive, more profitable. The investment is listed as an asset on the
balance sheet and becomes a part of the stockholders equity.
Unfortunately, when city growth and improvement call for similar public
investment in schools, fire/police protection, rapid transit, and urban
renewal the short-runners view these as "expenses" rather than
as basic assets in the community infrastructure.
Bond issue defeats and failure to provide tax revenues are a result of
this point of view and makes rational planning for future needs
difficult or impossible. The effect of such neglect is that the
community declines in its functional and economic efficiency, in time it
becomes a less desirable place in which to live. Part of the
attractiveness of California is the fact that it has kept up most of its
public investments - particularly in educational and highway planning -
unlike many eastern cities. A time of testing for attitudes toward
transportation planning and public expenditure will come in November
when voters decide the proposed rapid transit system which will provide
a vital balance to the transport needs of the Los Angeles area. Stanford
Research Institute, viewing the 89 mile network as strictly an
investment, calculated a $1.87 return to the community for each dollar
put up.
SPRAWL CONTRIBUTES TO HIGHER COSTS FOR SERVICES
The City of Los Angeles with its 463 sq. mi. area is one of the largest
town plots in the nation but its tax base and planning efforts suffer
from irregular boundaries and framented jurisdictions. Its territory
completely or partially surrounds six of its suburbs with overlapping
and crossing service areas; the planning problems can be imagined.
Perhaps more serious in its effect on the tax base and city planning are
the so-called Phantom Cities or "dropout-towns" of Los Angeles
County which are industrial, strip-commercial, or high-income
residential enclaves which exist mainly to escape ordinary municipal
taxes.
These industrial/commercial "cities" have no health/welfare
problems, and require minimal fire and police protection. Los Angeles
and other towns provide these services for their workers. The
high-income residential enclaves also insulate themselves from urban
problems - but depend mainly upon the City of Los Angeles for their
livelihood and major cultural amenities.
The presence of cut-rate tax haven "cities" handicaps urban
planning by draining the industrial base and the high-income citizens
from the city proper. The larger city and its residents have less funds
for operations, planning, and community investment while the "phantoms"
enjoy a tax windfall.
A JUST PROPERTY TAX CAN BE AN AID TO PLANNING
In short, taxes and planning are intimately related; Los Angeles and
many other cities are trying to develop tax programs which will permit
more logical planning and better implementation of these plans for the
future. Councilman Edmund Edelman, chairman of the Revenue and Taxation
Committee of the Los Angeles City Council has enlisted the aid of a team
of UCLS fiscal economists to prepare new tax approaches for the city. To
resolve at least some of the geo-economic and planning problems cited
above the UCLA group and the committee will examine tax incentives for
desirable intensities of use, penalties for undesirable ones,
user-benefit charges and other proposals.
Tax effects on planning take place whether intended or not, with
increasing awareness of the fiscal impact on planning -- and the
planning effects on taxation - one can make more rational choices about
the structure of the community in which we live. We may not like taxes
but no civilization exists without them; let us use taxes as part of the
apparatus to plan a better future.
|