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The Theory of Property Tax LECTURER: JACK WU Outline Topic I: What Are Property Taxes? Topic II: Property Tax Incidence Topic III: Property Tax Capitalization Topic IV: Property Tax Competition and Provision of Local Public Goods Topic II: Property Tax Incidence II1:Traditional View: Excise Tax View II2:New View: Capital Tax View Traditional View Property tax is viewed as an excise tax貨物稅. Therefore, property tax is ad valorem tax從價稅. Theoretical analysis approach: Partial equilibrium analysis New View Property tax is viewed as a capital tax 資本稅or profit tax利潤稅. Therefore, property tax is a factor tax要素稅. Theoretical analysis approach: General equilibrium analysis II1: Traditional View: Property Tax as Excise Tax Case 1:Tax on Land Case 2:Tax on Structure (Building attached to land) Case 1:Tax on Land Natures of Land: _Fixed quantity _Immobility _Durable Assumptions on Land: Supply of land is perfectly inelastic Figure: Incidence of a Tax on Land Summarizing Incidence of a Tax on Land Neutral Efficient (no deadweight loss) Tax Burden borne completely by landlords Case 2:Tax on Structure Natures of Structure: _Heterogeneity _Immobility _Durability _High moving cost _Discrimination and Segregation Assumptions: Supply of structure is perfectly elastic Figure: Incidence of a tax on structure Summarizing Incidence of a Tax on Structure Neutral Tax burden borne completely by structure users Inefficient (Deadweight loss) Progressive or Regressive? Progressive: property tax as a percentage of income rises with income Regressive: property tax as a percentage of income falls with income Figure: Estimates of the Property Tax as a Percentage of Income under the Traditional View , 1957 (Netzer) Unit: $1,000; % Money Nonresident Residential income class ial property property Total property Less than 2 4.0 3.3 7.3 2-3 3.4 1.6 5.0 3-4 3.2 1.4 4.6 4-5 3.4 1.4 4.8 5-7 2.2 1.7 3.9 7-10 1.6 2.0 3.6 10-15 1.3 2.7 4.0 15 and over 1.7 1.6 3.3 Average - - 4.6 Regressive 14 Netzer , D. 1966. The Economics of Property Tax. Brookings Institute. Table 3.3, p.45 and Table 3.5, p.55. Figure: Estimates of the Property Tax as a Percentage of Income under the Traditional View , 1968 (Musgrave) Unit: $1,000; % Income class Total property Less than 4 6.7 4.0-5.7 5.7 5.7-7.9 4.7 7.9-10.4 4.3 10.4-12.5 4.0 12.5-17.5 3.7 17.5-22.6 3.3 22.6-35.5 3.0 35.5-92.0 2.9 92.0 and over 3.3 Average 3.9 15 Regressi ve Musgrave R.A. and Musgrave P.B 1973. Public Finance in Theory and Practice. McGraw-Hill. p. 368. Figure: Estimates of the Property Tax as a Percentage of Income under the Traditional View , 1966 (Pechman and Okner) Unit: $1,000; % Family income class Total property Less than 3 6.5 3-5 4.8 5-10 3.6 10-15 3.2 15-20 3.2 20-25 3.1 25-30 3.1 30-50 3.0 50-100 2.8 100-500 2.4 500-1,000 1.7 1,000 and over 0.8 Average 16 3.4 Regressi ve Pechman, J.A. and Okner B.A. 1974. Who Bears the Tax Burden? Brookings Institute. Table 4.8, 3b, p. 59. Figure: Estimates of the Property Tax as a Percentage of Income under the Traditional View , 1970 (ACIR) Unit: $1,000; % Family income class Residential property Less than 2 16.6 2-3 9.7 3-4 7.7 4-5 6.4 5-6 5.5 6-7 4.7 7-10 4.2 10-15 3.7 15-25 3.3 25 and over 2.9 Average 4.9 Regressi ve Advisory Commission on Intergovernental Relations.17 1973. Financing Schools and Property Tax Relief–A State Responsibility. ACIR. Table 15, P. 36. II2:New View: Property Tax as Capital Tax Rationales of Capital Taxes Incidence of Capital Taxes -Case 1:A Uniform Tax -Case 2:Differential Taxation by Types -Case 3:Differential Taxation by Locations Impacts of Property Tax Differential on Labor market, local consumer goods market, and land market Rationales of Capital Taxes I Modern economic analysis most often considers property taxes as taxes levied on the capital, which is one of the major inputs (with labor and materials) into the production of goods and services. It is straightforward that property taxes are levied on commercial and industrial property because plant, land, and equipment are considered as capital. Rationales of Capital Taxes II Residential housing is not intuitively considered as capital. Alternatively, they are normally considered as durable consumer good. However, physical residential housing can be considered as only one input into the production of a consumer good: housing service. Incidence of Capital Tax Case 1: A Uniform Tax Case 2: Differential Taxation by Types Case 3: Differential Taxation by Locations Case 1: A Uniform Tax Assumption 1: The quantity supplied of capital goods (property) in the nation is fixed (in the long run), suggesting a perfectly inelastic supply of capital. Assumption 2: The government imposes a uniform national tax on all capital goods (property) at a single rate. This implies that changes in the type of property owned or the location of the property will not reduce the tax liability. The only way to avoid the tax is to reduce the amount of property owned, that is, to reduce investment. Assumption 3: A property owner cannot avoid the tax by selling the property to another investor. Implications After the tax is imposed and known, any potential buyer would be willing to offer less for the property because the future after-tax return is lower than it would be if there were no tax. Therefore, the property tax is represented by a shift down in the demand curve. Figure. Incidence of Uniform Tax Summary of Incidence of A Uniform Tax Tax burden borne entirely by capital owner. The rate of return earned by capital owners falls by the full amount of the tax because those owners at the time the tax is levied have no options to change behaviors in an effort to avoid the tax. Efficient (NO distortion, NO deadweight loss) Case 2: Differential Taxation by Types Assumption 1: Two types of capital goods: A and B Assumption 2: Government levies a property tax on capital A, while it levies zero tax on capital B Assumption 3: Investors can avoid the tax by decreasing their investment in taxable capital and increasing their investment in exempt capital. Assumption 4: Capital goods are mobile between types. Assumption 5: Users of capital goods are immobile between capital types. Implication of Assumption Reality: some types of property are exempt from taxation with all other property taxed everywhere at a uniform rate. Distortion in capital investment decision: Investing more on capital B (exempt capital) and less on capital A (taxable capital) As a result, after-tax rates of capital return change: after-tax rate of return of capital A rises and after-tax rate of return of capital B falls. In equilibrium, after-tax rate of return of capital A equals after-tax rate of return of capital B Figure: Very Short Run 28 Very Short Run Analysis Initial equilibrium is at rate of return R0 for two types of capital (A and B) when there are no taxes. If a property tax is imposed on Capital A only, the immediate effect is a reduction in the rate of return from capital A to R1, as reflected by DA1, which includes the tax. An investor in capital A earns a return of R0, pays tax of (R0-R1), and retains a return of R1. Because the tax has reduced the rate of return from capital A compared to that available from capital B, investors are expected to switch from A to B in the short run. Figure: Short Run Adjustment 30 Short Run Analysis As the amount (quantity supplied) of capital A falls from A0 to A1, the rate of return from capital A changes to R2, and as the supply of capital B rises, the price of , or the rate of return from, capital B falls to R2. Potential investors in capital B need not be offered as high a return when there was no tax on A, because the property tax on capital A has made investment in capital B relatively more attractive. Figure: Long Run Equilibrium 32 Long Run Analysis The long-run equilibrium is reached at quantities A1 and B1, with a net-of-tax rate of return in both markets equal to R2. Of course, owners of capital A still have to pay the tax; so to earn a net-of-tax rate of return equal to R2, they must receive a gross return of R3. Long-Run Equilibrium In capital A market: Price paid by capital user: R3 Price received by capital owner: R2 Capital tax per unit: R3-R2 Both capital user and owner share tax partially In capital B market: Price paid by capital user= Price received by capital owner: R2 Capital user gains, but capital owner loses. Incidence of Differential Taxation by Types Tax burden is borne by capital owners of both types Tax burden is borne by capital users of Type A The capital user of Type B benefits from tax Inefficient Why does differential taxation create inefficiency? The tax differential creates an incentive for the economy to have more of the untaxed capital, even though the productivity of capital B has not risen. The initial long-run supply represents the marginal social cost for both types of capital and initial demand the marginal social benefit. The tax differential induces an increase in the amount of capital B so that marginal cost is greater than marginal benefit. Similarly, the reduction in the amount of capital A causes its marginal benefit to be greater than marginal cost. In other words, the economy is supplying too much capital B and too little capital A. Figure: Dead Weight Loss 37 Case 3: Differential Taxation by Locations Assumption 1: All capitals are homogeneous Assumption 2: Two locations: A and B Assumption 3: Government levies a property tax on capitals in location A, while it levies zero tax on capitals in location B. Assumption 4: Capitals are mobile between locations Assumption 5: Capital users are immobile between locations Implications of Assumption Reality: taxation of identical property at different tax rates by different jurisdictions. Capital owners can avoid the property tax in location A by moving to location B. In equilibrium, the after-tax rates of return in both locations are equal. Figure: Very Short Run 40 Very Short Run Analysis Initial equilibrium is at rate of return R0 for two locations (A and B) when there are no taxes. If a property tax is imposed on Capital in location A only, the immediate effect is a reduction in the rate of return from capital in location A to R1, as reflected by DA1, which includes the tax. A capital investor in location A earns a return of R0, pays tax of (R0-R1), and retains a return of R1. Because the tax has reduced the rate of return from capital in location A compared to that available from capital in location B, investors are expected to switch from location A to location B in the short run. Figure: Short Run Adjustment 42 Short Run Analysis As the amount (quantity supplied) of capital in location A falls from A0 to A1, the rate of return from capital in location A changes to R2, and as the supply of capital in location B rises, the price of , or the rate of return from, capital in location B falls to R2. Potential investors in capital in location B need not be offered as high a return when there was no tax on capital in location A, because the property tax on capital in location A has made investment in capital in location B relatively more attractive. Figure. Long Run Equilibrium Long Run Equilibrium The long-run equilibrium is reached at quantities A1 and B1, with a net-of-tax rate of return in both locations equal to R2. Of course, owners of capital in location A still have to pay the tax; so to earn a net-of-tax rate of return equal to R2, they must receive a gross return of R3. Incidence of Differential Taxation by Locations Tax burden borne by capital owners in both locations. Some of the tax burden from the higher-tax location is shifted to capital owners in the lower-tax location through the decrease in the rate of return, which is caused by the increased supply. Tax burden borne by capital users in Location A where capitals are taxed. Capital users in Location B where capitals are not taxed benefit from the tax. Inefficient Figure. Deadweight Loss Modified Case 3: Assumption 5 is dropped What happen if we drop the assumption 5 that capital users are immobile? Users of capital in location A pay a higher rental price than that in location B, so some of them will move to location B. Therefore, the demand for capital in location A decreases, and the demand for capital in location B increases. Figure: Long Run Equilibrium with Mobile Capital Users 49 Long-Run Equilibrium with mobile capital users There is no long run equilibrium under this setting because it is impossible that both equilibrium conditions hold simultaneously: (1)equalized rental prices paid by capital users in both locations, and (2) equalized rental prices received by capital owners in both locations. The long run equilibrium outcome depends on the relative spatial mobility of capital owners and users. Impacts of Differential Taxation by Locations Impacts on labor market Impacts on local consumer goods (Housing services) Impacts on land market Analysis of Impacts on Labor Market If capital is mobile, the higher tax rate in location A causes less capital to be invested in that location, which is expected to affect the demand for labor in location as well. If labor and capital are complementary, then the reduced amount of capital investment will also reduce the demand for labor, causing wages in location A to fall. The opposite happens in location B, where increased capital investment causes an increase in demand for labor and an increase in wages. Figure. The impact on Labor Market, Labor is Immobile Labor is immobile If workers do not or cannot change jobs in response to these wage changes, the story stops; part of the differential property tax burden in location A has shifted to workers in location A. Labor is Mobile However, if workers are mobile and respond to the change in relative wages, the supply of labor falls in location A (driving wage back), and the supply in location B rises (driving wage down). In that case, the effect of the property tax differential in location A is a reduction in employment rather than a change in wages. Figure. The impact on Labor Market, Labor is Mobile Impacts on Local Consumer Goods • • • The changes in the user prices of capital in locations A and B, caused by the difference in property taxes, also are expected to affect the prices of local consumer goods that use capital in their production process. Because the user's price of capital (the rental rate) has increased in location A, one expects that the prices of local consumer goods that are capital intensive will also rise. Housing service is the chief among these local consumer goods. Figure. The impact on local consumer goods, consumer is immobile Analysis (Immobile consumer) In location A, the supply curve shifts up because the cost of producing housing services increases due to the higher property tax. As a result, the price of housing services in location A -that is, the consumer’s cost of living in a house- is expected to rise. It rises from P0 to P1. In contrast, the decrease in the consumer’s price of capital in location B is expected to reduce the price of housing services in location B. (Supply curve of housing services shifts to the right). Figure. The impact on local consumer goods, consumer is mobile Analysis I(Mobile Consumer) • • Just as with labor, whether the story stops or continues depends on whether housing consumers respond to the change in the relative price of housing services between the two locations. If consumers are aware of the differences and are mobile, then more consumers are expected to seek housing in B, where the price has decreased, and fewer consumers are expected to seek housing in A. Analysis II(Mobile Consumer) However, the decrease in housing demand in location A will housing prices down, while the increase in housing demand in location B will increase housing prices again. If consumers are perfectly mobile, the resulting effect of the property tax differential, then, is a decrease in the amount of housing in A and an increase in the amount of housing in B, but the relative prices do not change. Impacts on Land Market • • • Because of the positive property tax rate differential in location A, the amount of capital investment in A is expected to fall, with the effect of decreasing the demand for the complementary input land. Further, if housing consumers react to the increased housing service price by leaving for other locations, the demand for land will decline further. These decreases in the demand for land will reduce the price (value) of land in A. Impacts on Land Market II • • However, landowners do not have the option, available to owners of other types of capital, of moving their investment (land) to a lower-tax location; the supply of land in location A is fixed. If all other capital, other inputs, and consumers are all mobile, then the burden of the tax differential that remains is reflected in a decreased value of land. Impacts on Land Market III If land is the only immobile commodity or agent, then all of the burden of the tax differential is capitalized into land values in the higher-tax location, A in the example. Those hurt by the tax differential are the landowners in location A at the time the tax was increased. Landowners in location B benefit. • Figure. The impact on land market Summary Property Tax Rate in location A Wage ; Employment Price of local goods ; Production output Housing rent ; Land rent Value of houses and land