Comments on the Middle Class STAR
Rebate Program,
To the Assembly Standing Committee on Real Property
Taxation
H. William Batt, Ph.D.
hwbatt@gmail.com Central Research Group, Inc., Albany
Center for the Study of Economics, Phlladelphia
www.urbantools.org
December 5, 2007
As the property tax now exists, it violates
- the principle of neutrality, because
it influences and alters decisions from what would occur
in its absence;
- the principle of efficiency, to the
extent that it, as well as other taxes, reduces market
performance and economies by the "deadweight loss" it
generates;
- the principles of horizontal and vertical
equity: those in similar circumstances
don't typically bear comparable obligations, nor are
those in different circumstances treated in a uniformly
commensurate way;
- the principle of administrability,
insofar as its management is likely to be quickly skewed
by external forces, and because maintaining adequate and
reliable records is so costly;
- the principle of simplicity, which
leads to misunderstanding and opaque application, with
the consequent loss of its legitimacy; and
- the principle of stability, which
requires it to be continually jiggered and otherwise
modified to provide adequate revenue on which governments
depend.
Inherent in these downside effects is the distortion of
locational decisions so that land use configurations do not
unfold in an optimal ways and lead those who must make such
choices to second best alternatives.
What happens to property values over
time?
- The land value tends to increase, sometimes at
multiple times the rate of inflation, while the
improvement value decreases, a 2006 FRB study says about
1.5% annually.
- The property values do not change uniformly, even in
a single locality, and certainly not throughout the
state.
What happens to the assessments?
- Assessments quickly become inaccurate, even after one
or two years' lapse. They no longer accurately reflect
the values of property parcels throughout the locality,
and the state. Maryland reassesses every parcel in the
state every three years.
- Residential parcels change hands more often than
non-residential parcels, which means that the
inaccuracies in assessment are quickly skewed to favor
non-residential holdings.
- The costs of a comprehensive revaluation make
municipal leaders reluctant to take on the challenge. I
addressed this in my prepared testimony in February,
2007.
What happens to formulas intended to relieve
identified burdens?
- Thresholds, floors and ceilings, quickly become
obsolete.
- What is adequate in one region is either onerous or
too generous in other regions.
What relief measures are available, and how do
they compare?
1. NCSL identifies four that are extensively employed in
various states:
- Caps on assessments and on tax rates
- Homestead differentials and exemptions
- Circuit-breaker Provisions
- Tax Deferral Options, with Interest
2. Only the Deferral option avoids the liabilities
listed above.
- It protects the budget of the locality and taxing
system, and is administratively costless.
- It is fair to everyone, even to those who are not
homeowners.
- It imposes no distortions on individual choice, on
the economy or on land use choices.
- The initiative rests with the titleholder of the
parcel.
- Its terms can be flexible and accommodate to changing
circumstances.
- It is simple to understand and to administer.
- It can be employed even if assessments are inaccurate
or unreliable.
- It can be implemented immediately, simply by
enactment of permissive legislation.
Where are the present problems?
1. Lack of understanding of the nature of the real
property tax.
- that it is really two taxes that have very different
economic dynamics — land and improvements
- that the tax on land value is really a tax on the
flow of economic rent — not a tax on a
"thing."
- that the market value of location sites is due to the
community's enterprise, not titleholders
- that the tax on improvements is destructive, whereas
the tax on land rent is constructive
- that land value is easily assessed, and cheap to do;
improvements are difficult to assess
- that the tax on land value has a venerable moral
philosophy behind it, easily explained
- that the tax on land value comports with all the
textbook principles of sound tax theory
2. Administrative problems with assessment,
administrative management, and public understanding
- Assessments quickly become obsolete
- The tax regime is quickly distorted and resented
- Other tax regimes suffer from far greater
liabilities
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