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Patchwork Remedies Walter Rybeck: What Affordable Housing Problem?
Like all creatures -- goldfinches, squirrels,
butterflies, cicadas -- we humans are squatters on this
planet. We all need a part of earth for shelter,
nourishment, a work site and a place to raise the next
generation. Otherwise we perish. ...
In the 1980s, Washington, D.C., was concerned about its growing army of homeless. At that time I found there were 8,000 boarded-up dwelling units in our Nation's Capital -- more than enough to accommodate some 5,000 street people. I also found there were 11,500 privately owned vacant lots in the District of Columbia, mostly zoned for and suitable for homes or apartments. Decent housing on these sites held in cold storage would have provided an alternative for the many low-income families squatting in places that were overcrowded, overpriced, overrun with vermin and overloaded with safety hazards. These issues spurred my research described in a 1988 report, "Affordable Housing -- A Missing Link." Evidence from the Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics and other sources over a 30-year period revealed the following average cost increases of items that go into the building and maintenance of housing:
Why do those statistics not seem to jibe with
what you have been told, seen with your own eyes, and
felt in your own pocketbooks?
The answers would be obvious except that, so
far, I have not mentioned what happened to the price of
the land that housing sits on. Many of those who talk
and write about housing conveniently overlook the fact
that housing does not exist in mid air but is attached
to the land, and that the price of this land has gone
through the stratosphere.
In contrast to those 11- to 14-percent annual increases in housing-related costs, residential land values nationwide rose almost 80 percent a year, or almost 2000 percent over those three decades. ... A close friend in Bethesda bought a house and lot there 40 years ago for $20,000. Two months ago he sold the property for a cool half million. That 2400 percent increase was entirely land value. The buyer immediately demolished the house to put up a larger one, so he clearly paid half a million for the location value -- the land value -- alone. Officials, civic leaders and commentators who bemoan the lack of affordable housing nevertheless applaud each rise in real estate values as a sign of prosperity. Seeing their own assets multiply through no effort of their own apparently makes them forget the teachers, firemen, police and low-income people who are boxed out of a place to squat in their cities and neighborhoods. ... Many of our Founding Fathers, George Washington included, had amassed huge estates. But the property tax induced them to sell off excess lands they were not using. ... One of the many virtues of a tax on land values is that it can be introduced gradually. Cities that take this incremental approach report that homeowners-voters-taxpayers hardly notice the change. What's important in modernizing your taxation is not the speed of change but the direction you choose. If you keep the present tax system with its disincentives for compact and wholesome growth, you will experience the treadmill effect that has been so familiar in so-called urban and housing "solutions." You will have to keep running faster and faster with patchwork remedies to keep from sliding backward. A caution. Revising taxes as proposed here will not end the need for housing subsidies, at least not in the short run, but it will do three things that should greatly reduce subsidies.
In Conclusion, I have tried to show that
America has a housing land problem,
not an affordable housing problem. This problem
can be substantially alleviated by freeing the market
of anti-enterprise taxes and by turning the property tax right side up -- that is,
by dropping tax rates on housing and by raising them on
publicly-created land values. Read the whole
article
Walt Rybeck: Have We Forgotten The Foundation?
However, too few have a clue about how to deal
with land issues, or any notion that archeological digs
into our history might provide useful answers. Instead,
consider what's happening:
Urbanologists and the public need to be awakened
to the central role played by taxation. They need to
see that loss of our historic land tax has made
speculation our top national sport -- a treacherous one
at that. As Hans Blumenthal wrote in Metropolis...and Beyond (edited by fellow
panelist on this program, architect Paul
Spreiregen):
There is no doubt that the present real property
tax...contributes more to depressing the standard of
housing than all government housing policies combined
do to raise it. The current property tax may fairly be
called the upside-down tax. It taxes land values too
lightly, buildings much too heavily. It rewards bad
land use, penalizes good land use. Consider three
identical homes and lots:
These all-too-familiar examples condemn not the
assessor but our present tax system. And the same
perverse property tax incentives apply to commercial
properties. Is it any wonder cities are torn apart? The
wretched tax on buildings is only the half of it. The
low land tax is the other half. A
speculator sees that the annual increase in his or her
land value is greater than the tax bill. This signals
the owner to do nothing, to sit back and collect the
values generated by productive neighbors and the
community.
Speculation feeds on
itself. The more land held out of use, the tighter the
supply of available sites. This raises land
prices further, seducing more speculators into the land
game, hastening the flight of residents and businesses
from central cities and even small towns. This is far
from the only cause of sprawl, but one of the most
potent. It cannot be stressed too much because it is
one of the least recognized causes. H.G. Brown: Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress & Poverty: 14 Liberty, and Equality of Opportunity (in the unabridged P&P: Part X: The Law of Human Progress — Chapter 5: The Central Truth)
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