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Assessment Under Threat
Enid SlackInstitute on Municipal Finance and Governance
Presentation to the Association of Municipalities of Ontario
Niagara Falls, OntarioOctober 18, 2005
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Outline of Presentation
Introduction: the characteristics of a good local tax: how does the property tax stack up?
Market value assessment under threat
An alternative to market value assessment – area based taxation
Addressing volatility under a market value system – examples from the U.S. and the U.K.
Concluding remarks: Addressing volatility in the Ontario system
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Introduction: Characteristics of a Good Local Tax
Equity based on benefits received from municipal services
Equity based on ability to pay Efficiency – do not distort economic
behaviour Autonomy and Accountability (visibility) Revenue yield Easy to administer Stability and predictability
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The property tax Equity based on benefits received for some
services (should not pay for social services); does not tax commuters and visitors
Is it a regressive tax? Does distort decision to invest in property Visible and accountable Good revenue yield (2003 - $16 billion in
Ontario) but inelastic source of revenue Easy to administer in theory Volatility arising from market value
assessment
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Market value assessment under threat Concern over the use of market value
assessment and the volatility associated with it
Alternatives to market value e.g. area-based assessment
Ways to address volatility used in other countries: time of resale assessment (California); banding (UK)
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
Under unit assessment, assessment is calculated as the sum of an assessment rate per square meter multiplied by the size of the land parcel and an assessment rate per square meter multiplied by the size of the building.
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
Under unit value assessment, the assessment rate per square meter is adjusted to reflect location (zone), quality of the structure (e.g. age, construction materials), or other factors.
Market value has an indirect influence on the assessment base through the application of adjustment factors.
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
Area-based assessments are commonly used in Central and Eastern Europe where the absence of developed property markets makes it difficult to determine market value.
They are also used in parts of Germany (in the former GDR), China, Chile, Israel, Kenya, and Tunisia.
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
Area-based taxes are less volatile than value-based taxes but also less equitable
Benefits from services are more closely reflected in property values than in the size of the property (e.g. properties close to transit systems or parks)
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
Area-based assessments (particularly unit assessment) are unlikely to capture neighbourhood amenities (amenities that have often been created by government expenditures and policies) because they do not take into account differences in the quality of buildings nor their location.
Two identical properties – one next to an abbatoir and one next to a park – pay same tax under area-based system
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
Area-based assessment results in a relatively greater burden on low-income taxpayers than high-income taxpayers when compared to value-based assessment. The reason is that average household incomes in high-value neighbourhoods are higher than in low-value neighbourhoods.
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
It has been argued that unit value assessment is easier to understand and cheaper to administer than value-based assessments
Difficult to use for the multi-residential rental, residential condominium, commercial, and industrial properties (e.g. how to allocate common areas)
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
In market economies, there is a tendency to a proliferation of multipliers applied to area base to reflect relative differences in values
The resulting complexity led to the abandonment of area-based taxation in the Netherlands, for example
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Alternative to market value assessment: area-based taxation
Conclusion on area-based taxation:
Where it is possible to use market value, it is generally regarded as a better tax base
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Addressing volatility: Proposition 13 in California Time of sale reassessment:
assessment increased by inflation or 2% per year (whichever is less) until property is sold
No reassessment if property transferred to children of owner
Stability and predictability of taxes
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Addressing volatility: Proposition 13 in California Inequitable: unequal treatment of
properties of comparable value
Some owners pay 17 times as much in taxes as neighbours in comparable properties
Inequities can go on for generations: one young family buys a new home and pays market value taxes; another inherits a home and pays taxes on parents’ acquisition value
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Addressing volatility: Proposition 13 in California Young first-time homeowners face higher taxes
because starter homes are reassessed more frequently
Proposition 13 favours older, more affluent generation over younger first-time homebuyers
Decreases household mobility
Favours existing businesses over new businesses
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Addressing volatility: Proposition 13 in California Does not always reduce volatility –
when property values fell (1990s) and then rose, entire increase was allowed as long as it was below acquisition value
Later introduced provision to allow for reductions to be reflected in full
Still some properties whose values fell below acquisition value faced assessment increases greater than 2%
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Addressing volatility: Proposition 13 in California Nordlinger v Hahn case went to U.S.
Supreme Court (1992) In an 8-1 decision, court upheld
acquisition value system New owner purchasing a property is
different than someone who is already saddled with purchase and does not have the option not to buy
Also upheld on grounds of neighbourhood preservation, continuity, and stability
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Addressing volatility: Banding in the U.K. Applies to the council tax (residential property
tax) introduced in 1993 after community charge (poll tax) abolished
Individual valuations (market value) in 1991 used to assign each property into one of eight bands
Change in value does not affect banding (increase in value from expansion or improvement does not take effect until time of sale)
No revaluation since introduction in 1993
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Addressing volatility: Banding in the U.K. Stability and predictability of taxes
Inequitable: same impact as out of date market value assessment
Revaluation would result in large tax shifts
Revaluation for 2007 (based on 2005 values) has been postponed, pending further review
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Addressing volatility: assessment and property tax freezes
Breaks the link between taxes and market values:
Taxes less uniform and more arbitrary Properties with similar values pay different
taxes No incentive to review assessment “Once a freeze is imposed, the process of
thawing may be too painful to bear” (Joan Youngman, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy)
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Addressing volatility: property tax freezes
Stability and predictability at the expense of equity
But, ignoring sound economics principles can result in an even less equitable tax in the long run and even greater taxpayer resistance
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Addressing volatility in Ontario Accuracy in assessment is critical to a
market value assessment base Assessment increases cannot be used
as excuse for property tax increases Taxpayer (and media) education is
needed to understand the relationship between assessment and taxes
Taxpayers should be offered more payment options
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Addressing volatility in Ontario Existing tools can be used to mitigate
impact of tax increases:
Property tax credits for low-income taxpayers
Tax deferrals for the elderly (to address cash-flow problem)
Phase-ins of tax increases Unduly burdensome provision under
Section 365 of the Municipal Act (for those facing undue hardship)