http://www.zaksite.co.uk/landrent/index.htmlor is this just another instance of Fair Tax?
3/13/2006 11:28:05 AM
3/13/2006 11:32:20 AM
3/13/2006 11:39:58 AM
3/13/2006 11:44:02 AM
An odd, but interesting, idea. However, we still have bigger problems. That said, this idea has a real chance of getting implemented because property taxes are levied on the local level, all you need to do is convince the city council to impliment it. That said, it would devastate the market value of undeveloped land whose property taxes will increase, with the inverse for developed land. It would dramatically encourage the development of land, and dramatically reduce the dis-incentive to build. Of course, if we only got as much government as we needed, it wouldn't matter how revenue was raised because the impact would be too low to encourage too much avoidance.
3/13/2006 12:34:52 PM
No less silly than the Fair Tax
3/13/2006 12:47:48 PM
The Value Added Tax is a much better tax system than both.
3/13/2006 1:10:40 PM
If you you own more land, you pay more in taxes - is this the general premise?
3/13/2006 2:10:42 PM
what happens when you build a building on some land, then can't afford to pay the land rent anymore? does the next sucker with enough for the land rent get your building?
3/13/2006 2:31:12 PM
Good question. It doesn't seem that, if you cease payin the Land Rent, you lose your buildings/improvements, because that runs counter to the original intent. But it does raise some issues. If person A takes over the "rent" on a plot of land, on which person B owns a house, and person C owns a business, what rights (if any) does that give person A to impose his will on persons B and C? That could get very messy very quickly if rights are given, but if not, then there's no point for anyone to rent the land in the first place.
3/13/2006 2:42:56 PM
^^ I assume it is just like what happens right now when you cannot afford the taxes on your property. The city slaps you with the bill, if you do not pay it the city confiscates your property and auctions it off. Any money collected above and beyond your tax bill and attached fines you get the excess. In the case that the taxes were on the land, but a skyscraper is sitting on it, I trust the auction would collect far more money than you owed. That said, what idiot doesn't pay his taxes to the point of losing a couple million dollars in property? Mortgate the property to the hilt. That way, if the city wants to confiscate the property it will need to fight the bank for it. If after the auction you still owe more money on the land, then the city begins confiscating other property (car, etc). You can always declare bankruptcy and put your life in the hands of a judge.[Edited on March 13, 2006 at 2:59 PM. Reason : ,.,]
3/13/2006 2:55:51 PM
This sounds very regressive
3/13/2006 9:59:30 PM
there is no way it could be very regressive because last time I checked poor people typically arent sitting on hundreds of acres of land and undeveloped land in extremely rural areas still wouldnt have that much value for taxes to be levied againstbut what about condos?[Edited on March 13, 2006 at 10:53 PM. Reason : ]
3/13/2006 10:52:53 PM
the poor people that do have land dont have very valuable landthe people with very expensive land aren't poorwho is going to benefit from this more
3/13/2006 10:56:45 PM
What determines how much you pay in taxes? Is every inner-city acre taxed the same, regardless of usage? Does the fortune-500 insurance company with a skyscraper sitting on a few acres pay less than the local YMCA down the street?
3/13/2006 11:01:44 PM
^ Not if the YMCA was smart and located itself on the 3rd floor of a 50 story sky-scraper. Split the rent with 500+ other enhabitants and you should be fine. All in all, it isn't that different from the current system. Land is taxed by what it is worth, not what is standing on it. That said, on Wall-Street in downtown NY, the land occupied by the sky-scraper can be worth more than the sky-scraper standing on it. As it stands now, the denser the land is occupied (the more people living on it), the more you pay (A 500 apartment building is worth about 10 times as much as a 50 apartment building, keeping rents constant). Conversely, in this proposed system, with every occupant you move in, your per-capita tax burden is diminished (holding land value constant). It is an immense push to build higher and denser downtown where most of the tax-dollars will be collected. The tax burden for the rural areas, of course, will be mixed. The rich which own large plantations will pay more. Rich suburbs with big houses on single plots will pay far less (instead of taxing a million dollar home, we are only taxing a $5,000 plot, which can be had anywhere). Middle class suburbs will pay about the same. Poor areas, of course, will still pay nothing (land in a bad area of town is still worthless, regardless of whether you are taxing abandoned buildings or drug-soaked land). _____________WealthDensity:____Low_____Medium_____HighRural:______Same_____Less______LessSuburb:____Same_____Same_____LessDowntown:_More______More______MoreThis is my guess, operating under the assumption that land prices increase hockey-stick like as you get closer to downtown. anyone else have other theories?
3/14/2006 12:11:58 AM
^the land in the suburb will increase in value when the suburb is developed. So if there is a neighborhood with million dollar homes the land value there will increase, thus increasing the rent.
3/14/2006 2:20:34 AM
3/14/2006 3:08:19 PM
3/14/2006 6:14:04 PM
I WANT TO STAY AT THAT YMCA!!@
3/14/2006 6:26:18 PM
3/14/2006 7:28:32 PM
3/14/2006 9:44:07 PM
I'm glad that things started leveling off back around twenty-fifty, or there would have been trouble. Its nice to see that the well developed countries handled themselves well for so many centuries as the rest of the world messed up.
3/14/2006 9:54:57 PM
from John H. Beck .....
3/14/2006 10:33:30 PM
^ Wait, this wasn't a substitute to the current property tax system?!?!? WTF?!? You CANNOT raise 20+% GDP by taxing property! That is absurd! It would utterly and completely destabilize the "natural market system" for realestate. Rents, ownership costs, would sky-rocket. As a result, everyone will abandon the ownership of land, opting instead for government housing (exempt) or squating. The system will go into a spiral of destruction as people default on their "land taxes", opting instead for illegal housing, driving down land values and tax collection, prompting higher tax rates, pushing people off property, etc. Eventually the system would settle when the government fixed land prices for the purpose of tax collection (stopping the fall), but it would look nothing like the current system. People will sometimes pay you to take un-occupied land off their hands. The price of a house+plot will sometimes be less than the price of constructing the house because you are not just selling property, but an obligation to pay a third party cash every month. So, the real price of real-estate will be the land value + asset value - [present value of all future tax payments]. Ultimately, people will on average be paying about the same in taxes every year, but land ownership will by much lower and illegal housing and businesses will be booming, as is the result whenever you tax something by a rediculous amount (60+%).
3/14/2006 11:16:04 PM
3/15/2006 1:25:52 AM
Thats true, but his example was residential
3/16/2006 9:46:23 AM
how about not taxing stuff repeatedly that people have already worked and paid for.
3/16/2006 9:49:05 PM
How about just not taxing people
3/16/2006 10:54:11 PM
no this is stupid. In fact this is one of the worst ideas I've ever seen. The amount of infrastructure needed and INSANE amount of loopholes right off the bat for corruption make this not possible. Let me explain.First... not only would you have to set a lands initial value, but then you would have to get someone who represents the official view of land values to reevaluate your land and its improvements. Right there... huge huge HUGE hole for corruption. Lets say you are a apartment building owner, you pay more for the large/higher complex you own. toss $1000 to the inspector and your land pays "less" tax because it's considered smaller.Or lets say some building corp wants your land. They pay off one of these inspectors to greatly overevaluate your land. Our tax system is fine. The problem is that our taxes don't go where they are supposed to. I want their to be legislation that says money obtained for transportation (roads and highways) does not go elsewhere. It is spent on roads and highways. Thats my problem with our current system.
3/16/2006 11:48:55 PM
Uh, we already have a property tax system. It is something along 10 cents for every 100 dollars. Changing it from a property tax to a land tax would not dramatically change the incentives to cheat nor would the effects have more than marginal impact. If you are saying the system would collapse if it went from collecting about 5% GDP to 40+% GDP, you'd be right. Trying to scap the income tax system and replacing it with a land tax would be insane by warping the market substantially. That said, the income tax system itself has been corrupt from day one. It would be negligible if government was smaller, but it doesn't appear to be going that way. Income tax evasion, by itself, is a huge money maker. It doesn't tax criminals, it doesn't tax liers, it doesn't tax illegals. A "land tax" would at least do this. No amount of bribery could value your land at zero. But lie on just one form and you can get your income valued at zero. Hell, some mafia bosses qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit (Their tax rate is effectively negative!) Try finding such glaring holes in any other means of taxation than income. A well worded Value Added Tax would be impossible to avoid entirely. Even if my factory manages to escape paying the tax directly, odds are my suppliers didn't, and whenever I spend my ill-gotten profits I'll pay it then.
3/17/2006 10:16:46 AM
.10 on the hundred? in my county it is .84. .20 goes to medicaid and that is constantly increasing.
3/17/2006 9:11:21 PM