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So land tax as a concept worries me to some extent due to the potential distortions it creates. Outside the cities, the fundamental value of land is close to zero and is really only worth what it can produce be it via agriculture, mining or whatever but it's not worth much just as land. t's not easy to sensibly tax something that just sits there and which has huge difference in value per unit of area depending on location. So how does one actually calculate the value on which to tax?
The income tax idea seems reasonable as long as the rates are set for any given financial year in advance. Eg on 1st July you are able to know with certainty what tax rates you'll be paying. So the system would always need to be a year or two behind unless some arbitrary inflation factor were applied in advance.
As for land taxes etc, that potentially has some unintended consequences depending on how it's applied. Eg a factory in Australia needs more land than a simple warehouse storing imported goods. But logically we wouldn't want to tax local production more than imports.
A large wind or solar farm takes up far more land than a fossil fuel power plant. But even those who don't believe there to be a problem with CO2 emissions generally wouldn't want to see wind or solar taxed more heavily than gas simply because it takes up a bit of otherwise unused land in the middle of nowhere.
A high rise building takes up far less land than a single level building with the same office space. But do we really want to start building skyscrapers in regional towns in order to have a smaller footprint when there's plenty of land anyway?
So land tax as a concept worries me to some extent due to the potential distortions it creates. Outside the cities, the fundamental value of land is close to zero and is really only worth what it can produce be it via agriculture, mining or whatever but it's not worth much just as land. t's not easy to sensibly tax something that just sits there and which has huge difference in value per unit of area depending on location. So how does one actually calculate the value on which to tax?
Considering the majority of the population lives within a 50KM slice of land along the coast I'd say it would be easy to tax farm land minimally, if at all. I'd see it more as tax it if we're building on it, or zoned for resi / commerical use, since I'd like to see some of the increase in value from public infrastructure go back into consolidated revenue, which helps to make public infrastructure semi self funding. Currently all the new "wealth" generated from public infrastructure is pretty much kept by the landowners who benefit most from it. It shouldn't be too difficult to have a progressive land tax system, and it would definitely help to make the very wealthy pay a bit more tax since they're able to shelter quite a bit within the current tax free status of the family home. There's a relatively strong correlation between wealth and the value of land someone owns. It would be easy enough to provide CPI interest rate loans to the poor who purchased a long time ago and find they have a valuable property. It might also help to force the land bankers to actually bring the land to market instead of drip feeding supply to maintain high prices.
Take for example Kalgoorlie, 7 years ago houses ranged in price from $400k - $1m.
Now with the slump in gold price, they range from unsellable to $500k.
Would your land tax model be dynamic enough to compensate for rapid movements, if not how would the people compensate?
Not only are they out of work, but they have to pay land tax on a house that is basically worthless.
A progressive land tax would get around the issue. Quite easy to have a tax rate of say 0.1% for property below $300K. The state Govts know what the value of pretty much all land is, from the census we know income levels for suburbs, so it's not too hard to actually set a progressive tax scale taking both into consideration. We'd just have to decide how much income and corporate tax we'd like to replace via land tax, and considering it's a far more efficient tax we'd likely see a drop in taxation levels providing the same amount of revenue.
If we're moving along from the age of entitlement then why is it the tax payer's problem if someone has bought at the top and now is trying to sell at the bottom? One of the hard lessons in life to realise prices don't always go up.
Oh I agree completely, thinking property is an investment rather than a place to house your gear and save you rent, is stupid.IMO
I can just see some really weird skews, on how it would be implemented. I think I posted previously that changing a tax input can have major ripple effects.
If by ripples you mean winners and losers, for sure, but our current system isn't working particularly well. Not when the ultra wealthy are happy to spends 10s of millions to minimise their tax.
We reward speculation over hard work. There's too many tax expenditures bleeding the budget. The problem is those benefiting most from the current system generally have the wealth and ability to really push back hard at any moves to make the tax system fairer and more efficient. Just look at the wailing in the streets over the proposed changes to the statutory method for car FBT.
tax land / consumption / resources and we could pretty much get rid of just about all other forms of taxes except for the sin taxes. Might end up with a massive unemployment level amongst accountants and lawyers specialising in tax minimisation though.
Don't you pay rates? Category 1 is "Land used or approved for development, predominantly as low density residential land, etc."Unless there is a land tax model, that is proven, I doubt we will invent one.
Don't you pay rates? Category 1 is "Land used or approved for development, predominantly as low density residential land, etc."
Unless there is a land tax model, that is proven, I doubt we will invent one.
Much easier to remove negative gearing and make the principal residence loan interest a tax deduction upto a certain level.
Yes, but tying that to consolidated revenue requirements, would be problamatic.IMO
Land values go up and down as has been shown in the rest of the world. Consolidated revenue tends to have an ever increasing trajectory.
Syd is implying it could reduce replace, income tax etc. The problem is income tax is dynamic, it is collected every week from every pay packet, easy money.
I can see that it would work for individuals owning residential property. That seems reasonably straightforward.
But how would it apply to, say, a mine, railway, dam / reservoir, gas pipeline or something like that? In those cases the infrastructure has high value, that is not directly related to the area of land occupied, whilst the land "as is" is pretty much worthless other than for what's under or on top of it.
Or is the idea to not apply the tax to such things, and only apply it to residential and general commercial property?
Texas have a very successful model of land tax combined with a right to develop and a form of bonds for new housing "estates" to help fund infrastructure which are then paid off via a levy charged to home owners.
It's helped Texas have roughly the same level of immigration as Australia in a land mass smaller than NSW without the price bubble. land taxes are nothing new and have been around for centuries. Most Australian states have them but only for commercial and rental properties.
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Trade off for Texas though is that architecturally it's a very ugly place.
Not exactly sure what you mean by this?
I can only comment about Sydney, but there's few visually pleasing buildings in the CBD.
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