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Published byMaud York Modified over 9 years ago
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The 1% Solution Saving Baltimore City by cutting its property tax rate Stephen J.K. Walters, Ph.D. Loyola College in Maryland Steve H. Hanke, Ph.D. The Johns Hopkins University
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Recapitalization Repopulation Rejuvenation We think of cities as dense concentrations of people In truth, they are dense concentrations of capital, which attracts us because abundant physical capital makes us more productive (and prosperous) in our work and more comfortable in our leisure Cities that are capital-friendly will attract people and have healthy economies; cities that repel capital will decay... and die
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Baltimore’s uneven recapitalization To attract investors, we rely on subsidies and tax breaks on a limited scale Their effects are similarly limited, leaving vast areas starved for capital The question: If we understand that special subsidies and tax breaks are a good idea and necessary to attract investment, why isn’t general tax relief seen as a great idea?
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Making San Francisco capital-friendly: A 57% cut in the property tax rate
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In Baltimore: A half century of “capital punishment”
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The “ruinous effects” of Prop 13: S.F.’s recovery of property tax revenue
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Not-so-ruinous effects: The “fiscal dividend” in S.F.
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What if we used “The 1% Solution” in Baltimore? Note first: We tax “personal property” at 2.5 times the rate we tax “real property” Accordingly, a 1% real property tax rate SHOULD 2.5% personal property tax rate This would make us more receptive than the County for residential and business investment The FY2009 budget cost of such rates: $380,912,050 (or 13% of total ’09 budget)
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“Affording” rejuvenation: Five strategies 1. Cuts in operating budget (or revenue enhancements from elimination of unnecessary special subsidies) 2. Asset sales (including now-worthless abandoned property) 3. Lower tax rate on structures, higher on land 4. Debt financing 5. Cash on Delivery: Announce in year t that permanent cuts will be put in place in year t+3
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The “Cash on Delivery” Plan Binding legislation that delivers a 1% tax rate at a date certain in 3 years Allows for 1 complete re- assessment cycle Limit spending growth in interim Bank increases in property, transfer, and other taxes Deficit (largely) closed before it occurs
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