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Parliament of the Republic of South Africa Presentation to the Portfolio Committee for Provincial and Local Government on the Property Rates Bill 30 May.

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Presentation on theme: "Parliament of the Republic of South Africa Presentation to the Portfolio Committee for Provincial and Local Government on the Property Rates Bill 30 May."— Presentation transcript:

1 Parliament of the Republic of South Africa Presentation to the Portfolio Committee for Provincial and Local Government on the Property Rates Bill 30 May 2003

2 Purpose of this presentation 4 To address questions asked about the purpose of Municipal Property Rates in South Africa and the purpose of this Bill 4 To inform the debate on the basis of valuation and rating 4 To outline the scope of policy issues still to be addressed

3 Purpose of Municipal Property Rates 4 Questions asked at work shop and during hearings…. 4 “ where did the current notion of property rates come from?” 4 “ what is the purpose of property rates?” 4 “what do property rates pay for?” 4 “what is this Bill about?”

4 Property rates in South Africa: origins of current notion 4 Property rates has a long tradition in SA 4 Has traditionally been used as the single most important source of local own- source discretionary revenue 4 However historically only existed in urban WLA s 4 Amalgamation of municipalities -bring former BLA s, R293 towns etc into prop tax base

5 Property rates in South Africa origins of current notion... 4 Correlation between who paid property rates before and level of infrastructure and public services 4 Rallying points for rent boycotts, non - payment of service charges and one city one tax base 4 Result of history both decision -makers and rate payers think of rates as a price paid for specific services

6 Purpose of property rates in South Africa- significance 4 When compared to revenue (and profits from consumption-based tariff funded services and inter-governmental transfers) still the most NB source of own- source discretionary revenue for local authorities 4 Former WLA s 1/5 of all local revenue (+- R 4 bn or 20.2 % of own source revenue or 19.7 % of total revenue)

7 Significance compared 4 Property rates as % of total government tax revenue (comparison done for ‘90 s by IMF) 4 SA: 6.74 % 4 Developing Countries: 3.30% 4 Industrialized Countries: 5.54 %

8 Significance... 4 As % of sub-national government revenue (90 s) 4 SA: 11.44 % 4 Developing Countries: 9.63 % 4 Industrialized Countries: 12.99 %

9 Purpose of property rates… what do rates pay for? 4 “ a means to distribute the cost of general local government activities or community services among rate payers in accordance with their ability to pay, as measured by the (market) value of property” 4 To pay for services that generally provide benefits that accrue broadly across an area- and are not not users or sub-groups

10 What should this Bill aim to achieve? 4 Legitimacy 4 Uniformity 4 Common tax base 4 Common valuation cycle 4 Horizontal and vertical Equity 4 Efficiency 4 Enforceability

11 What should this Bill aim to achieve? 4 Openness 4 Sound monitoring of standards 4 Simple and transparent appeals processes 4 Relief from extraordinary tax burdens 4 Redistribution amongst individuals 4 Redistribution amongst localities

12 The debate on the basis of valuation and rating Issues, Options, Arguments and Evidence

13 Valuation and rating … issues 4 What to value ? 4 What to tax? 4 Who should set the rate and determine the relief? 4 How should this be done ?

14 What to value i.e. which base should be taxed? 4 Bahl ‘98 Long standing debate if property tax base should include improvements 4 Thus far no uniform world wide practice has evolved 4 If there is a trend then it is towards valuing and rating the total value of property 4 However what are the cases put forward?

15 The case for land only 4 Cost of valuation process is lower 4 Administrative efficiencies are better, updating of property records and data maintenance is easier 4 land value based valuation and rating is seen as a possible incentive for investment as improvements and maintenance of improvements are excluded from taxation

16 The case for land only... 4 Land taxation has a strong relation to the notion of public good 4 Improvements are a matter of private choice 4 Based on an economic theory that the supply of land is essentially fixed (inelastic) 4 Site value rating is said to be neutral to land use 4 Taxes on land discourage speculation

17 The case for land and improvements 4 Total property value is easily understood 4 The concept of willing buyer willing seller is widely accepted 4 two thirds of property value lies in improvement in real estate 4 land and improvements recognizes wealth in assets and therefore treats all citizens equal 4 land and improvement is easy to administer because source data is readily available 4 land and improvement valuation does not prevent land only rating

18 The case for land and improvements... 4 Valuing land and improvements allows greater flexibility in lowering the nominal rate than a tax based only the capital value of land 4 This provides in a politically palatable tax base 4 Valuing land and improvement holds promise of optimizing the local tax base

19 The case for land and improvements... 4 Record of sales of vacant land in urban areas not as rich as sale of properties at total value 4 Hence sites has to be valued by residual method, ie first determine the bundled property value then deduct the value of the improvements 4 SVR is more subjective than total value

20 Land versus land and improvements (some thoughts) 4 The test of transparency,understandability and acceptability 4 The test of horizontal equity ( owners of high value properties on small sites) 4 The test of real local government income and basis for inter-governmental transfers 4 Political palatability

21 Comparative options The current UK property tax system... 4 The amount paid is set by the local authority in accordance with a prescribed formula 4 As example two adults living in a 30 000 pound house (band A) will pay 2/3 as much tax as those living in a band D house (80 000) and those in band H (320 000) twice as much

22 Comparative options The current UK property tax system? 4 Foundations (Law, Henry : April 2000) - occupiers of commercial properties pay uniform business rate (UBR) based on annual rental value - rate is set annually at national level - total amount collected is distributed to local authorities through complex formula - 50 % of full rate can be levied on vacant properties - agricultural land and buildings are exempt from UBR

23 Comparative options The current UK property tax system... 4 Residential properties are subject to Council tax 4 Council tax is based on the selling price at the time of the valuation (currently ‘91) 4 Properties are assigned to 8 valuation bands ranging from A - H 4 A under 40 000 pounds H over 320 000 pounds

24 Comparative options The current UK property tax system... 4 Advantages of UBR and Council tax - easy to administer - taxes are difficult to evade and avoid - ensuring compliance is easy - because the taxes are tied to property they can be applied by any LG structure 4 Disadvantages of UBR and Council tax - valuations involve inspection of premises - many appeals are generated when valuations are received - financial disincentive to improve and develop - the tax rewards the owner of vacant and undeveloped land

25 Disadvantages... - valuations are insufficient and infrequent (up and down turns) - exemption of agricultural properties distorts the property market - allocation of all UBR income to local authorities gives rise to high gearing of discretionary local government spending - local authorities have no direct interest in promoting improvements - the tax is regressive in that an undue proportion of the burden is borne by low value properties - the tax is also regressive across local authorities (Westminster with highest concentration of high value properties has lowest rates) - banding avoids valuation of individual properties which leads to fortuitous advantages and disadvantages for those value is close to the step between one band and the next - Council tax generates insufficient income

26 Rating processes Issues and Options

27 Rating: issues and options 4 Site rating (the base of the tax is land values only) 4 Flat Rating (the base of the tax is land and improvements with both taxed at the same rate) 4 Composite rating (the base of the tax is land and improvements,they are both taxed but at different rates)

28 Who must decide - the basis and the rate 4 Section 229 - rate setting a local power or an unfettered local power? 4 Most Govt.'s do not give unlimited powers. (Bahl ‘98)

29 Evidence 4 US - Oates & Schwab ‘79/80 Pittsburg SVR, graded or composite rating “played significant role city’s econ resurgence”. 4 Yet no US states to date have authorised site value tax.

30 Number of local authorities using Site, Flat or Composite Rating 4 ProvinceSiteFlatCompositeTotalPercent 4 Cape 4 897216544.5 4 Natal34 132 6718.1 4 OFS10 833 5113.7 4 Transvaal78 2 8 8823.7 4 Total126100145371100.0 4 Percent34.027.039.1100.0 Source: CSS (1994)

31 Shift in Share between Commercial and Residential Properties (1990 Total Value to 1997 Site Value) Source: City of Cape Town, Department of Finance, Rating and Valuation project. Staff compilations 1990 total value 1997 site value Commercial properties Commercial properties Residential properties Residential properties 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 % %

32 Shift in Share from 1990 Total Value to 1997 Site Value in CBD 1990 total value 1997 site value 0 0 2 2 4 4 6 6 8 8 10 12 200 600 400 800 1,000 M O N T H L Y R A T E S (M I L I O N S) M O N T H L Y R A T E S (M I L I O N S) NUMBER OF PROPERTIES

33 Shift in Incidence from a Sample of CBD Properties with High Improvement Values to Properties with Lower Values (1990 Total Value to 1997 Site Value) 1990 rates 1997 rates High improvement values High improvement values Lower values 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 MILLIONSMILLIONS MILLIONSMILLIONS


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