Welcome to The Conservative Cave©!Join in the discussion! Click HERE to register.
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
PETRUS (423 posts) Sun Oct-09-11 10:22 PMOriginal message Taxing Nothing: Make Owners of Vacant Property Pay Economist Dean Baker has an idea that could slow down foreclosures and lower rents.
However, there is one tax that state and local governments can raise without fear of losing businesses or people. They can tax vacant properties.This is an especially desirable tax in the current economic situation since the real estate bubble created a glut of both residential and non-residential property in much of the country. Having housing units or commercial properties sit idle does no one any good. People could be living in the housing units and the commercial properties could offer new jobs in stores and offices.The problem is that property owners often have difficulty coming to grips with the new market environment. They saw the run-up in prices of the bubble years and they expect that these prices will soon return. Rather than accept a lower price to sell or rent their vacant properties, they are waiting for prices to return to their bubble peak.As a result, these pie-in-the-sky property owners are holding property that returns them no income. And, the whole economy suffers as a result of not deriving any value from these idle structures.A vacant property tax would help these property owners to see reality. By providing an additional incentive to actually use vacant property this tax can both raise a substantial sum of money and bring down the cost of renting housing and commercial property.
PETRUS (423 posts) Sun Oct-09-11 10:44 PMResponse to Reply #6 11. Oh, c'mon I know that and so does he - he's a freakin' PhD in economics. He's suggesting a (small) additional tax to address an imbalance - most vacant properties are owned by banks, landlords, and speculators. Rents are (still) too high. People are homeless, and entrepreneurs need space.
How about if you have some vacant property and you want to build but the government won't give you permit?Then you get double tapped for not being able to build because they won't let you build. Or even better, make it illegal to build and then tax them for not building.It's a Liberal wet dream
The way I read it this is an additional tax on top of current property taxes if the building is empty/not rented/not used. The theory is that the mean landlord needs to be re-euducated into asking a lower rent and the way to convince them to lower the rent is to lay on an additional tax until the landlord sees the light. Just like you can be punished (i.e. taxed) for not buying insurance you can be punished for having the gall to ask for market rent and then not accepting below market offers...