Resource of the Week: Database — Significant Features of the Property Tax
By Shirl Kennedy, Senior Editor
This online database presents data on the property tax in all 50
states. Because accurate data provide the critical foundation for sound
governmental decision-making, the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and the George Washington Institute of Public Policy
joined in a partnership to provide information and support public
policy concerning the property tax, probably the most controversial tax
in the United States.
The term “Significant Features” pays tribute to the work of the
Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, which was
established by Congress in 1959 to study the relationships among local,
state, and national levels of government. Until its termination in
1996, ACIR provided a wealth of research on the functioning of the
federal system, particularly through its flagship publication,
Significant Features of Fiscal Federalism.
This new site provides data sets and links relating to the property
tax and its role in state and local finance in all 50 states. The
interface allows users to access property tax and data online in a
variety of forms, including tables of the most frequently sought
figures, a query system for creating new tables, and a downloadable
database. This data will be of value to a wide variety of users,
including journalists, public officials, and researchers.
+ User guide (PDF; 29 KB)
+ Tables
+ State summaries
+ Census of governments data
+ Glossary
Mythical land shortage inflates housing cost .
"18 Jun 2009 ... THERE is a lot of misunderstanding about home prices.
Many people all over the world seem to have thought that since we are running out of ..."

THERE is a lot of misunderstanding about home prices.
Many
people all over the world seem to have thought that since we are
running out of land in a rapidly growing world economy, the prices of
houses and apartments should increase at huge rates.
That
misunderstanding encouraged people to buy homes for their investment
value - and thus was a major cause of the real estate bubbles around
the world whose collapse fueled the current economic crisis.
This
misunderstanding may also contribute to an increase in home prices
again, after the crisis ends. Indeed, some people are already starting
to salivate at the speculative possibilities of buying homes in
currently depressed markets. But we do not really have a land shortage.
Every major country of the world has abundant land in the form
of farms and forests, much of which can be converted someday into urban
land.
Less than 1 percent of the earth's land area is densely
urbanized, and even in the most populated major countries, the share is
less than 10 percent.
There are often regulatory barriers to
converting farmland into urban land, but these barriers tend to be
thwarted in the long run if economic incentives to work around them
become sufficiently powerful.
It becomes increasingly
difficult for governments to keep telling their citizens that they
can't have an affordable home because of land restrictions.
The
price of farmland hasn't grown so fast as to make investors rich. In
the United States, the price of agricultural land grew only 0.9 percent
a year in real (inflation-adjusted) terms over the entire 20th century.
Most of the benefit from land for investors has to be from the
profit that agribusiness can make from their operations, not just from
the appreciation of the price of land.
Despite a huge 21st
century boom in cropland prices in the US that parallels the housing
boom of the 2000s, the average price of a hectare of cropland was still
only US$6,800 in 2008, according to the US Department of Agriculture,
and one could build 10-20 single-family houses surrounded by
comfortable-sized lots on this land, or one could build an apartment
building housing 300 people.
Land costs could easily be as low as US$20 per person, or less than 50 US cents per year over a lifetime.
Of
course, such land may not be in desirable locations today, but
desirable locations can be created by urban planning. Many people seem
to think that the US experience is not generalizable, because the US
has so much land relative to its population.
Population per
square kilometer in 2005 was 31 in the US, compared with 53 in Mexico,
138 in China, 246 in the United Kingdom, 337 in Japan, and 344 in
India. But, to the extent that the products of land (food, timber,
ethanol) are traded on world markets, the price of any particular kind
of land should be roughly the same everywhere.
Farmers will
not be able to make a profit operating in some country where land is
very expensive, and farmers would give up in those countries unless the
price of land fell roughly to world levels, though corrections would
have to be made for differing labor costs and other factors.
Shortages
of construction materials do not seem to be a reason to expect high
home prices, either. For example, in the US, the Engineering News
Record Building Cost Index has fallen relative to consumer prices over
the past 30 years.
To the extent that there is a world market
for these factors of production, the situation should not be entirely
different in other countries.
An even more troublesome fallacy is that people tend to confuse price levels with rates of price change.
They
think that arguments implying that home prices are higher in one
country than another are also arguments that the rate of increase in
those prices should be higher there.
But, the truth may be just the opposite. Higher home prices in a given
country may tend to create conditions for falling home prices there in
the future.
The kinds of expectations for real estate prices
that have informed public thinking during the recent bubbles were often
totally unrealistic. A few years ago Karl Case and I asked home buyers
at random in US cities undergoing bubbles how much they think the price
of their home will rise each year on average over the next 10 years.
The
median answer was sometimes 10 percent a year. If one compounds that
rate over 10 years, they were expecting an increase of a factor of 2.5,
and, if one extrapolates, a 2,000-fold increase over the course of a
lifetime.
Home prices cannot have shown such increases over long-time periods, for then no one could afford a home.
The
sobering truth is that the current world economic crisis was
substantially caused by the collapse of speculative bubbles in real
estate (and stock) markets - bubbles that were made possible by
widespread misunderstandings of the factors influencing prices.
These misunderstandings have not been corrected, which means that the same kinds of speculative dislocations could recur.
(The
author, professor of economics at Yale University and chief economist
at MacroMarkets LLC, is coauthor, with George Akerlof, of "Animal
Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives the Economy and Why It Matters for
Global Capitalism." Copyright: Project Syndicate,
2009.www.project-syndicate.org.)