
handle: 10419/301037 , 10419/232050 , 10419/236226 , 10419/235322
We investigate the welfare implications of property taxation. We apply a sufficient statistics approach that accounts for the distributional effects of tax changes at the household level within a spatial equilibrium framework. We show that equity effects are driven by price adjustments in the housing and labor markets, while efficiency is determined by changes in public goods. Using microdata and exploiting 5,500 municipal property tax changes in Germany, where assessed housing values remain constant, we find that 83 percent of the tax burden is passed through to rental prices, with modest labor market effects. Simulations of the welfare effects of property taxes reveal that the price effects of property tax hikes are regressive. Despite the low efficiency costs of the tax, it becomes distributionally neutral only if public good preferences are very high.
h41 - Public Goods, 330, rental housing, h22 - Taxation and Subsidies: Incidence, property taxation, r13 - General Equilibrium and Welfare Economic Analysis of Regional Economies, local labor markets, State and Local Taxation, Public Goods, H71, and Revenue, Housing Supply and Markets, r38 - "Production Analysis and Firm Location: Government Policy; Regulatory Policy", R31, Subsidies, ddc:330, h71 - State and Local Taxation, Production Analysis and Firm Location: Government Policy; Regulatory Policy, R38, General Equilibrium and Welfare Economic Analysis of Regional Economies, tax incidence, R13, welfare, H41, r31 - Housing Supply and Markets, H22, Taxation and Subsidies: Incidence
h41 - Public Goods, 330, rental housing, h22 - Taxation and Subsidies: Incidence, property taxation, r13 - General Equilibrium and Welfare Economic Analysis of Regional Economies, local labor markets, State and Local Taxation, Public Goods, H71, and Revenue, Housing Supply and Markets, r38 - "Production Analysis and Firm Location: Government Policy; Regulatory Policy", R31, Subsidies, ddc:330, h71 - State and Local Taxation, Production Analysis and Firm Location: Government Policy; Regulatory Policy, R38, General Equilibrium and Welfare Economic Analysis of Regional Economies, tax incidence, R13, welfare, H41, r31 - Housing Supply and Markets, H22, Taxation and Subsidies: Incidence
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