scholarly journals Political Economy of Property Tax Reform: Hawaii's Experiment with Split-Rate Property Taxation

2011 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 4-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sally Kwak ◽  
James Mak
1991 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 351-378
Author(s):  
Frances Frisken

AbstractOntario's attempt in the 1970s to reform its system of local property taxation aimed to make the local tax system more equitable and efficient in the interest of allowing local governments greater autonomy to act within their own areas of responsibility. In trying to implement the programme, the government used a variety of means to inform local officials about the objectives of reform and to secure their co-operation in achieving it. These efforts failed and the province abandoned the field to local and regional governments, having concluded that the economic and political costs of provincially imposed reform outweighed any advantages to be derived from it. The outcome attested to the influence that local interests and institutions can exercise over provincial policy-making despite their legally subordinate position in the governmental hierarchy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 122 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-32
Author(s):  
Matthew Gardner Kelly

Background/Context Dealing mostly in aggregate statistics that mask important regional variations, scholars often assume that district property taxation and the resource disparities this approach to school funding creates are deeply rooted in the history of American education. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study This article explores the history of district property taxation and school funding disparities in California during the 19th and 20th centuries. First, the article documents the limited use of district property taxation for school funding in California and several other Western states during the 19th century, showing that the development of school finance was more complicated than standard accounts suggest. Then, the article examines how a coalition of experts, activists, and politicians worked together during the early 20th century to promote district property taxation and institutionalize the idea that the wealth of local communities, rather than the wealth of the entire state, should determine the resources available for public schooling. Research Design This article draws on primary source documents from state and regional archives, including district-level funding data from nine Northern California counties, to complete a historical analysis. Conclusions/Recommendations The history of California's district property tax suggests the need for continued research on long-term trends in school finance and educational inequality. Popular accounts minimizing the historical role of state governments in school funding obscure how public policies, not just market forces shaping property values, create funding inequalities. In turn, these accounts communicate powerful messages about the supposed inevitability of funding disparities and the responsibility of state governments to correct them. Through increased attention to long-term trends in school funding, scholars can help popular commentators and policymakers avoid assumptions that naturalize inequality and narrow the possibilities for future funding reforms.


2001 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 974-1008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin L. Einhorn

Economic historians have traced the origin of the uniform property tax in the United States to the insertion of uniformity clauses into state constitutions in the Northwest and to efforts to tax commercial wealth. This article shows that the tax was created by legislation in the Northeast and that the first constitutional clauses were adopted in the South to protect slaveholders. It is time for historians of the U.S. political economy to abandon the dated paradigms of the “progressive history” tradition.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 25-30
Author(s):  
Elena S. Stegnienko ◽  
Svetlana A. Frolova

The article discusses attempts to integrate land tax and property tax of individuals into a single tax on real estate in the Russian Federation. The analysis of foreign systems of property taxation on various grounds is given (level of distribution of powers, level of budget to which tax revenues, property, subject of tax are directed). The principles of the effectiveness of the system of taxation of real estate, developed by international practice, are identified.


Author(s):  
Р.Ш. Абакарова

Данная статья посвящена особенностям налогообложения в Российской Федерации. Особое внимание в данной статье выделяется налогу на имущество организации. Проведен анализ проблем исчисления данного налога и способы их решения. На сегодняшний день вопрос правильного исчисления налога на имущество организаций является весьма актуальным, поскольку данный налог является одним из основных источников доходов субъектов Российской Федерации. В статье рассмотрено, какие произошли изменения по налогу на имущество организаций и последствия реформирования. Special attention in this article is allocated to the property tax of the organization. Tax on property of organizations occupies a central place in the system of property taxation in Russia. The analysis of problems of calculation of this tax and ways of their decision is carried out. To date, the question of the correct calculation of the property tax of organizations is very relevant, since this tax is one of the main sources of income of the subjects of the Russian Federation. The article considers what changes have occurred on the property tax of organizations and the consequences of reform.


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