A note on China’s direction of tax system reform and its limitations -With a focus on the Implications and Limits of Local Government Fiscal Income in Consumption Tax and Housing Property Tax-

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 102-141
Author(s):  
Jin oh Park
1990 ◽  
Vol 5 (0) ◽  
pp. 89-104
Author(s):  
Yeon-Cheon Oh

Korea is ready to introduce local autonomy as a result of political compromise between the ruling and opposition party. With the introduction of local autonomy in Korea, changes in the local financial system are expected. For example, the local government is expected to raise its own tax efforts as well as share more portion of total internal tax revenue. Therefore, the redesign of local tax system with additional transfer of the national tax base to the local government is one of the major tax policy issues in Korea. For strengthening local tax capability, the central government has transferred most of tobacco profits of the public enterprise to local government in a form of Tobacco Consumption Tax. In spite of the introduction of Tobacco Consumption Tax to local tax system which contributes to improvement of financial situation of local government, other national taxes (example, Telephone Tax, Inheritance Tax, Liquor Tax) are also under consideration, as adequate targets for local transfer.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 327
Author(s):  
Avi Perez

There are two different forms of property tax systems: value-based tax, which is used in most countries of the world, and area-based tax, which is used mainly in Central and Eastern Europe and developing countries in Africa. Area-based property tax provides more stable and predictable budget revenues. It is simpler to administer and scores worse on equity grounds from the perspective of the ability-to-pay principle of taxation. Against this background, Israel’s property tax system, known as Arnona, is complex, spatially diversified, and causes a lack of uniformity that leads to tax distortion. This paper’s primary purpose is to identify the weaknesses of Israeli property tax from 1997 to 2017 and indicate how to improve the property tax system. This paper is based on case studies from four of the most important cities in Israel: Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa, and Beersheba, which have four different measurement methods for calculating property tax. Unique data were collected from the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. According to this analysis, it was found that there are substantial differences in property tax between the four cities over the two decades analyzed. The main weakness is the lack of uniformity of the taxation system; the solution is to unify the measurement of real estate area for tax purposes using drone technology.


2003 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard W. England ◽  
Robert D. Mohr

This paper jointly models a landowner's decision to develop a parcel and the option to enroll that parcel in a current use assessment program. The analytical results highlight different factors that influence the effectiveness of a current use program in delaying development. The results also underscore the difficulty a local government might have in influencing the behavior of the landowner. Except for altering eligibility rules, a local government employing current use assessment has but two policy tools: a penalty for development and the property tax rate.


2021 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 857-872
Author(s):  
Kate McCue ◽  
Bill McCue

In 2018, the Chippewas of Georgina Island First Nation (GIFN) implemented a First Nation property tax system under the First Nations Fiscal Management Act (FMA)—one of the earliest First Nations in Ontario to do so. Implementation of a property tax system gave GIFN an opportunity to improve funding for and expand local services, and provide a more equitable sharing of local service costs between cottagers leasing First Nation land and the First Nation. Key challenges encountered when implementing the property tax system were building consensus around the need for a tax system, building an appropriate administrative infrastructure, carrying out property assessments, and professionals lacking knowledge of First Nation property tax. These challenges, however, presented opportunities to create a knowledge base around property taxation within GIFN, among cottage leaseholders, and in the wider community. Key lessons learned were (1) start as soon as possible; (2) First Nations Tax Commission support and standards are important; (3) staff training is important; (4) communicate early and often; (5) hold open houses; (6) local services are more than garbage collection; (7) property taxes do not harm lease rates or cottage sales; (8) educate lawyers, real estate agents, and other professionals; (9) startup costs were significant; (10) coordinate laws and standards with provincial variations; (11) modernize systems; and (12) utilize other parts of the FMA.


2007 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Döring

AbstractIn Germany, the current situation of local government finance is still worrying. Up to now, all political attempts to reform the German local tax system fundamentally led to no satisfying result. For this reason, new reform initiatives gain particular attention in scientific and political discussion. Against this background, the paper examines the proposal for reform of the existing local tax system presented by Stiftung Marktwirtschaft. By highlighting public finance characteristics of economically reasonable local government finances as well as public choice characteristics of a politically successful reform, it will be shown that within some small but important modifications the proposal of Stiftung Marktwirtschaft is in a position to solve local government finance problems in a durable manner. This result is consecuted by an empirical simulation of the fiscal effects for all German local authorities. The fiscal simulation demonstrates that more then ninety percent of German cities and municipalities will gain from a political implementation of the proposal for reform.


2022 ◽  
pp. 197-213
Author(s):  
Yeoul Hwangbo

The challenge over most countries has been legislating related acts and regulations on global electronic commerce taxation, but they have not implemented the consumption tax system for global electronic commerce so far. Consumer payment tax (CPT) is based on fintech and thereby proposed so that consumers can pay the consumption taxes to related taxation office of the countries in accordance with consumer country's jurisdiction principle, considering the CPT is assessed to satisfy most of the electronic commerce taxation criteria and has the potential to be applied to electronic commerce.


2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 320-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Alm ◽  
Robert D. Buschman ◽  
David L. Sjoquist

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