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Preferential assessment: impacts and alternatives

In: The Property Tax, Land Use and Land Use Regulation

Author

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  • John E. Anderson

Abstract

Dick Netzer, a leading public finance economist specializing in state and local issues and urban government, brings together in this comprehensive volume essays by top scholars connecting the property tax with land use. They explore the idea that the property tax is used as a partial substitute for land use regulation and other policies designed to affect how land is utilized. Like many economists, the contributors see some type of property taxation as the more efficient means of helping to shape land use. Some of the essays analyze a conventional property tax, while others consider radically different systems of property taxation.

Suggested Citation

  • John E. Anderson, 2003. "Preferential assessment: impacts and alternatives," Chapters, in: Dick Netzer (ed.), The Property Tax, Land Use and Land Use Regulation, chapter 3, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:3041_3
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    Cited by:

    1. Tsoodle, Leah J. & Featherstone, Allen M. & Golden, Bill B., 2005. "Estimating the Market Value of Agricultural Land in Kansas Using a Combination of Hedonic and Negative Exponential Techniques," 2005 Agricultural and Rural Finance Markets in Transition, October 3-4, 2005, Minneapolis, Minnesota 132763, Regional Research Committee NC-1014: Agricultural and Rural Finance Markets in Transition.
    2. Jeffrey I. Chapman & Robert J. Johnston & Timothy J. Tyrrell, 2009. "Implications of a Land Value Tax with Error in Assessed Values," Land Economics, University of Wisconsin Press, vol. 85(4), pages 576-586.

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    Keywords

    Economics and Finance;

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