1 / 24

Inefficiencies in Land Markets

Inefficiencies in Land Markets. February 22, 2006. Little House on the Prairie. Benefits = $1400/yr Cost = $600/yr Net benefits = $800/yr. A River Runs Through It. RIVER. Flood Zone. 10% chance of storm that will cause flood. Expected value of net benefits = .9(800) +.1(-600) = 660.

kblack
Download Presentation

Inefficiencies in Land Markets

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Inefficiencies in Land Markets February 22, 2006

  2. Little House on the Prairie Benefits = $1400/yr Cost = $600/yr Net benefits = $800/yr

  3. A River Runs Through It RIVER Flood Zone 10% chance of storm that will cause flood

  4. Expected value of net benefits = .9(800) +.1(-600) = 660

  5. Standard reaction to risk: purchase flood insurance Cost of premium: $140/year [based on 10% probability of having to make a $1400 payout in any given year]

  6. Ex. 1 – Land values may be artificially high and send the wrong signal to buyers and sellers Does the land market function properly and result in the efficient uses of land? • Subsidized flood insurance • Bail-outs

  7. Subsidized flood insurance $35/year (instead of $140)

  8. Bail-outs

  9. Ex. 2 – Costs of land ownership may be artificially low and send the wrong signal to buyers, e.g. Subsidizing Sprawl Sprawl – defined as low-density, auto-dependent residential and commercial development Subsidies Provision of utilities Mortgage interest deductions Transportation development

  10. MC with mortgage interest deductions (MPC) P* q* S or MSC $ pe D or MB qe Residential lot size

  11. Growth Management • Direct • Urban growth boundaries • Urban service area boundaries • Zoning • Indirect • Impact fees • Transfer taxes • State investments

  12. Ex. 3 – Externalities in the land market may result in inefficient uses of land • External benefits from using land for agriculture • Ecological benefits • Aesthetic benefits • External costs of developed uses • Water runoff from impervious surfaces • Air pollution from automobile exhaust

  13. P* D=MSB q* S $ pm D=MPB only qm Acres of farmland

  14. S=MSC P* q* $ S=MPC only pm D qm Acres of land developed

  15. Farmland Preservation • Property rights tools – zoning • Taxes – differential assessment • Market • purchase in fee or purchase development rights • create development rights market

  16. Zoning • Exclusive • Concern about windfall/wipeout syndrome • Non-exclusive • Large minimum lot size • Cluster zoning • Conservation design

  17. Conservation Design/Zoning

  18. Taxes • Differential assessment • Preferential assessment: agricultural land is assessed for property tax purposes at a lower rate than is other land • Deferred taxation: agricultural land is taxed at a lower rate but some or all of the taxes are captured at time of development • Restrictive agreements: contractual arrangements that give agricultural land owners lower property taxes in exchange for agreement not to develop

  19. Deferred taxation (penalty) • When land is converted, owner must repay a specified amount of the tax benefits realized (10 years of benefits is common). • Owner of land enters into differential assessment program. • Property taxes assessed at $66.66, rather than $142.88 • When land is developed, owner must repay $76.22 for each year of preferential assessment up to 10 years (maximum penalty is $762.20)

  20. Market • Purchase in fee • Purchase development rights (PDR) • Lease development rights (this is essentially the Michigan model) • Create market for transfer of development rights (TDR)

  21. Purchase of Development Rights • Fair market value is $7144 (can develop) • Agricultural use value is $3333 (cannot develop) • Development value is $7144 - $3333 = $3811 • Public or private entity pays landowner $3811; removes development rights stick from the bundle

  22. Lease of Development Rights • Landowner receives regular (e.g. annual) payment in exchange for keeping land in agricultural use. • Michigan – Circuit breaker program (PA 116) • Farmers sign development rights agreements (leases) and receive income tax credits for the duration of the agreement • Income tax credits depend upon level of property taxes and agricultural income

  23. In Michigan: Farmland owner enters PA 116 agreement. Farm income is $200 rent plus $50 salary per year. Property tax is $66.66. 3.5% of income is $8.75. Income tax credit is $66.66 - $8.75 = $57.91

  24. Transferable Development Rights 8 units/acre 2.5 units/acre Sending Zone – area to protect Receiving Zone – deemed suitable for development .1 units/acre 10 units/acre

More Related