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Volume 19, Issue 1
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Volume 17, Issue 4
Volume 17, Issue 3
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Volume 17, Issue 1
Houses, Apartments, and the Incidence of Property Taxes
Comment: Listokin, Listokin, and Voicu
Comment: Petersen
The External Costs of Foreclosure: The Impact of Single-Family Mortgage Foreclosures on Property Values
Recipients of Housing Assistance under Welfare Reform: Trends in Employment and Welfare Reform
Rates and Race: An Analysis of Racial Disparities in Mortgage Rates
What Is Housing Affordability? The Case for the Residual Income Approach
Windows of Opportunity: Lead Poisoning Prevention, Housing Affordability, and Energy Conservation
Volume 16, Issues 3 and 4
Volume 16, Issue 2
Volume 16, Issue 1
Volume 15, Issue 4
Volume 15, Issue 3
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Volume 15, Issue 1
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Volume 14, Issues 1 and 2
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Houses, Apartments, and the Incidence of Property Taxes
Volume 17, Issue 1
2006
Jack Goodman
 
The residential property tax is a major component of local government revenues and consumers’ housing costs. This study uses newly available data from the 2001 Residential Finance Survey to investigate the incidence of this tax.
 
The study finds that for the nation as a whole, multifamily rental housing bears an effective tax rate (tax divided by property value) that is at least 18 percent higher than the rate on single-family owner-occupied housing. This gap appears to have arisen during the 1990s. The level of taxation and the apartment/house differential vary considerably by location. Much—but not all—of the differential is associated with the fact that apartments have a lower average property value per unit than houses. The residential property tax, as implemented, promotes low-density development, disproportionately burdens lower-value properties, and may impose higher taxes on apartment residents than on homeowners with identical incomes.
 
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