Volume 19, Issue 2
Volume 19, Issue 1
Volume 18, Issue 4
Do Impact Fees Raise the Price of Existing Housing?
Comment: Chapin
Comment: Crowe
Effects of Proportionate-Share Impact Fees
Do We Know Regulatory Barriers When We See Them?
Reassessing the Role of Housing in Community-Based Urban Development
The Impact of Parental Homeownership on Children's Outcomes during Early Adulthood
Volume 18, Issue 3
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Comment: Crowe

 

Volume 18, Issue 4
2007


David Crowe
 
Impact fees raise the price of new homes, which pay the fee directly, and existing homes, which serve as substitutes for new homes. I argue that such fees are excessive because the net economic benefit of additional homes is not included in the calculation and because more efficient financing tools exist. An impact fee actually pushes prices higher than the fee because it is paid when construction begins but collected at the time of sale. Costs are increased by construction period interest and other costs determined as a percentage of the sale price.
 
Local governments calculate impact fees incorrectly by not including the indirect and positive impacts from construction and occupancy. If these added net benefits were also considered, the fiscal impact would be less and little or no fee would be required. Moreover, other methods for financing infrastructure are available in most states, so impact fees are unnecessary.
 
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