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Encyclopedia :
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Property tax |
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Property taxProperty tax is an ad valorem tax that an owner of real estate or other property pays on the value of the thing taxed. The taxing authority performs or requires an appraisal of the value of the property, and tax is assessed in proportion to that value. Forms of property tax used vary between countries and jurisdictions.CountriesCanadaMany provinces in Canada levy property tax on real estate based upon the current use of the land. Property tax levels vary between the Provinces.
United KingdomThere is currently no ad valorem tax on residential property. Two former systems were dropped because of their extreme unpopularity. They were United StatesIn the United States, property tax on real estate is usually assessed by local government, at the municipal or county level. A tax assessor is a public official who determines the value of real property for the purpose of apportioning the tax levy. An appraiser may work for government or private industry and may determine the value of real property for any purpose. Tax assessor offices maintain inventory information about improvements to real estate. They also create and maintain tax maps. This is accomplished with the help of surveyors. On tax maps, individual properties are shown and given unique parcel identifiers. The tax maps help to ensure that no properties are omitted from the tax rolls and that no properties are taxed more than once. Real property taxes are usually collected by an official other than the assessor. The assessment of an individual piece of real estate may be according to one or more of the normally accepted methods of valuation (ie income approach, market value or replacement cost). Assessments may be given at 100 percent of value or at some lesser percentage. In most if not all assessment jurisdictions, the determination of value made by the assessor is subject to some sort of administrative or judicial review, if the appeal is instituted by the property owner. Rising real estate property taxes were a cause of taxpayer revolt in the west; see California Proposition 13 (1978) and Oregon Ballot Measure 5 (1990) for more details. The Supreme Court has held that Congress cannot directly tax land ownership. However, "indirect" taxes on the transfer of land are permitted: in the past, this has taken the form of requiring revenue stamps to be affixed to deeds and mortgages, but these are no longer required by federal law. Under the Internal Revenue Code, the government realizes a substantial amount of revenue from income taxes on capital gains from the sale of land, and in estate taxeses from the passage of property (including land) upon the death of its owner. In the US, another form of property tax is the personal property tax, which can target Personal property taxes can be assessed at almost any level of government, though they are perhaps most commonly assessed by states. Real estate taxes in many locations in the United States are used to fund school systems. Thus, poor areas perforce have disadvantaged school systems. The system of real estate taxes has been sharply criticized as being archaic for this and other reasons. Nevertheless, public opinion has to a large extent prevented any significant change in the system. ImpactsEcologicalProperty tax on real estate has been implicated as a factor contributing to urban sprawl. The foundation of this argument is that the market value of undeveloped real estate reflects the property's current use as well as it's development potential. As a city expands, the development potential of outlying property increases thus increasing the property value and tax. Property uses which generate little or no revenue per land area (such as farms, ranches, private conservation parks, etc) become disadvantaged relative to property uses which generate a high revenue per land area (such as retail and industrial). The effects which property tax has on urban development are ambiguous regarding urban sprawl. A property owner who improves her land must pay tax on the improvements. This tax on improvements has been shown to result in lower density development. As the density of development decreases, the amount of developed land needed for a given population increases. However, this pressure may be counteracted because a property tax tends to decrease dwelling-size of new developments. Attempts to reduce the ecological impact of property taxes include: Because the first two methods retain some amount of property tax, those remedies still favor land uses which generate revenue although the effect is smaller. SociologicalProperty tax is sometimes called a regressive tax which particularly affects low-income/high-asset persons (pensioners, farmers in drought years, etc). Because these persons have high-assets accumulated over time, they have a high property tax liability. However, their current income level is low. Therefore, a larger proportion of their income goes to paying the property tax. The regressive nature of the tax was a common argument used by supporters of California Proposition 13. Property tax has also been described as a progressive tax. See Also
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