| > It's just taxing the value of the land without any improvements at all > rationally should make as efficient use of the land as possible These two statements are contradictory. The value of the bare land (just pure dirt) is low no matter where it is. But the second statement is where the consequences show up. The LVT idea isn't really to tax the bare land, it is to tax it as if it was being used by the most financially productive way possible. So, tell me how is that not a tax that is based on something that doesn't actually exist today? The assessor can say: Sure, it's just bare dirt, worth nothing right now, but you could have a skyscraper there and if you did, it'd be worth a lot. So we'll pretend it's worth a lot and tax based on that. The other bad consequence of LVT is that it's supposed to force every bit of land to the most financially productive use. Do you want to live in such a society? Something like a free playground is never the most income-generating use for a patch of land, but it's a wonderful thing to have in towns. |
This is fundamentally incorrect. It is a tax on the bare land. While the value of bare land is substantially less than the value of both the land and improvements, the land is by no means free. It is a scarce resource. Just try getting someone with an acre lot of beachfront property in a resort town to trade you for an acre of remote and barren tundra.
Let's say you have a vacant lot that you purchased for $25k. You want to build a $300k home on it. Let's say there is a standard property tax of 1%. Before you build your home, your property taxes would be $21 per month. After you build your home and your property gets re-appraised, your property taxes would go up to $270 per month, more than a 10x increase. While this is small compared to the cost of a mortgage, it is owed in perpetuity, even long after the house has been paid off. By leaving the land undeveloped, a landowner can keep their tax burden low.
Conversely with a LVT of say 5% you are paying $104 per month for the vacant plot of land. Build a $300k home on it and your taxes remain $104 per month. Thus there is no tax benefit to leaving the land undeveloped. Note that at no point did the potential use of the land get assessed, other than the free market value of the bare land.
Further, an LVT does not force every bit of land to be optimally financially productive, it just doesn't incentivize unproductive uses. Under the current system, it's better to have an empty lot full of garbage than a free playground, because by cleaning it up and putting in basic amenities you have increased its tax burden. Under an LVT, the land being a public park is the default, and the public gets just compensation for giving up any such spaces to other uses.