| > 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. Yes and no. You're not taxing the land as if it was bare or as if it was full; you're taxing it based on the perceived value to a developer. > 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 value of an empty lot is approximately equal to the value of the developed lot right next to it. This is already being done. > 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. Government-owned land could be tax-free since (in theory) it's being used for public good. |
So I feel like you just agreed with my premise, no?
The value (and thus the tax) on my empty lot with nothing but dirt is going to be set by the tax of the developed lot right next to it, which might contain a highrise apartment building.
So you're saying I will be taxed on the value of an imaginary building I don't actually have, just because the neighboring lot has one. So there's no way I can afford to pay that since the bare dirt doesn't give me any income. So I will lose this land due to the tax.
Am I wrong?