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by spwa4
184 days ago
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But ... none of this affects this problem in a good way. The problem here is that it's cheaper to leave financed buildings empty, rather than fill them up at cheaper rents, eating the bigger loss. If anything land value tax makes the problem worse, as it would immediately become part of the financing, driving up the price. (the price, obviously, is the price the buyer paid. That the seller doesn't receive the money for the land value tax just sucks for them, it makes no difference) Land value tax, in a world where buildings are financialized (ie. have a mortgage) and used for speculation will make things worse by making everything more expensive, hence making the big losses on underwater mortgages ... bigger. Which, you have my personal guarantee, won't affect the community in a good way at all. Empty lots aren't empty because their owners hate you, it's because the land value is too low for the mortgage and needs to drop, but can't, they're unwilling or unable to eat the loss. The problem is investors prefer small yearly loss over eating the big loss now. Land value tax supposedly solves that ... by making everything more expensive? Of course it will do the reverse. |
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Exactly! So we make it more expensive to leave their building empty. Land value tax makes it more expensive to hold the land vacant, thus encouraging the speculator to either use the property (improving the community), or continue lowering rental/sale prices until it rents or sells, or pay higher taxes to the community they're ruining.
> Empty lots aren't empty because their owners hate you, it's because the land value is too low for the mortgage and needs to drop, but can't, they're unwilling or unable to eat the loss.
They're empty because the speculators are asking so much above market price for rent or sale that nobody can afford it. The solution is to institute forces which coerce them to either use it or sell it (potentially at a loss, but not as high a loss as holding it vacant).
> Land value tax supposedly solves that ... by making everything more expensive?
No, land value tax only makes it more expensive to leave the property empty. It doesn't make anything else more expensive. Indeed, it makes it cheaper for a business to buy up an unused property, because the seller would rather sell at a loss than incur a sufficiently larger loss (land value tax) over time.