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The taxation of housing. Andrew Leicester Zoë Oldfield. Background. Recent housing market volatility Implications for macroeconomic stability? Miles / Barker reviews to report at Budget Is housing ‘under-taxed’? Options for reform? Could taxes stabilise the market?
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The taxation of housing Andrew Leicester Zoë Oldfield
Background • Recent housing market volatility • Implications for macroeconomic stability? • Miles / Barker reviews to report at Budget • Is housing ‘under-taxed’? • Options for reform? • Could taxes stabilise the market? • Revenue-raising implications?
Is housing under-taxed? “… investment in housing is relatively lightly taxed compared to other investments.” Fiscal Stabilisation and EMU (2003) • Housing has consumption and investment elements • Economic reasons for lower housing taxes? • UK versus other countries?
Current housing taxes * 2002–03 Source: Pre-Budget Report, Inland Revenue
International comparison Source: Author’s calculations from OECD Revenue Statistics 2003
International comparison Source: Author’s calculations from OECD Revenue Statistics 2003
Housing vs. other consumption • Housing does not attract VAT • True for some other consumption goods • But not for large durables • Council Tax, Stamp Duty etc. make overall comparisons difficult
Housing ‘under-taxed’? • Hard to argue that housing under-taxed compared to other investments • Compared to other consumption the case is stronger • Effect of Council Tax? • What are the options for reform?
VAT on housing • No VAT charged on housing • Distort consumption decisions? • Speculation that VAT to be introduced on new houses: • Estimated revenue effect: £4.5bn (2003 – 04) • Implications for housing supply? • Buy non-new home instead?
Stamp Duty • Some problems with stamp duty in general • Price clustering: change structure of tax? • Labour mobility • Stamp duty as stabilising tool • Legislation needed • Pre-empting greater volatility? • Implementation lags • Spread cost over whole mortgage
CGT on First Homes • CGT now applies only to non-primary housing • Extending it would raise £11.5bn (2003 – 04) • Many ways in which it could be introduced • Adds complexity to CGT system, reduces yield • Reduce labour mobility if exemptions for lengthy ownership period?
Property Tax • Feature of some international systems • Council Tax has elements of property tax • Direct link between house value and tax paid • Acts in part as automatic stabiliser • Replace Council Tax? • Problems with local tax element (Balance of Funding) • Issues for design: • Would renters pay? • Associated benefit?
Distributional effects Source: Author’s calculations from British Household Panel Survey 2000 with incomes and house prices uprated to 2002 values
Property Tax • Estimated revenue £16bn (2002) • Larger burden at bottom of distribution • Low income, high housing wealth: are they “poor”? • Includes many pensioners
Distributional effects Source: Author’s calculations from British Household Panel Survey 2000 with incomes and house prices uprated to 2002 values
Property Tax • Estimated revenue £16bn (2002) • Larger burden at bottom of distribution • Low income, high housing wealth: are they “poor”? • Includes many pensioners • Slightly less regressive than council tax • Revenue similar (for modelled example) • Cost of revaluation?
Conclusions • Govt. may need to raise taxes to meet fiscal rules • Housing could provide potential source of significant new revenue • Not easy to justify based on housing being ‘under-taxed’ • Stabilisation another reason for reform • Needs careful consideration and consultation • Would justify reformed rather than higher taxation