Hou | Development, Governance, and Real Property Tax in China | Buch | 978-3-030-07051-9 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 198 Seiten, Previously published in hardcover, Format (B × H): 148 mm x 210 mm, Gewicht: 291 g

Reihe: Politics and Development of Contemporary China

Hou

Development, Governance, and Real Property Tax in China


Softcover Nachdruck of the original 1. Auflage 2019
ISBN: 978-3-030-07051-9
Verlag: Springer International Publishing

Buch, Englisch, 198 Seiten, Previously published in hardcover, Format (B × H): 148 mm x 210 mm, Gewicht: 291 g

Reihe: Politics and Development of Contemporary China

ISBN: 978-3-030-07051-9
Verlag: Springer International Publishing


This book offers an analysis of China in its muddling through of financial reforms towards adopting a local real property tax. The research is designed to serve dual purposes. First, it is an effort to provide an independent perspective on an urgent public policy under consideration by the Chinese government and to reflect upon this policy’s process, which started over a dozen years ago yet is still in the fermenting stage with no sight of fruition. Additionally, this project is intended to share China’s experience with other developing and transitional countries, so they can discern the difficulties China has faced and understand what may entangle them in the modernization of their taxation systems.  

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1.      Introduction                                                                                                                                                                       

2.      Why the Real Property Tax? A Fiscal System’s Approach         

2.1.   A Fiscal System’s Approach

2.1.1.      Tripod structure of modern tax systems

2.1.2.      Direct vs. indirect taxes

2.1.3.      Regressive vs. progressive taxes

2.1.4.      Tax allocation among government levels

2.2   Evolution of Taxation in New China

2.2.1        The pre-1949 tax state

2.2.2        The no-tax state from the mid-1950s to the late 1970s

2.2.3        Public provision mentality

2.3   Fiscal System Reforms 1978-2015: Reestablishing the Taxation System

2.3.1        Corporate and personal income taxes

2.3.2        Value added tax

2.3.3        The missing foot of the tripod 

2.4   Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations

2.5   Towards a Local Property Tax – the Window Paper Effect

3.      Housing Provision Reform and the Real Estate Sector                                                    3.1.   Housing Provision Reform: from Free Provision to Market to Mixture

3.1.1.      Genesis of the reform

3.1.2.      Shift from free provision to market mechanism

3.1.3.      Central blueprint vs. local implementation

3.1.4.      The comfortable housing project 1995-97

3.2.   Real Estate Sector as the Pillar of Economic Growth

3.2.1.      Housing construction and economic growth

3.2.2.      Muddling through of housing market intervention

3.3.   Ad Hoc Preparations for the Real Property Tax

4.      Why China Needs a Real Property Tax – Empirical Evidence 

4.1  Value Capture and Basic Education in China

4.1.1        School system setup and finance

4.1.2        Imposed school tiers and inequity

4.1.3        Market housing price: capitalization and sorting 

4.2  Related Literature

4.2.1        Static (cross-sectional) studies

4.2.2        Dynamic studies

4.3  Data and Methodology

4.3.1        Hypotheses

4.3.2        Sample area and data collection

4.3.3        Estimation methods

4.3.4        Hedonic features and neighborhood amenities

4.4  School Reputation, Policy Shock, and Capitalization

4.4.1        Effects of school tiers on housing price

4.4.2        Effects from strict enforcement of the proximity rule

4.4.3        Parallel trend test of the DID model

4.5 Summary and Conclusion

5.      Institutional Obstacles to China in Adopting the Real Property Tax

5.1.   Private Property Right – Land Rights

5.1.1.      Land rights in rural areas

5.1.2.      Land and real property rights in urban areas

5.2.   Land Use Rights – Leasing by Local Governments

5.3.   Dilemma of Direct Taxation

5.4.   Debates around Adopting the Real Property Tax

5.4.1.      Over-concern for protecting the have’s

5.4.2.      Under the excuse of protecting the have not’s

5.5.   Seeking the Window Paper Breaker(s)

5.5.1   Typology of the window paper breakers

5.5.2   Window paper breakers in China’s reforms since 1978

5.5.3   Window paper breakers in adopting the real property tax

6.      Principles for the Design of the Real Property Tax                                                                                             

6.1.   Equity                                   

6.1.1.      Equity as the foundation block of real property taxation      

6.1.2.      Definition, perception, and actuality of equity           6.1.3.      Equity in tax burden distribution                                           

6.1.4.      Tax base and exemptions                                                                               

6.1.5.      Tax rate: progressive or not                                                                

6.2.   Efficiency                 

6.2.1.      Defining efficiency in taxation

6.2.2.      Equity vs. efficiency: a trade-off

6.2.3.      Efficiency and feasibility

6.2.4.      Allocative efficiency

6.2.5.      Rental properties market

6.2.6.      Examples of exemption proposals that go against efficiency

6.3.   Feasibility                 

6.3.1.      Political acceptability: fairness in tax administration

6.3.2.      Administrative feasibility: convenience for taxpayers

Appendix 6.3: Aspects of Real Property Tax Administration           

6.3.3.      Tax assessment office

6.3.4.      Assessment frequency 

6.3.5.      Approaches of property assessment

6.3.6.      Administrative cost

6.3.7.      Resolution of appeals

6.4.   Transparency             

6.4.1.      Essential features of tax transparency

6.4.2.      Local registration of properties

6.4.3.      Unified national network of real property registration

6.4.4.      Public budgeting system 

6.5.   Adequacy                 

6.5.1.      Real property tax as a local tax

6.5.2.      Major revenue source

6.5.3.      Recurring revenue source

6.5.4.      Intergovernmental transfers and moral hazard

6.5.5.      Local real property tax and inter-jurisdictional fiscal disparity

6.6.   Stability                                

6.6.1.      Inelastic demand for housing

6.6.2.      Stable revenue source

6.6.3.      Use of property tax revenue: two opposite examples

6.6.4.      Mechanism for cyclical stability of revenue

6.7.   Six Principles as a Framework for New Tax Design              7.      Strategies for Implementing the Local Real Property Tax                                                                                  

7.1.   Dilemma: Deep-Rooted Centralization Tradition    

7.2.   Key Elements of the Implementation Plan                            7.2.1.      Open and participatory law making                7.2.2.      Central authorization for local implementation                      7.2.3.      Local discretion with no uniform scheme                               7.2.4.      Window for adjustments and preparations                             7.3.   Other Related Matters                      

7.3.1 Incentive for and accountability by local governments

7.3.2 Self-reinforcing compliance 

7.4.   Proposed Design: A Local Real Property Tax for China

7.4.1.      Four tax elements                   

7.4.2.      Four implementation measures

7.4.3.      Three related institutions

8.      Simulation of Tax Incidence and Redistribution Effects of the Tax Proposal

8.1           Introduction

8.2 Related Literature

8.2.1   Three waves of ability-to-pay research
8.2.2   Measurement of ability-to-pay

8.2.3   Studies of willingness-to-pay

8.2.4   Tax incidence and equity

8.3 A Theoretical Framework of Ability-to-pay and Willingness-to-pay

8.3.1    Ability-to-pay based on the bidding and sorting model

8.3.2    Measuring ability-to-pay

8.3.3    A theoretical model of willingness-to-pay

8.3.4    Measures of willingness-to-pay

8.4 Data, Methods and Results

8.4.1    An analysis of ATP indexes

8.4.2    WTP: inter-household/region differences and their determinants

8.4.3    Consistency between ability-to-pay and willingness-to-pay

8.4.4    Tax burden distribution and redistribution effects

8.4.5    Determinants of net benefits

8.5  Comparative Analysis of Alternative Exemption Thresholds                       

8.5.1 Impact of local property tax on government finance

8.5.2 Linking ability-to-pay with willingness-to-pay

8.6  Discussion and Conclusion

9.      Conclusion: Towards Balanced Development and Harmonious Governance                             

9.1  Lessons learned

9.2  Challenges ahead


Yilin Hou is Professor of Public Administration and International Affairs and Senior Research Associate in the Center for Policy Research at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University, USA.



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