Contra the KC Star: Tax Increases are NOT the Answer

The Kansas City Star wrote an op-ed urging Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon (D) to expend some of his political capital in order to bring in more revenue to fund state programs. The Star states that lawmakers in Jefferson City should stop bickering about which programs to cut (they specifically mention the current fight about cutting funds from higher education or funding for a medical program for the blind) and focus on finding new sources of revenue. They specifically mention reigning in tax credits and raising the tax on cigarettes.

Why are tax hikes even on the table? Legislators have not even cut all waste and low-priority programs from the state budget, never mind bigger ticket items such as higher education and medical programs for the blind. Considering that the Missouri House passed an appropriations bill that includes funding for the Missouri Wine & Grape Board along with ethanol subsidies (and that is only for the Department of Agriculture), the state has plenty of places to cut.

The Star editorial is not all bad. It does call for reigning in tax credits, which the Show-Me Institute has pushed for repeatedly. However, it also calls on raising the cigarette tax. The Show-Me Institute has written on this issue and the situation is the same now as it was then; raising taxes on cigarettes is not the cure for what ails Missouri.

Missouri needs a healthy environment so its economy can thrive. That does not just mean low taxes; it also means lowering regulatory burdens. Doing so will ensure that the state receives enough revenue so that all PROPER functions of government have enough funding to work effectively.

Don’t Bank on It: When it Comes to Vacant Property, Learn from Saint Louis’ Failures

The idea of land banking is new in Philadelphia. It is also naive. The Philadelphia City Council’s proposed land banking ordinance incorporates the most harmful practices of the oldest land bank in the United States, the Saint Louis land bank.

More than 40 years ago, Saint Louis City set up a land bank in response to the exodus of its residents, and the vacant property they left behind. When the land bank was created, the hope was that it could return vacant property back to private, productive use.

Instead, the land bank has adopted policies which have compounded the vacancy crises. Most troubling is the land bank’s policy of giving area aldermen an inordinate amount of influence over whether someone can purchase property. Offers from residents are rejected simply because their local alderman does not express his approval of the sale.

Offers to buy vacant land bank property are often from neighborhood residents. The properties are generally in a state of disrepair, and the bidder is planning to repair the property in an attempt to make his or her neighborhood a better place to live. If the resident does not have the blessing of his local alderman, the offer is typically rejected.

Consider the case of 2925 Union, a rundown, 1-story brick building in Saint Louis that received offers from four different buyers. The Saint Louis land bank said no to all four offers. When the area alderman showed up at a land bank meeting and told the land bank to sell the property to another buyer, it did.

Tragically, this policy of deferring to area officials will be written into law if Philadelphia’s land bank ordinance is adopted. In its current form, Philadelphia’s ordinance forbids the land bank from entering into a transaction if the district council person expresses disapproval. This policy will almost certainly thwart development byresidents who do not have their councilman’s approval, even if the resident plans to put the property to productive use.

Our fear is not unfounded. This happens frequently in Saint Louis. The former deputy mayor for development told us that “the sort of working arrangement we have with the aldermen is that if they don’t want to do something, we don’t want to do it.”

In order to quickly get land back into private, productive use, a land bank should accept reasonable purchase offers, even if politicians oppose them.

Philadelphia should also heed Saint Louis’s failed attempts to hold property for future development. Show-Me Institute research revealed that between 2003 and 2010, the Saint Louis land bank rejected nearly half of all purchase offers. The most common reason for rejection was that the property was being held for future development. Unfortunately, the hoped-for future developments rarely materialize.

In Philadelphia, the land bank proposal establishes goals that may undermine efforts to return the land to productive use. The goals include otherwise laudable priorities, such as encouraging “affordable or mixed-income housing that is accessible or visitable” and “community facilities that provide needed services and enrichment opportunities; side- and rear-yards; urban agriculture; and community open space.” These goals may have the unintended consequence of providing a reason for the land bank to reject purchase offers that do not fit the land bank’s vision. Again, our fears are grounded in experience – this public policy failure has occurred repeatedly in Saint Louis.

To be clear, Saint Louis’s adverse policies are not written into law, and can be suspended at any time. Indeed, it appears that in response to the Show-Me Institute’s research the land bank bank’s rejection rate was cut nearly in half. But in Philadelphia, these poor policies will be written into law.

Bruce Stahl is a research assistant and Audrey Spalding is a policy analyst at the Show-Me Institute, which promotes market solutions for Missouri public policy.

Department of Economic Development Responsive Documents: Norwood Hills Country Club

 

We Need Historic Tax Cuts, Not Tax Credits

Saint Louis, the destination of more than $1 billion in state tax credits since 2000, may soon be home to a few more. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that the city is about to conduct a search for all of its historic buildings. It is likely that the uncovered structures will become eligible for Historic Preservation tax credits.

This program sounds great for property developers, but what about everyone else? Shouldn’t Saint Louis concern itself with rejuvenating the entire city, not just a few old properties? Here is an idea: eliminate the earnings tax. It would be like a tax credit for everyone. It might even attract more businesses to the city, bringing economic growth.

For Show-Me Institute material on eliminating the earnings tax, click here and here.

Place Your Bets: Proposed Aerotropolis May Be Funded In Part With Casino Tax Revenues

We noted in February that we saw some legislative activity in the Missouri House intended to revive, at least in part, 2011’s moribund Aerotropolis legislation, which suffered long before dying in last year’s special session. Since then, there has been no obvious movement regarding the project — until this week.

Two different stories on Aerotropolis are now circulating. The first came out Tuesday and dealt with efforts in the state legislature to once again drive state tax credits to the project. It looks like House leaders may try to tuck Aerotropolis back into an economic development package that the chamber is preparing.

The second story was published this morning and is the more fascinating of the two. It reveals that Saint Louis County may apply $3 million in casino tax revenues to support the Aerotropolis project. If true, the funding source would certainly be apropos, given that Aerotropolis almost certainly is a gamble. Over the last year, Audrey Spalding and I (as well as Chrissy Harbin) have discussed at length the merits (or lack thereof) of Aerotropolis, a project that originally clocked in at a cool $480 million when it was first proposed. That figure is worth keeping in mind as proponents of the Aerotropolis plan pine for state money. Taxpayers have been told that Aerotropolis “needed” a half billion dollars to take flight; then $360 million; and then just $60 million. Maybe Aerotropolis should not receive any money from taxpayers?

This also may be a case of life imitating art, as this Show-Me Institute PSA (narrated by our own Rick Edlund) makes clear.

No doubt, a plethora of interest groups are still actively campaigning to resurrect Aerotropolis, but proponents have still failed to make the case that 1) the Aerotropolis plan will work, and 2) public money is required to resolve some market failure standing in the way of the project’s success. Last year, it looked like private parties just wanted to gamble with the public’s money. “A game changer at $480 million! A bargain at $360 million! Just $60 million will do the trick! How about $3 million?”

It sounds like we have a problem gambler on our hands. Maybe the best thing to do is to simply cut them off.

Optometrist Mandate Dies In Senate Education Committee

In February, I wrote about a bill that would renew an onerous mandate on kindergartner and first grader eye exams in Missouri: a mandate which only two other states in the country impose. I voiced my concerns about the bill, not only because of the costs it would unnecessarily impose on Missouri families — health insurance does not typically cover the eye exams and they generally would have to be paid out of pocket — but because of the inconsistency inherent in a state imposing one health mandate while vociferously opposing another health mandate that the federal government is imposing. Earlier this month, I even delivered testimony about the proposal before the Senate Education Committee, which was considering whether to send the proposed law to the floor of the Missouri Senate. Since then, I have been following the issue closely.

Well, yesterday the Education Committee told Missouri families where it stands, voting to not send the bill to the full Senate for further consideration, meaning the bill is effectively dead — for now, anyway. The House is still considering substantially similar legislation, and there are technical pathways through which this legislation could be resurrected or otherwise attached to other bills, and thus reconsidered. I will be on the lookout for all such activities, but the good news is that the prospects for the bill are now very bleak.

Kudos, Senators. There are more effective and efficient ways of promoting eye health for Missouri’s children than through the mandate contemplated here. The Committee made the right decision.

The Ladue Schools Proposed Tax Increase

A proposal for a substantial tax increase is on the ballot in the Ladue School District next week. Substantial is not a loaded term – 49 cents added to a current tax of $2.75 is a large percentage and a substantial increase, no matter what this drivel says. This works out to $279 per year for a $300,000 home, and many of the homes in the district are worth much more than that.

The tax increase is needed, according to supporters, in order to (among other things) pay for the operations of a new building the district purchased in 2010. The school district says their projections on revenue were off, but it is not their fault:

“It was so unprecedented. At that point and time, it was hard to imagine that kind of downturn,” said Susan Dielmann, district spokeswoman.

That statement is referring to a choice made in late 2009/early 2010, and it is just crazy. By that time, it was apparent to many people that we were in for a long and difficult economic recovery, and the idea “everybody just assumed the economy would be terrific by 2011” is preposterous. From USA Today in late 2008 (emphasis added):

Others are gloomier. They expect continued job losses and depressed consumer and business spending throughout the year because of tight credit conditions. The resulting damage to the consumer and business psyche will change the very nature of the economy for years to come.

Many families within the Ladue School District send their children to private schools. So, it should hardly surprise people that many taxpayers within the district who do not, will not, or never did use the public schools are opposed to a dramatic tax increase to pay for something the district probably should not have bought in the first place.

On the other hand, someone once did a study demonstrating that high MAP scores have a positive effect on property values within the Ladue School District, so there is no denying that if the tax increase is necessary to maintain the quality of the schools that the taxpayers will recover a portion of those taxes via property values and sale value. However, it is hardly obvious that the new tax dollars are required to maintain the high district rankings and educational quality. Supporters of the proposal obviously think it is, and opponents think it is not. I do not live in the Ladue School District so I cannot say, but the relationship between per-pupil expenditures and school achievement is far from exact. (Clayton and Ladue certainly spend a very high amount per student and are terrific schools, but there are plenty of counter-examples.) 

Even if the tax increase maintains or improves the school quality, some of that property value increase will be offset by lower values due to the higher taxes. That study also demonstrated the positive effects that low taxes can have on property values. I do not pretend to know how the exact relationship (MAP scores vs. tax rates) would work out going forward. The gains from education quality (if the higher taxes lead to that, which is far from certain) may outweigh the loss from higher taxes. But I do predict that, if this passes, more residents in the Ladue School District will appeal their property tax assessments to try to capture some of the real estate decline and offset the higher tax rate. That will limit the effectiveness of the tax increase.

Election day next week is going to be very interesting in the Ladue School District. I fail to see how a tax increase this substantial is going to benefit the people of the district. The 49 cents per $100 of assessed valuation comes out to an average property tax increase of $766 within the city of Ladue itself. (Hat tip to here for that number, though the rest of the piece is awful.) This is a lot of money to correct a mistake.

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