Law, Economics & Organization Workshop: "Reassessing the Property Tax" with UChicago Public Policy Prof. Christopher Berry

Feb. 24, 2022
4:10PM - 5:40PM
Online
Open to the Yale Community

Christopher R. Berry, William J. and Alicia Townsend Friedman Professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy and the College, will be presenting from his draft paper, "Reassessing the Property Tax." The abstract of his draft paper reads: 

The property tax is the single largest source of revenue for American local governments. It is designed to be an ad valorem tax. The fairness and accuracy of the tax hinges on the quality of property valuation by local assessors. Using data from millions of residential real estate transactions, this paper shows that assessments are typically regressive, with low-priced properties being assessed at a higher value, relative to their actual sale price, than are high-priced properties. Within a jurisdiction, homes in the bottom decile of sale price face an assessment level, as a proportion of price, that is twice as high as that faced by homes in the top decile, on average. As a result, the property tax disproportionately burdens owners of less valuable homes. Such regressivity is evident throughout the US. This result cannot be explained by measurement error in sale prices, or by explicit policy choices, such as assessment limits. Rather, regressivity appears to result from limitations in the data and methods used in assessment.

The complete draft paper is available here.

To access the Workshop, please check the LEO main page on Thurs., Feb. 24th after 9:00 a.m. (ET).

Sponsoring Organization(s)

Law, Economics & Organization Workshop