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E-book
Author Bird, Richard M. (Richard Miller), 1938- author.

Title A tale of two taxes : bproperty tax reform in Ontario / Richard M. Bird, Enid Slack, and Almos Tassonyi
Published Cambridge, Mass. : Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
©2012

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Description 1 online resource (xii, 275 pages) : illustrations
Contents Getting property taxes "right" : an impossible dream? -- Financing local governments and schools in Ontario : property tax reform in context -- The history of the property tax in Ontario : is an old tax always a good tax? -- The 1998 property tax reform : a never-ending story? -- Assessment reform in Ontario : is success enough? -- Local property taxation and education finance : sharing the tax base -- The property tax family -- Property taxes in the GTA : revenue hills and tax competition -- Rethinking the property tax in Ontario
Summary "This book examines the broad reform of the Ontario property tax in 1998. The objectives of this reform included introducing a full market value assessment, establishing a property tax system that would be widely accepted, and removing property tax reform from the provincial political agenda. Although the reform effort was lauded by experts at the time, its overall objectives were not achieved. In fact, the new assessment system may have ultimately weakened the role of the local property tax. Good property tax design needs to recognize the important differences between taxing housing and taxing business property"--Provided by publisher
"Revenue from the property tax alone is not sufficient for large urban areas to pay for the range and level of public services for which they are responsible. The paths to improving the property tax--for example, abolishing the heavily discriminatory taxation of business property--would leave a major revenue hole in local budgets. The question is how to make up for this gap. The authors consider two approaches to the problem: restructuring education finance and introducing a new form of business taxation, at both the provincial and local levels. Over the past decade Ontario was able to successfully adopt a uniform, province-wide market value assessment system. However, its experience suggests that when reforms in property tax administration are combined with sound reforms in both property tax policy and some aspects of local governance and finance, they are more likely to bring about the desired benefits. Many jurisdictions around the world have been advised to implement major reforms in property taxation to resolve local government finance problems. This detailed evaluation of Ontario's [1998] reform in both property tax policy and full market value assessment shows that, while such reforms are possible, they require very careful design, implementation, and sustained follow-up if they are to succeed, especially in large metropolitan areas"--Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Property tax -- Ontario
Tax assessment -- Ontario
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- International -- Taxation.
Property tax
Tax assessment
Ontario
Form Electronic book
Author Slack, Enid, 1951- author
Tassonyi, Almos, author
ISBN 1558442359
9781558442351