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11 votes
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What works: Groundbreaking evaluation of climate policy measures over two decades
22 votes -
Sweden has cut 80% of its net emissions since 1990 – while growing its economy twofold. How have they done it?
31 votes -
The misplaced incentives in academic publishing
21 votes -
Experimental real property tax basis-set rate based on usable area per person
Random thought. What if we taxed property based on the area per person of the property, as opposed to sale value? Edit and quick intro to those who mostly rent: most real property in the US,...
Random thought. What if we taxed property based on the area per person of the property, as opposed to sale value?
Edit and quick intro to those who mostly rent: most real property in the US, especially residential property, is taxed yearly based on some variation of something called "fair market value," usually assessed by a local tax assessor's office
I'm proposing that a property would be taxed for every square meter of space per person in the designated property unit. It can't be totally simplified, but should be fairly straightforward. There could also be progressive brackets. It might not make make sense to apply it strictly per person, but rather for a typical use. That is, we would assume "single family residential" properties to house 3.4 (totally made up number) people per house and property.
The goal of this is to find a fair, market-driven incentive to build density into urban cores.
A similar approach could be applied to commercial space (but probably not industrial).
It could be coupled with a sales tax (currently missing in most real property tax regimes, at least in the US) to capture runaway property valuations in certain jurisdictions.
Alternatively, we could drop the property value based tax rate (but not eliminate it), and then add a per person-area surcharge.
It's not meant to increase revenue, although it could certainly be used that way. It could also be use to decrease revenue, and maybe that would be a good way to sell it. But at the end of the day, developers and residents would both have an incentive to pursue as dense development as possible, even if there is not a density driving pressure of desirablity, which only exists in a few really cool urban cores.
8 votes -
Wait, does America suddenly have a record number of bees?
27 votes -
Compensating compassion | Too few people donate their organs, dead or alive. How can we make it easier to donate, but avoid the abuses that some fear from cash payments?
32 votes -
NFL reaches ‘major milestone’ with record nine minority head coaches in place for the 2024 season
10 votes -
Not your grandma’s granny flat: How San Diego hacked state housing law to build ADU ‘apartment buildings’
16 votes -
Ford 'pausing' construction of Marshall EV battery plant
20 votes -
The bewildering architecture of skybridges
4 votes -
The playlistification of music
19 votes -
The incentive problem at the heart of the American justice system
7 votes -
Four of out every five cars registered in Norway last year was an electric car, according to data released by the Norwegian Road Federation
9 votes -
Film productions from around the world are eager to capture Iceland's dramatic landscapes – and to take advantage of an attractive incentive scheme
3 votes -
Electric cars rise to record 54% market share in Norway – Nordic country becomes first in the world where electric car sales outstrip those powered by other means
12 votes -
How the CCP does job promotions
6 votes -
Bill Gates on vaccines, Trump, and why social media is “a poisoned chalice”
7 votes -
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9 votes -
The replication crisis of scientific papers and why it's happening
6 votes -
New York dangled extra incentives in initial bid to lure Amazon HQ2
6 votes -
Biopharma has abandoned antibiotic development. Here’s why we did, too.
9 votes -
Yang vs. Warren: Who has the better tax plan?
14 votes -
Financial incentives are weaker than social incentives but very important anyway
5 votes -
Government-backed initiative is designed to open up the country's unique musical culture by offering a 25% rebate to international artists using Icelandic recording studios
5 votes -
Productions that could have taken advantage of Swedish locations and craft expertise continue to run away to foreign locations for lower costs and tax incentives
4 votes -
How giraffes ruined science: An overview of the replication crisis
4 votes -
As VF Corp. moves its HQ to downtown Denver, CEO vows to repay $27 million in tax incentives with donations
5 votes