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Resource and Land Taxation

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Title: Resource and Land Taxation


1
Resource and Land Taxation
  • Indira Rajaraman
  • Tax Aspects of Domestic Resource Mobilisation A
    Discussion of Enduring and Emerging Issues
  • Rome
  • 4-5 September 2007

2
Resource Taxation
  • Non-renewable Mining, Petroleum, Timber
  • Renewable (within sustainability limits) Water,
    Fishing

3
Fiscal Resources from Natural Resources
  • With natural resources, it is non-tax revenue in
    the form of royalty and other compensation,
    rather than taxation, which poses issues to be
    resolved.
  • Taxation of resources, whether within a VAT
    framework or not, is on par with indirect taxes
    on other inputs (conceptual parity, if not rate
    parity) exports are usually exempted, with or
    without a VAT.
  • Non-tax royalties do not figure in
    double-taxation agreements and are therefore not
    compensated in any way.

4
Are Resource Royalties an Emerging Issue?
  • Resources are not uniformly distributed
    spatially, so there is the issue of whether
    non-tax revenue should accrue to producer
    jurisdictions, and why.
  • In the future, with buoyant commodity demand from
    China and India, mineral prices are projected to
    be buoyant, therefore this is a very live issue.
  • Demand-side players will lobby for royalty design
    that will keep mineral prices less buoyant, and
    producer jurisdictions will lobby for royalty
    design that will keep up fiscal buoyancy.

5
Rationale for Non-tax Compensation
  • Economic
  • Land pre-empted from other use during extraction
  • Depletion (inter-temporal fairness)
  • Externalities (market failure to factor in
    concurrent and inter-generational costs)
  • Costs of restoration of land for other uses
  • Permanent loss of livelihoods (river storage for
    hydro power)
  • Legal Local jurisdictional rights in terms of
  • Ownership
  • Control

6
Compensation Design
  • Royalty rates
  • Specific rates ( per unit quantum) low on
    buoyancy but stable
  • Ad valorem ( value) high on buoyancy, but can be
    volatile
  • Mixed systems are sometimes prescribed (Specific
    plus value) that strive for the virtues of
    both.
  • Where resource prices on a steady upward trend,
    producer jurisdictions benefit from fully ad
    valorem design
  • Hydro power not formula driven, designed case by
    case, which introduces scope for corruption.

7
New Approaches
  • New approaches profit/income-based royalty
  • Competitive bidding processes to determine
    royalty rather than pre-determined formula
  • suits the variability of mineral deposits
  • but can be defeated by collusive bidding
  • Competitive bidding for each component of royalty
    makes collusion difficult across all elements of
    a vector of bids
  • Environmental
  • Design (fully ad valorem or hybrid with specific
    component)
  • Depletion (separate for current local and
    inter-generational)

8
Land Taxation
  • In situ
  • Transfer of property

9
Which Level of Government?
  • Immoveable property (housing and land) is the
    universally assigned tax base for local
    government.
  • Immoveable property as a tax base is
    administratively suitable for local government
  • relatively easy to observe and assess,
  • and relatively difficult to conceal.
  • Thus, effective land taxation holds the key to
    provision of the local public goods which are
    critically underprovided in the developing world
  • Water, sanitation, law and order, primary
    education

10
Effective Land Taxation in Developing Countries
  • Requires three operational properties
  • parsimonious information requirements for
    assessment
  • assessee acceptance.
  • The critical need is for an incentive structure
    for local revenue collection.

11
Problems in Developing Countries
  • Valuation distortions Land markets are
    frequently distorted as a result of taxation of
    transfer of ownership (called stamp duty in
    India), and taxation of capital gains, both of
    which encourage under-reporting of the true
    market value of land and property.
  • Valuation basis Not enough transfer transactions
    for a robust estimate of capital value.

12
Common Solutions to the Valuation Problem
  • Urban property taxation is typically based on
    rental value rather than capital value, since the
    market for rental might be deeper than the market
    for transfer of ownership.
  • However, even rental value can be distorted by
    rent control legislation.
  • Being sought to be overcome by presumptive
    zone-specific area-based taxation.

13
Presumptive Parameters
  • Parameters going into determination of the
    presumptive rental value
  • Type of usage (commercial/residential/other)
  • Type of construction
  • Zone (the zones need not be contiguous)
  • Age of building
  • Resident type

14
Revenue Yield of Presumptive Levies
  • Buoyant only if rates periodically revised.
  • This calls for recalibration of the various
    parameters underlying the determination of the
    area-based rental value.
  • Thus, area-based assessment will lead to
    sustained revenue improvement only if it is not a
    once-over change.

15
Local Government Collection Incentives
  • Require three properties to work in practice
  • Minimal costs of assessment and enforcement (of
    the incentive).
  • Cross-sectional fairness in assessment of revenue
    potential across local jurisdictions.
  • Distinction between revenue effort and underlying
    revenue potential (matching grants do not do
    this).

16
Cost-effective Incentives
  • The most cost-effective design for own resource
    collection incentives
  • Norm-based closed-ended grants from higher
    governments, where allocations are made after
    deducting baseline calculations of local revenue
    potential.
  • Thus, the revenue potential is deemed to have
    been collected (upto some stipulated percentage
    less than hundred if need be), at specified floor
    rates.
  • This calls for a minimal-cost method of
    estimating jurisdiction-specific revenue
    potential.

17
Other Incentives Commonly Found
  • Grants from higher-level governments must not be
    so structured as to carry adverse policy
    incentives.
  • Example A grant system inversely calibrated to
    local facilities will generate adverse incentives
    for keeping these under-supplied.
  • Other types of direct incentives commonly
    recommended (based on performance indicators like
    primary enrolments, small family norms) call for
    monitoring and verification by State governments
    and are liable to lapse over time.

18
Compliance
  • Compliance can be encouraged by linking property
    tax payment to ownership rights
  • Urban property taxation is a benefit tax and
    there is non-compliance when no commensurate
    services are delivered by urban authorities

19
Rural Land
  • In rural areas
  • selective, not universal, coverage confined to
    crops yielding returns above a specified floor
  • systematic, as distinct from discretionary,
    catastrophe exemption provision for rural land,
    given the absence of perfect risk markets
  • New issues arising with the conversion of rural
    land into Special Economic Zones explosion in
    land value with no commensurate gain for original
    owners of the land.

20
References
  • The Energy and Resources Institute, 2007, Study
    on Compensation to Resource Bearing States
    (Interstate Council, mimeo)
  • June 2007 conference of Lincoln Institute
  • Rao, U.A. Vasanth, 2006 Is Area-Based Assessment
    an Alternative, an Intermediate Step, or an
    Impediment to Value-Based Taxation in India,
    Georgia State University
  • Rajaraman, Indira, 2003, A Fiscal Domain for
    Panchayats (Oxford University Press).
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