Identifying Determinants of Horizontal
Property Tax Inequity: Evidence from Florida
Authors: Marcus T.
Allen and William H. Dare
Start Page:
153
End Page: 164
Volume: 24
Issue Number: 02
Year: 2002
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Research
Abstract: In the property tax
literature, an ad valorem property tax is considered equitable if all
properties in the taxing jurisdiction are subject to the same effective
tax rate. That is, all properties, regardless of value or type, should be
taxed at the same percentage of their market value. Because market value
is a theoretical construct and not directly observable, errors in
estimating market value may result in systematic inequity, with some
properties taxed at higher effective rates than others. This study extends
previous research on property tax inequity by examining potential
determinants of errors in the property valuation process for a sample of
single-family homes in Palm Beach County, Florida. The results indicate
that assessment difficulty (as measured by the variation around the mean
assessment to transaction price ratio) is positively related to lot size,
living area, age of the home and the percentage of minority residents in
the neighborhood and is negatively related to market activity levels,
resident income levels, whether the property is the permanent residence of
its owner, and whether the property has a swimming pool. The generality of
these results is limited by the use of transaction price as a proxy for
unobservable market value.

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