Skip to main content

Citation

Zhu, Guozhong & Dale-Johnson, David (2020). Transition to the Property Tax in China: A Dynamic General Equilibrium Analysis. Journal of Urban Economics, 115, 103214.

Abstract

We use the dynamic general equilibrium approach to examine the potential impacts of the introduction of alternative tax regimes in the housing market in China. This approach models housing demand and supply based on the dynamic optimization behaviors of households and a representative housing developer. The model is able to capture key features in the Chinese housing market, and it provides predictions about policy effects through counterfactual experiments. We consider a universal property tax, a selective tax that applies to investment properties only, and a land value tax. Regarding the use of tax revenue, we examine two alternatives: 1) a “redistributive” scenario where tax revenue is redistributed in equal amounts to households, and 2) a “non-redistributive” scenario where tax revenue is spent on local public goods without affecting household decisions. Quantitatively we find that the selective and re-distributive tax is more efficient in terms of generating sustainable government revenues and reducing vacancy rates.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jue.2019.103214

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2020

Journal Title

Journal of Urban Economics

Author(s)

Zhu, Guozhong
Dale-Johnson, David