Housing taxes in Europe and the world: facing fundamental reforms

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Taxation issues concerning residential property are among most vital for citizens: housing is the main asset for most households, it plays an important role for the middle class, with owner-occupied housing representing on average 60% of middle-class wealth. Unprecedented growth in house prices over the last three decades has made access to the housing market increasingly difficult for younger generations. 

Resent OECD report underlines that high-income and older households occupy a disproportionate share of overall housing wealth. However, the report provides a number of policy options to help countries implement needed reforms.
The OECD report has appeared at a highly volatile moment for the European and global economy; both are battling soaring inflation and an energy crisis, and facing possible recessionary signs.
Improving effectiveness of housing taxation – as part of an overall national tax policy mix- can help improve the functioning of housing markets, improve fairness and equity and help raise more revenue. New OECD report shows that some housing tax policies may help address current housing market challenges, although tax policies may not always be the most effective tools.
Tax policies may be used to address specific housing market challenges, such as reducing the carbon footprint of housing, encouraging a more efficient use of land and housing, as well as boosting the supply of affordable housing.
However, tax policies may sometimes be a blunt tool and may even be counterproductive under certain circumstances. In particular, where tax relief is intended to encourage homeownership, it can sometimes contribute to raising house prices and redistributing wealth to current homeowners if housing supply is fixed.
Even where tax policies can play a positive role (e.g. vacant home taxes, tax incentives for energy-efficient housing renovations, etc.), they may not necessarily be as effective as alternative policy instruments (e.g. regulations) and will generally need to be complemented by other sectoral policy measures.
https://www.oecd.org/tax/tax-policy/efficiency-effectiveness-and-equity-of-housing-taxation-can-be-improved.htm?utm_source

Residential taxes: basics
= Housing plays a central role in peoples’ lives. Access to shelter is a basic human need and a key determinant of individual welfare. Therefore, access to well-located and quality housing shapes people’s social lives as well as their access to health care, education, job opportunities and recreational activities. Housing also affects well-being on a daily basis as the home is the centre of family and –increasingly- professional life, with a recent widespread adoption of teleworking during COVID-pandemic. In most highly developed states, housing is on average the single-largest expenditure item across all income groups and has accounted for an ever-larger share of total household expenditure in recent years.
= Housing constitutes households’ largest lifetime investment and the majority of their wealth; its significance varies across countries. Housing is a key vehicle for wealth accumulation and is a particularly important asset for middle-class households. For example, in OECD countries, owner-occupied housing accounts on average for 50% of total household wealth across all households and for more than 60% of middle-class wealth.
However, the importance of housing varies widely across countries: e.g. homeownership rates range from 44% in Germany to 93% in Lithuania. Housing wealth, including both owner-occupied and secondary housing, accounts for at least 80% of total household wealth in Latvia, Lithuania, and Greece, but less than 40% in the US and New Zealand. High-wealth households, and to a lesser extent high-income households, own a disproportionately large share of owner-occupied housing wealth and own the majority of secondary housing wealth. High-income households also hold a disproportionate share of housing debt, although lower-income households with mortgages generally face higher relative debt burdens.
Homeownership and housing wealth are also strongly associated with age, with older households holding more housing wealth and representing a far greater proportion of homeowners.
= Recent unprecedented growth in house prices has made housing market’s access increasingly difficult for younger generations. Despite some fluctuations, house prices have seen a strong and continuous growth over the past century, with a rapid acceleration in house price increases in the last 30 years and even sharper growth during the COVID-pandemic. House price growth has been uneven across global regions with much more significant rises in large metropolitan areas. House price inflation, particularly in urban areas, has been driven by a combination of factors constraining housing supply (e.g. limited space in highly urbanised areas, land use and zoning regulations, rising construction costs) and stimulating demand (e.g. demographic changes, low interest rates, globalisation).
Declining housing affordability poses a particular challenge to younger households, with evidence that homeownership rates have been declining for younger cohorts over time, particularly among those with lower income and wealth.
General information on tax revenues in: https://data.oecd.org/tax/tax-revenue.htm#indicator-chart
= Housing also has wide-ranging environmental impacts. The residential sector has a significant carbon footprint, accounting for around 22% of global final energy consumption and 17% of energy-related CO2 emissions, with the bulk of the housing sector’s energy consumption originating from heating (and consequently, is a significant source of fine particles in the air). Housing has wider environmental impacts on land use and biodiversity, e.g. through the loss of rural lands, fragmentation of natural habitats, as well as on transport and water consumption.
= Housing taxes are becoming of growing importance given the pressure on governments to raise revenues, improve the functioning of housing markets and combat inequality. In post-pandemic period, many countries are looking to restore public finances by raising tax revenues while supporting the economic recovery. Many governments are also under increasing pressure to address rising inequality and declining housing affordability, which is more acutely affecting low-income and young households. In addition, in the context of growing international mobility of capital and people, governments may aim to raise more revenues from less mobile tax bases, in particular real estate. This increased attention on housing taxes reinforces the need to design them effectively and fairly.
= Housing taxation already plays an important role; more countries levying a wide range of taxes on immovable property. Many countries levy recurrent taxes (see below) on immovable property; owners of rental properties are taxed on their rental income and, in a minority of countries, owner-occupiers are taxed on imputed rent. Transaction taxes are also commonly levied upon housing purchases; capital gains taxes are levied on the disposal of housing, although many countries exempt capital gains on the sales of main residences. Inheritance and gift taxes may also be levied when immovable property is transferred to heirs.
= The way housing taxes are designed often reduces their efficiency, equity and revenue potential. Many countries still levy recurrent property taxes on outdated property values, which significantly reduces their revenue potential (as revenues have not risen in line with property values), their equity (as households whose properties have increased in value may not be paying more tax), as well as their economic efficiency (as property taxes levied on outdated values provide incentives for people to remain in housing that is subject to a lower outdated valuation, even if it no longer suits their needs).
Reliance on transaction taxes is high, despite the potential for these taxes to reduce residential, and to some extent, labour mobility. The majority of countries fully exempt capital gains on main residences, and while there may be justification for such an approach, an uncapped exemption provides vastly greater benefits to the wealthiest households and further distorts the allocation of savings in favour of owner-occupied housing. Other forms of tax relief for owner-occupied housing, in particular mortgage interest relief, have been found to be regressive and ineffective at raising homeownership rates.
In some countries, features of rental income taxation and inheritance tax rules applying to housing also reduce progressivity and revenue potential. While housing taxes are viewed as harder to avoid and evade than other taxes, tax systems often leave room for such behaviors, reducing the efficiency, fairness and revenues of housing taxes.

Reform options
States’ governance could consider both enhancing equity and revenue potential of housing taxes. The OECD report discusses a wide range of reform options that could help enhance the design, functioning and impact of housing taxes, which includes the following:
• Strengthening the role of recurrent taxes*) on immovable property, in particular by ensuring that they are levied on regularly updated property values, while lowering housing transaction taxes would increase efficiency in the housing market and improve vertical and horizontal equity.
*) Recurrent taxes on land, buildings and/or other structures consist of taxes payable regularly (usually once or twice each year), in respect of the use or ownership of land, buildings or other structures used by citizens and/or utilized by enterprises in production, whether the enterprises own or rent such assets.

Source: https://www.tariffnumber.com/info/abbreviations/3324

Tax on property is defined as recurrent and non-recurrent taxes on the use, ownership or transfer of property. These include taxes on immovable property or net wealth, taxes on the change of ownership of property through inheritance or gift and taxes on financial and capital transactions. This indicator relates to government as a whole (all government levels) and is measured in percentage both of GDP and of total taxation. https://data.oecd.org/tax/tax-on-property.htm
• Considering capping the capital gains tax exemption on the sale of main residences to ensure that the highest-value gains are taxed would strengthen progressivity and reduce some of the upward pressure on house prices, while continuing to exempt capital gains on the main residence for the majority of households.
• Gradually removing or capping mortgage interest relief for owner-occupied housing would also have positive impacts on progressivity, tax revenues and house price affordability.
• Tax incentives for energy efficient housing renovations could be better targeted to ensure that they reach low-income households. This could contribute to greater emissions reductions and enhance the equity of tax incentive schemes.
• Caution should be exercised when considering tax incentives to encourage homeownership. In most cases, encouraging the supply of housing and promoting the more efficient use of existing housing stock through both tax and non-tax measures is likely to have a greater impact on housing affordability.
• Strengthened reporting requirements, including third-party reporting to the tax authority and international exchanges of information for tax purposes, are also key to ensuring that housing taxes are enforced properly.
Reference to: https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/03dfe007-en/index.html?itemId=/content/publication/03dfe007-en

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