The Assessment Gap: Racial Inequalities in Property Taxation

Author:

Avenancio-León Carlos F1,Howard Troup2

Affiliation:

1. University of California , San Diego, United States

2. University of Utah , United States

Abstract

Abstract We document a nationwide “assessment gap” that leads local governments to place a disproportionate fiscal burden on racial and ethnic minorities. We show that holding taxing jurisdictions and property tax rates fixed, Black and Hispanic residents face a 10%–13% higher tax burden for the same bundle of public services. We decompose this disparity into between- and within-neighborhood components and find that just over half of it arises between neighborhoods. We then present evidence on mechanisms. Property assessments are less sensitive to neighborhood attributes than market prices are. This generates spatial variation in tax burden within jurisdiction and leads to overtaxation of communities with a high share of minority residents. We also find appeals behavior and appeals outcomes differ by race within neighborhood. Inequality does not arise from (i) racial differences in transaction prices or (ii) differences in features of the housing stock.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference42 articles.

1. “The Effects of the 1930s HOLC ‘Redlining’ Maps,”;Aaronson;American Economic Journal: Economic Policy,2021

2. “What Explains Neighborhood Sorting by Income and Race?,”;Aliprantis,2019

3. “Why Are Residential Property Tax Rates Regressive?,”;Amornsiripanitch,2021

4. “The Wrong Side(s) of the Tracks: The Causal Effects of Racial Segregation on Urban Poverty and Inequality,”;Ananat;American Economic Journal: Applied Economics,2011

5. “Our Taxes Are Too Damn High: Institutional Racism, Property Tax Assessments, and the Fair Housing Act,”;Atuahene;Northwestern University Law Review,2017

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