Topic: Value Capture

2021 David C. Lincoln Fellowship Symposium: Measuring the Value of Land

January 28, 2021 - January 29, 2021

United States

Offered in English

The David C. Lincoln Fellowships in Land Value Taxation were established to encourage academic and professional interest in land value taxation through support for major research projects. This program honors David C. Lincoln, founding chairman of the Lincoln Institute, and his long-standing commitment to land value taxation studies by encouraging scholars and practitioners to undertake new work on the theory of land value taxation and its application to contemporary fiscal systems.

The 2019-2020 program focuses specifically on identifying practical land valuation methods that could be employed by assessors and public finance officials to measure changes in land values induced by public investment. Research projects use a data set that offers 12 years of land sales, improved sales, and assessment data from a large urban county.

This event provides an opportunity for current David C. Lincoln Fellows to share their research on land valuation methods and receive feedback from valuation practitioners and other experts. 


Details

Date
January 28, 2021 - January 29, 2021
Time
9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Location
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
United States
Language
English

Keywords

Assessment, Land Value, Land Value Taxation, Land-Based Tax, Property Taxation, Valuation, Value Capture

Course

Desarrollo Urbano Orientado a Transporte: Aspectos críticos e implementación en América Latina

March 2, 2020 - April 3, 2020

Online

Free, offered in Spanish


Descripción

Este curso ofrece una introducción a la relación entre el transporte, la movilidad y los usos del suelo, y profundiza en el concepto de Desarrollo Urbano Orientado al Transporte (DOT) con énfasis en la movilidad sostenible. Se aborda la relación de este concepto con una serie de instrumentos de planificación y gestión urbana asociados a las inversiones en transporte masivo e infraestructura de transporte no motorizado, especialmente con la idea de captura de valor y los instrumentos de financiación del desarrollo urbano. Se discuten las etapas de formulación y evaluación de propuestas DOT, los impactos de las inversiones en transporte sobre el desarrollo y casos emblemáticos de DOT a nivel global.

Relevancia

Actualmente, las ciudades de América Latina y el Caribe realizan importantes inversiones en sistemas de transporte masivo, las que pretenden responder a los retos de un crecimiento urbano en rápida expansión y que incentiva el uso de vehículos motorizados privados. El concepto de Desarrollo Urbano Orientado al Transporte (DOT) surge como una alternativa frente a este crecimiento urbano de baja densidad y con baja demanda de los sistemas de transporte público, y busca promover formas urbanas compactas en áreas servidas por transporte masivo, la infraestructura para transporte no motorizado, la mezcla de usos del suelo para reducir la necesidad de viajes largos, y el mejoramiento del espacio público amigable para los peatones.

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Details

Date
March 2, 2020 - April 3, 2020
Application Period
November 7, 2019 - December 2, 2019
Selection Notification Date
January 10, 2020 at 6:00 PM
Location
Online
Language
Spanish
Cost
Free
Registration Fee
Free
Educational Credit Type
Lincoln Institute certificate

Keywords

BRT, Cadastre, Climate Mitigation, Development, Economic Development, GIS, Housing, Land Use Planning, Planning, Smart Growth, Transport Oriented Development, Transportation, Urban Development, Value Capture, Zoning

Course

Cómo Calcular las Plusvalías del Suelo Urbano

March 2, 2020 - April 3, 2020

Online

Free, offered in Spanish


Descripción

El curso pretende revisar críticamente los métodos más utilizados para el cálculo de plusvalías. El método comparativo de mercado, muy usado en Latinoamérica, no es seguro y está viciado por ofertas especulativas. Por otro lado, el método residual permite un mejor acercamiento al valor posible de la transacción. De esta manera, se profundiza en las bases metodológicas de la valoración de lotes a través del método residual, y se estudian los casos concretos de Colombia y Brasil para analizar las ventajas y limitaciones del método para su uso en zonas de expansión y en áreas consolidadas. Por último, se realizan ejercicios de aplicación de acuerdo a los ejemplos abordados.

Relevancia

América Latina casi duplicó su tasa de urbanización entre 1950 y 2010, y es hoy la segunda región más urbanizada del planeta. Esta rápida urbanización genera una fuerte demanda de tierra dotada de servicios, y presión hacia los gobiernos para proveerlos. La inversión pública en infraestructura, servicios y equipamiento urbano, así como la normatividad que permite un uso más intensivo de la tierra, genera cambios significativos en el valor del suelo, los que se conocen como plusvalías urbanas. América Latina tiene una larga historia de políticas de recuperación de plusvalías, y varios países han aprobado legislaciones con consideraciones explícitas sobre la captura de valorización del suelo. La efectiva aplicación de estos instrumentos requiere métodos robustos de estimación de los incrementos de valor del suelo.

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Details

Date
March 2, 2020 - April 3, 2020
Application Period
November 7, 2019 - December 2, 2019
Selection Notification Date
January 10, 2020 at 6:00 PM
Location
Online
Language
Spanish
Cost
Free
Registration Fee
Free
Educational Credit Type
Lincoln Institute certificate

Keywords

Land Value, Value Capture

Course

Fundamentos e Instrumentos para la Gestión de la Valorización del Suelo

March 16, 2020 - May 8, 2020

Online

Free, offered in Spanish


Descripción

El curso presenta conceptos fundamentales, discute argumentos y analiza evidencias sobre la relación entre las prácticas urbanísticas del sector público y privado, el comportamiento de los mercados de suelo y los sustentos legales de la gestión social de la plusvalía del suelo urbano. Se revisará una variedad de alternativas de instrumentos diseñados para redistribuir los costos y beneficios de la urbanización. Serán discutidos instrumentos urbanísticos de gestión de derechos de desarrollo, de uso del suelo conforme a su función social, y de regulación urbanística del mercado de suelo. Los instrumentos que se analizarán tienen en común una visión amplia del territorio y de las acciones que permitan su adecuada gestión.

Relevancia

Los recursos públicos disponibles para satisfacer las carencias de infraestructura y servicios en las ciudades de América Latina son escasos y se distribuyen de manera desigual en el espacio, tanto en cantidad como en calidad. Al realizar inversiones en infraestructura y servicios públicos, el Estado genera una valorización del suelo que beneficia a determinados propietarios, sin que sea el resultado del esfuerzo o inversión de éstos. Lo anterior produce una transferencia de recursos públicos a entidades particulares, sin posibilidad de recuperar los costos de la obra pública. La gestión social de la valorización permite avanzar hacia una distribución más justa de los costos y beneficios del proceso de urbanización, así como disciplinar y reducir los efectos indeseados del mercado de suelo y avanzar hacia ciudades más equitativas y sustentables.

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Details

Date
March 16, 2020 - May 8, 2020
Application Period
November 6, 2019 - December 2, 2019
Selection Notification Date
January 10, 2020 at 6:00 PM
Location
Online
Language
Spanish
Cost
Free
Registration Fee
Free
Educational Credit Type
Lincoln Institute certificate

Keywords

Appraisal, Development, Land Value, Valuation, Value Capture

Course

Suelo y financiación del desarrollo urbano: Experiencias iberoamericanas comparadas

March 1, 2020 - March 6, 2020

Madrid, Spain

Free, offered in Spanish


Curso de Desarrollo Profesional – Edición Especial

En las ciudades de América Latina suele ser creciente la lista de problemas a resolver en vista de la carencia de fuentes de financiación. Las políticas de recuperación de plusvalías ofrecen un camino para enfrentar este tema, y este curso busca difundir las lecciones de la experiencia de América Latina en ese sentido.  El curso explorará los desafíos involucrados en la transferencia internacional de ideas, incluida la relevancia del sistema local de España para comprender la universalidad de los principios que informan las políticas de suelo.

El curso tiene una orientación multidisciplinaria que permitirá a los participantes entablar un diálogo constructivo y comparativo desde los fundamentos urbanísticos, económicos y jurídicos de la recuperación de plusvalías partiendo de postulados generales y universales, así como conocer soluciones locales a problemas no resueltos en la gestión urbana contemporánea. Este curso es desarrollado por el Programa para América Latina y el Caribe en colaboración con la UNED (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia – Madrid, España).

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La fecha límite de postulación ha sido extendida hasta el 2 de diciembre de 2019.


Details

Date
March 1, 2020 - March 6, 2020
Application Period
October 31, 2019 - December 2, 2019
Selection Notification Date
December 16, 2019 at 6:00 PM
Location
Madrid, Spain
Language
Spanish
Cost
Free
Registration Fee
Free
Educational Credit Type
Lincoln Institute certificate

Keywords

Development, Economics, Legal Issues, Public Finance, Public Policy, Urban, Urban Development, Urbanism, Value Capture

This image shows the city of Cape Town

How a New Land Policy Could Help Unwind Apartheid in Cape Town, South Africa

Inclusionary Housing is a Form of Land Value Capture, or Land Value Return
By Will Jason, October 18, 2019

 

Looking at the South African government’s map of “the social tapestry of Cape Town,” it’s not difficult to see the legacy of apartheid. The map shows many pockets of racial integration, but most nonwhite residents live in the Cape Flats, an expansive area southeast of downtown that extends far out to the urban fringes. This area includes the city’s infamous townships, built in the twentieth century to segregate black and mixed-race residents.

Whites, who make up only 15 percent of the population, occupy the northeastern and southwestern suburbs, the Atlantic shoreline, and much of the urban core, or City Bowl, so-named because it is surrounded by Devil’s Peak, Lion’s Head, and the iconic Table Mountain, the latter of which was voted one of the world’s New Seven Wonders of Nature.

The City Bowl is where Amazon recently moved into a new eight-story office building. Developers advertise newly built projects in the neighborhood like the 17-story Sentinel, “a super-modern glass and aluminum building offering the most contemporary architectural statement in the City Centre,” and the Onyx, an 11-story “jewel in the crown of Cape Town” featuring “hotel-style residents’ amenities in the form of a gym, outdoor cross-training track, a day spa with sauna, bar, and kitchen, as well as a sky terrace with dramatic harbour, city and mountain views.” Two of the Onyx’s penthouses came accessorized with a Jaguar SUV.

In Cape Town and the rest of South Africa, formal racial exclusion—enforced under centuries of colonial rule and sustained during the mid- to late-twentieth century by apartheid—has given way to economic segregation. Whites make up only a tenth of South Africa’s population, but nearly two thirds of its elite, according to the World Bank, which designates the country as the world’s most unequal. The top 10 percent of households possess more than 70 percent of the nation’s wealth.

Land is at the core of the problem, and one potential solution

After centuries of deep social divisions, Cape Town’s jobs, schools, and efficient transportation—sources of economic opportunity—are concentrated downtown and in affluent suburbs. Most residents can’t afford to live in those areas, and endure long commutes from townships and other far-flung neighborhoods, many lacking parks, hospitals, or, in some cases, basic infrastructure for water and sanitation.

Reversing such entrenched inequality will require a massive effort with many different solutions, but the city is poised to adopt a new policy that could help. Known as inclusionary housing or inclusionary zoning, the policy originated as a way to combat segregation in another nation with a history of racial oppression—the United States.

The mechanics of inclusionary housing are simple: owners of real estate projects are required to sell or rent some of the new homes or apartments to lower-income residents at prices they can afford. In some cases, property owners can provide the affordable housing at a nearby location or pay into a housing fund. Cities can specify how much affordable housing is required, and exactly how low the rent or sales prices need to be.

Inclusionary housing is a form of land value return, or land value capture, a type of policy that allows the public sector to tap the gains from rising property values that result from public sector actions—construction of a new road, for example—rather than those of the individual property owner, and use the value increase for the public’s benefit. One common source of property value increase is a change in the density of a neighborhood or individual property.

Inclusionary housing is rooted in the understanding that much of land’s value is generated by actors other than the property owner,” said Enrique Silva, director of international initiatives for the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy.

Willard Matiashe, a researcher for the Development Action Group, a housing policy organization in Cape Town, described inclusionary housing as “one way of sharing the land value windfalls linked to additional development rights that the city gives to developers.”

Inclusionary can be a tool for spatial justice

Now used in more than 800 U.S. communities, inclusionary housing first gained traction in the 1970s, partly in response to a practice known as exclusionary zoning, by which cities used land-use regulations to prevent less affluent, often nonwhite renters or home buyers from moving to desirable neighborhoods. Common exclusionary measures include prohibitions of apartments or smaller homes.

South Africa enforced its segregation through more explicit land-use laws, most notoriously the Group Areas Act, which established different sections in cities for each race. Beginning in the 1960s under this law, Cape Town forcibly removed 60,000 nonwhite residents from an area near the city center known as District 6, bulldozed their homes, and relocated them to the urban fringes.

Cape Town under the Group Areas Act. Illustration by Myriam Houssay-Holzschuch, Olivier Ninot, and Emma Thébault

Cape Town under the Group Areas Act. Illustration by Myriam Houssay-Holzschuch, Olivier Ninot, and Emma Thébault

After the end of apartheid in 1994, the new democratically elected government immediately recognized the importance of land in addressing inequality. In an early white paper, the government committed to establishing “socially and economically integrated communities, situated in areas allowing convenient access to economic opportunities as well as health, educational, and social amenities.” Two years later, it enshrined these ideas in the new constitution.

But breaking the cycle of segregation has proven difficult. In response to an urgent need for basic housing, the post-apartheid government has built millions of homes for low-income South Africans, but they are located mostly at the urban periphery where land is cheap. These homes provide shelter but little access to opportunity.

“South Africa has acknowledged in law that they need to have a strategy for desegregation and they’re in search of practical tools to achieve that goal,” said Rick Jacobus, who has studied inclusionary housing and recently traveled to South Africa on behalf of the Lincoln Institute to learn and advise public officials.

Momentum behind inclusionary housing in South Africa is building

South Africa’s policy makers first put inclusionary housing on the agenda in 2004 as part of a national housing plan, and in 2007 the Department of Housing produced a framework for national legislation. However, these efforts fizzled in the face of opposition from the real estate industry, a downturn in the housing market, and technical concerns.

In the absence of a coherent national policy, cities have experimented with their own policies. The country’s largest city, Johannesburg, adopted the country’s first municipal inclusionary housing policy in 2008 for high-priority transportation corridors, although the policy was rarely used. Johannesburg recently adopted a new citywide policy, but it allows developers to meet the requirements simply by building market-rate homes or apartments of a smaller size—an indirect way to reduce the rent or sale price.

These initial efforts have been relatively modest, but there is now a stronger legal foundation for inclusionary housing in South Africa, thanks to another piece of legislation enacted a few years ago. In 2013, South Africa’s parliament enacted the Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act (SPLUMA), which established spatial justice as one of the core development principles that should guide local land use, stating that “past spatial and other development imbalances must be redressed.” Now advocates in Cape Town are relying on that law to push for more aggressive affordable housing policies.

In Cape Town, momentum behind inclusionary housing has been fueled by a real estate boom that began in the early 2010s. Home prices have increased faster in Cape Town than elsewhere in the country, in part because of a strong luxury market and demand from foreign buyers, who are drawn to the dramatic landscape and Mediterranean-style climate. The market has cooled recently amid a national economic slump and a 2018 water crisis, but prices in some neighborhoods are still double what they were just five years ago. Only a fraction of Cape Town’s households can afford the average-priced house in the city.

The central business district in Cape Town. Photo by Amy Cotter.

Building on the legal foundation of SPLUMA, an activist group called Ndifuna Ukwazi (“Dare to Know” in the regional Xhosa language) began in 2017 to file objections against real estate projects for which developers sought changes in the regulations—to build above the allowable height, for example. These challenges have led some developers to voluntarily add affordable housing to their projects, but the process has been ad-hoc, often with weak enforcement.

Last month, Ndifuna Ukwazi escalated its campaign with a lawsuit against the city over its approval of a proposed mixed-use tower called The Vogue, which would become one of Cape Town’s tallest buildings and promises to be “iconic in both form and function,” with “undulating balconies and roof gardens” and “top-level penthouse apartments which will all enjoy panoramic views over the Atlantic Seaboard.”

Among the handful of Capetonians who could afford an apartment in the development, nearly half are white, Ndifuna Ukwazi said in its lawsuit, even though whites make up only a sixth of the city’s population.

“Every new exclusive development that is approved by the city without affordable housing entrenches a system of racial segregation and unequal access to services,” the group said in a statement.

Developers are at the table

Such pressure has made developers more open to an inclusionary housing policy. Last year, developers sat down with advocates, experts, and city officials in a series of dialogues, hosted by the Development Action Group and the Lincoln Institute. Developers said they would prefer the certainty of a citywide policy if it could eliminate the risk of challenges to individual projects, which can create costly delays.

“Developers in the room were saying, ‘give us the number so we can factor that into our proposals,’” said Matiashe of the Development Action Group.

Nigel Burls, a Cape Town planning consultant who works on behalf of developers but did not participate in the dialogues, said developers might support an inclusionary housing policy if it doesn’t make projects infeasible.

“If it seems to be addressing a problem and it’s not seen to be penalizing developers, the developers will jump on the bandwagon,” Burls said. “It has to be carefully structured and it has to be carefully thought through. It has to be done in a manner that it doesn’t kill development.”

The city is making efforts to enact such an inclusionary housing policy. In a concept document released last year, Cape Town proposed to tie inclusionary housing to zoning change or additional development rights that increase property values. A draft policy is expected sometime in 2020.

“If we can get a policy together that speaks to more equitable ownership and benefit from the land and land value, it’s an incredibly important moment,” said Gail Eddy, a research officer for the city of Cape Town who is helping to craft the new policy.

By itself, inclusionary housing would not solve Cape Town’s problems of segregation and unaffordable housing. The policy would only work in neighborhoods that can attract market-rate development, which excludes large swaths of the city where infrastructure is poor. It would not produce nearly enough homes and apartments to meet the needs of the poorest residents.

Nevertheless, an inclusionary housing policy would establish the principle that the whole community has a claim on land and its value, and that the city can use land to redress its inequalities.

“Inclusionary housing is a statement that land should be used for the benefit of the public—in the case of Cape Town and South Africa, to help reverse longstanding patterns of exclusion,” said Silva of the Lincoln Institute.

 


 

Will Jason is associate director of communications at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy.

Photograph: Cape Town, South Africa, with Table Mountain as the backdrop. Credit: kavram/iStock via Getty Images.

 

Course

Distribución de Cargas y Beneficios en la Aplicación de Reajuste de Terrenos

October 14, 2019 - November 15, 2019

Online

Free, offered in Spanish


Descripción

El curso es de carácter práctico y está centrado en un ejercicio que realizará cada estudiante para calcular los precios del suelo en un proyecto de desarrollo o de revitalización, derivados de las normas de uso y edificabilidad (aprovechamientos urbanísticos), y de la estimación de los costos de urbanización (cargas u obligaciones urbanísticas).

Se identificará la forma de valorar los terrenos, la forma de pagar a los propietarios aportantes, y de financiar total o parcialmente los costos de urbanización. Se tendrá como referencia casos concretos de reajuste de terrenos en ciudades colombianas para ilustrar los sistemas de reparto equitativo de cargas y beneficios.

Relevancia

El  reajuste   de  terrenos es  un  instrumento que  resuelve algunos problemas presentes en los procesos de desarrollo urbano: la subdivisión de la tierra y la desigual asignación de los beneficios derivados de los índices o coeficientes de edificabilidad, y de los usos del suelo a través de las normas o planes urbanísticos. Esta inequidad se produce entre los propietarios privados de suelo involucrados en un proyecto urban,o y entre éstos y la colectividad. También es una herramienta eficaz para resolver el problema de la falta de recursos para financiar los costos de urbanización y la obtención de suelo para uso público y para proyectos de vivienda social.

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Details

Date
October 14, 2019 - November 15, 2019
Application Period
July 17, 2019 - August 14, 2019
Selection Notification Date
September 27, 2019 at 6:00 PM
Location
Online
Language
Spanish
Cost
Free
Registration Fee
Free
Educational Credit Type
Lincoln Institute certificate

Keywords

Appraisal, Assessment, Community Land Trusts, Homeowners Associations, Housing, Infrastructure, Land Market Regulation, Land Trusts, Land Use Planning, Land Value, Reuse of Urban Land, Urban Development, Urban Revitalization, Valuation, Value Capture