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50-State Property Tax Comparison Study

For Taxes Paid in 2015

Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and Minnesota Center for Fiscal Excellence

June 2016, English

Other Publications

Property Tax, Public Finance

June 2016, English

Other Publications

Property Tax, Public Finance

Bubble Economics

How Big a Shock to China’s Real Estate Sector Will Throw the Country into Recession, and Why Does It Matter?

Bryane Michael and Simon X. Zhao

May 2016, English

Working Paper

Land Markets

May 2016, English

Working Paper

Land Markets

The Segmentation of Urban Housing and Labor Markets in China

The Case of Shanghai

Cathy Yang Liu, Jie Chen, and Huiping Li

May 2016, English

Working Paper

Economic Development, Housing

May 2016, English

Working Paper

Economic Development, Housing

A Good Tax

Legal and Policy Issues for the Property Tax in the United States

Joan Youngman

March 2016, English

Book

Land Value Taxation, Local Government, Property Tax, Public Finance, Valuation

March 2016, English

Book

Land Value Taxation, Local Government, Property Tax, Public Finance, Valuation

Further Empirical Evidence on Property Taxation and the Occurrence of Urban Sprawl

Robert W. Wassmer

March 2016, English

Working Paper

Property Tax

March 2016, English

Working Paper

Property Tax

Priceless

Duties and Powers of State Trust Land Departments and the Effects of Appraisal Methods and Practices

Maren Mahoney

March 2016, English

Working Paper

March 2016, English

Working Paper

Land and the City

Edited by George W. McCarthy, Gregory K. Ingram, and Samuel A. Moody

January 2016, English

This book from the Lincoln Institute's 2014 Land Policy Conference examines issues of land use policies and their impact on sustainable urbanization. By 1960, one-third of the world’s population lived in urban areas, and in 2007 the world’s urban population passed the halfway mark. All projected world population growth through 2050 will be urban, by which time two-thirds of the worlds people will depend on urban environments to meet their social, economic, and housing needs. The extent to which these needs will be met depends in many ways by the character of future urbanization defined in large part by land policies, ranging from planning for development or climate change, to the provision of affordable housing or other opportunities for the advancement of urban residents.

Book

City and Regional Planning, Climate Change, Economic Development, Housing, Infrastructure, Land and Property Rights, Land Conflict Resolution, Land Markets, Local Government, Property Tax, Public Finance, Urbanization

January 2016, English

This book from the Lincoln Institute's 2014 Land Policy Conference examines issues of land use policies and their impact on sustainable urbanization. By 1960, one-third of the world’s population lived in urban areas, and in 2007 the world’s urban population passed the halfway mark. All projected world population growth through 2050 will be urban, by which time two-thirds of the worlds people will depend on urban environments to meet their social, economic, and housing needs. The extent to which these needs will be met depends in many ways by the character of future urbanization defined in large part by land policies, ranging from planning for development or climate change, to the provision of affordable housing or other opportunities for the advancement of urban residents.

Book

City and Regional Planning, Climate Change, Economic Development, Housing, Infrastructure, Land and Property Rights, Land Conflict Resolution, Land Markets, Local Government, Property Tax, Public Finance, Urbanization

State and Local Ad Valorem Taxation of Mineral Interests

Calvin A. Kent

January 2016, English

Working Paper

January 2016, English

Working Paper