House Prices and Property Tax Revenues During the Boom and Bust: Evidence from Small-Area Estimates

House prices
Property tax

Christopher B. Goodman (2018). “House Prices and Property Tax Revenues During the Boom and Bust: Evidence from Small-Area Estimates,” Growth & Change, 49 (4): 636-656, doi: 10.1111/grow.12261

Author
Affiliation

Northern Illinois University

Published

December 2018

Doi

Abstract

Although the Great Recession put the U.S. economy into a tailspin, we know little about how the changes in house prices influenced property tax collections. Using local level housing data from Zillow matched to property tax data from 1998 to 2012, two questions are examined. First, the elasticity of property tax revenue with respect to house values is estimated. Second, the timing of this elasticity is determined. The analysis rules out that local policymakers capture the entire increase of house value in property tax revenues but unable to rule out that increases in house values are completely offset by changes in effective property tax rates. Decreases in values have an elasticity between 0.3 and 0.4 and take three years for changes in values to impact property tax revenues. While property tax collections declined, local policymakers adjusted effective millage rates such that revenues did not decline as much as home values.

Citation

BibTeX citation:
@article{goodman2018,
  author = {{Christopher B. Goodman}},
  title = {House Prices and Property Tax Revenues During the Boom and
    Bust: Evidence from Small-Area Estimates},
  journal = {Growth \& Change},
  volume = {49},
  number = {4},
  pages = {636 - 656},
  date = {2018},
  url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/grow.12261},
  doi = {10.1111/grow.12261},
  langid = {en}
}