Tax the dirt, with Lars Doucet & Greg Miller

Tax the dirt, with Lars Doucet & Greg Miller

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) is joined by Lars Doucet and Greg Miller, co-founders who have just launched the Center for Land Economics, to discuss improving property taxation in the US. They explore how shifting taxes from buildings to land could transform development patterns, why California's property tax caps coincide with its housing crisis, and how the fundamental trade-off between assessment accuracy and consistency creates winners and losers. The conversation also covers the posting-to-policy pipeline, their work developing open-source tools to improve assessment equity, and techniques citizens can use to influence their local assessment office.

Full transcript available here:
www.complexsystemspodcast.com/tax-the-dirt-with-lars-doucet-greg-miller/


Sponsors: Safebase

Ready to save time and close deals faster? Inbound security reviews shouldn’t slow down your team or your sales cycle. Leading companies use SafeBase to eliminate up to 98% of inbound security questionnaires, automate workflows, and accelerate pipeline. Go to safebase.io/podcast

Recommended in this episode:

Twitter:
@patio11
@larsiusprime

TIMESTAMPS:
(00:00) Intro

(00:45) Center for land economics

(04:01) Property tax basics

(05:31) Challenges in property valuation

(10:22) Impact of Proposition 13 in California

(12:28) Anti-market property tax policies

(14:43) Housing crisis and land value
(15:46) Sponsors: Safebase

(17:17) Housing crisis and land value (Part 2)

(27:49) Urban development incentives

(29:17) Tokyo's urban planning success

(39:23) The abundance movement in housing

(40:07) Innovative housing policies

(41:24) Government bureaucracy and policy making

(49:56) Mass appraisals and property tax fairness

(01:00:02) Technological advances in property assessment

(01:06:16) Empowering local governments and citizens

(01:16:02) Wrap


Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(94)

Forty ways to pay for coffee in Japan

Forty ways to pay for coffee in Japan

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) reads his 2021 essay "Payments in Japan," tracing how Japanese consumers navigate a landscape with dozens of competing payment methods at once: credit cards, electronic mone...

25 Juni 35min

The factory behind your home loan

The factory behind your home loan

Patrick McKenzie reads from his 2022 Bits About Money essay on mortgages, making the case that a mortgage is best understood as a manufactured product, not a simple loan between a bank and a customer....

18 Juni 26min

How brokerage transfers actually work

How brokerage transfers actually work

Patrick McKenzie reads from his 2024 Bits About Money essay on ACATS, the Automated Customer Account Transfer Service that governs how Americans move investment accounts between brokerages, then updat...

4 Juni 43min

Wrong numbers and why they survive, with Aaron Brown

Wrong numbers and why they survive, with Aaron Brown

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) is joined by Aaron Brown, author of Wrong Number, to examine why institutions that produce bad statistics face so few consequences for doing so. They trace the pattern from ...

14 Maj 55min

Defendant, Censor, Politico, Spy

Defendant, Censor, Politico, Spy

The improbable but true story of how non-profits operating a private intelligence agency to combat terrorism decided to interfere with campaign infrastructure in a U.S. election.This piece includes or...

8 Maj 1h 5min

How the SPLC became financial infrastructure

How the SPLC became financial infrastructure

Patrick McKenzie reads from his latest Bits About Money essay, walking through why bank fraud charges are a prosecutor's favorite tool, how the Bank Secrecy Act's surveillance regime is designed to fo...

1 Maj 51min

The honey badger of payments

The honey badger of payments

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) reads his classic Bits about Money essay on how checks shaped the entire American payments infrastructure, from the origins of ACH to why a standard US bank account is, tech...

23 Apr 29min

Cash received is not revenue earned

Cash received is not revenue earned

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) reads his classic Bits about Money essay explaining why revenue recognition in software is more complicated than most engineers, founders, and financial reporters think. The...

16 Apr 33min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
varvet
rss-borsens-finest
avanzapodden
uppgang-och-fall
svd-tech-brief
rss-svart-marknad
bathina-en-podcast
lastbilspodden
rss-dagen-med-di
fill-or-kill
24fragor
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
borsmorgon
dynastin
rss-den-nya-ekonomin
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
borslunch-2