Property taxation can be used in a Pigouvian way to raise the costs of environment and decrease land use consumption for the benefit of environmental protection. However, in presence of a growing shortage of funding over time, local governments can use property taxation in order to ‘fill the coffers’ rather than to pursue aims of environmental safeguard. A negative effect on the budget side could be associated with a weaker control on land use regulation from local governments, since higher environmental consumption leads to higher tax revenues. In a theoretical paper, Ermini et al. (2012) show that a positive (negative) relationship between tax revenue and the number of land use permissions can emerge when there is complementariety (substitutability) between environmental and human uses of land. We test this relationship on a panel of Italian municipalities from 1999 to 2006. Our results show a positive and significant correlation between property tax revenue and the issuance of land use permits, suggesting the prevalence of the complementariety relationship. This result implies that Italian municipalities are more concerned about funds raising rather than environment preservation.
Land Use And Italian Local Government Taxation: Environmental Protection Or Fund Rising Purposes? / Ermini, Barbara; Fiorillo, Fabio; Santolini, Raffaella. - In: RIVISTA ITALIANA DI ECONOMIA, DEMOGRAFIA E STATISTICA. - ISSN 0035-6832. - STAMPA. - LXVI:3-4(2012), pp. 95-102.
Land Use And Italian Local Government Taxation: Environmental Protection Or Fund Rising Purposes?
ERMINI, Barbara;FIORILLO, Fabio;SANTOLINI, Raffaella
2012-01-01
Abstract
Property taxation can be used in a Pigouvian way to raise the costs of environment and decrease land use consumption for the benefit of environmental protection. However, in presence of a growing shortage of funding over time, local governments can use property taxation in order to ‘fill the coffers’ rather than to pursue aims of environmental safeguard. A negative effect on the budget side could be associated with a weaker control on land use regulation from local governments, since higher environmental consumption leads to higher tax revenues. In a theoretical paper, Ermini et al. (2012) show that a positive (negative) relationship between tax revenue and the number of land use permissions can emerge when there is complementariety (substitutability) between environmental and human uses of land. We test this relationship on a panel of Italian municipalities from 1999 to 2006. Our results show a positive and significant correlation between property tax revenue and the issuance of land use permits, suggesting the prevalence of the complementariety relationship. This result implies that Italian municipalities are more concerned about funds raising rather than environment preservation.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.