Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Yardstick Competition in case of the Czech Property Tax Cover

Yardstick Competition in case of the Czech Property Tax

Open Access
|Jul 2013

Abstract

Introduction of the local coefficient in the property tax law since 2009 gave a significant tax authority to Czech municipalities; on average they can up to quadruple their property tax revenue which means increasing their total revenue by more than 10%. Czech municipalities appeared very cautious when exercising this new autonomy and only less than 8% of them applied the local coefficient in 2013.

The theory of yardstick competition offers one of the possible explanations of this reluctance: Voters do not vote for politicians who increase taxes unless the politicians in the neighbouring jurisdictions increase taxes as well. So municipal politicians are carefully observing what others do and approve the local coefficient with prudence.

The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the usage of the local coefficient with special regard to spatial distribution and impacts on re-election and to verify the existence of the yardstick competition among Czech municipalities in case of the property tax.

The results of the difference of means test using data for 206 municipalities with extended scope comply with this theory: (1) politicians who applied local coefficient in 2010 got re-elected in a significantly lesser number of municipalities than those who did not, and (2) in all years analyzed, municipalities applying local coefficient are surrounded by a higher share of municipalities with local coefficient than municipalities without it.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/revecp-2013-0002 | Journal eISSN: 1804-1663 | Journal ISSN: 1213-2446
Language: English
Page range: 77 - 91
Published on: Jul 9, 2013
Published by: Mendel University in Brno
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2013 Lucie Sedmihradská, published by Mendel University in Brno
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.