• tal@lemmy.today
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    1 month ago

    It’s a very specific system where government revenue comes from a tax on the value of land (and not even on improvements on that land, so a mansion on land wouldn’t be taxed, for example).

    Most countries have some form of property tax. IIRC the UK is the only G7 country that doesn’t, has a mostly-flat-rate council tax, though they do have a transfer tax on sale of real estate. But property tax isn’t a land value tax, and having one doesn’t make a country Georgist.

    I’m fairly confident that there are no countries that have gone for deriving their revenue from a land value tax.

    • Schlemmy
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      1 month ago

      The tax that I’m talking about is calculated on the value that has been attributed by the cadastre. You pay it when you own the property without having a building or any other land use on site.

      Then, when there is a building on the plot that isn’t being used as intended you get taxed on that. The rate is increased by 100% every year with a maximum of 4 increases resulting in a maximal tax of 500% of the base tax.

      This is besides from the standard property tax that makes up an average of 50% of municipalities incomes. There are municipalities in Belgium they get up to 90% of their working funds out of those taxes.