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This monograph offers a detailed analysis of the creation, pilot implementation, and possible wide adoption of the real property tax at the local level in China. Starting in 2003, as China’s economy gradually recovered from the Asian financial crisis that started in 1998, the real property market entered a period of rapid expansion, followed immediately by rampant speculation, rising housing costs, and official corruption. Over the last ten years, the price of real property in most cities has more than tripled, especially in metropolitan areas. In an effort to curb this, the government has instituted a number of property-market controls, including property tax pilot programs in Shanghai and Chongqing. While this is the latest of a number of fiscal reforms, it is a very important one that carries with it the ability to change the landscape of public finance, intergovernmental relations, and local governance in China. It represents a fundamental change in the provision of public services, the relationship between local governments and tax payers, and the status of localities in the government structure. Taking a public choice perspective, the authors argue that the local property tax should be used not solely as a means of controlling housing prices but should be fully employed as a fiscal and budgetary institution that will contribute to mitigating multifarious socio-economic problems resulting from economic growth, rapid urbanization, and widening income disparity. As this program is the first of its kind, so this book is the first detailed study of property tax in China; as such, it will appeal to researchers of public finance and public policy. It will also be of great interest to policymakers in China and in other countries that are considering adopting or reforming their versions of the local property tax. It fills the gap in a growing body of literature about the inner workings of Chinese economics and policy.
Economics/Management Science. --- Development Economics. --- Economic Policy. --- Public Finance & Economics. --- Economics. --- Economic policy. --- Finance. --- Economie politique --- Politique économique --- Finances --- Real property tax -- China. --- Rent charges. --- Wealth tax -- China. --- Business & Economics --- Economic Theory --- Property tax --- Wealth tax --- Net worth tax --- Taxation of wealth --- General property tax --- Taxation of property --- Public finance. --- Development economics. --- Public Economics. --- Taxation --- Capital levy --- Cameralistics --- Public finance --- Currency question --- Economic nationalism --- Economic planning --- National planning --- State planning --- Economics --- Planning --- National security --- Social policy --- Economic development --- Public finances
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Simon Kempf has developed hedonic (quality-adjusted) office rent indices for German metropolitan areas. His study explores new territory as it constructs, for the first time, such indices for Germany. The author thereby has taken into account the different qualities of the underlying lease contracts regarding location factors, lease factors, building factors, equipment and layout factors of the office rental unit – using more than 22,005 office lease contracts stored in the Rental Databank of IPD GmbH in Wiesbaden. This hedonic index construction methodology is well known among real estate researchers and statisticians, but it has been mainly used in the residential sector. As a second novelty the multiple imputation method in the statistical analysis to solve the problem of missing data is employed. Quality-adjusted office rent indices serve as market and economic indicators as well as a bench-marking instrument. Contents Fundamental of the Office Property Market and the Implications for Hedonic Price Indices Office Rent Determinants Hedonic Analysis of German Office Rents Development, Application and Evaluation of Hedonic Office Rent Indices Target Groups Researchers in the field of real estate management and investment Real estate developers, portfolio managers, investors, valuers, occupiers About the Author Dr. Simon Kempf wrote his dissertation at the Real Estate Management Institute (REMI) of the EBS European Business School.
Real Estate, Housing & Land Use --- Business & Economics --- Real estate business --- Office buildings --- Rent charges --- Economic aspects --- Rentcharges --- Rents charge --- Buildings, Office --- Office space --- Real estate companies --- Real estate industry --- Encumbrances (Law) --- Commercial buildings --- Industrial buildings --- Business --- Land use --- Real estate investment --- Real estate management. --- Finance. --- Market research. --- Real Estate Management. --- Finance, general. --- Market Research/Competitive Intelligence. --- Market research --- Marketing --- Markets --- Research --- Research, Industrial --- Funding --- Funds --- Economics --- Currency question --- Property management --- Apartment houses --- Housing
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