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EH.NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by EH.NET (June 1997)
Glenn W. Fisher, _The Worst Tax? A History of the Property Tax in
America_. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1996. x + 244 pp.
$35.00 (cloth), ISBN: 0700607536
Reviewed for EH.NET by John Joseph Wallis, Department of Economics,
University of Maryland. <[log in to unmask]>
From the question mark in the title one might expect that this
book would try to answer the question: is the property tax a good or a bad
tax? And from the remainder of the title one might expect a general
history of the property tax throughout the nation and throughout the
nation's history. This very interesting book does not deliver on either
of the implicit promises in its title, but it is worth a closer look in
any event.
Fisher begins with a general discussion of the property tax and
fiscal policy in late 18th and early 19th century America. The focus then
shifts to Kansas. An intensive study of the property tax in Kansas makes
up the bulk of the book. In the last chapter and conclusion, the
discussion shifts back to more general questions and a wider focus.
It is hard to fault the approach, however, since there is no
"American property tax," there are only property taxes in the individual
states and, as Fisher makes clear, there are really thousands of local
property taxes administered under an umbrella of state supervision. The
nature of state administration varies widely from state to state and over
time. Making generalizations is, as a result, a hazardous business.
Fisher focuses on the implication of two common changes in the
property tax structure in the middle part of the 19th century, and, by
example, how those changes played out in Kansas. These are constitutional
or legislative provisions mandating uniformity and universality in
property taxation. Uniformity means that all property that is liable to
the tax is taxed at a uniform rate. Universality means that all valuable
property in the state is subject to taxation. Uniformity combined with
universality implies that all property in a state, tangible and
intangible, land, buildings, inventories, animals, equipment, etc. must be
assessed and taxed at the same rate.
Uniformity and universality are important both as a reflection of
the political climate of the mid-19th century, and for the confusion and
difficulties they ultimately created in the administration of the property
tax. After the debt crisis of the early 1840s, when state governments
began moving toward rather than away from the property tax as their main
source of revenue, the property tax became the fiscal mainstay of both
state and local governments. It was at that point that uniformity and
universality provisions were widely enacted as reform measures. The
essential idea behind them was that the wealthy and the privileged escaped
property taxation through unfair assessment (uniformity) and their ability
to transform their wealth into untaxed assets (universality).
The reforms opened up another can of worms, perhaps one bigger
than the universe. For uniformity and universality to work, there had to
be a system of state-wide assessment on all property. In most states,
assessment was a function of local governments with some state cooperation
and supervision. Full implementation of the reforms would have required
complete centralization of the revenue system at the state level, which
nobody wanted. This federalism issue was further complicated by the
intractable difficulties in assessing many types of intangible property.
Ultimately, the general uniform and universal property tax was
replaced by a more specific and well defined property tax, which in most
states became a tax on real estate. The real estate tax was easier to
define and administer and easier to equalize across local governments,
although it is still plagued with problems of assessment. The change
occurred in the 20th century at the same time that state governments were
moving away from property taxes towards sales and income taxes. The shift
was underway before the 1930s, picked up speed during the depression, and
was complete by the middle years of the 20th century. Today, state
governments collect a very small share of property taxes and property
taxes are a very small share of total state revenues.
Fisher's study illuminates clearly how these forces were at work
in Kansas. Whether Kansas accurately mirrors what happened in other
states it unclear. This book makes an important step in the right
direction. It awaits another 40 or so similar studies on property
taxation in other states.
John Joseph Wallis
Department of Economics
University of Maryland
John Wallis is a student of the history of America. Recent publications
include (with Jac Heckelman) "Railroads and Property Taxes," _Explorations
in Economic History_, 34 (1), January 1997; "The Impact of the New Deal on
American Federalism," (with Wallace Oates), forthcoming in _The Defining
Moment_, Michael Bordo, Claudia Goldin, and Eugene White, editors, NBER,
University of Chicago Press; "Early American Federalism and Economic
Development, 1790-1840," _ Public Finance and Environmental Economics:
Essays in Honor of Wallace E. Oates_, Robert Schwab, editor, forthcoming,
Edward Elgar.
Copyright (c) 1997 by EH.Net and H-Net, all rights reserved. This work
may be copied for non-profit educational use if proper credit is given to
the author and the list. For other permission, please contact
[log in to unmask] (Robert Whaples, Book Review Editor, EH.Net.
Telephone: 910-759-4916. Fax: 910-759-6028.)
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