Estimating the Holdout Problem in Land Assembly
In: FRB Atlanta Working Paper No. 2013-19
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In: FRB Atlanta Working Paper No. 2013-19
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Working paper
In: FRB Atlanta Working Paper No. 2009-19a
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In: Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Working Paper No. 2009-19
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Working paper
In: International journal on world peace, Band 23, Heft 1, S. 41-74
ISSN: 0742-3640
In: Labour history: a journal of labour and social history, Heft 87, S. 271
ISSN: 1839-3039
In: Loisir & société: Society and leisure, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 341-361
ISSN: 1705-0154
In: Loisir & société: Society and leisure, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 83-106
ISSN: 1705-0154
We examine voter support in 2008 for Constitutional Amendment 1 in Florida, which modifies a Proposition 13–like property assessment growth cap by allowing homeowners to port their exempted value to a new home. Despite claims by amendment proponents that it would lower property taxes, we do not find that support was higher in precincts with a greater share of eligible property owners. Nor was support explained by the average size of existing exemptions. Instead, we find that precincts with more mobile households supported Amendment 1. In addition, we find evidence that voters understood how changing assessment methodology could affect their tax share. Under a conventional assessment cap, a homeowner who moves resets the assessed value to the market price, lowering the share of assessed value for remaining homeowners. Remarkably, we find that support for Amendment 1 falls as mobility in other parts of the city increases. This finding suggests that Amendment 1 was viewed as a way for high-mobility voters to shift the tax burden back to low-mobility homeowners. In addition, support is higher when a city has a high number of out-of-state immigrants, who have no tax exemption to port into the city, but support is lower when the city has high rates of in-state immigration. These findings suggest that voters are fairly tax savvy and as concerned with shifting the tax burden as they are with curbing absolute expenditures.
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In: FRB Atlanta Working Paper No. 2022-11
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In: FRB of Cleveland Working Paper No. 14-31
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Experiences reveal that the monitoring costs of the foreclosure crisis may be nontrivial, and smaller governments may have more success at addressing potential negative externalities. One highly localized form of government is a homeowners association (HOA). HOAs could be well-suited for triaging foreclosures, as they may detect delinquencies and looming defaults through direct observation or missed dues. On the other hand, the reliance on dues may leave HOAs particularly vulnerable to members' foreclosure. We examine how property prices respond to homeowner distress and foreclosure within HOA communities in Florida. We combine data sets of HOAs, sales and aggregate loan delinquency, and foreclosures from 2000 through 2008. We find properties in HOAs are relatively less affected by more distressed neighbor homes compared with non-HOA properties, but only when considering less severe delinquency rates. We also find that negative price effects from higher delinquency exposure rates are ameliorated for properties in larger and newer HOAs.
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In: FRB Atlanta Working Paper No. 2019-20
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In: Peace and conflict studies
ISSN: 1082-7307
External economic assistance from the International Fund for Ireland and the European Union Special Support Program for Peace and Reconciliation assisted in setting the context of the Northern Ireland peace agenda, and holds out the promise of a new civic culture. This article explores people's perceptions of economic assistance of conflict amelioration in Northern Ireland. Some of the findings, in respect of inter-community differences in perceptions of the utility of external economic assistance in building the peace dividend, are discussed in the paper.