16. Financing infrastructure for the urban poor
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Transcript of 16. Financing infrastructure for the urban poor
Urban infrastructure in Sub-Saharan Africa
Harnessing land values, housing and transport
Matt Glasser
July 2015
Financing Infrastructure for the urban poor
Thinking about poverty and wealth
1. Low vs. high income demographics
• And many points in between
• And corporate entities
2. Few assets with little value vs. many assets with high value
• Ditto
3. Spending and economic activity
• Ditto
(Re) distribution?
• Income redistribution income taxes (national tool usually)
• Asset redistribution land-based financing? (LG tool)
• Social burden of land
• Henry George (1879): the location value of land is created by society, so tax/rent on land is the most logical source of public revenue
What is infrastructure?
• Services?
• Serviced sites?
• Complete housing units?
• Transit systems?
-----------
• Residential?
• Commercial?
Urban infrastructure needs
Three categories: 1. existing service delivery gaps (mostly poor?) 2. population and economic growth (some poor) 3. replace and rehabilitate aging infrastructure (some poor)
What do we mean by financing? 1. Sources of revenue
• Taxes
• Grants
• Fees and charges
2. Ways of leveraging revenue • Borrowing
• PPPs
3. Ways of providing subsidies • Supply side
• Demand side
• Incentives and distortions
It matters how infrastructure is financed
Financing tools shift financing burden
• local taxes:
• cost borne by local taxpayers
• national grants:
• cost borne by national taxpayers
• land-based financing, cost is borne by:
• Those who use / benefit from infrastructure, or
• Those who create the need.
Questions for discussion
1. Should the rich help pay for infrastructure for the poor?
1. How can this be done with fairness (equity) and efficiency (avoid perverse incentives)?
1. Role of national and local governments?
Infrastructure costs
• cost of planned investments includes: • construction costs
• design and supervision costs (engineering consultants),
• compliance costs (e.g. EIS and mitigation)
• financing costs (transaction and debt service)
Closing the gap
• Lower costs? • The more you do, the more it costs (cobblestone vs.
paved roads, houses vs. sites, public goods vs. private goods)
• Limit waste and improve efficiency
• Delay capital expenditure? • Add infrastructure in smaller steps
• Increase revenues? • Fees and charges for water, electric • Wealth, income, and economic activity taxes for
public goods (most roads, health, education) • Housing? • Keep subsidies separate from charges
• Accelerate revenues? • Development charges • Impact fees
Local Government Revenue
1. Transfers from national government
2. Own source revenues
• taxes
• fees and charges
• capital revenues
With a good legal framework, cities can raise all the revenue they need. They dominate in terms of:
• wealth (property taxes)
• transactions (sales tax, VAT, etc.)
• income (personal and corporate income tax)
General Taxes v. User Charges
• Property taxes
• Sales taxes
• Income taxes
• Business taxes
• Tariffs, service charges, tolls, etc.
• Cover cost of production
• Targeted Subsidies
No good excuse for sloppy billing and collection!
Questions for discussion
1. Should the rich help pay for infrastructure for the poor?
• Consequences of inequality
2. How can this be done with fairness (equity) and efficiency (avoid perverse incentives)?
• Minimize cost
• Capital contributions as early as possible
• Capital subsidies transparent and up front
• Portable subsidies
3. Role of national and local governments?
• Regulatory role
• Fiscal (tax and spend role)
• Delivery role (housing is an issue)
Land-based financing - General • Property taxes are the archetype
• As value goes up, tax base increases, even if tax rate is steady.
• Value reflects location and amenities: • if a highway intersection or metro line is built,
value increases • If a rural property becomes part of the city,
value increases
• Keys to success: • Keep tax rolls up to date, so all properties are
included • Regular re-valuation to capture changes in
value
Land-based financing - TIF
• Tax increment financing • Can be used with property tax
(and other local taxes which grow with urbanization)
• Base year collections established
• Increment over base year can pay for infrastructure
Development charges
Capital cost recovery fees
• pro rata share of capital costs city has incurred to provide services,
• e.g. water / sanitary sewage treatment plants, mains, etc.
• imposed when user connects to networks
Impact fees
• compensate for off-site impacts, e.g.
• new shopping mall attracts traffic, clogging streets off-site.
• paving increases drainage downstream. Ditches, culverts, are needed.
• impacts are cumulative.
• Aggregate impacts have real financial and economic consequences.
Other land-based financing
• Betterment levies
• A special tax on a parcel benefitted by infrastructure
• Meant to captures appreciation in value
• Compare to property taxes with regular valuations
• One time charge, may be paid over time
• Special improvement / downtown development districts
• Not limited to infrastructure
• Usually at least majority of property owners consent
• Can have one time or recurrent charges
• Special / Quasi municipal districts
• A separate juridical entity
• Can have taxing powers like municipality
• Can be inside or outside municipal boundaries
• Can be special purpose or general
Pros and cons of leveraging
Advantages:
• More infrastructure more quickly
• Future users contribute
• Supports decentralization and local priorities
Disadvantages:
• Limits flexibility of future councils
• Borrowing can make a bad financial situation worse
• Investments cost even more, so if used unwisely, future generations are left with unnecessary burden