Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Neil Flanagan's avatar

As a non-economist I had to read it a few times to get the gist of what you were saying and I think the introduction of "air rights" muddies up what most people understand to be a "betterment tax". But that is just my opinion.

I will make a few other points.

When I worked for a LG who had a few Priority Development Areas within its boundaries it always struck me how neatly these PDA aligned to property ownership of what you coyly described as "connected" landowners, even if this did result in very odd shaped PDA boundaries.

But again, as a humble town planner I still don't know what is the ACCOUNTING benefit of having all these significant land parcels that obviously have some increased property valuation, but are left idle for 10 - 15 years before being fully developed. It boost their asset bottom line which in turns makes the company look very prosperous, but without actually being forced to do anything to realise this potential value. MAYBE something could be done around the ACCOUNTING rules to force this land to housing much quicker (e.g. only a small proportion of land that an be realistically developed in 3-5 years can be placed on the books at the inflated potential value and the rest remains on their books at the unimproved land value based on the existing zoning and not the potential zoning).

I have no disagreement with your central thesis that some financial (taxation) penalty could / should be applied to land that has been up-zoned, but not developed over some time. But putting on my planning hat, we regularly up-zoned land with the full knowledge that it won't be developed in the immediate short term (e.g. apartment building around nominated major centres), but will slowly and hopefully developed over the longer time. I gather you are just taking a small part of the profit away for this time lag, but I can't see it forcing this future supply coming to market any faster.

I have often toyed with the idea that we planners upzone TOO much land to allow for freedom of market choices. Again I have no problems with having choices around the city, but as a Council we should have a series of rolling plans that say - this area will be up-zoned for the next 3 - 5 years and after that, what hasn't been been developed reverts back to the original zoning (including all DA that have been approved, but not yet commenced in this time) and we move onto the next nominated area. Your proposal could fit into this model nicely, by adding a extra layer of financial incentive. These nominated areas will be mostly based on those areas that are the cheapest for Council to develop / redevelop in terms of infrastructure spend.

Expand full comment
Ian Bromley's avatar

Interesting article but - the Green Belt is around Toronto, not Ontario. Would be like saying the Green Belt around Victoria when you mean Melbourne.

Expand full comment
7 more comments...

No posts