Skip to main content
Article
Do local governments use business tax incentives to compensate for high business property taxes?
Regional Science and Urban Economics (2020)
  • Joshua Drucker
  • Richard G Funderburg, University of Illinois at Springfield
  • David Merriman, University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Rachel Weber, University of Illinois at Chicago
Abstract
Why do municipalities set business property taxes higher than the costs of business services when, in competitive markets, this would result in the inefficient provision of public goods? Statutory tax rates may be set artificially high to allow selective reductions for targeted firms through incentives. We examine the nearly 2500 tax codes—sub-municipal geographic areas—that host business locations in 134 municipalities in Cook County, Illinois. We explain spatial variation in tax incentives as a function of the relative competitiveness of tax codes. Our findings suggest that municipalities apply property tax abatements to offset their own relatively uncompetitive tax rates but use Tax Increment Financing (TIF) incentives to engage in vertical competition in order to capture revenue from overlapping governments.
Keywords
  • business incentives,
  • business property tax,
  • tax increment financing,
  • spatial competition,
  • Illinois
Publication Date
March, 2020
DOI
10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2019.103498
Citation Information
Joshua Drucker, Richard G Funderburg, David Merriman and Rachel Weber. "Do local governments use business tax incentives to compensate for high business property taxes?" Regional Science and Urban Economics Vol. 81 (2020)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jdrucker/43/