WASHINGTON - City-tax revenues dropped this year by the most in 25 years, hit hard by falling home prices that could crimp local budgets for years to come.
Property-tax revenue in U.S. cities fell 1.8 percent in fiscal year 2010, according to a report released Wednesday by the National League of Cities. It's the first drop in the 25 years that the survey has been conducted.
Depressed home values are just beginning to affect property-tax receipts and the impact could linger for at least two more years, the report said. The declines are only now being felt because real-estate assessments lag changes in market values.
City governments are already facing tough choices between spending cuts and possible tax increases. Many are laying off workers and cutting services to make up for lost revenue. Strapped city budgets could increase already high unemployment and further restrain economic growth.
"While the recession might have officially ended for the national economy, cities are now in the eye of the storm," said Chris Hoene, a director at the NLC and co-author of the report. "The pain is intensifying."
Overall, tax revenue fell 3.2 percent in 2010, and cities cut spending by 2.3 percent. It's the fourth-straight year that city-tax revenues have declined.
"The full weight of the decline in housing values has yet to hit the budgets of many cities and property-tax revenues will likely decline further in 2011 and 2012," the report said.
One reason cities are suffering is that it's unusual for both sales taxes and property taxes to fall at the same time, said Michael Pagano, a dean at the University of Illinois at Chicago and co-author of the report. Property and sales taxes are the two main sources of cities' revenue.
Sales taxes respond quicker to changes in the economy and usually pick up as a recovery begins, Pagano said, even as declines in home values have a delayed impact on property taxes.
All states, except for Vermont, require their cities to balance their budgets every year. To do that, city officials have cut spending and raised taxes to make up for the declining revenue.
The survey found that 74 percent of cities instituted a hiring freeze this fiscal year, while 54 percent reduced or froze salaries and 35 percent implemented layoffs. Local governments have cut 120,000 jobs since the recession began.
There are more layoffs to come. Hoene said a separate NLC report earlier this year projected that cities will cut 480,000 jobs this year and next. More jobs will be lost among private companies that do business with cities, he said.
Many cities are also canceling building projects. Sixty-nine percent of cities have delayed or cancelled infrastructure projects this fiscal year, the report found.
by Christopher S. Rugaber Associated Press Oct. 7, 2010 12:00 AM
Falling home prices hammer local government tax revenue
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Real Estate News
Reuters: Business News
National Commercial Real Estate News From CoStar Group
Latest stock market news from Wall Street - CNNMoney.com
Archive
-
▼
2010
(632)
-
▼
October
(98)
- Historic first: Treasury sells debt with negative ...
- Waterfront's plan for 150-foot tower passes hurdle
- Scottsdale council postpones consideration of Blue...
- Fed is joining investigation of foreclosure proced...
- Depositors at closed bank lose $1.8 million
- Unemployed workers caught in credit-report trap
- Steps can help simplify process of foreclosure
- Lien Stripping, Cram-Down, and the Benefits of a C...
- Land preserves add 3,139 acres
- G20 summit must reject competitive devaluations-EU...
- Phoenix-area condo projects to reopen next month
- Rescue of Freddie and Fannie may hit $259 billion
- Freeport third-quarter profit up 27%
- H&R Block suit may end refund loans
- U.S. economic growth uneven, Fed survey says
- Phoenix area sales rise for office, industrial bui...
- Crystal Cathedral megachurch files for bankruptcy ...
- BofA Ends Foreclosure Freeze - WSB News on wsbradi...
- Banks probed in home seizures
- The Legitimacy of Securitization: Behind the Headl...
- Invest in emerging markets infrastructure - Oct. 1...
- Vernon Hill is the best damn banker alive (Just as...
- 10 tips for real estate success in 2011 | Inman News
- Pimco, New York Fed Said to Seek BofA Loan Repurch...
- PREVIEW: G20 finance ministers meet amid currency ...
- The Subprime Debacle: Act 2 - Thoughts From The Fr...
- Plan now for potential tax changes
- Arizona home buyers face complicated hunt
- Gilbert seeks appraisal after land deal panned
- Arizona stimulus money pooled
- Arizona home sales propped up by investors
- Northeast Valley home prices continue steady decline
- Goddard: Borrowers need a 'bill of rights'
- Kierland Commons celebrates 10 years
- As more live together, housing slump lingers
- Scottsdale, Phoenix acquire trust land for preserves
- Japan questions South Korea G20 leadership over FX...
- Foreclosure mess clouds report
- Arizona showing commitment in foreclosure investig...
- Commercial real estate in the Valley is stagnant
- USA Basketball cancels move to Glendale
- Lawyer: No formal training for 'foreclosure experts'
- Underwater, Walking Away
- Mozilo settles Countrywide fraud case at $67.5 mil...
- Bernanke sees case for more Federal Reserve easing...
- I want to sell my house
- The Politics of Foreclosure - CNBC
- Chinese Investors Scooping Up US Real Estate
- The Fastest-Growing Cities In The U.S. - Forbes.com
- Market Recap - Week Ending October 08, 2010
- 3 Factors keeping prices from rising
- Foreclosure Freeze Fallout
- High-end homebuilder watches his pennies
- Desert Sky Mall planning mercado
- Global leaders fail to settle currency dispute
- Pimco's Gross Says Capitalism Is Under `Relative S...
- video draft
- Your ultimate home-maintenance to-do list
- Cave Creek approves plan for shopping center near ...
- Phoenix apartments near Desert Ridge Marketplace s...
- Council delays Blue Sky vote
- Developers propose arena, retail for site
- Project density raises concern
- Scottsdale condos defying real-estate market
- Bank of America stops sales of foreclosed homes
- Falling home prices hammer local government tax re...
- August proved hard month for home resales
- Wells Fargo, Arizona homeowners settle mortgage-lo...
- Pending Home Sales Rise 4.3% in August - FOXBusine...
- Q&A: What credit-card suit means
- Feds sue MasterCard, Visa, American Express
- The "New Normal" Economy
- Developers, retailers focusing on infill areas
- Investors grow less apt to risk
- Maricopa County Probate Court - Protecting your mo...
- Palladium Explodes to the Upside | zero hedge
- Foreclosure Mistakes May Cloud Home Ownership Titl...
- Shadow Inventory, an Avalanche That's Coming Soon?...
- July uptick in home prices won't last, experts say...
- Moody's considers GMAC servicer rating downgrade «...
- Congress OKs higher mortgage loan limit extension ...
- Bank-Owned Housing: Fannie Mae Wants You to Buy - ...
- Bank of America delays foreclosures in 23 states
- Paradise Valley falls on priciest ZIP codes list
- Ireland to spend billions to help struggling banks
- AIG reaches deal to repay government
- Experts disagree on gold-price rally
- Fed officials clash over new strategies to bolster...
- JPMorgan stalls foreclosures
- Hedge fund buys TOUSA's Arizona properties for $42...
- Fulton Homes' reorganization plans duel
- New FDIC rules require banks to share some risk
- Maricopa County rental-property owners lose tax br...
- Maricopa County Probate Court - Life savings, free...
- Obama's effort to ease credit meets resistance
- Obama's effort to ease credit meets resistance
- New Homes For Sale Phoenix Scottsdale Real Estate ...
- Canadians become top out-of-state homebuyers in Ar...
-
▼
October
(98)