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Response to “Impact Fees and Housing Affordability” by Vicki Been
William A. Fischel
Dartmouth College

 

Professor Vicki Been has provided an excellent survey of what we know about impact fees. Her economic analysis is sound and well balanced, and she has surveyed the major works in this area with insight and institutional nuance. Her call for empirical work that takes into account the benefits, as well as costs, of exactions is especially important to heed. To that end, the focus of this comment is why thinking of exactions as fees for service rather than as taxes is better. Been’s analysis presents both views about the nature of exactions, but she leans toward viewing exactions and impact fees as prices. I want to second that inclination and explain why it matters.

A tax is an obligation imposed by the government on owners of assets and income streams within its jurisdiction. Most taxes are uniform in their effect in this minimum sense: they treat people and assets that are economically identical the same. In this respect alone, it could be argued that land use exactions are different from taxes in that similar activities can easily be subjected to different exactions. Exactions are sometimes negotiated with government officials, and, for what are often legitimate reasons, different developers may end up paying different exactions for otherwise similar projects.


 

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