Against Land Value Capture
An otherwise-good video by the Joint Transit Association about A Better Billion criticizes us for not proposing value capture to fund the scheme. I’ve seen other otherwise-good American transit advocates back this, and I’ve seen many a thinktank propose it and similar nonconventional schemes to fund public transit, in lieu of taxes. Taxes are political. Taxes annoy voters. So why not get around them by taxing development behind the scenes? It’s attractive on the surface, but in truth, broad taxes are the only way to fund government and expect it to perform as expected; value capture is so opaque that it is very easily wasted, to the point that 100% of the funds it provides can sometimes be wasted on excess construction costs, as has been the case in Hong Kong. Good transit advocates should reject this scheme and demand that funding be as straightforward as possible, with the understanding that the part about taxes that annoys voters is what ensures the money is spent well.
What is value capture?
Value capture is the name for any of a set of programs aiming to fund infrastructure by taxing the development that it would unlock – in other words, to capture some of the value gained by the private sector. This contrasts with broad-based taxes, which capture value from the entire economy and not just from specific developments or developments in specific areas. The idea is that the infrastructure generates value not just for the broad economy but also specifically in the area it serves, so it’s right to tax that area.
In practice, value capture schemes are most common when there’s perception that raising broad taxes is too difficult politically, or undesirable otherwise. Hong Kong extensively uses value capture to fund MTR expansion, not because its taxes are too high but because it wishes to keep its taxes very low. American cities have begun looking into such schemes in much higher-tax environments, with limited willingness to fund things out of the general budget; the 7 extension in New York was built with bonds tied to tax increment financing (TIF), which promised that the higher property taxes generated by Hudson Yards development would pay the bonds back.
Which projects are funded by value capture?
Naturally, value capture and TIF systems favor projects that have the most real estate value to capture. In New York, this meant the 7 extension but not Second Avenue Subway, which the real estate advisors to Bloomberg denigrated on the grounds that the Upper East Side was already developed.
This already creates biases, in favor of not just wealthier areas (the Upper East Side is after all rather rich) but also ones with high redevelopment potential, for example because they are underbuilt. This, in turn, favors worse projects, because they serve lower preexisting density.
The dominant benefit of public transportation in benefit-cost analyses, which are not undertaken in the United States, is the benefit to passengers, representing social surplus. For an example that was just sent to me, a study from last month analyzing a further Nuremberg U-Bahn extension classifies the total benefits of the chosen alternative on p. 30 as 5.73 million €/year in passenger benefits, plus about 3 million €/year in various externalities of which the biggest are reduced accident costs and reduced traffic congestion. Similarly, Börjesson et al’s ex post analysis of the T-bana, finding a benefit-cost ratio of 6, has consumer surplus dominating the benefits of the system. Land use changes are helpful, but the main purpose of a subway is to be ridden rather than to stimulate real estate development. A Better Billion looks at the possibilities of development unlocked by new lines, but not for nothing, we also look at existing bus ridership and subway capacity problems in analyzing which projects to recommend; development-oriented transit can work but only as a secondary option, and value capture overemphasizes it in preference to other needs.
Value capture and costs
Hong Kong is famous in the core English-speaking world for linking development with MTR construction. It’s also a very good example of what not to do. I complained mightily about value capture in 2017, but if anything I pulled punches, because while I did talk about Hong Kong’s use of MTR value capture as a corrupt slush fund, I didn’t know enough to connect this with Hong Kong’s other problems:
- Very high infrastructure construction costs. They are so high that value capture only covers about half the project costs, and the other half, funded directly by the government, is still more per kilometer than the world average cost. Hong Kong, moreover, has been ground zero for the adoption of the consultant-centric globalized system of procurement – British consultants who were there in the 1980s and 90s workshopped the system and then brought it home, leading to a cost explosion that rendered first London, then Australian and Canadian cities, incapable of building urban rail. In this sense, value capture is an attempt to paper over the inability to build by using a tool perfected in the city that has extreme construction costs and can only build anything because, with car ownership suppressed by taxes, it has atypically high demand.
- Overcrowding, likely the worst in the developed world. The data out of Hong Kong isn’t quite comparable to the most overcrowded cities in the democratic world (Paris averages 31 m^2/capita). Hong Kong reports median rather than mean housing size: its median is 16 m^2, and while it has a lot of inequality, it doesn’t produce nearly a factor of 2 of a mean-median spread. Hong Kong has atypically high inequality, but even that only produces a mean-to-median income ratio of 0.67, and housing surface area is distributed more equally than income. So it’s almost certain Hong Kong is the first world’s overcrowding capital, all because the state doesn’t develop enough land or housing (net annual housing growth is 3.8 dwellings/1,000 people, low for East Asia) in order to create more profits for the MTR to fund ever growing construction costs.
The way forward
Value capture and other nonconventional funding strategies should be categorically rejected. They lead to poor project selection, high construction costs through opacity, and, in the most extreme cases, other governance problems including Hong Kong’s legendarily bad overcrowding. The only legitimate way to fund public transportation and other infrastructure project is through broad-based taxes, either directly as in some dedicated payroll and sales taxes found in both the United States and Europe or, better yet, through the general budget, debated at the highest responsible level of government (municipal, provincial, or national), itself funded largely by broad taxes.
