Financing Municipal Services for Sustainable Development Getting the Prices Right

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Financing Municipal Services for Sustainable Development Getting the Prices Right Presentation to the Urban Development Conference University of Alberta April 10, 2014 Enid Slack Institute on Municipal Finance and Governance Munk School of Global Affairs University of Toronto

Introduction Major cities around the world are experiencing rapid population growth Pressure to provide services Pressure to preserve farmland, open spaces, natural resources Smart growth, sustainability recognize the need to respond to growth pressures and pay for services on the one hand and protect the environment on the other 2

Theme of Presentation If cities want to promote sustainable development, they need to think about how they pay for services Need to price services correctly and not subsidize inefficient development The city is a distorted price system (Wilbur Thompson, Psychology Today, 1968) 3

Outline of Presentation Municipal expenditures and revenues Alberta municipalities Role of municipal finance in sustainable development Focus on specific revenue tools and impact on sustainable development: User fees Road pricing Parking levies Property taxes Development levies 4

Distribution of Municipal Expenditures, Alberta 2012 Planning and Development, 6.9% Other, 9.6% General Government, 13.9% Recreation and culture, 12.4% Police, 9.5% Fire, 6.4% Public health and welfare, 2.0% Waste management, 4.1% Water and wastewater, 9.1% Transit, 8.0% Roads, 18.2% 5

Distribution of Municipal Revenues, Alberta, 2012 Contributed and donated assets 5.5% Other revenues 10.4% Return on investment 1.8% Development levies 1.7% Property and business taxes 40.2% Provincial transfers 16.0% Federal transfers 2.2% User fees 21.6% Other taxes 0.7% 6

Role of Municipal Finance Municipal financial tools (e.g. property taxes, user fees, development levies) are generally not neutral with respect to development patterns in some cases, they work together with planning tools to achieve sustainable development objectives in other cases, they do the opposite 7

Getting the Prices Right Incorrect pricing of urban services has been at the root of a number of urban problems... including sprawl Marginal cost pricing -- higher fees are charged to those far away from existing services; if use average cost, subsidizing sprawl Pricing services correctly results in efficient use of services as well as more efficient land use 8

Pricing Services Correctly Examples: User fees Road pricing Parking levies Property taxes Development levies 9

User Fees Signals what people are willing to pay for Need to be able to identify the beneficiaries and exclude those who don t pay Appropriate for water, sewage, garbage collection, highway improvement (tolls), public transit 10

User Fees Getting the prices right means charging user fees that reflect the marginal cost -- the additional cost imposed by the user Allows governments and citizens to make efficient decisions about how much to provide and how much to consume 11

User Fees When users do not pay the marginal cost: They overuse the system (so we think we need more roads or other infrastructure) Encourages inefficient uses of land 12

User Fees BUT user fees are not used as much as they could be and are poorly designed Not popular with citizens, politicians, administrators Difficult to calculate marginal cost; difficult to exclude those who don t pay New technology can help (e.g. roads and parking) 13

Road Pricing Highway users do not look at external costs (congestion and pollution); therefore over-use highways relative to what is economically efficient Under-pricing of auto congestion externality results in excessive dispersion inefficiently low residential densities and sprawl 14

Road Pricing Road toll incentive to make efficient decisions with respect to modal choice, trip frequency, trip timing, route choice (but not driving care!) Examples London, Singapore, Toronto Need alternatives e.g. bus transit in London Technology makes it easier Maybe toll new roads or HOT lanes 15

Parking Levies Free parking provides wrong incentives to use cars and park for the day in central city Cruising for spaces wastes time, fuel, creates traffic congestion, accidents, pollution One study shows cars cruising for free parking contribute over 8% to total traffic Parking fees can vary with duration and location of parking, time of day 16

Major source of municipal revenue in Alberta and across Canada Levied on residential, commercial and industrial properties Tax levied on market value of property (land and buildings) Property Taxes 17

Property Taxes Some say the property tax reduces density any investment that increases property value will increase the tax Others say it increases density because the tax is shifted onto consumers and leads to a reduction in the size of homes Property tax policy can reduce density: E.g. Tax often favours single-family homes over apartments 18

Covers growth-related capital cost associated with new development Off-site infrastructure (e.g. highways, sewer lines, etc.) Growth pays for itself Development Levies 19

Development Levies Developers will develop at the efficient time and place if they face the full social cost of their development If levy differentiated by location, density, type of development then efficient development A uniform charge will subsidize inefficient land uses 20

Final Comments Need to create the right incentives for sustainable development Pricing services correctly (e.g. through user fees, property taxes, development levies) creates the right incentives for efficient use of resources and efficient land use 21