Voting on tax issues in Montana (1986-1994)

Montana citizens have used the initiative process to bring six taxation issues to the voters in the last nine years. Only two of these (1-105 and HB671) were confirmed by the electorate, all but one commanded substantial support. This study has focused on property taxes as potentially a root cause o...

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Main Author: Zhu, Jiaping
Language:en
Published: 1995
Online Access:http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1995/zhu/ZhuJ1995.pdf
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spelling ndltd-MONTSTATE-http---etd.lib.montana.edu-etd-1995-zhu-ZhuJ1995.pdf2012-07-03T13:19:55Z Voting on tax issues in Montana (1986-1994) Zhu, Jiaping Montana citizens have used the initiative process to bring six taxation issues to the voters in the last nine years. Only two of these (1-105 and HB671) were confirmed by the electorate, all but one commanded substantial support. This study has focused on property taxes as potentially a root cause of voter dissatisfaction, even if it may sometimes be expressed as disapproval for other taxes, fees or spending. The dominant relationship found here is between voting and reappraisals of residential property. Voters in counties where property values rose more quickly were significantly more likely to support all but one of the citizen initiatives, in comparison with voters in counties with lower rates of property appreciation. In sharp contrast and somewhat unexpectedly, there is relatively little evidence that high property tax rates (mill levies) or rapidly increasing mill rates are significantly related to voting on tax issues. One explanation for these findings is that reappraisals are largely outside the control of both citizens and local officials, in contrast to mill levies. Thus, rapid property appreciation results in tax increases which have not been approved through the normal workings of the political process, resulting in citizen frustration and anger. 1995-05-15 Thesis Montana State University en http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1995/zhu/ZhuJ1995.pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Montana citizens have used the initiative process to bring six taxation issues to the voters in the last nine years. Only two of these (1-105 and HB671) were confirmed by the electorate, all but one commanded substantial support. This study has focused on property taxes as potentially a root cause of voter dissatisfaction, even if it may sometimes be expressed as disapproval for other taxes, fees or spending. The dominant relationship found here is between voting and reappraisals of residential property. Voters in counties where property values rose more quickly were significantly more likely to support all but one of the citizen initiatives, in comparison with voters in counties with lower rates of property appreciation. In sharp contrast and somewhat unexpectedly, there is relatively little evidence that high property tax rates (mill levies) or rapidly increasing mill rates are significantly related to voting on tax issues. One explanation for these findings is that reappraisals are largely outside the control of both citizens and local officials, in contrast to mill levies. Thus, rapid property appreciation results in tax increases which have not been approved through the normal workings of the political process, resulting in citizen frustration and anger.
author Zhu, Jiaping
spellingShingle Zhu, Jiaping
Voting on tax issues in Montana (1986-1994)
author_facet Zhu, Jiaping
author_sort Zhu, Jiaping
title Voting on tax issues in Montana (1986-1994)
title_short Voting on tax issues in Montana (1986-1994)
title_full Voting on tax issues in Montana (1986-1994)
title_fullStr Voting on tax issues in Montana (1986-1994)
title_full_unstemmed Voting on tax issues in Montana (1986-1994)
title_sort voting on tax issues in montana (1986-1994)
publishDate 1995
url http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1995/zhu/ZhuJ1995.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT zhujiaping votingontaxissuesinmontana19861994
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