Brendan Burgess
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A very good point.Brendan you are assuming that a landowner applies to have land rezoned.
Surely this will both reduce supply and raise costs.
In answer to your question about what tax land owners currently pay, they currently pay capital gains tax.
The National Asset Management Agency Act introduced a “windfall gains tax” on certain Capital Gains. This tax is charged at a rate of 80% in respect of a disposal of development land where both a rezoning and a disposal took place in the period beginning on 30 October 2009 and ending 31 December 2014.
Substitute 'rezoning' for 'planning' and you have a point. Except, in theory rezoning is not something you apply for - it's something that's done to your land by strategic planners, unswayed by lobbying.Imagine you owned zoned land, you now have a stong incentive to get planning quickly before this legislation is passed.
But they do. Not just agricultural land but also small parcels of land in urban areas currently derelict or formerly the location of houses or other buildings long since collapsed or otherwise destroyed. Much of these leap in value once rezoned (or PP applied for). I've seen cases locally where a local landowner had very small parcels of land, carved off their own properties, got PP for a decent build, and then sold on. Its a particularly good fundraiser for religious institutions with land to spare.Brendan you are assuming that a landowner applies to have land rezoned. In reality this is a local authority decision - although obviously land owners lobby they have no power over rezoning decisions.
In answer to your question about what tax land owners currently pay, they currently pay capital gains tax.
The "use it or lose it" stipulation might be more useful, if actually properly enforced. But look around any urban area even in Dublin: the country is littered with invisible dereliction, both land and unused properties.'In the short term, the system will cover all new residential zoning or mixed-use zoning that includes residential development'
Ok so it will only apply to newly zoned in the short term.
Unless they plan a lot of new zoning, I think it would be better to increase the cost/incentives of existing zoned landowners.
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