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Taxing the Rich: Do Housing Prices Fall When Empty Second Homes Are Taxed? - Bloomberg
Coal Harbour in Vancouver, Canada, the first North American city to implement a tax on empty homes. 

Coal Harbour in Vancouver, Canada, the first North American city to implement a tax on empty homes. 

Photographer: Jennifer Gauthier/Bloomberg
The Big Take

Taxing Rich Peoples' Empty Homes Isn't Helping the Housing Crisis

Economists say levies on vacant homes are largely political theatre, and policymakers need to tackle other factors such as supply-demand imbalance.

As policymakers struggle to control an affordable housing crunch, officials in some of the world’s biggest cities have their sights set on a tactic: taxing the empty homes of the rich.

Los Angeles is planning to put a vacant homes tax on the ballot for 2022, in the face of a mounting homelessness crisis. Hong Kong officials are considering taxing condo developers to deter them from hoarding new units. Ireland is exploring its options. Barcelona has gone as far as threatening to seize landlords’ empty apartments — paying half of market value — and convert the units into affordable rentals. Paris tripled its tax on second homes in 2017.