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Laboratory Experiments of Land Assembly Without Eminent Domain

In: Experimental Law and Economics

Author

Listed:
  • Mark DeSantis
  • Matthew McCarter
  • Abel Winn

Abstract

The authors use laboratory experiments to test two self-assessment tax mechanisms for facilitating land assembly. One mechanism is incentive compatible with a complex tax function, while the other uses a flat tax rate to mitigate implementation concerns. Sellers publicly declare a price for their land. Overstating its true value is penalized by using the declared price to assess a property tax; understating its value is penalized by allowing developers to buy the property at the declared price. The authors find that both mechanisms increase the rate of land assembly and gains from trade relative to a control in which sellers’ price declarations have no effect on their taxes. However, these effects are statistically insignificant or transitory. The assembly rates in our self-assessment treatments are markedly higher than those of prior experimental studies in which the buyer faces bargaining frictions, such as costly delay or capital constraints.

Suggested Citation

  • Mark DeSantis & Matthew McCarter & Abel Winn, 2022. "Laboratory Experiments of Land Assembly Without Eminent Domain," Research in Experimental Economics, in: Experimental Law and Economics, volume 21, pages 35-125, Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:rexezz:s0193-230620220000021004
    DOI: 10.1108/S0193-230620220000021004
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