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MINNESOTA PROPERTY TAXES

BY THE NUMBERS
2009 EDITION
Jeff Van Wychen
Minnesota 2020 Fellow
April 2009
Table of Contents___
Executive Summary 1

Introduction-The Last Seven Years 5

Property Tax Data: 2002 to 2009 12

Conclusion: A Call for Accountability 19

Appendix A 20

Appendix B 23

References 26
Executive Summary___________________
Since 2002, Minnesota property taxes, in general, and homeowner property taxes, in particular, have increased
rapidly. The cause of the statewide growth in property taxes is not growth in local government budgets.
These property tax hikes are the result of state policies that require more public costs to be borne by property
taxpayers and a larger share of total property taxes to be borne by homeowners.

Of the 854 cities in Minnesota, 677 (79.3 percent) experienced an increase in per capita property taxes from
2002 to 2009, while
560 (65.6 percent)
experienced an increase
of ten percent or more.

The average homestead*


property tax among
Minnesota cities has
increased even more
rapidly than per capita
taxes. Of Minnesota’s
854 cities, 746 (87.4
percent) saw an increase
in the average homestead
property tax from 2002
to 2009, while 530 (62.1
percent) experienced an
increase of 20 percent or
more.

It is important to adjust for the impact of inflation when assessing changes in state and local government
revenue over time so as to distinguish
between real spending growth versus
growth caused by erosion in the
purchasing power of the dollar. In this
report, all changes in tax and revenue
amounts over time are adjusted
for inflation in the cost of state and
local government purchases, unless
otherwise noted.

Appendices A and B show growth


from 2002 to 2009 in per capita
property taxes and average
homestead property taxes for all
Minnesota cities with a population
over 5,000.

___________________________________________________________________
*A “homestead” refers to an owner-occupied housing unit.

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 1


On a statewide basis, the rapid growth in property taxes in Minnesota since 2002 cannot be attributed to
growth in local government budgets. While the average Minnesota homestead property tax has increased by
over 25 percent from 2002 to 2008, per capita county, city and township and per pupil school district revenue
have all fallen.

State Aid Cuts Force Property


Taxes Up

If growth in local government


budgets does not explain the
growth in property taxes,
what does? State policies
have caused property taxes,
generally, and homestead
property taxes, specifically, to
increase rapidly since 2002.

The primary cause of statewide


property tax growth is
reductions in state aid to local
governments. From 2002
to 2008, state aid to local
governments declined by $2.4 billion in 2008 dollars. In response to these aid reductions, local governments
increased property taxes and cut spending, as illustrated below.

On a statewide basis, local governments recovered slightly less than half of the $2.4 billion state aid reduction
through property tax increases. The rest of the aid cut was made up for through cuts in funding for schools,
roads, parks, public safety, and other public services. One thing is certain: the claim that statewide property
tax growth in Minnesota since 2002 is the result of increased local government spending is demonstrably false.
The state has dealt with its revenue
Growth in local spending could not have caused property tax increases during a period when local government
budgets were shrinking. In fact, local governments have been tightening their belts much more than state
problem by cutting dollars to local gov’ts
government. gov ts
Percent Change in Real Per Capita/Per Pupil State and Local During the same period
Government Revenue: FY 2003 to 2009 (CY 2002 to 2008) that state aid to local
State revenues exclude federal recovery dollars governments fell by $2.4
6% billion, the population that
3.2%
Y 02-08)

4% local governments must


2%
provide service to increased
change from FY 03-09 (CY

0%
-2% by approximately five percent
-4% (although statewide school
-6%% -3.9%
3 9% enrollment declined by one
-8%
-8.0%
percent). In addition, over
-10%
-12%
this six year span, new testing
-10.7%
10.7%
requirements and higher
Percent c

-14%
-16% -13.7% standards were foisted on to
Total State Retained State Total School Total City Revenue Total County
Government Government District Revenue ((per capita)) Revenue* ((per
school districts and additional
Revenue (per Revenue** (per (per pupil) capita) state costs were shifted on to
capita) capita)
**Retained state government revenue is equal to total state government revenue minus transfers to
*County revenue estimates incorporate an
approximate adjustment for the partial state counties.
local governments. Retained state revenue represents the dollars that the state keeps for state takeover of court administration costs.
purposes, as opposed to sharing with local governments.

2 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


The basic pattern observed for all local governments is also apparent when we examine the three major levels
of local government—counties, cities, and school districts—individually. For all three levels of government,
cuts in state aid have caused both reduced funding for local services and higher property taxes.

Homeowners Shoulder Higher Tax Burden

However, state aid cuts do not explain why homestead property taxes have risen more rapidly than the average
for all other types of property. The more rapid rate of growth in homestead property taxes since 2002 is
largely attributable to repercussions of the state’s 2001 tax act. Specifically:

•Changes in the rate at which various classes of property were assessed contributed to a shift of local
taxes on to homesteads. While an initial increase in homestead property taxes in 2002 was prevented
through the elimination of the general education property taxes, subsequent shifts in 2003 and 2004 were
allowed to occur.

•The new “market value homestead credit” was structured in such a way that the amount of the credit
would shrink as the
taxable value of
homesteads increased.
As homestead taxable
value increased, the
amount of the credit
fell and net homestead
property taxes grew.

•In exchange for a


sizeable reduction in
local property taxes, the
2001 tax act imposed
a new state property
tax on businesses (and
seasonal recreational
properties). This state
property tax was insulated from the state aid cuts that were pushing local property taxes upward. The fact
that a portion of business property taxes were protected from the impact of state aid cuts is among the
reasons that business property taxes have grown less rapidly than homestead property taxes since 2002.

•The phase-out of the limited market value program (i.e., a program that limits the rate of taxable value
growth for homesteads and some other classes of property) contributed to homestead property tax
increases in 2003 and for at least the next two years.

Further compounding the growth in homestead property taxes are cuts in state funding for education, which
have stimulated growth in “referendum market value levies” as school districts seek to replace declining state
aid dollars. Referendum market value levies fall more heavily on homestead properties than do ordinary
levies, thereby accelerating the rate of growth in homestead property taxes.

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 3


Fair, Progressive Tax Policy Needed

State policymakers need to come clean about the true cause of rising property taxes in Minnesota. Since 2002,
the rapid growth in property taxes, in general, and homestead property taxes, in particular, is primarily the
result of state policies, not local spending decisions. True reform to the property tax and state aid systems will
not come about until policymakers acknowledge—or citizens compel them to acknowledge—the real causes of
property tax increases.

Minnesota 2020 is calling on state leaders to stop large state aid cuts that result in additional increases to local
property taxes and to fix state policies that shift a greater share of property taxes on to homeowners over time.

At the same time, state leaders must ensure that Minnesota’s tax system is fair and progressive by ensuring
that a disproportionate share of the cost of public services and infrastructure is not borne by families with
the least ability to pay. A fair tax system is needed in Minnesota to ensure a balanced budget, healthy
communities, and a thriving statewide economy.

4 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


Introduction - The Last Seven Years____
Property taxes in Minnesota have increased well above the rate of inflation and population growth over the
last seven years. For the most part, the growth in per capita property taxes since 2002 has not been the result
of growth in local government spending, but of state aid cuts.

Tax payable year 2002 is the baseline year in this analysis because it was a transitional year for Minnesota’s
property tax system. In the preceding year, the legislature enacted a series of changes to Minnesota’s property
tax system; tax payable year 2002 marked the first year these changes were implemented.

To understand what has happened since 2002, it is important to understand the changes implemented in 2002.
The most notable property tax changes enacted in that year were:

1. The elimination of the general education property tax through full state funding of general education.

2. The culmination of over a decade of class rate compression.

3. The creation of a new state property tax on business and seasonal recreational property.

4. The phase-out of the limited market value program.

5. The creation of the new homestead market value credit.

The other major change that has profoundly influenced the level of property taxes since 2002 is a dramatic
reduction in state aid to local governments.

It is important to adjust for the impact of inflation when assessing changes in state and local government
revenue over time so as to distinguish between real spending growth versus growth caused by erosion in the
purchasing power of the dollar. Unless otherwise noted, all amounts in this analysis are adjusted for inflation
in the cost of state and local government purchases.1

Elimination of General Education Property Tax

Perhaps the most prominent of the changes enacted in 2001 and implemented in 2002 was a shift in
responsibility for funding general education away from local property taxes and into the state’s general fund.
In the same year, the state also reduced transit property taxes by assuming funding for transit operations,
although the dollars involved in this takeover were small in comparison to the general education takeover.

Through these swaps, state general fund spending increased while local property taxes fell significantly.
Statewide net property taxes per capita fell by 12.1 percent, while the average residential homestead2 property
tax fell by 16.5 percent. While there were many other factors at work, the principle cause of the decline in
property taxes from 2001 to 2002 was the state takeover of general education funding.

However, the dark side of full state funding of general education soon became apparent. While the legislature
leapt at the opportunity to eliminate the general education property tax, they declined to increase state taxes
by the amount necessary to maintain the state funding commitment at the 2002 level. Since 2002 (school
fiscal year 2003), state aid to school districts have fallen; in response, school property taxes increased. From
tax payable year 2002 (corresponding to school fiscal year 2003) to 2008 (fiscal year 2009), state aid to school

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 5


districts fell by $1,292 per pupil in constant FY 2009 dollars, while school property taxes increased by $761 per
pupil.3

Homeowners were hit particularly hard by the decline in state aid to public schools. As state aid fell, school
districts attempted to gain approval for new referendum levies to replace the decline in state aid. Many of
these referendum levies were spread against what is referred to as “referendum market value.” Unlike other
levies, levies spread against referendum market value afford no preferential tax treatment to homeowners; for
this reason, an increase in referendum levies translates into a larger percentage increase in homestead taxes
than business taxes. Total school referendum market value levies increased by 145 percent from 2002 to 2008
(corresponding to school fiscal years 2003 to 2009).4

Class Rate Compression

Another major feature of the tax changes enacted in 2001 and implemented in 2002 was the climax of more
than a decade of “class rate compression.” A “class rate” refers to the percentage by which the value in a
particular class of property is multiplied in order to determine the amount against which levies are actually
spread. Because business property is subject to higher class rates than homestead property, businesses pay
higher taxes per each dollar of land and building value than do homesteads.

The primary goal of “class rate compression” is to reduce the disparity between the highest business class rate
and the lowest homestead class rate.5 The ratio of the highest business class rate to the lowest homestead
class rate has gone from 5.25 to 1 in 1989 to 2 to 1 in 2002, where it remains today.

A comparison of homestead and business class rates is not an accurate way to gauge the property tax disparity
between homesteads and businesses for four reasons:

1. Unlike most states, Minnesota does not tax personal property (e.g., fixtures, equipment, and
inventories).6 Because personal property comprises a larger percentage of business value than of
homestead value, businesses derive a greater benefit from the personal property exemption than do
homesteads. A simple comparison of homestead and business class rates ignores the relative advantage
that businesses receive as a result of the personal property exemption and thereby overstates business
taxes relative to homestead taxes.

2. A comparison of the highest business class rate to the lowest homestead class rate overstates the
overall business tax burden relative to homesteads because 13.1 percent of business value is assessed at
a rate below the highest rate, while 4.8 percent of homestead value is assessed at a rate above the lowest
rate (based on data for taxes payable in 2009).

3. A comparison of business and homestead class rates overlooks the fact that a significant percentage of
property taxes are spread against referendum market value—an alternative tax base which is not subject
to class rates. For taxes payable in 2009, 12.2 percent of local levies are spread against referendum
market value. By ignoring referendum market value levies,7 a simple comparison of class rates again
overstates business property taxes relative to homestead.

4. Homesteads receive some forms of tax relief that business properties do not. For example, homestead
property taxes are reduced through the homestead market value credit and the homeowners’ property
tax refund, and homestead taxable value is reduced through the limited market value program. A simple
comparison of class rates ignores these additional forms of property tax relief that homesteads receive.

6 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


Even though “class rate compression” was based on a flawed comparison of the level of business and
homestead property taxes, it nonetheless became a central theme of property tax “reform” from 1990 to
2001. The rationale of class rate compression was to discourage local government spending growth by shifting
more of the total property tax burden on to homesteads. Lost on proponents of class rate compression was
the fact that per capita county and city spending levels were essentially flat over the preceding decade8, so to
some extent compression was addressing a problem that did not exist.

Class rate compression results in a shift of property taxes from business properties on to homesteads.
However, in 2002 this shift was “bought off” through the elimination of the general education property tax and
through the homestead market value credit, discussed below. In fact, homesteads enjoyed greater property
tax relief than businesses in 2002 relative to 2001.

However, residual effects of class rate compression that occurred in 2003 were not bought off. In 2003,
homestead property taxes in the metropolitan area increased significantly because of the interaction between
the class rate compression enacted in 2002 and the metropolitan tax base sharing program, commonly
referred to as the fiscal disparity program. Because of a year lag in the tax base data used to make fiscal
disparity calculations, the effects of class rate compression first implemented in 2002 did not affect fiscal
disparity tax calculations until 2003. The shift of taxes on to metropolitan homesteads in 2003 resulting from
this interaction was not bought off, resulting in homestead property tax increases in 2003.9

The property tax changes enacted in 2001 also resulted in reduction to rental (i.e., non-homestead residential
properties and apartments) class rates, some of which did not occur until taxes payable in 2003 and 2004. The
rental class rate reductions occurring in 2003 and 2004 produced a shift in tax burden on to homesteads and
other non-rental properties that was not bought off through increased state aids or credits.

Class rate compression also had a large impact on how state aid cuts that occurred after 2002 would affect
homeowners. After the class rate compression enacted in 2001, homesteads comprised a much larger
percentage of the local tax base. As local governments raised property taxes to replace a portion of the
reduction in state aid, a larger share of the property tax increase fell on homeowners than would have been
the case prior to the class rate compression enacted in 2001.

A New State Property Tax

The elimination of the general education property tax combined with class rate compression would have
produced a huge windfall of business property tax relief in 2002. In order to reduce the magnitude of
business property tax relief and to generate additional revenue for the state general fund, the state imposed
on businesses a new state property tax. The new state tax also applied to seasonal recreational residential
property, which also enjoyed substantial property tax relief in 2002 as the result of an exemption from school
referendum levies.10

In future years, growth in the state property tax was linked to inflation as measured by the implicit price
deflator for state and local government purchases. However, the state levy was not linked to growth in the
state’s economy or population; consequently, the real (i.e., inflation adjusted) per capita state property tax levy
on businesses actually declined from 2002 to 2009.

The state property tax levy also helped to insulate a portion of business property taxes from the growth in local
property taxes that was occurring as a result of the reduction in state aid. While homestead property taxes

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 7


were increasing, approximately 28 percent of statewide business property taxes were declining in real per
capita dollars. The presence of the state property tax levy is one of the reasons why homestead property taxes
have increased much more rapidly than business property taxes since 2002.

Phase-Out of the Limited Market Value Program

The limited market value (LMV) program was implemented, effective for taxes payable in 1994, in an attempt
to protect owners of homestead, agricultural, and cabin property from tax increases resulting from rapid
growth in value.11 Under the LMV program, growth in the taxable value of eligibility property is limited to a
percentage of the prior year taxable value or a portion of the assessed value growth from the prior year to
the current year, whichever is greater. By restricting the rate of taxable value growth in a single year, the LMV
program helps to spread over time the impact of property tax increases resulting from rapid escalation in
property values.

Assessors generally oppose programs such as LMV which result in properties being taxed at less than full
market value. Assessors also point out that the LMV program can create tax fairness issues, since it can
result in owners of identical properties, located in the same taxing jurisdictions, paying different property
taxes. Proponents of LMV argue that the program simply cushions property owners from the effects of rapid
valuation growth by spreading tax increases out over time; any tax unfairness resulting from LMV, they argue,
is temporary.

In 2001, the legislature sided with opponents of LMV and required that the program be gradually phased-out;
during the phase-out period, caps on valuation growth would gradually be loosened, allowing for a more rapid
rate of growth in the taxable value of eligible properties. Under the 2001 tax act, LMV would have been fully
eliminated for taxes payable in 2008; however, given property tax increases driven by the rapid value growth
experienced earlier in this decade, the legislature opted to extend the LMV program. Under current law, the
LMV program will be fully eliminated for taxes payable in 2010.

Paradoxically, the property taxes on most Minnesota homesteads are higher, not lower, because of the LMV
program as currently constituted. By capping the value growth of some properties, the LMV program reduces
the size of the total tax base, thereby producing higher tax rates. All properties not enjoying a taxable value
reduction through LMV are paying higher property taxes as a result of these higher tax rates. Even at its peak,
most homesteads in Minnesota enjoyed no taxable value reduction through the LMV program and thus would
have been paying higher property taxes as a result of the program, all other things being equal.

While most homesteads are paying higher property taxes as a result of the LMV program, the average tax
increase among homeowners who are hurt by the program is only $21 per homeowner, while the average
property tax reduction among homeowners that benefit from the program is $211 based on pay 2009
data.12 Thus, the average tax increase among homeowners who are disadvantaged by the program is small in
comparison to the tax reduction among homeowners who benefit.

Since tax payable year 2006, the principle beneficiaries of the LMV program have been owners of timberland,
agricultural, and cabin properties. Since 2006, aggregate homestead property taxes in Minnesota have
increased, not decreased, as a result of the LMV program. However, this might not have been the case if the
taxable value growth limits in effect in 2001 had been left in place.

The phase-out of the LMV program which began in 2003 did contribute to an increase in the aggregate
statewide residential homestead property taxes in 2003 and for at least the following two years. After that, it

8 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


is unclear if aggregate statewide homestead property taxes would have been higher or lower in the absence of
the LMV phase-out enacted in 2001. The debate over LMV may ultimately be rendered moot by the slowing
rate of growth and, in some instances, decline in property values.

Homestead Market Value Credit

The homestead market value credit was enacted in 2001 and implemented for taxes payable in 2002 as a
replacement for the “education homestead credit” and as a way of preventing possible homestead property
tax increases that could occur as a result of class rate compression.

The amount of the homestead market value credit for a particular property is entirely dependent on the
taxable value of the property. For the first $76,000 of homestead taxable value, the homestead market value
credit equals 0.4 percent of the property value. Thus, a homestead with a taxable value of $76,000 would
receive a homestead market value credit of $304 ($76,000 x 0.4%). As home values grow beyond $76,000,
the credit shrinks at rate of 90 cents per every $1,000 of value until hitting zero at a value of $413,778; all
homesteads with a value of $413,778 or more receive no homestead market value credit.

Homestead taxable value grew significantly from 2002 to 2008 (assessment years 2001 to 2007) before
leveling off in 2009 (assessment year 2008). This homestead value growth caused a significant decline in the
market value credit. The graph on the following page shows the statewide growth in nominal (i.e., unadjusted
for inflation) homestead taxable value in billions (left axis) and the corresponding decline in the nominal
homestead market value credit in millions (right axis).

From tax payable year 2002 to 2009, the nominal statewide homestead market value credit declined by $59
million or 18.2 percent. In constant 2009 dollars, the decline is $170 million or 39.1 percent. The decline
in the credit amount is a direct function of the growth in taxable homestead value. As the amount of the
homestead credit declines, the net homestead property tax increases by an equivalent amount. This is yet
another feature of the 2001 tax act that has contributed to growth in homestead property taxes over time.

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 9


State Aid Cuts

The 2001 tax act did not mandate state aid reductions in future years. However, the act did extend state
spending commitments in ways that were unsustainable in the long term. With a governor committed to a
“no new tax” agenda, broad based revenue increases were off the table and state budget reductions became
inevitable. A disproportionate share of these budget reductions took the form of cuts in state aid to local
governments.

These state aid cuts are the primary cause of statewide property tax increases over the last six years. The
graph below examines the change in statewide local government revenue, property taxes, and state aid in
constant 2008 dollars since 2002.

From 2002 to 2008, property taxes


imposed by local governments
increased by $1.2 billion in constant
2008 dollars.13 However, this
growth in property taxes cannot
be attributed to growth in local
government budgets; since 2002
total local government revenue
declined by $1.4 billion.

The primary cause of statewide


property tax growth is reductions
in state aid to local governments.
From 2002 to 2008, state aid to local governments declined by $2.4 billion in constant 2008 dollars. The local
property tax increase was sufficient to replace slightly less than half of the state aid cut. The balance of the
state aid cut was dealt with by primarily cutting local budgets.

10 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


It should also be noted that at the same period that local government revenue fell by $1.4 billion, the
population that local governments must provide service to increased by approximately five percent (although
statewide school enrollment declined by one percent). In addition, over this six year span new testing
requirements and higher standards were foisted on to school districts and additional state costs were shifted
on to counties.14

By aggregating all levels of local government together, a significant amount of detail is overlooked. However,
the basic pattern observed in the above graph for all local governments is also apparent when we examine the
three major levels of local government—counties, cities, and school districts—individually.

• For counties, per capita state aid is projected to fall by 28.8 percent from 2002 to 2008. This projected
decline in aid is the principal cause of a 5.0 percent increase in per capita county property taxes and a 10.7
percent decline in total per capita county revenue.

• For cities, per capita state aid is projected to fall by 43.1 percent from 2002 to 2008,15 contributing to
a projected 9.7 percent growth in per capita city property taxes and a 13.7 percent decline in total per
capita city revenue.

• For school districts, per pupil state aid is projected to fall by 13.3 percent from fiscal year (FY) 2003 to
FY 2009 (corresponding to tax payable years 2002 to 2008). The state aid loss has driven a 48.6 percent
increase in property taxes per pupil and a 3.9 percent decline in per pupil revenue. (The percentage
increase in school property taxes is so high because school property taxes for 2002/2003 were extremely
low due to the elimination of the general education property tax in 2002.)

For all three levels of government, we see the same trend: cuts in state aid causing both reduced funding for
local services and higher property taxes.

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 11


Property Tax Data: 2002 to 2009_______
The trends emphasized previously—specifically, the implications of the 2001 tax act combined with
subsequent reductions in state aid—are the primary cause of property tax increases over the last seven years.
An examination of property tax data reveals the magnitude of these property tax increases.

The table in appendix A shows per capita property taxes in nominal dollars in all Minnesota cities with a
population over 5,000 for the years 2002 through 2009. The final two columns in this table show the increase
in property taxes in nominal and real (i.e., inflation adjusted) dollars per capita from 2002 to 2009. The table
also shows the largest county (i.e., the county which contains the largest share of the city’s property value) and
the code of the largest school district for each city listed. (The property tax amounts listed are for the entire
city, including portions that may lie outside the largest county and school district.)

Property tax per capita is not a particularly useful way of measuring the property tax paid by a typical resident
of a city, since included in the property tax total are business property taxes. A city with a large commercial/
industrial tax base may have a high level of per capita property taxes, but the tax on residents of the city might
be relatively low because much of the tax is borne by business property. However, the per capita property tax
does provide a reasonable way to gauge growth in property taxes relative to growth in the community.

A perusal of the information in appendix A shows that of the 142 cities with a population over 5,000, 119
(83.8 percent) experienced an increase in per capita property taxes from 2002 to 2009, while 96 (67.6 percent)
experienced an increase of ten percent or more. (A ten percent increase in real dollars over this period
translates into a nominal increase of 47.7 percent.) The following graph shows the number of cities by the
percent growth in per capita property taxes from 2002 to 2009, including all Minnesota cities (over and under
5,000 population).
Of the 854 cities in Minnesota,
677 (79.3 percent) experienced
an increase in per capita property
taxes from 2002 to 2009, while
560 (65.6 percent) experienced
an increase of 10 percent or
more.

A simple count of the number of


cities can give a skewed picture
of property tax increases because
very small cities comprise a large
percentage of the number of
Minnesota cities. For example,
while small cities (population
under 5,000) comprise 83.4
percent of all Minnesota cities,
they contain only 15.5 percent
of the statewide city population. The graph below shows the percent of the statewide city population by
the percent increase in per capita property taxes in the city in which they reside; for example, 22.8 percent
of the population of Minnesota cities reside in cities that experienced a 10 to 20 percent increase in per
capita property taxes from 2002 to 2009. This presentation of the information essentially weights cities by
population.

12 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


Of the 4.3 million people that reside in Minnesota cities, 82.4 percent reside in cities that have experienced an
increase in per capita property taxes from 2002 to 2009, while 65.9 percent reside in cities that have seen an
increase of ten percent or more.
There is tremendous
variation in the
circumstance of local
governments across the
state. In some jurisdictions,
spending growth no doubt
played a role in property
tax increases. However,
per capita revenue in the
vast majority of Minnesota
cities, counties, and school
districts has declined
since 2002 based on the
most current information
available. Large cuts in state
aid to local governments
explain why property taxes
are increasing at the same
time that local government
revenue is falling.

Focusing on Homesteads

Homeowners have been particularly hard hit by rising property taxes. From 2002 to 2009 the average
homestead property tax in Minnesota has increased by 29.8 percent. (Without adjusting for inflation, growth
is 74.2 percent.)

A major reason for property tax growth is state aid cuts; however, this factor by itself does not explain why
homestead property taxes have risen more rapidly than the average for all types of property. As noted above,
the more rapid rate of growth in homestead property taxes since 2002 is largely attributable to repercussions
of the 2001 tax act, including the structure of the homestead market value credit and repercussions of class
rate compression.

An additional factor contributing to the rapid homestead property tax growth are large increases in
referendum market value levies resulting from declining state aid to school districts. As noted above,
referendum market value levies fall more heavily on homeowners than do ordinary levies, thereby contributing
to a more rapid rate of growth in homestead property taxes.

One factor that does not explain the rapid growth in homestead property taxes since 2002—or at least very
little of it—is growth in homestead values. While homestead values did grow from 2002 to 2009, growth in
other types of value grew more rapidly on a statewide basis. Thus, on a statewide basis, there would have
been no shift of tax burden on to homestead property resulting from value growth because the homestead
share of taxable value declined from 2002 to 2009. Even before the decline in residential values in many parts
of the state in the 2008 assessment for taxes payable in 2009, homestead value growth was not quite keeping

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 13


pace with the rest of the tax base.

The table in appendix B shows the average homestead property tax in nominal dollars from 2002 to 2009 in
all Minnesota cities with a population in excess of 5,000. The table further shows the growth in the average
homestead tax in each city from 2002 to 2009 in nominal and real dollars. The table also shows the largest
county (i.e., the county which contains the largest share of the city’s taxable value) and the code of the largest
school district for each city listed. (The homestead tax amounts listed are for the entire city, including portions
that may lie outside the largest county and school district.)
The information in
appendix B shows that
of the 142 cities with a
population over 5,000,
only 6 saw a decline in
average real homestead
property taxes from 2002
to 2009. The remaining
136 (95.8 percent) all
saw increases; 101 (71.1
percent) of these cities
saw increases in excess
of 20 percent. (A 20
percent increase in real
dollars over this period
translates into a nominal
increase of 61.1 percent.)
The graph above shows
the number of cities
by the percent growth
in average homestead property tax from 2002 to 2009 including all Minnesota cities (over and under 5,000
population).

Of Minnesota’s 854 cities, 746 (87.4 percent) saw an increase in the average homestead property tax from
2002 to 2009, while 530 (62.1 percent) experienced an increase of 20 percent or more.

As noted above, simple count of the number of cities can give a skewed picture of property tax increases
because small cities comprise a large percentage of the number of Minnesota cities. The graph on the
following page shows the percent of the statewide city population by the percent change in the average
homestead property tax in the city in which they reside; for example, 27.0 percent of the population of
Minnesota cities resides in cities that experienced a 20 to 30 percent increase in average homestead property
taxes from 2002 to 2009. This presentation essentially weights cities by population.

Of the 4.3 million people that reside in Minnesota cities, 97.0 percent reside in cities than have seen an
increase in average homestead property taxes from 2002 to 2009, while 71.5 percent reside in cities that have
seen an increase of 20 percent or more.

In some cities, a significant portion of homestead property tax increases could be due to growth in local
spending. However, in general this is not the case. The graph below compares growth in the average

14 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


Minnesota homestead
property tax since 2002
relative to the decline
in the per capita
revenue of counties
and cities and the per
pupil revenue of school
districts. (This graph
ends in 2008 because
reliable forecasts of
2009 county, city, and
school district revenue
are not yet possible
due to uncertainty
involving potential
state aid cuts in 2009.)

From 2002 to 2008


(FY 2003 to FY
2009 for school
districts), the average
homestead property tax in Minnesota has increased by over 25 percent, while real per capita county and city/
town revenue and real per pupil school revenue have all declined. Clearly, the statewide growth in average
homestead property taxes
could not be driven by growth
in local government revenues,
since these revenues have
decreased.

Homestead vs. Commercial/


Industrial Property Taxes

A comparison of homestead
and commercial/industrial
property tax increases
from 2002 to 2009 further
underscores the magnitude
of homestead property tax
growth in Minnesota. The
graph on the following page
compares homestead and
commercial/industrial property tax growth over the last seven years.

From 2002 to 2009, the rate of growth in total homestead property taxes is 39.6 percent—more than five
times greater than the rate of growth in commercial/industrial property taxes. A portion of the higher rate of
growth in homestead property taxes is attributable to a more rapid rate of growth in homestead taxable value
(driven in part by the phase-out of the limited market value program). From 2002 to 2009, homestead taxable

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 15


value grew 1.5 times more rapidly than commercial/industrial taxable value. However, a 1.5 times faster rate
of value growth is not sufficient to explain a five times greater growth rate in taxes.

During the same period, the average homestead property tax (i.e., the total tax divided by the number of
properties) increased by 29.8 percent, while average commercial/industrial property tax declined by 4.2

percent.

The ways in which the 2001 tax act has contributed to increases in homestead property taxes are noted above.
In addition, the 2001 tax act has partially insulated commercial/industrial property owners from increases in
local property taxes resulting from state aid cuts through the creation of a separate state-imposed business
property tax which has declined in real per capita dollars since 2002. Clearly, the “reforms” enacted in 2001
have been far more favorable for Minnesota businesses than for Minnesota homeowners.

Trend from 2008 to 2009

As indicated in the graph on page 7, during most years from 2002 to 2008 property taxes have increased at
the same time that total local revenues declined. Based on Price of Government (POG) data, 2009 could be an
exception to this rule, although it is too soon to know this with certainty.

One thing is reasonably clear: per capita property taxes should increase from 2008 to 2009 by about 5.5
percent based on the rate of inflation for 2009 as projected in February.16

Based on February forecast POG data, per capita county and city revenue, and per pupil school district revenue
are expected to increase in 2009, although at this point 2009 revenue amounts are based on projections.

16 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


Reasons for the increase in projected revenue include:

•Local governments are recouping a portion of the revenue losses that they have absorbed since 2002.
Even after the projected revenue increase in 2009, total per capita local government revenue will be about
8.0 percent less than it was in 2002 based on POG projections.

•County and city revenues are deflated in 2008 due to $110 million in aid cuts imposed by the Governor.
These cuts occurred in December at the very close of the county and city budget year. A reduction in 2008
revenue contributes to a larger percentage increase in revenue from 2008 to 2009.

•POG projections of local government revenue are based on current law. However, with a looming
structural budget deficit of over $6 billion projected for the next fiscal biennium, it is largely expected that
the state will cut back the current law aid level for local governments. Thus, projections of 2009 revenue
growth are in part based on dollars that will probably not show up.

As local governments were setting their levies (i.e., the dollars they will collect from property taxes), credit
markets were collapsing, the national economy was in a free fall, and talk of more state aid cuts abounded. In
this environment of uncertainty, local governments are likely to depend more heavily on a revenue source they
can count on: the property tax.

Even more uncertainty was introduced into county and city budgets with the enactment of levy limits in
2008, effective for taxes payable in 2009. At the insistence of Governor Pawlenty, the 2008 tax act placed
restrictions on the authority of counties and cities to levy property taxes. Once levy limits are imposed, local
governments have an incentive to levy the maximum allowable amount out of fear that the state will intervene
and permanently eliminate any unused levy authority in future years. In this way, levy limits can actually push
levies higher, not lower, as local governments are forced to second guess state attempts to micro-manage local
finances.

Because of levy limits combined with the likelihood of state aid cuts of unknown magnitude, local government
finances are in a state of uncertainty. This uncertainty makes it more difficult to forecast local government
revenues in 2009 and contributes to increased reliance on property taxes.

With the bursting of the real estate bubble, the growth in homestead market values came to an abrupt halt for
taxes payable in 2009. (Note that the values used to determine taxes payable in 2009 are based on values from
January 1, 2008; thus, the subsequent decline in homestead values after January 1, 2008 are not reflected in
2009 property taxes.) This contributed to a lower rate of growth in homestead property taxes relative to other
types of property. From 2008 to 2009, residential homestead property taxes are expected to increase by 3.3
percent, compared to a 6.1 percent growth rate in all property taxes.17

However, even this growth in residential homestead property taxes is more than one would expect to see
based on changes in value. From 2008 to 2009 (corresponding to the January 1, 2007 assessment to the
January 1, 2008 assessment), the homestead share of statewide taxable market value fell 2.0 percent,18 while
the homestead share of statewide property taxes fell by just 1.2 percent.

The decline in the homestead share of statewide property taxes did not keep pace with the decline in the
homestead share of taxable value for at least two reasons. First, referendum market value levies increased by
10.0 percent from 2008 to 2009, more than double the rate of growth in ordinary tax capacity levies. As noted
above, referendum market value levies fall more heavily on homesteads than do ordinary tax capacity levies;

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 17


the more rapid rate of growth in referendum market value levies contributes to a more rapid rate of growth in
homestead property taxes. The continued erosion of per pupil state aid no doubt contributed to the growth in
referendum market value levies.

Second, businesses (and non-seasonal recreational residential properties) were insulated from the full extent
of the growth in local levies through the state property tax. As noted above, the state property tax typically
grows less rapidly than local property taxes because the state property tax is unaffected by cuts in aid to local
government. This contributed to a less rapid rate of growth among business properties relative to homestead
properties than would have been the case had the change in property taxes been based solely on changes in
taxable value.

The structure of the homestead market value credit did not contribute much to homestead property tax
growth from 2008 to 2009 because statewide homestead values did not increase from January 1, 2007 (for
taxes payable in 2008) to January 1, 2008 (for taxes payable in 2009) and thus the amount paid to homeowners
through the homestead market value credit is not expected to decline from 2008 to 2009. This trend is
illustrated in the graph on page 10.

18 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009


Conclusion: A Call for Accountability__
When a taxpayer sees significant growth in property taxes over time, he assumes that his local governments
are spending more. While this conclusion may be understandable, it is often wrong.

Property taxes in Minnesota have grown rapidly from 2002 to 2009, but local governments do not have any
more money to spend. Per capita county and city revenue and per pupil school district revenue are less today
than they were seven years ago.

The cause of this paradox rests in the nature of the state-local fiscal relationship. In Minnesota, state
government has a de facto monopoly on dollars collected through the income and sales taxes. (While some
local governments are allowed to impose a sales tax, such taxes are strictly regulated by the state and are
generally allowed only for limited purposes and at rates far below the state sales tax rate.) In exchange for this
monopoly, state government is to share a portion of its income and sales tax dollars with local governments in
order to avoid excessive local dependence on the property tax.

However, in recent years state aid to local governments has become a de facto slush fund that state leaders
have used to solve their revenue problems. Have a large state budget deficit? Don’t bother to increase state
taxes; rather, disproportionately cut back on the dollars that the state shares with local governments. In this
way, state leaders can posture as champions of “no new taxes” while compelling local governments to do the
dirty work of raising property taxes while at the same time cutting funding for local services.

From 2002 to 2008 (state fiscal year 2003 to 2009), state aid to Minnesota local governments has fallen by over
$2 billion dollars. Approximately half of this aid cut was recovered through increases in local levies, thereby
explaining much of the property tax growth since 2002. The other half of the state aid cut was recovered
largely through reductions in local government revenue, thereby explaining cuts in funding for education,
public safety, and infrastructure investments. Local property taxes have increased far more rapidly than state
income and sales taxes because the state has solved its revenue problems on the backs of local governments
and local property taxpayers through disproportionately large state aid cuts.

Since 2002, Minnesota homeowners have been hit with a double whammy. Not only are property taxes
increasing because of state aid cuts, but an increasing share of the property tax is being shifted on to
homeowners due in large part to changes enacted in 2001. Class rate compression and the structure of the
homestead market value credit have both contributed to increases in homestead property taxes.

Further compounding the growth in homestead property taxes are cuts in state funding for education, which
has stimulated growth in referendum market value levies as school districts seek to replace declining state aid
dollars. Referendum market value levies fall more heavily on homestead properties than do ordinary levies,
thereby accelerating the rate of growth in homestead property taxes.

State policymakers need to come clean about the true cause of rising property taxes in Minnesota. Since 2002,
the rapid growth in property taxes, in general, and homestead property taxes, in particular, is primarily the
result of state policies, not local spending decisions. True reform to the property tax and state aid systems will
not come about until policymakers acknowledge—or citizens compel them to acknowledge—the real causes of
property tax increases.

MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 19


20 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009
MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 21
22 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009
MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 23
24 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009
MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009 25
References___________________________
1
All inflation adjustments in this report are based on the implicit price deflator (IPD) for state and local government purchases, which
is a better measure of inflation for the types of goods and services purchased by state and local governments than is the Consumer
Price Index (CPI). The projected rate of inflation for 2009 is based on the February 2009 update to the state and local IPD.

2
A “homestead” is an owner-occupied housing unit. In discussing homestead values and property taxes, this report will focus on
residential—as opposed to agricultural—homesteads. Residential homesteads comprise 96.3 percent of all taxable homestead
market value in Minnesota.

Calculated using state aid data from the February 2009 Price of Government report and pupil unit counts (average daily
3

membership) from the Minnesota Department of Education.

Calculated from Minnesota Department of Revenue data.


4

5
Class rate compression also focused on reducing the class rate disparity between rental property and homestead property. The
primary focus of the discussion here is on the business-homestead class rate disparity, which is the largest disparity both in terms of
the class rate gap and in terms of the amount of value involved.

6
The exception here is electrical generation machinery, which is taxed in Minnesota. Electrical generation machinery comprises less
than two percent of taxable business value in the state.

7
For levies spread against referendum market value, businesses enjoy a tax advantage relative to homesteads because the tax
advantage that businesses derive from the exemption of personal property still applies, while the preferential treatment that
homesteads derive through the class rate system does not. For this reason, referendum market value levies impose a higher effective
tax rate (i.e., property tax as a percentage of total real and personal market value) on homesteads than on businesses.

8
Based on annual city and county expenditure reports from the Office of the State Auditor adjusted for inflation, per capita total city
expenditures declined by 0.9 percent and county expenditures declined by 0.1 percent from 1990 to 2000.

9
A similar shift also occurred in 2003 in the taconite relief area due to an interaction between class rate compression and the taconite
fiscal disparity program. However, because the value involved in the taconite fiscal disparity program is small in comparison to total
taxable value, the shift on to homesteads was small.

Effective for taxes payable in 2006, the seasonal recreational portion of the state property tax base was separated from the business
10

portion and subjected to a lower state tax rate.

11
The LMV program was later expanded to include timberland. A similar program was in place for tax payable years 1974 to 1980.

12
“Limited Market Value Report: 2008 Assessment Year Taxes Payable 2009.” Minnesota Department of Revenue. [http://www.taxes.
state.mn.us/legal_policy/research_reports/content/2009_lmv.pdf]

Amounts in this section are calculated based on data from the February 2009 Price of Government (POG) report. POG data for
13

2007 and 2008 (FY 2008 and FY 2009) are estimates.

For example, the state has shifted responsibility for incarcerating short-term felony offenders to counties and mandated that
14

counties pay ten percent of the medical assistance costs for nursing homes stays in excess of 90 days for people under age 65.

The decline in city aid from 2002 to 2008 is especially large in part because of a $66 million city aid unallotment (i.e., reduction)
15

imposed by Governor Pawlenty in December of 2008.

16
The rate of inflation for 2008 to 2009 based on the Implicit Price Deflator for State and Local Government Purchases is expected to
be negative (i.e., we will have deflation in projected state and local government costs). Because of this, the inflation adjusted growth
rate in property taxes reported in this analysis will be greater than the nominal (i.e., unadjusted for inflation) growth rate in taxes.

17
Ibid.

18The residential homestead share of statewide taxable tax capacity fell by 1.7 percent.

26 MN Property Taxes by the Numbers 2009

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