Warren Dew wrote:Seth wrote:Warren Dew wrote:Seth wrote:Is the Vatican (being a sovereign state) a signatory to the EU?
I don't think the article is talking about the Vatican itself. I think the "about 100,000 properties, classed as non-commercial, including 8,779 schools, 26,300 ecclesiastical structures and 4,714 hospitals and clinics" the article mentions are the ones scattered throughout Italy that are owned by the Catholic Church.
So, is this advocacy for taxing schools, churches and hospitals?
Half a dozen posts on the first page, including yours quoted above, appeared to assume that the property in question was the Vatican City itself. In the post you are quoting here I just wanted to provide a relevant quote, from the article originally linked, that indicated otherwise, to get the discussion on track. The Italian government trying to tax Vatican City would be tantamount to a declaration of war on a foreign government. The Italian government rescinding special tax benefits for property in Italy owned by the Catholic Church is, in contrast, entirely legal.
I didn't say it wasn't legal, I said it was bad public policy.
That said, in answer to your question, I would prefer that churches and hospitals pay the same property taxes as everyone else, since they benefit from the same public services that property taxes normally pay for. If we had a sensible school system that eliminated public schools in favor of vouchers, I'd prefer that schools also pay property taxes.
Again, those public services are mostly NOT paid for by property taxes, they are generally paid for by other forms of taxation like sales taxes. And the infrastructure costs are billed directly as fees in many cases, including water, power, sewer and suchlike. Why should anyone pay property taxes merely for the privilege of owning property?
In some states, your argument that such organizations perform roles that might otherwise be performed by government may be an argument for exemption from income taxes, which are what would generally be used to provide those roles. However, even that is somewhat questionable, since for profit hospitals seem to be able to compete adequately against nonprofit hospitals, showing that tax exemption is not required.
For-profit hospitals compete because they are not required by federal law or their own organizations to serve the indigent free of charge, or because they are compensated for such services by federal tax money, which is NOT collected from property taxes, which are entirely STATE imposed taxes. Federal funds come from income and business taxes.
Again, why should anyone be required to rent their property from the government even if they are not using services?
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