As the state’s primary means of both redistributing wealth and
incentivizing private investment, tax plays an outsized role in a range
of critical urban processes, including (re)development, gentrification,
financialization, and local and regional governance. We argue, through
reference to existing literature in urban and economic geography, as
well as our own research on taxation and the state, that urban
scholarship could benefit by close and careful engagement with taxation
and the tax system. We term this new vein of research “fiscal
geographies” and see it as offering potential for more nuanced study of
urban political economy, politics, and processes.
History
Citation
Tapp, R. and Kay, K., 2019. Fiscal geographies:“Placing” taxation in urban geography. Urban Geography, 40(4), pp.573-581.