We'd tax any property we already tax, but we'd simply increase the ammount. cars/planes/houses/land/boats/etc... To be honest i have no clue how you'd collect it, though. If it would be a local thing that gets forwarded to the feds or if the feds just come in and take a look at everything. Either way, its probably easier for an IRS agent to come in and look at a boat than try to track down numbered offshore accounts. You already register your house, your car, your plane, your boat, etc... with some government agency, so they've already got most of the info they need. Property taxes would potentially discourage people who right now cant afford/or are on the edge of affording property. This isn't a bad thing. That shit fucked us right good. It would probably encourage renting, and people are going to want to rent in the best place possible. It might even encourage more urban growth instead of sprawl. You end up with alot of people renting property (now with more disposable income because they have no income tax) in urban centers, spending locally, and encouraging local growth. If local governments in urban centers weren't worse than the feds, you might even see increased local tax revenue go to helping the poor. Urban centers would get the better schools and people out in the suburbs could still enjoy that lifestyle, they'd just have to work a little harder to educate their kids (which they do already). This is all theoretical and i have no idea if it would work or not, but unless im missing something it seems like a better way to go. Taxing established, physical wealth is much more progressive than income tax.
2/22/2010 10:50:01 AM
I could tentatively agree with that.There's got to be a downside, though.
2/22/2010 11:09:09 AM
Realistically the problems with tracking property are all going to be due to incompetence in the bureaucracy. IDK about NC, but the state of maine has absolutely no problem getting all vehicles registered and paying fees every year. Cops pulled me over once when my registration was expired. They want their money. As long as the database Maine uses for registrations is the same as other states, or even if its not the same, but contains the same data it wouldn't be hard for the fed to use it if they aren't retarded. Its an entirely different story to have the fed try to figure out how someone has moved money around in offshore accounts they have no access to. Or to track someone laundering money through some organization. Property exists, theres a bill of sale on it, its registered already with someone, sales tax was probably paid on it, its just a metter of collecting the data and processing it. re: local governments with power of revenue, I agree it might cause problems and probably wouldn't be the best way to do it. But the fed could balance it out by reducing the ammount of money they hand out to the state. Not ideal though.
2/22/2010 11:18:03 AM
2/22/2010 11:44:43 AM
2/22/2010 12:14:00 PM
2/22/2010 1:16:26 PM
2/22/2010 5:02:01 PM
http://money.cnn.com/2010/01/27/real_estate/most_overvalued_metro_areas/
2/22/2010 5:39:15 PM
Come on dude, that really doesn't pass the smell test. Your first hint that something is amiss is who commissioned the study
2/22/2010 6:00:05 PM
2/22/2010 6:18:08 PM
Since you're an expert in this study, can you explain how their results for San Diego are polar opposite that of Case Shiller?
2/22/2010 6:28:53 PM
2/22/2010 6:55:04 PM
2/22/2010 7:07:52 PM
Oh, you didn't actually click the link. It references a study done by IHS Global Insight a non-biased third party economic research firm.
2/22/2010 7:09:46 PM
Look, no one is impressed with your reading of wikipedia. As far as the shoe part, I said this
2/22/2010 7:12:25 PM
2/22/2010 7:43:49 PM
Look, you can keep typing snark type posts but no one is going to take any of that seriously if you continue to refuse to address how this dumb study by IHS is 3 sigma away from Case Shiller data.
2/22/2010 9:04:23 PM
Dude, where did burrito go anyway? Did he realize he looked kinda dumb making this thread in the way he made it...all populist and liberal and shit?
2/22/2010 9:35:03 PM
2/22/2010 10:34:53 PM
That a lot of typing without defending really anything you've posted. I've destroyed your argument and if you can't see that then I have some undervalued beach property in Asheville I'm itching to sell you.
2/23/2010 6:25:46 AM
what a fun thread
2/23/2010 7:03:47 AM
^^ How did you disprove any part of the study I posted? You didn't even read it.
2/23/2010 8:18:09 AM
Aaron this sounds like class warfare bullshit to me
2/23/2010 11:39:53 AM
2/23/2010 6:38:51 PM
2/23/2010 6:44:23 PM
2/23/2010 6:52:03 PM
2/23/2010 7:13:01 PM
You're still posting after having lost this badly? Global Insights own economists have a report that undermines this analysis. You know how I know? BECAUSE I FUCKING CLICKED THE LINK AND READ WHAT THEY HAD TO SAY.Now would you like to keep trolling or do you have something worthwhile to add to this debate?
2/23/2010 7:22:24 PM
2/23/2010 7:40:39 PM
That is the exact opposite of not having proof. Keep trollin douche.[Edited on February 23, 2010 at 8:01 PM. Reason : .]
2/23/2010 8:01:36 PM
I had proof, a third party economic study by professional economists, you called it uncreditable. How could anyone use logic to argue with you?[Edited on February 23, 2010 at 11:15 PM. Reason : ]
2/23/2010 11:15:16 PM
BUMPRobert Shiller, inventor of the Case-Shiller Index was on NPR today and said "it's not likely that home prices are inflated".
3/24/2010 5:52:33 PM
I don't think there's any way of really knowing that. The market is still flooded with homes, so the market clearing price is probably lower. I would expect prices to go down even further, and since many people are anticipating that to be the case, they may go below their true equilibrium price.I just like how these mainstream economists always explain bubbles (be they in the stock market or housing market) as irrational exuberance or animal spirits. It's god damn low interest rates, even Geithner (and to some degree, Bernanke) are admitting that now, yet we continue down the same path that created the housing bubble, except the mistakes we're making are much, much bigger in scale now. The dollar is the bubble, now.
3/24/2010 6:03:30 PM
3/24/2010 7:15:42 PM
so, there's no fucking way that cheaper money via low interest rates encouraged more people to go out and make expensive purchases on credit (like a house)? naaaaah, that'd never happen
3/24/2010 8:35:37 PM
3/24/2010 10:54:06 PM
3/25/2010 8:04:56 AM
3/25/2010 9:19:43 AM
3/25/2010 5:43:39 PM
3/25/2010 8:06:28 PM
3/25/2010 8:33:38 PM
no one is arguing that low rates made for riskier loans.
3/25/2010 9:58:27 PM
then what are you arguing? That low rates made more loans? The total number of loans had nothing to do with the crash, the number of risky loans that were overvalued and rise in proportion of risky loans are what caused the crash, and all of that traces back to inaccurate ratings.
3/25/2010 10:58:06 PM
If we're now clear on how the Fed's rate did not cause the bubble, can you apologize to mls09 who you berated with an argument that you can now see is wrong?[Edited on March 26, 2010 at 8:25 PM. Reason : ]
3/26/2010 8:24:56 PM
the bubble does NOT mean risky loans, dumbass. Nice try, though.but seriously... cheap rates for borrowing didn't make people go out and borrow. really? you should stick to telling us all about how those evil republicans are filibustering in the house[Edited on March 26, 2010 at 8:40 PM. Reason : ]
3/26/2010 8:36:07 PM
so then you disagree that subprime mortgages caused the bubble?
3/26/2010 8:40:19 PM
i never argued as such. I can hear the filibuster in the house RIGHT NOW.you are the king of strawmen
3/26/2010 8:55:10 PM
Explain to me how the low fed rate expanded the proportion of risky mortgages.You could say that a low fed rate made the bubble worse, but you can't say it caused it.Also it's funny how you're still childishly parading around an argument that I never made while at the same time accusing me of strawman.
3/26/2010 8:58:39 PM
dude. I NEVER SAID THE FED MADE RISKIER FUCKING LOANS! that is why it is a strawman. dumbfuck
3/26/2010 9:04:16 PM
Then how did the fed rate cause the bubble? You did say that. And seeing how the bubble was caused by the mortgage market being flooded with overpriced risky mortgages, how did the fed rate cause that?
3/26/2010 9:08:06 PM