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Regional Rivarly


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2006 Aug 15, 6:00am   22,082 views  212 comments

by Joe Schmoe   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

By Joe Schome.

To me, one of the most interesting aspects of the bubble is that its effects are felt differently in differnet areas. Not just on a nationwide level -- appreciation has been mostly flat in TX, while prices have tripled in many parts of CA -- but the bubble even affects different regions of the same state in a disparate way.

For example, while the median price in the SF Bay Area is higher than the LA median, I think that SF is nonetheless far, far more affordable than LA.

For example, you can get a 2BR condo in a decent school district like Walnut Creek (average SAT score 1140) for $200k. To get a 2BR condo in an LA school district with that kind of average SAT score, you'd have to spend at least $400k, and probably $600k.

The disparity in SFH prices isn't as pronounced, but there is a disparity there too. For example, as of this posting there are 32 SFH's for sale in the SF Bay Area's best public school district, Cupertino (average HS SAT score 1251). In San Marino, the LA area's best public school district (average HS SAT score 1231), there are 5. Now, Cupertino has roughly two and a half times as many listings as San Marnio and is about four times as populous, so it's not an apples-to-apples comparison, but the fact remains that Cupertino is cheaper. Also -- and this is really important -- SFH's are not the only type of housing for sale in Cupertino. There are 2BR condos in Cupertino starting at $545k. San Marino is zoned solely for single family homes, there is not a single condo in the entire community. The cheapest avaialble listing of any kind in San Marino is a 1,000 square foot 2BR house for $798k.

So viewed in this light, while the SF Bay Area may have a significantly higher median price than LA, it is actually far more afforadble. A middle class, college-educated family not might want to live in a 2BR condo in Walnut Creek, but they can afford to do so if they stretch just a little bit. In SoCal, by contrast, the situation is much worse for middle class families. While there are several $200k condos in Walnut Creek, a place with very good schools, there is not a single 2BR condo listed for less than $200k in Compton, SoCal's worst public school district. Thus, the folks in SoCal are getting squeezed by the bubble a lot more than folks in NorCal.

The bubble is even more intersting in places like NYC. There, a generic 2BR condo in a one of the nicer areas of NYC's Upper West Side will cost you $949k. We're talking about Jerry Seinfeld's apartment here, not a high-end place with a view of Central Park or the river. The upper-income suburbs of New York are dirt cheap by comparison. Private schools are a must. Mehdham, NJ has SFH's starting at $374k; Scarsdale, NY (a city with an average per capita family income in excess of $200k) SFH's start at $600k. Values are all over the map in the NYC area. Clearly, the bubble affects different regions differently.

#housing

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52   skibum   2006 Aug 15, 9:12am  

eburbed Says:

"If the situation doesn’t improve in the next couple of years, then many of the under 40 crowd will move to Atlanta, Austin or Raleigh. Wages are less in those places, but you can more than make up for the difference by purchasing a non-bubble priced house."

I don’t see that happening. People have been saying that for years about Boston, California, New York - the great sucking sound has never happened. A mild fizz - yes, but that mass exodus will never happen.

Actually, your statement is not entirely true:

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/04/20/bay_state_exodus_2d_only_to_ny/

From the article:

Frey said metropolitan Boston has been losing people since 1990, but in recent years the loss has been occurring at greater rates than at any time since the recession of 1990 and 1991. Today's report found that among large metropolitan areas, Greater Boston trailed only San Francisco and New York City in its rate of loss.

I guess you could say it's somewhere between a mild fizz and a great sucking sound - maybe a slow leaking, hissing sound?

53   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 9:16am  

Mr. Vincent,

Personal benefit does not equate to good tax policy. Prop 13 discourages new housing and artificially inflates the value of existing housing stock. It's also oppressive on young families, precisely the sort of people this state should do more to keep. It decreases school funding to an extent. Finally, it encourages the housing market to be illiquid, as would be buyers are barred from entry due to high prices and would be sellers are reluctant to sell because they got such a low tax basis.

If Prop 13 does not exist, houses would be cheaper and more plentiful, and in the long run that good for everybody. A house is a place to live, it's not a lottery ticket for some early buyers to get rich from.

54   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 9:21am  

PROP 13 DID NOT CAUSE THIS HOUSING BUBBLE! When prices revert to trend, you renters will love prop 13 after buying your house.

Mr Vincent,

Given that I was (a) not born early enough to have my "tax basis" arbitrarily frozen in time in 1978, and (b) even after prices revert to the mean, I would STILL be paying far more than my birth-Lottery neighbors, I seriously doubt that I will ever grow to love Prop. 13.

The only good thing about Prop. 13 is the tax RATE cap (1.25%), which --it's true-- does apply to all homedebtors. What makes Prop. 13 so horrendously distorting, though, is the "frozen in 1978" price BASIS for the house. This is what results in the infamous "I pay $10,000 for a tract home identical to my neighbor, who only pays only $500" scenarios.

55   Allah   2006 Aug 15, 9:22am  

(I am not an economist, but I do seem to have better real estate sense than David Lereah)

He knows what's reallyhappening in real estate, he just chooses to lie.

56   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 9:24am  

Many of the BA under 40 crowd are renting or bought marginal property with help from mom and dad. So they still don't have to worry about carrying the full cost of BA ownership. Many haven't started procreating and worrying about schools/childcare. They will give cheaper cities like Austin and Raleigh a closer look once they seriously look into buying to settle down. Something's gotta give, the ineffable BA aura will come off once the young people have to worry about mundane things like good schools and paying for car insurance.

57   surfer-x   2006 Aug 15, 9:24am  

When prices revert to trend, you renters will love prop 13 after buying your house.

Ahhh, "you renters"

How about we refer to you as Mr. Asshole?

58   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 9:25am  

Small correction:

-A house is a place to live, it’s not a lottery ticket for some early buyers to get rich from.
+A house should be a place to live, it should not be a lottery ticket for some early buyers to get rich from as things stand today.

59   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 9:27am  

In terms of disparity, I can't get over the fact that in Chicago many on the north side will pay 600 to 625k for a three bedroom condo literally next to a three flat for 780k to 850k (3 unit building where you own the entire lot). Some of these 3 flats willl have a nice owners unit of 2 to 3 bedrooms; it may not be quite to the level of the condo, but still a very nice unit. On top of that, with the 3 flat you have 2 renters paying most of the mortgage and taxes. The more I look at real estate the more intrigued I am by all the disparities even in a small area of interest but of course in the larger national context as well!

60   Randy H   2006 Aug 15, 9:31am  

SFWoman,

NP. Consult your tax attorney/accountant for real advice.

HARM,

I think a national use tax would be politically feasible if it were seriously treated. First the primary problems, as I see it (taken from various reading about this issue for the past decade or so):

1. It won't work if it doesn't replace existing taxes. The EU VAT is a very bad attempt at a use-tax regime because it has just become an additional tax burden layer, not a replacement.

2. It may be impossible to achieve (1) without amending the US Constitution, which means it will never happen unless somehow snuck in while other amendments are occurring. I think that the Supremes would uphold state rights to administer their own commerce within their state if the Fed's tried to either directly or indirectly force states to eliminate all their taxes.

The Benefits:

1. It would be philosophically fair. Taxes are based upon consumption/use, so taxpayers only pay when consuming/using.

2. It would appease social-engineers. I actually don't hate all forms of social engineering; just most. But the powers that be could discourage cigarette smoking, for example, by imposing a high tax on those while encouraging eating carrots by having no or token tax on vegetables.

3. Number (2) above would prevent regression. Assuming the gov't doesn't put .0001% tax on yachts and 72% tax on milk, the system will be progressive. Poor who consume most of their income to survive will keep more money because they'll pay little to no taxes...that is unless they're buying X-boxes and Ice cream. If they are, then that's their choice.

4. People feel better when they do pay taxes because they are doing it as a matter of conspicuous consumption. Kind of like buying a car today. People rarely consider the tax implications of the car purchase -- they buy the car because they have decided to buy a car of a certain type/price, despite the taxes. If they want to pay less tax, they buy a cheaper car or a used car. That psychology will extend to all non-essential consumption/use.

5. Finally, I think it would be palatable because it moves the burden of tax accounting, filing, and compliance to businesses and away from people. Businesses and perma-pro-bus advocates will argue that it will raise prices for everyone because biz will pass on the added costs to consumers. This is fallacy. Biz will have less tax burden in most cases, because they will file/pay no income tax or cap gains tax or (the biggest burden) myriad complicated state taxes. Their tax costs will fall, not rise. This won't stop them from bitching about it, though. And that would actually help politically make the proposition attractive to populist voters.

Who will hate and fight hard against this?

1. Those employed by the various tax agencies, auditors, or preparers.
2. State gov't politicians
3. The very wealthy; they lose a proportional advantage they have in their ability to avoid taxation.
4. The knee-jerk liberal advocates of the poor. They just hate anything that isn't simple "eat the rich" rhetoric.
5. A few businesses that make money off of state-tax arbitrage; namely internet retailers and border-area retailers.

61   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 9:32am  

Paul,

Good point. If this bubble goes on for much longer, the flippers will "extract" all the values of the existing housing stock by making all these old 2 or 3 family homes into super pricy condos. I guess this situation makes sense for young people desperate to own with no common sense in their heads.

62   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 9:34am  

Then again with the new tax bills coming the two renters probably don't even cover taxes. We have trianual assesments. Most people I know are reporting assessed valuations that more than doubled in 3 years.

I guess it's the flip side of CA. Grandma is getting kicked out onto the street because the house she bought in gritty old Chicago for 50k or 100k is now the hottest neighborhood in the midwest and valued at 1M (I should mention that she gets a larger deduction for being elderly but still..).

63   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 9:44am  

Randy,

Honestly, I think the advocates for the poor have more than just a rhetorical dislike for a national VAT. Most of the poor are not paying taxes outside of SSI and Medicare. A national VAT will increase their tax burden.

If the current tax system worked the way it ought to, I'd be against a VAT system, since it'd probably mean lower corporate taxes and more squeeze on marginal income workers. But realistically, the current system is so messed up that the opposite would be true. The corporations would probably end up paying more in taxes and spend less effort structuring their deals based on tax planning. The marginal income people will simply learn to live with less (and they won't feel it as much if everyone around them is also poor or if conspicuous consumption just went out of fashion) and deal with a less complicated tax system. My main concern would be the shock to our consumption based economy - I think the shock will have to come sooner or later, but it's still a scary thing to contemplate.

I'm curious to know what the VAT would cover. I assume it would cover all services, rentals, insurance policies, etc. not directly taxed under the current regime. Enforcement would be a lot easier if everyone goes to a traceable cash card/credit card system.

64   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 9:44am  

Astrid,

I think we may be past the extraction point.

Just for fun sometimes I'll walk around the neighborhood on the weekends and go through a couple of the hundreds of open houses. On Sunday, the agent was closing an open which was for two condos in a four unit building in order to get to his next open which was for 4 units out of a 4 unit building. It's empty!

I love renting!

Paul

65   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 9:45am  

I guess it’s the flip side of CA. Grandma is getting kicked out onto the street because the house she bought in gritty old Chicago for 50k or 100k is now the hottest neighborhood in the midwest and valued at 1M (I should mention that she gets a larger deduction for being elderly but still..).

God, if I hear another "Grandma is getting kicked out onto the street" urban myth, I think I'm gonna hurl! Paul, this is the same line of crap that was used to sell Prop. 13 to the public back in '78, and is no more true today than it was then.

If said "grandma" on fixed income finds herself truly unable to pay her property tax on that (presumably paid off in full) urban house-ATM now in a "hot neighborhood, she has TONS of options, most notably:

1. Move to a less expensive neighborhod or city, like a lot of retirees do. It not only will lower her taxes, it will probably lower her property insurance and other expenses as well. It will also free up another house close to where JOBS are for young families who might actually NEED it.

2. Pay the property tax by tapping the equity via cash-out refi, HELOC, reverse-mortgage or a zillion other loan products the mortgage finance wizards have cooked up. If the place is paid for and grandma ain't living forever, why not?

66   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 9:45am  

Paul,

Then grandma should consider selling and moving elsewhere. There's constant talk of old people being kicked to the curbs when it's the invisible debt strapped or locked out young family who would make best use of those homes.

67   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 9:51am  

SFWoman,

The very wealthy seems to shield most of their income and expenditures behind bank lines of credit, corporations and various trusts. Thus, they are often taxed very lightly as it is. With a VAT system, we can at least be sure of some tax capture.

I'm troubled by the VAT discussion. On one hand, I think it's a more rational system that may curb some of this society's excesses (less complicated tax system, encourage saving v. spending, make people responsible for their own purchases). One the other hand, I think the cumulative shock of such a change over would be very large and very unpredictable. I highly doubt it would ever be feasible in this country, though it might work very well for small tightly controlled economies like Singapore or Japan.

68   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 9:55am  

SFWoman,

LOL! Since I make 95% of my purchases with credit card, a vast faceless bureaucracy (enforced by a couple consumer lending code sections) already knows about my embarrassingly large purchases of garden shrubs and seeds.

69   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 9:56am  

I agree with you as to Grandma getting her new found fortune. I think most of them do just what you suggest. It just seems a bit crazy that someone that owns (not with other peoples money but OWNS) property for decades should be forced into doing anything with it or change where they live. In fact, many of these people are the ones that pionered in "bad" areas and helped make them better (perhaps instead we just needed a FED with an out-of-control printing press like today).

One might then argue that they are getting paid for that early effort but they still have to move. I can only imagine how hard that is that age after living in the same place for so long with so many friends, etc.. One of the pillars of this country use to be property rights. Now taxes are used to take your property (sounds familar to the revolution against the British). If that doesn't work they use immenant domain.

70   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 9:58am  

Mr. Vincent,

I agree with your points that Prop 13 is a political third rail and most (shortsighted, in my mind) people who bought into them will loath to lose them. But I cannot agree that Prop 13 is good tax policy.

71   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 9:59am  

Randy,

Thanks for the use-tax explanation. About the only fly in the ointment (aside from having to overcome all the powerful, entrenched interest group opposition you mentioned) is the fact that rich people spend very little of their income/net worth on consumption, while the poor spend the large majority of their income/net worth just to survive. This would make it somewhat regressive.

Of course, as you said, they could set the tax rate much lower on "essential" commodities, like meat, veggies & milk, while higher on "luxury" goods. Something tells me that the rich --as always-- will find new ways to exploit the system and lobby heavily to create brand-new loopholes to replace the old ones. It might work fairly well for a while (10-20 years out?), but after the tax lawyers, PACs and lobbyists go to work on it, who knows?

72   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 10:06am  

It just seems a bit crazy that someone that owns (not with other peoples money but OWNS) property for decades should be forced into doing anything with it or change where they live.

Paul, life is inherently unfair, I agree. However, just about every attempt by government (or ballot proposition) at making it "less" unfair inevitably seems to produce the exact opposite result --especially when these schemes attempt to interfere with free market operations, fix prices/wages, set arbitrary tax ceilings for certain "protected" groups (but not others), etc.

On the scale of life's unfairness though, I'll take "having to move to a lower cost city to avoid higher property taxes when I retire" over "being priced out of the state I grew up in forever" any day of the week.

73   Allah   2006 Aug 15, 10:09am  

I agree with you as to Grandma getting her new found fortune. I think most of them do just what you suggest. It just seems a bit crazy that someone that owns (not with other peoples money but OWNS) property for decades should be forced into doing anything with it or change where they live.

She doesn't have to move, she can do what many other old folks are doing, reverse mortgage. The money in her house is trapped and when she dies, they're not going to bury her in it. She might as well put her equity to use;hell she'll even be able to buy more expensive things and live much better for the last years of her life. What's there to feel sorry for?

74   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 10:09am  

HARM,

You've made the assumption that property taxes are inherently part of life in your "life is unfair" response. They are not!

Paul

75   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 10:10am  

or shouldn't be!

76   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 10:13am  

Paul,

Taxes are a given wherever governments exist. The only thing that varies from place to place, or country to country is the method and degree of burden.

77   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 10:20am  

Harm,

My point exactly.

Paul

78   Glen   2006 Aug 15, 10:26am  

Randy & Harm,

One of the rarely mentioned problems with a sales/use tax is the dividing line between "consumption" and "investment." Stocks and bonds are clearly investments. Food and energy are clearly consumption items. But what about real estate? Is it an investment or consumption item? What about an antique car? What about artwork, antiques or collectibles?

Figuring out these kinds of issues would provide plenty of fertile ground for attorneys, accountants, lobbyists and politicians. Any time there is a difference in tax treatment between two or more items games can be played.

79   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 10:27am  

King_Cobra,

That was what I was trying to say to a certain degree. Look at how Alaska flipped out when BP was going to shut down Prudo Bay completely. I read the govenor had instructed the attorney general to investigate how they could go after BP since the oil revenues are about 89% of the states budget.

Paul

80   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 10:30am  

Wrong harm! death is inevitable but in some countries you don’t have to pay tax at all, no income tax no sales tax. You keep whatever you make. In some countries of Middle East there is no tax. Check Oman, UAE etc. Sultan uses oil money to run goverment.

Right, but who pays the Saudi, Oman & UAE governments for all that oil, thus enabling these governments to dispense government largesse (and to line their own pockets)?
A: American, European, Chinese & Indian consumers.

Sadly, there is no such thing as free government --or free lunch.

81   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 10:34am  

SF,

I never said that property taxes should be done away with. However, the extent to which they are relied upon is NUTS! My wife and I decided to sell our house when the property tax for us was 10k. We don't have kids so essentially it was paying for parks, fire, police and the Daley / Cook county waste. We now rent 5 blocks from our old house at 26k per year. As for funding education which most of that tax goes to is crazy even for a family with kids. Most send them to private as the public suck.

Paul

82   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 10:36am  

Paul,

Then we at last agree :-).
"If men were angels, no government would be necessary."
--James Madison

SP,

Don't worry about it. In any case, you have a point about the "anchor baby" loophole in our immigration laws. Add that to our ill-advised "family reunification" policy, and you can bet the U.S. will remain a third-world welfare magnet for decades to come.

83   Paul189   2006 Aug 15, 10:36am  

SP,

I didn't even know what you were talking about. It seems to me if your literate you should be in a library reading books. Oh, add that to my list of where my tax $$$ go.

Paul

84   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 10:44am  

ajh,

You missed the following sentence:

Something tells me that the rich –as always– will find new ways to exploit the system and lobby heavily to create brand-new loopholes to replace the old ones.

Yes. Whenever and wherever there is an opportunity to arbitrage differentials in the system to someone's advantage, it will be done. There is no perfect tax system possible anymore than a perfect government is possible. Just varying degrees of imperfection.

85   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 10:53am  

Paul a country can run without taxing ppl or service only when it has other resources of generating money. In Oman Sultan gets certain percentage of oil money and runs the Goverment. However in most of the countries they have taxation to run Goverment.

King_Cobra,

But how does oil (the resource) "generate money"? Ultimately, it generates money mostly by being sold to consumers in other countries. That money then gets spent on rich sultans, lavish construction projects (Google "Dubai" and "The World") and social welfare.

Basically in, SA, Oman, UAE, etc. taxes are "collected" by the government having a monopoly on the greatest resource in those countries, which other countries desperately need and will pay for: oil. Taxes are an unfortunate global reality, but whether they are paid indirectly by state-run monopolies (Arab world) or directly by taxpayers/consumers (Western world), they must still be paid.

Again, there is no such as free government.

86   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 10:56am  

King_Cobra,

Posted before I saw your last comment. Looks like we basically agree.

87   e   2006 Aug 15, 11:07am  

I don’t know where you are from, but I’m guessing you are either not from LI or you are a hermit that doesn’t know anybody.

More than half of my friends have already left to buy in states such as NC, PA, GA, TX, IN even FLA, some are in the process of moving and many of the others who bought are starting to regret it.

No, I'm from LI.

My friends moved to places like DC, Boston, and the City. But then again, most of my friends became doctors/lawyers/consultants/bankers.

88   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 11:14am  

Blue Oyster Cult?

More cowbell !!

89   e   2006 Aug 15, 11:26am  

Property Tax in California, what is the milliage or percent. I just told (my neighbor) that California has the highest property taxes, at 5%, am I right?

FWIW, I recall reading that most politicians don't know/don't care what the local property tax is - because it is basically out of their control.

That said, it's not 5%.

Here's a guess:

http://www.retirementliving.com/RLstate1.html#CALIFORNIA

Personal Income Taxes
Tax Rate Range: Low - 1.0%; High - 9.3%
Income Brackets: * Lowest - $6,319; Highest - $41,477
Number of Brackets: 6
Tax Credits: Single - $85; Married - $170; Dependents - $265; 65 years of age or older - $87
Standard Deduction: Single - $3,254; Married filing jointly - $6,508
Medical/Dental Deduction: Same as Federal taxes
Federal Income Tax Deduction: None
Retirement Income Taxes: Social Security and Railroad Retirement benefits are exempt. There is a 2.5% tax on early distributions and qualified pensions. All private, local, state and federal pensions are fully taxed.
Retired Military Pay: Follows federal tax rules.
Military Disability Retired Pay:
Disability Portion - Length of Service Pay; Member on September 24, 1975 - No tax; Not Member on September 24, 1975 - Taxed, unless combat incurred. Retired Pay - Based solely on disability: Member on September 24, 1975 - No tax; Not Member on September 24, 1975 - Taxed, unless all pay based on disability and disability resulted from armed conflict, extra-hazardous service, simulated war, or an instrumentality of war.
VA Disability Dependency and Indemnity Compensation: Not subject to federal or state taxes
Military SBP/SSBP/RCSBP/RSFPP: Generally subject to state taxes for those states with income tax. Check with state department of revenue office.

Property Taxes
Property is assessed at 100% of full cash value. The maximum amount of tax on real estate is limited to 1% of the full cash value. After taxes have been paid, homeowners 62 and older who earn $35,051 or less may file a claim for assistance on 96 percent of property taxes, up to $34,000 of the assessed value of their homes. Call 800-852-5711 or visit for details. Homestead exemptions are handled at the county level. Under the homestead program, the first $7,000 of the full value of a homeowner's dwelling is exempt. The state has a property tax postponement program that allows eligible homeowners (seniors, blind and disabled residents) to postpone payments of property taxes on their principal place of residence. Interest is charged on the postponed taxes. For more information, contact the California State Board of Equalization Office -- 800-400-7115.

Inheritance and Estate Taxes
There is no inheritance tax. However, there is a limited California estate tax related to federal estate tax collection.

90   HARM   2006 Aug 15, 11:34am  

But there’s nothing that can be done.

Sure there is --let's start a ballot initiative to repeal ALL property taxes.
If voters aren't willing to repeal Prop. 13 (or at least remove the absurd 1978 tax basis for lucky Boomers), then no tax at all is better than a crushing tax that only burdens young families.

91   astrid   2006 Aug 15, 11:39am  

I know federal estate tax scheme used to give a tax credit for every dollar of state estate/probate tax. But I think that's recently changed to limit the practice of high estate taxes.

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