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The housing collapse in 2008 may not be repeated
Nothing is forever except death and taxes.
widespread infertility among women by destroying their lifetime supply of eggsI predict that the CCP will be cloning a new obedient population within a decade, if they aren't already.
housing can not sustain at this rate of growth with almost zero interest rate unless go down all the way to negative rate:
So, I'd get paid to buy a house?
When interest rates soar as the bulk of the Boomers enter retirement and pull vast amounts of capital out of the economy to consume
So, I'd get paid to buy a house?
Is housing always going to be this fucking expensive,
Onvacation saysSo, I'd get paid to buy a house?
That could work.....get paid 10k per year to live in the house but pay 50k per yr in property taxes
1) Is housing always going to be this fucking expensive, and is it going to keep going up due to inflation?
I recall some years back Logan M, the mortgage loan dude, was strongly of the opinion that the us would see high demographic fueled housing demand in the early to mid 2020's. I forget what his arguments were, but he seemed to feel strongly about it, so it always stuck with me.
We should tax the land and never the house on it.
We should tax the land and never the house on it.
What do you suppose the levy would be?
Would the county or state get the tax?
The federal government owns an ungodly amount of land, would they be subject to a local levy?
I asked a knowledgable Georgist about this once and I liked his answer: Let people bid on the property taxes to own the land the next time it comes up for sale. High bidder on property taxes gets the land ownership. Sell the house separately (maybe to the same person).
The house sits out in the rain and slowly rots, a liability.
The land is forever and is an asset.
We should tax the land and never the house on it.
There's a ton of questions to be answered and if you have an input on any of these ramblings, I'd love to hear it:
Under that system a Bill Gates could buy up all the land and charge rent to whoever owns or uses the buildings on it.
And most of it isn't on the market anyway.
1) Is housing always going to be this fucking expensive, and is it going to keep going up due to inflation? I'm considering buying a rental or two since my brother is a realtor and is making a good return on them - he just bought a nice townhouse last week and had it rented next day.
2) Or are people buying up assets (raising price and restricting supply) in panic due to all the printing, but we'll eventually deflate like last time, or end up in more a stagflation scenario?
3) What happens this coming winter if the vaxx were to knock out a huge portion of our population? Do we then end up with a glut of homes?
4) What are decent investments right now? Disclaimer, I went in pretty big on oil 3 months ago and am up big, but I need to diversify - and fuck big tech - no interested.
5) Metals.... I'm hesitant on the inflation mindset being here for good (again) because the price of metals hasn't followed the price of housing/crypto/stock market over the last 6 months. In fact, they seem pretty fucking stagnant to me, but I'm still open to buying a few monster boxes of SAE's...
6) I have a truck and a boat, but have recently been thinking about selling them, since they are both now magically worth more than I paid, buying a Prius Prime, and dumping the rest into big oil. Disclaimer: I have no need for a truck, I just like it. Totally impractical.
Let me hear your thoughts/theories. I've got a shit ton of stuff just rolling around in my head, but am trying to piece together a half decent strategy for navigating the next several years/months.