« First « Previous Comments 41 - 43 of 43 Search these comments
I don't mind getting rid of the MID, but it should be phased in, because it will otherwise arbitrarily damage people who recently made decisions based on the previous structure.
I am talking about somewhat expensive metro areas, where most of the Patnet readers live. I'm not talking about only new homes. My house is over 30 yrs old, but I still save by deducting mortgage interest and state taxes. You are talking about percentages of homeowners, which is completely irrelevant. Most people (70% or so) buy their first new house at some point in their lives. During the first 5 yrs or so, they save a lot on their taxes, and this increases the price of that first home, because they talk with bankers/mortgage people, and because the amount they are allowed to borrow is impacted by default rates, which depend on total monthly cost after taxes.
I don't mind getting rid of the MID, but it should be phased in, because it will otherwise arbitrarily damage people who recently made decisions based on the previous structure.
Only 30% of taxpayers itemize now. Only 20% of homeowners take the MID and 80% of those have incomes over 100k. The amount of additional purchasing power of the MID at the 150k income level is 1.5%. The changes to house values from eliminating the MID will be negligible. The people truly benefiting from the MID either don't need it anyway or are in over their heads with creative financing.
« First « Previous Comments 41 - 43 of 43 Search these comments
Would effectively kill the MID for most of America. Interesting. Will be surprised if it goes through. I wonder what NAR is doing today.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/washington-braces-for-details-of-trumps-tax-reform-plan/2017/04/25/1fba8b30-29df-11e7-a616-d7c8a68c1a66_story.html
#politics #housing