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schacon 10 hours ago

Love it.

In fact, we should have expanded it to be a "millionaire tax" where everyone who has a home worth more than $1M needs to pay a one time $50k+ tax to the highly efficient state government. I'm sure they can easily figure out how to sell a small fraction of their home to cover it.

If there is one thing that history has proven, I think it's how valuable dry taxation is for everyone in the long term.

pojnttekkn 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

There you have it everyone; a rando in HN the other billions on the planet give zero fucks exists says everyone else is an idiot.

Taxation isn't about efficiency. It's about social power. Political power. Economic freedom.

You think dick rockets to nowhere burning more resources every launch than you will consume is efficient?

Love how geniuses obsess over made up finance efficiency put ignore it anywhere else because they know nothing of physics.

object-a 10 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I mean, people already do pay property taxes on homes? So this isn’t a very good retort.

schacon 9 hours ago | parent [-]

In California, it's capped at a knowable amount when you buy the home and pegged at the sale price. You know what it is and what it always will be when the transaction happens. The people whom have owned a house now worth a million for 30 years probably pay a few grand a year and always have. Dry taxing the technical value of their assets today would destroy millions of families. The point is that dry taxation is generally pretty stupid.

object-a 9 hours ago | parent | next [-]

1. The tax is not pegged at the sale price. What prop 13 actually does is limit the amount of appreciation the state can recognize for tax purposes.

2. There are lots of states/cities in the US that do not cap the appreciation of your house for tax purposes, and I don’t think it destroys millions of families. In fact the California cap is generally seen as a terrible policy because it distorts the housing market

JKCalhoun 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Any why should Prop 13 apply to commercial real estate?

georgeburdell 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I wouldn’t call it stupid, but it is a policy choice. On the other side, why should Grandma pay 5% of the property taxes as the new couple next door while receiving the same access to public services, while also pushing another family to live farther away?

malcolmgreaves 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

This is an idiotic take.

The difference between a million dollars and a billion dollars is basically a billion dollars. At this scale, it’s the same comparison between a billion dollars and a homeless person.

_DeadFred_ 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

No billionaire owns a single physical house that is their entire worth and that is also their sole form of shelter.

Now if you are proposing a tax on all secondary homes worth $1M or more... I'm listening.