this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2024
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Economics
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By the article's explanation, the top 10, 5, and 1 percent are not introductory price levels. These are high-value homes, not starter homes.
Take a look at homes around cities that actually have career options. Homes that used to cost 400k are now going for over a million.
And what echelon of sale price do they fall under?
It’s all in the implementation. I live in a high cost of living state so my house might appear to be in a higher overall percentile. However it’s an 80 year old starter home, so I don’t think it’s reasonable to subject me to a mansion tax.
Too many of these attempts to tax the rich don’t seem to take into account how expensive some places are and hurt those who are not close to wealthy
Whatever it costs, old or new, is what they're talking about (within the state, as my quote mentioned). It doesn't take into account whether you think your house should be valued where it is. This isn't a valid criticism of the article.