Quote:
Originally Posted by jlousa
Guys Jebby is absolutely correct from an economic standpoint. You have two buyers today, one buys a completed unit and removes a units from the market place and pays no tax. You have a second buyer that bought a presale last week, they aren't removings a unit from the market place, they are creating a unit, yet the second buyer gets dinged with a 15% after the fact. How can anyone argue that makes sense? Sure if they bought after the tax is implemented it would be one thing but doing it retroactive is bad policy.
This is going to cause a reduction in future supply. And although it will make a slight dent in prices, it won't do much, if you can't afford anything today would you be able to afford if prices fall 10-15% or even 20% from the recent highs? What I expect to see is the reduced new supply create upward pressure on rents hurting the very people that need the most help. The proper solution was not to have kept interest rates so low for so long, but raising them would hurt too many voters so it wasn't done. Short shortsightedness.
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Ok, a few comments on this whole situation:
1. Nobody knows the true goal of this tax, but according to the government, they want to tax foreigners who are driving up prices, and use that money to pay for low income rentals and other housing options for local citizens. This is
exactly what the public has been clamoring for.
2. The result of this tax is either a windfall of money (to be directed towards rentals for locals)
or a big correction in real estate. Again, this is exactly what the public has been complaining about.
3. Rules have to come into effect at some date. I personally have an outstanding pre-sale contract, and I benefited substantially from the changes in PTT earlier this year. Pre-sale contracts are nothing more than pieces of paper. The taxation and all other legal impacts have always happened at the stage when the land is transferred. Those who don't get to vote are getting screwed, what a shocker.
4. Mortgage interest rates are driven by the bond market,
full stop. There is literally nothing that local jurisdictions can do to impact these rates. Even the federal government has little control as bond returns are linked to the risk factors of the country's entire economy. The federal government has a huge debt and no desire to pay more interest than absolutely necessary on the money they are borrowing.
5. I know Mike Stewart, I've been to a few of his open houses and he has been a buyer's agent for me. He's a character to be sure, but he knows a ton about the local market and works hard for his clients. He has their best interests in mind (because they pay his salary), and his suggestions are merely tax avoidance, the same thing you'd expect from your accountant or your lawyer. If the government wanted to make what he's suggesting illegal, they should have written it into the legislation.