Re: Why the land went up
Actually, it is very clear that Silicon Valley exists in significant part because of massive government expenditures on defense. It wasn't infrastructure spending in the road building sense, but then again the Department of Defense buying all of Intel's early output (and Fairchild's, etc etc) is very much a purse string to government.
Be that as it may, it is not clear at all to me that the value of San Francisco real estate was only because of Silicon Valley. SF has major tourism, corporate headquarters, and FIRE activity as well.
I find it difficult to see how you can go from a 9.1% annual return from 1959 to present, to a 5% return, given a 1% property tax in 1973. This tax in turn could increase no more than 2% a year. I guess the property tax was much higher prior to 1973? Certainly the property taxes being paid for 2012 would comprise only less than .3% of the value of the property, much less the land alone.
I think that would be true for someone who bought in the '70s, but is much less true for someone who bought in earlier periods. Even if your parents had bought said land with a mortgage, by 1973 (when inflation really started) I'd think that most of the interest had already been paid. So there would be some benefit from paying off principle with devalued dollars, but not clear to me at first glance that this offsets the interest payments.
No question the appreciation made the above calculation moot, however.
Then again, the victims of financialization aren't the people who are adult at the time, they are the ensuing generations. You personally are less affected, but your kids certainly are in a much more difficult situation.
I pity the 18 to 25 year olds now - between student loans, high housing costs, and poor job prospects.
Originally posted by Polish Silver
Be that as it may, it is not clear at all to me that the value of San Francisco real estate was only because of Silicon Valley. SF has major tourism, corporate headquarters, and FIRE activity as well.
Originally posted by Polish Silver
Originally posted by Polish Silver
No question the appreciation made the above calculation moot, however.
Then again, the victims of financialization aren't the people who are adult at the time, they are the ensuing generations. You personally are less affected, but your kids certainly are in a much more difficult situation.
I pity the 18 to 25 year olds now - between student loans, high housing costs, and poor job prospects.
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