Economists were right on the home buyer tax credit
Started by Riversider
almost 16 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009
Discussion about
Builders and brokers wasted our tax dollars to line their own pockets.
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2010/03/very-expensive-home-buyer-tax-credit.html
Just about every economist opposed the tax credit as expensive and ineffective. Here are some quotes from a post last September from an article by Patrick Coolican in the Las Vegas Sun: Economists say extending tax credit for first-time homebuyers is bad policy
It’s terrible policy,” says Mark Calabria of the libertarian Cato Institute.
“It’s awful policy,” says Andrew Jakabovics, associate director for housing and economics at the liberal Center for American Progress. “It’s incredibly expensive. It’s not well targeted.”
...
“We paid $8,000 to at least 1.5 million people to do something they were going to do anyway,” Jakabovics says.
...
“A heck of a lot of people would have bought the house anyway,” says Ted Gayer, an economist at the Brookings Institution.
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The tax break, due to expire at the end of November, is on track to cost $15 billion, twice what Congress had planned. In other words, it will cost $43,000 for every new homebuyer who would not have bought a house without the tax break.
Gayer also questions whether moving people from renting to owning is really all that useful ...
The tax credit is one, albeit very expensive, way to create more households, but rental vouchers to get people out of their parents’ basements should also be considered, economists say.
genius!