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by Loughla
2170 days ago
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The home was assessed at over a quarter of a million dollars, for both taxes this year, and by an independent assessor when we refinanced. I'm saying I have a decent home, but that amount of money is unrealistic. It cost $100,000 to build, 11 years ago. I cannot be convinced it almost tripled in value, in any realistic market, in 11 years. |
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Anyway, if we start with an actual "cost" of $150,000, you get to $250,000 with 11 years of compound interest at 5%. If we instead completely ignore your labor input, 11 years at 9% gets us from $100,000 to $250,000. Can you really not be convinced that "realistic market" might not have a 5% (or 9%) yearly increase in value? That's not to say it will always go up that much, but it doesn't seem unrealistic that it might.
The bigger question of course is how we determine "value". Is $250,000 for a house today any more "realistic" than $100,000 to build it 11 years ago? Not by any objective measure. They are both just numbers, determined by how much people are willing to pay, which in turn depends on how much they have in their bank accounts, which in turn depends on how much someone is willing to pay them, which (circularly) depends on how much someone else is willing to pay for something else. There's nothing "realistic" about any particular numeric value.