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by avar
973 days ago
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You can pull on those heartstrings in either direction, as it were. In economic terms what you're arguing is that investment efficiency should always outweigh allocative efficiency. > pay [...] much more than your neighbor, who objectively speaking may have a lot of equal value. All land is unique, so I don't think adjacent land of equal value exists. The difference may be trivial, or it may be substantial. But yes, it's all a tradeoff. Some might prefer a centralized government authority decreeing a given value, others might prefer market-based price discovery. I'm not trying to convince you or anyone else either way, just pointing out that fair price discovery for a self-assessment LVT isn't an unsolved problem. |
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I don't understand how this relates. My point would stand even if the neighboring lots were slightly different in value.
> just pointing out that fair price discovery for a self-assessment LVT isn't an unsolved problem.
Yeah okay I'll give you that. It's just that we can't ignore how tax policy must match a society's values in a democratic society, else it'll be voted out. I'm saying this probably wouldn't work out since voters put value on the idea that at least some people will be able to get a good enough job to afford to bring up their kids in a stable home.