DeSantis Is Serious About Ending Property Taxes in FL—but Will It Work and Who Will Pay the $40 Billion Difference?

  • Thread starter Thread starter farce©
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies: 85
  • Views: 1K
  • Politics 
When I lived in Texas 30 years ago, they did it by increasing sales tax and property taxes.
 
Of course it will kill the big Blue areas-what there are anyway
 
Florida insurance troubles are real - so are new condominium regulations. We need subsidies!
 
Florida insurance troubles are real - so are new condominium regulations. We need subsidies!
Florida economy-with so much strength-is being strangled by mismanagement by the Pubes Folks there need to realize it is a big population State with a lot of bad news environmental issues-and yae it will cost some money from taxes to stay viable
 
Florida economy-with so much strength-is being strangled by mismanagement by the Pubes Folks there need to realize it is a big population State with a lot of bad news environmental issues-and yae it will cost some money from taxes to stay viable
The spigot of money flowing into Florida — from Russian oligarchs investing in north Miami condos, to Venezuelans moving their funds to safer havens, to Rust Belt retirees moving to The Villages — is unlimited. Literally unlimited. If Florida can’t balance its budget, nobody can. And that has nothing to do with political leadership. It’s all about the weather and the proximity to wealth havens.
 
Will probably let private equity do it all via a long-term sweetheart deal, al a Chicago parking deal,

This sounds like some of the crazy stuff Brownback tried in Kansas and that experiment failed spectacularly.
 
Florida insurance troubles are real - so are new condominium regulations. We need subsidies!
Give my your address I'll bring you some new boot straps to pull up.

It's interesting a guy with multiple properties and can afford the taxes routing for property taxes to go away.
 
The spigot of money flowing into Florida — from Russian oligarchs investing in north Miami condos, to Venezuelans moving their funds to safer havens, to Rust Belt retirees moving to The Villages — is unlimited. Literally unlimited. If Florida can’t balance its budget, nobody can. And that has nothing to do with political leadership. It’s all about the weather and the proximity to wealth havens.
I would suggest the political leadership is what is constipating the Golden goose
 
Florida insurance troubles are real - so are new condominium regulations. We need subsidies!
You would just buy lobster and new phones with that welfare. How about working for it rather than reaching into someone else’s pockets?
 
Florida actually hits me hard with property taxes, giving residents HUGE homeowner’s exemptions - shifting the tax burden to out-of-staters (politically very smart).

I was joking about wanting subsidies.
 
In another generation or so, most of Florida will be underwater due to global warming.
Too bad trump will not be around to see how convincing the cult that climate change is a hoax turns out.
 
Florida already has an extremely regressive tax system that relies heavily on sales taxes

“…Because nearly 80% of Florida’s tax income comes from sales taxes and excise taxes, like taxes on motor fuel, alcohol and tobacco, the state’s tax system is often referred to as “upside-down.” It’s the state’s lowest-income taxpayers that pay the most in taxes.

Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy’s latest Who Pays? report found that the bottom 20% of Florida taxpayers had a state and local tax rate nearly five times that of the top 1%.

The average effective state and local tax rate is 13.2% for Florida families and individuals with the lowest income, 9.1% for those in the middle, and 2.7% for the top 1%.

Florida is one of 41 states that tax the top 1% less than every other income group and one of 34 states that tax residents with the lowest income at a higher rate than any other group.

So, how is it that low-income taxpayers end up footing most of the bills if everyone is charged the same percentage in taxes?

Income proportion is a big issue. When low-income taxpayers pay the same tax rate as high-income earners, they are paying a greater portion of their income comparatively.

Consumption patterns are another factor that coincides with income proportion. Low-income families tend to spend more of their wages on taxable necessities, while higher-income families can put extra income toward non-taxable items things like retirement or investments. …”

 
Question for folks here just to confirm - do you guys view *all* sales tax as regressive?

I’m putting aside the whole proposal of eliminating property taxes in favor of more sales tax. But just sales tax in general, do you find it regressive?

If so, is this something that bothers you or just something you think we all need to live with since other forms of taxes (like income tax and property tax) are progressive?
 
Food* sold in Florida isn’t taxed.

*Prepared food is taxed.

Wouldn’t be surprised to see the sales tax on groceries reinstated to reduce or eliminate the property tax. Increase vehicle rental taxes and hotel taxes as well.
 
Back
Top