Adulting Part Two: Government & Taxes
Taxes are one of the ways adults think about money. It’s really important to watch how the government uses your money.
Government & Taxes: Do You Get What You Pay For?
For me it is mind boggling how much money the government takes from us. Once upon a time the government representatives you voted for treated tax money like it was their own and were very careful with spending. This isn’t true anymore and hasn’t been for a very long time, since about the mid to late 1980’s.
The U.S. Government has many social programs where the spending is very high. The cost of the Military is very high. We send unbelievable amounts of our tax money to other countries. There are hundreds of places to read about government waste with your money. You can’t really do anything about it except to vote for people you believe will be thrifty with the money you give them they take. There are things you can do in your local community to keep your tax burden lower.
One of my pet peeves is real estate property tax.
Property tax is a huge cash cow for local governments and it is very difficult to get a property tax to go down.
Let’s do some math. I own a piece of rental real property (a house) that is valued at roughly $275,000. Property tax rates are high here, not as high as other places, but still high. I pay (rounded) $3700.00 twice a year, $7400 a year in property taxes. I have a thirty-year mortgage, so, say I stay in my house for the thirty-years, I would pay $222,000 in property taxes. Now that is providing the tax rate stays the same (which it won’t, between 2017 and 2019 my taxes increased thirty one percent).
How would this sit with you if this were your picture? Did you know that you paid taxes on the same piece of real estate year after year, never ending until you sell?
Let’s play around with some more tax money.
Property taxes generally pay for the public schools. The public schools generally receive the largest portion of what you pay in total property tax. Now you’ll hear the argument that in a civilized society we all pay our fair share to provide for schools etc., but let’s visit “fair” for a moment.
Now let’s say that in an urban community where there are homeowners and renters, the rental population is sixty percent and home ownership is forty percent (which are the exact statistics we have where I am). The rent money a renter pays more than likely includes a portion of the property tax on the apartment building, so say you have twenty residents all chipping in on that one property tax, compared to one family paying the full amount. What do you think happens when the schools put an issue on the local ballot to raise property taxes so the schools can get more of your money?
I’ll tell you what.
The homeowners generally attempt vote the issue down, all the renters vote to increase the property taxes. Fair share?
But there’s more.
In the urban center where my rental house is located, the school spends roughly $13,000 per student and is an “F” rated school system (schools are rated A-F with A being schools where grade school children can actually read when they leave the 8th grade).
As a homeowner, forced to pay $7400 per year, how would that make you feel? How about a homeowner who never used the school system because they chose to homeschool or a tuition based school?
This example is just one example of how a local government spends the money it extracts from you. Think about what the Federal government does.
In 2019 the Federal Government took in $3.3 trillion in tax revenue. Eighty percent, or $2.7 trillion came from individuals. Cook that in your brain a minute.
Taxes are one of the ways adults think about money. It’s really important to watch how the government uses your money.
Your money is their lifeline.
Just remember, the government is counting on you not having the basics civics lessons to understand what they are doing with your money.
Educate yourself through reading.
The government doesn’t make money – ever.
It takes it from you and redistributes it how it sees fit. You can control it to some degree at the ballot box.