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bcrosby95 · 3 years ago
Over-reliance on income tax to fund the state's budget is a decades long problem. You can thank prop 13 for that. It's why whenever there's a recession California has gigantic budget shortfalls.

Expanding industry isn't gonna fix the problem.

Currently the state has an ~80bil surplus. The state needs to keep some of that around for the inevitable recession.

vmception · 3 years ago
> Currently the state has an ~80bil surplus. The state needs to keep some of that around for the inevitable recession.

yeah well the governor has an election to win, so free money for everyone

throwaway894345 · 3 years ago
I don't have strong feelings about prop 13, but what does it limit here? It's not like it's sane to arbitrarily raise property taxes during a recession (make housing even less affordable at the moment people have less money to spend). Seems like prop 13 or not, the solution is the one you identified in your last paragraph: maintain a buffer that can't be touched until a recession is declared (for some reasonable, objective definition of "recession").
inferiorhuman · 3 years ago
Prop 13 makes it nearly impossible to raise any tax (state or local) including one to fund a buffer or rainy day fund. Prop 8 makes it possible to get a reduction in property tax as values go down. Prop 98 makes it impossible to claw back funds spent on K-12 stuff.
wonnage · 3 years ago
I think that buffer would be even less popular. I can imagine the attack ads already - "California has the highest tax rates and they're not even spending it! Your tax dollars are sitting idle in the hands of <evil bank name of the week>"
frankbreetz · 3 years ago
Property values are usually not affect by recessions, 2008 being the exception, and thus income from property taxes is not affected as much. Income is more affected by recession. If prop13 is repealed California could raise larger percent of its budget from property taxes as opposed to income taxes, and it would help with variations of tax income.
bushbaba · 3 years ago
Accept California’s property tax revenue income has grown faster than inflation.
onlyrealcuzzo · 3 years ago
The state's budget grows a lot faster than inflation. Property tax revenues aren't growing anywhere near as fast as income tax revenues. The trend is clear. The state is more and more dependent on income tax.

Deleted Comment

jmyeet · 3 years ago
Maybe then there'll be enough popular support for repealing Prop 13.

People mention the heavy dependence on state income tax. Well, why is that? Compare that to states like Texas that obviously has no state income tax but just has high property taxxes. I actually think this is a way healthier situation.

But in the 70s, voters voted themselves a massive permanent tax break that's even bigger for corporations. When an individual buy a property the tax basis gets reset and recalculated. Not if the property is held in an LLC. So Disney's property tax rates have essentially been frozen since the 1960s.

The standard counterargument is "what about the old people getting kicked out of their homes?" It's an appeal to emotion that doesn't make any sense. First, why are we giving Disney a amssive tax break so some old person on a fixed income doesn't have to downsize from the family home they raised their children in? Second, if we really want to protect those people (and I'm in the camp who thinks we shouldn't) we have the technology to provide needs-based property tax relief in the form of a lower rate or (my preferred option) simply deferring the taxes interest-free until the home is sold or the owner dies.

eganist · 3 years ago
> But in the 70s, voters voted themselves a massive permanent tax break that's even bigger for corporations. When an individual buy a property the tax basis gets reset and recalculated. Not if the property is held in an LLC. So Disney's property tax rates have essentially been frozen since the 1960s.

Are people essentially selling the LLCs then, rather than the properties themselves?

saurik · 3 years ago
Yes. The LLCs are even often simply named after the street address, so stuff like 6243 Abrego LLC. The idea is then just whether you are making enough money off the asset to justify the minimum LLC tax vs. the property tax increase on an expected sale (which might be a good trade-off for everyone, but is certainly a good trade-off for people renting their property out).
jmyeet · 3 years ago
gedy · 3 years ago
I've never understood the objection to prop 13 - your property taxes can and do go up every year by a reasonable amount (2%?). The only thing they don't track is the insane bubble prices that happen every decade or so but who cares? If people sell then, they either are taxed or buy inflated property prices as replacement. When prices crash, the gov't shouldn't depend on bubble prices for revenue.
labcomputer · 3 years ago
> If people sell then, they either are taxed or buy inflated property prices as replacement.

Oh, sweet summer child. In California, you can transfer your below-market rate to a new property. You can also create an LLC for each property so that it need never be sold (change of control of the LLC owning the property does not trigger reset of the tax rate). And your children can inherit your property tax rate, too.

> When prices crash, the gov't shouldn't depend on bubble prices for revenue.

Most rates are so far below the real value of a property that most people still saw (and complained about) the maximum 2% annual increase during massive housing crashes like 2008.

leetcrew · 3 years ago
the objection is that, even after looking at longer timeframes to smooth bubbles, california real estate has appreciated by much more than 2%/yr over the last several decades. this is a policy that favors people who bought houses a long time ago over people who have bought more recently or are looking to buy for the first time. why/whether that's a problem depends on your perspective on what the purpose of a property tax is.

a simple way of looking at it is that property tax is just one of many ways that a city raises funds. it seems unfair that two people/families living in similar houses, consuming similar amounts of public services, might pay wildly different amounts of tax depending on how recently they bought their houses.

a more nuanced view is that taxes are not only about revenue collection, but also incentivizing or disincentivizing certain behaviors. high property taxes discourage people from living in highly demanded areas without having a strong reason to do so. a pair of empty nesters living in a detached 3/4BR home in SF is not an efficient use of the limited housing stock. if they really want to do that, they should be allowed to, but imo they should not be insulated from the economic consequences.

of course, this is all in conflict with the american ideal that you can lock in a fixed rate mortgage, pay it off, and have your heirs monopolize a particular plot of land in perpetuity. this has always seemed to me a promise that should never have been made, but at this point it would be very painful to unwind all the policy that props this up.

epistasis · 3 years ago
2% is not a reasonable amount when housing prices are regularly going up by 3x-5x that percentage.

There has never been a bubble crash that brought housing prices anywhere down to the Prop 13 valuations, so it's pretty strong evidence that it's not a bubble.

I think that we need to start charging a huge capital gains tax on local property transaction, assessed by the local government, not the federal government. Maybe 25%-50% of the capital gains. Or maybe 2% per year if ownership, with a max of X%.

Long time property holders have been exploiting the economy of California, taking in unearned profits, and taking that money out of poorer, more productive, people.

jmyeet · 3 years ago
Californians voted themselves two massive boons in the 70s.

1. Prop 13. This was in response to rising inflation in the 70s that had a knock-on effect to property taxes. The argument of kicking old people out of their homes was used as a stalking horse for giving the likes of Disney a massive tax break.

But there have been periods of high inflation since and some massive growth in property values. So you have a house that might've sold for $60,000 in 1975 with tax set accordingly, now being worth $3,000,000 and being taxed at twice that rate (1-2% per year capped cumulatively). So someone who buys an identical house now might be paying 20x the property tax rate.

This was further expanded by allowing people to inherit their low tax rates so you really have a two-tier system where long-term residents and corporations aren't paying anywhere near their fair share of property taxes.

2. Rent Control. This turned out to be another massive boon to incumbents. Inflation created issues with rents going up too fast. The solution? Cap the increases, just like Prop 13. And give tenants the right to stay. These too can be inherited.

So you might have someone in SF living in a $3,000,000 house that's paying $400/month in rent.

This hasn't really helped anyone since.

NYC had this too but steadily moved away from it. The last rent control lease was created in the early 1970s. There's a greater (but shrinking) pool of rent stabilized units that tend to have more reasonable rents.

Anyway, as you can imagine this creates a bunch of bad incentives. Under the table payments for leases. Illegal subletting. Properties remaining vacant because rather than be rented (I saw one estimate that 1 in 8 units in SF was vacant). The only recourse for evicting a rent controlled tenant was really an Ellis Act eviction.

Price caps only work in the very short term. They are not a long term solution.

Higher property taxes would actually help with the housing crisis in California because it's too cheap to park money in Californian property plus you could do something useful with those funds, not the least of which should be reducing state income taxes at the lower brackets.

mavelikara · 3 years ago
> The standard counterargument is "what about the old people getting kicked out of their homes?"

Deferring the taxes, as you mention later in your comment, would be most equitable way of handling this.

hintymad · 3 years ago
I remember there was a huge discussion on HN years ago on Prop 13, and someone mentioned that Prop 13 was proposed because the democratic party then double taxed people. Somehow I couldn't find the reference anymore. As for the Prop 13, it makes sense to me to keep it for the primary residence, as an ordinary person shouldn't be forced to give up their house just because the property appreciates. Prop 13 for non-primary and commercial property should be repealed. That said, I don't think Prop 13 will fundamentally solve California's problem before we fix our government. For instance, why would it cost more than 100K to house a homeless? How many people can earn that much, post tax, in the nation? Or why couldn't Bay Area schools afford even school bus or better school buildings or more teachers (CUSD teachers ask parents to grade students' homework)?
masonic · 3 years ago
>Prop 13 for non-primary and commercial property should be repealed.

Agreed. The Democrat legislature could do anytime without a single Republican vote. All it takes then is a simple majority of voters in the next statewide election. Ask yourself why that has never even been attempted.

jjav · 3 years ago
> The standard counterargument is "what about the old people getting kicked out of their homes?" It's an appeal to emotion that doesn't make any sense.

It makes sense as it was a very real problem for lots of older people who had built the neighborhood just to be displaced by rich newcomers.

What didn't and doesn't make any sense is applying the same protection to corporate-owned properties. Prop13 protection should only apply to a property owned by a named individual who lives in the property. Not corporations, not investment properties.

vmception · 3 years ago
are there enough of us that are not beneficiaries of Prop 13 to repeal Prop 13?

are there comprehensive stats of which properties are under that system and how many residents that applies to?

I don't care about the LLC part, its stupid for types of property (house, cars) to have separate transfer tariffs on them to begin with, so therefore it would be stupid for me to care that an LLC gets around them

I'm just wondering about the numbers of people, helps me determine if this is a useful area to spend energy at the moment

inferiorhuman · 3 years ago

  are there enough of us that are not beneficiaries of Prop 13 to repeal Prop 13?
No. Repealing Prop 13 is a third rail, ask our last republican governor. A common suggestion is to implement a so-called "split roll" system where non-residential property gets no Prop 13 protections and residential (ideally only the primary residence) maintains the limits. Unfortunately I doubt that'll ever pass within my lifetime.

Justin_K · 3 years ago
Yea, let's repeal Prop 13, our state needs to collect more money. As if they high gas prices and income taxes aren't enough... let's get the taxpayers once more, through their property. Does anybody actually think raising property taxes will make homes more accessible? It will create a further divide and will get passed through to renters anyways.
jaredklewis · 3 years ago
Different methods of taxation create different incentives and have different side effects.

For example taxing income is basically a tax on giving people jobs or being economically productive , two things we probably don't want to discourage, so I rate income taxes pretty poorly.

Taxing gasoline discourages people from using gasoline, which might have the side effect of encouraging adoption of other methods of creating and storing energy. So that's not all bad.

Property taxes have the wonderful side effect of making it more expensive to own property, which discourages speculation and other non-productive use of land.

I'm sympathetic that the tax burden in CA is already too high, but we can repeal prop 13 and maintain (or even reduce) total tax revenue by simultaneously reducing income taxes. IMHO, replacing some or all income taxes with more property taxes would be a massive improvement.

Many proponents of repealing prop 13 openly support cutting other taxes or would be open to such a compromise.

treeman79 · 3 years ago
There is no limit to the amount they will spend. Could be 100% still wouldn’t be enough.
masonic · 3 years ago
The Democrats would have put a Prop 13 repeal -or- a split-roll property tax system on the ballot almost anytime in the past two decades without a single Republican vote. All it takes then is a simple majority of voters in the next statewide election. Ask yourself why that has never even been attempted.
onlyrealcuzzo · 3 years ago
If 50% of voters are ever non-homeowners, prop 13 will probably get repealed. I'm not sure if that will ever happen.
bingohbangoh · 3 years ago
The heavy income tax is not disappearing if Prop 13 is repealed. They'll just raise the property taxes and distribute that money for themselves.
crooked-v · 3 years ago
Who is "themselves"?
antognini · 3 years ago
This is one of the downsides of having the state budget be so heavily dependent on a highly progressive income tax. Incomes at the top of the income distribution are relatively volatile, so boom-bust cycles in the broader economy have an outsized impact on state finances. (The top 1% of income earners pay about half of California's income taxes.) Unfortunately in a recession, state income falls right when services are needed the most. This hasn't led to any problems in most voters' memories since the last recession was now 14 years ago. But it has always just been a matter of time.

Any more stable alternatives aren't really political feasible in California. If anything, the political appetite in the state is to continue to increase taxes at the upper end of the income distribution. Income taxes at the middle and lower end are already high enough that voters probably wouldn't go for increasing their own tax rates. (Same with sales taxes.) Increasing the proportion of taxes that come from property taxes would probably provide a more stable revenue stream for the state, but would in effect require Prop 13 to be repealed, which is also a non-starter.

The state rainy day fund is meant to help counteract against this, but the fund essentially has a cap due to the Gann Limit, which limits its utility. The Gann Limit in general requires the state to return revenues in excess of a certain amount back to taxpayers. The way the political winds are shifting, the Gann Limit will probably be repealed in the next decade or so, though whether or not those extra funds will make it into the rainy day fund is unclear.

pishpash · 3 years ago
Even without a rainy day fund, which is an inefficient use of capital, the state could buy financial instruments to hedge a recession. Is it prohibited from doing that?
lumost · 3 years ago
At a state level, hedging recession risk suffers from counterparty risk.

Who knows who will need bailouts/ who will crash during the next recession. On the other hand California can borrow favorably against future revenues during most recessions.

subsubzero · 3 years ago
I am extremely bearish on the future of CA, so much so that this is my last week in the state(moving out for good). The state has really shot itself in the foot by driving out stable tradional businesses in the past few years with insane policies that really only favor hollywood and tech. With tech in full meltdown and as long as interest rates keep increasing(and tech stocks falling) the state will face a reckoning unlike any its ever seen.

As social/govt. services dry up, professionals will leave in droves as who wants to pay 10-13% state taxes when alot of other states offer way better tax rates with better quality of life. Think the homeless situation is bad now with tent cities everywhere, wait until the yearly $15B that CA spends on homeless disappears.

I predict a hyper exodus as the state suffers an economic collapse that will take most likely a decade or two to recover from. Lets also not forget that the 20th century was the wettest in the past 2000 years in CA and the 21st century will be very dry(which is normal for this state), so CA's agro economy will rapidly shrink, and water loss will force population out.

Oh and by the way I am a 4th gen. CA resident so its tough for me to acknowledge these facts.

HomeGear · 3 years ago
>With tech in full meltdown

The stock market does not reflect the reality - in fact, you might say the market is coming back to reality. There’s been small layouts but to call it a “meltdown” is a bit much.

strikelaserclaw · 3 years ago
I really think a lot of businesses have been propped up by the bull market the last 12-14 years. We are at a point where we are scraping the bottom of the barrel of ideas because all the fertile ideas for "how to use the internet" have been consumed. The internet is interesting in that it democratized creating businesses in probably a way never seen before, a kid with no life experience could teach themselves programming and invent a billion dollar company, how wild is that.
DragonStrength · 3 years ago
The problem is the timing. While workers are resisting return-to-office and startups offer equal comp for remote within the US, tech is taking a big enough downturn that if you started your job exactly a year ago you'll be making less this year than last in real dollars before taking into account inflation. A great time to be a startup that just closed Series A with remote positions though, which is why being bearish on California is not the same as being bearish on tech.
subsubzero · 3 years ago
Look at the prices of paypal, square, netlix, roblox, affirm, coinbase, etc they are all down at least 70% from 6 months ago with some down 90%, if that is not a full meltdown I don't know what is :)
billylindeman · 3 years ago
I'm also incredibly bearish on CA and left for good last year. The quality of life per dollar is just so incredibly skewed, and the monoparty culture perpetuates terrible policies that will continue to strangle the state.

I left the city for the mountains (tahoe) in 2020, and it felt much more reasonable, but with the forest fires getting worse every year living in nature there feels even more hopeless.

I'm back in the midwest, and my plan is to buy a huge plot of land and build a house that is off grid w/ it's own water supply. The system is in a slow state of collapse, and every year people just paper over what's right in front of us. I think CA right now is a leading indicator.

Shit is gonna get weird over the next decade.

hintymad · 3 years ago
Even though the one-party (it does not matter which party, by the way. The key is one party) California wreak havoc in the state, the Bay Area is still the best place for meaningful tech jobs. The Bay Area still has the highest concentration of the companies who are willing to invest in solving hard problems that in turn demand solid tech solutions. For me, that's distributed systems (especially distributed stateful systems), machine learning, and statistics. Throw in handsome pay and the Mediterranean climate, there's really not much incentive to leave, despite the disgusting lies in politics and wokeisms in every level.
wolverine876 · 3 years ago
This very common Internet take seems self-fulfilling, to a degree. And like many Internet takes, I've read it a million times without seeing any data.

> driving out stable tradional businesses

What is that based on? It's hard to believe all demand for local services doesn't have anyone supplying food, entertainment, construction, etc.

Drblessing · 3 years ago
> wait until the yearly $15B that CA spends on homeless disappears.

Wouldn't this alleviate the situation? I hear homeless people come to CA for the benefits.

bsaul · 3 years ago
The ones i saw when i visited SF clearly didn’t come there to benefit from anything. They were zombies walking the street with saliva dripping from their mouth.

I can’t imagine that this is with 15B spendings. It also makes me wonder what it’s going to be without..

djbusby · 3 years ago
But also being outdoors in CA is better than say MA.

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civilized · 3 years ago
> California’s heavy dependency on tax payments from the rich and on the continued strength of the tech economy makes the state highly vulnerable in the event of a significant slowdown

I thought we just spent like a decade poring over charts showing how the rich are least affected by any downturn.

candiodari · 3 years ago
Because the whole "the rich" are 2 different things:

1) the superrich, couple thousand in the whole of the US, who indeed essentially set their own tax rate. This is what everyone likes talking about. Needless to say, they're not the source of tax revenues, and they're NOT who government is talking about when discussing "raising taxes on the rich"

2) the "rich" as in double US average income or more. Anyone making 100k or more. Most California cops fall under this definition. These are people who will see their taxes raised, who pay for the state. This is who the government is talking about when discussing taxes.

You're talking about group 1. "Tax payments from the rich" is talking about group 2.

onlyrealcuzzo · 3 years ago
If you work in The Bay, Los Angeles, or San Diego - $100k is not far from the median.

One of the strangest things about CA is that people aren't aware that incomes are actually quite high. Everyone thinks they're crushing it and wonders why they aren't. It's because $100k is far from rich - it's close to the median.

$200k for a HH won't even put you in the top 10% in some pretty large areas of the state.

philipov · 3 years ago
Not making a statement on what the true facts are, but I don't see an a priori contradiction between these two statements. People who are rich have wealth, and are therefore less reliant on their transient income. But income taxes target income, not wealth.
vmception · 3 years ago
it depends on who "the rich" are

but there is a decent sized subset of California that is insulated from the "problems" of California. they are insulated from the famous tax rates, do not rely on employment income, are not subject to the compliance burdens of being an employer, have inherited low property taxes or only rent, and can leave at a moment's notice.

this part of the population of California is large enough to vastly distort the rental or property market wherever they go to.

bushbaba · 3 years ago
There’s so much bloat in the California government that they’d be fine. Especially when you consider the large reserves of many governments. My municipality has 10 years of operating expenses saved up in treasury bills
kwere · 3 years ago
the rich (income) can move out state if mistreated, expecially once RE & Tech & whatever "advantages" dry out.
LosWochosWeek · 3 years ago
>Despite strong annual budgets, California suffers the highest debt of any state — $507 billion

Suspiciously missing the dept-to-GDP ratio. I wonder why that is?

ajross · 3 years ago
Hell, they didn't even compare debt per capita[1]. Seeing numbers like that into an opinion piece is the easiest way to know you're almost certainly being deliberately lied to.

In fact the whole idea of California being somehow spending irresponsibly is simply false. State budgets are high because state revenues are high, and it's been beating US aggregate growth numbers for most of the last century. Maybe there's a good case to be made that the end of this period is approaching and that the gravy train is slowing down. But that's an argument about second derivative. California is and remains extremely wealthy and has a comparatively well-managed state budget. Period.

(I don't live there, btw.)

[1] Which per this link is almost dead-on average among US states at $3850: https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/debt-by-sta...

lkbm · 3 years ago
wtf is up with that page?

Side bar and chart:

> Least Debt: Tennessee ($875.12)

List:

> States with the Least Debt > 1. Texas > > Texas has the lowest debt of any state in the U.S. Alaska's total liabilities add up to $222.64 billion, and its total assets add up to $356.01 billion, giving Texas the highest net position in the country of $115.08 billion. Texas's debt ratio is 62.5% > ... > 3. Alaska > ... > 5. Tennessee

WalterGR · 3 years ago
According to Wikipedia:

> The economy of the State of California is the largest in the United States, with a $3.4 trillion gross state product (GSP) as of 2021. If California were a sovereign nation (2021), it would rank as the world's fifth largest economy, ahead of India and behind Germany.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_California

redisman · 3 years ago
Classic “visualization is actually just showing population density”
divyekapoor · 3 years ago
Because debt-to-GDP doesn't make sense as a financial measure and most people don't understand it. CA economy is $3.4T, CA debt-to-GDP is 14.9%, the US Federal Debt to GDP is 133.9%, so the total debt to GDP on the revenue dollars in California is 148.8%.

If California were a country, it would rank 5th highest in the world in debt-to-GDP ratio right behind Japan, Venezuela, Sudan, Greece and Lebanon.

That said, debt-to-tax-revenue is a more useful financial measure. The total CA tax revenue (income, sales, corporate tax) is about $173B [1]. The debt-to-total-tax-revenue is 293%. Since we don't want to shut down Schools, Medicare, SNAP, Pensions & Unemployment, the debt-to-discretionary-expenses is even more dire at 704% limiting the ability of the state to make a dent in the debt payments without increasing taxes.

In effect, CA is neck deep in debt no matter how you look at it.

[1] https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/4448

wolverine876 · 3 years ago
Or just wait for the next economic expansion.

I was telling someone today how I loved where I lived. They said, 'really? everyone says how much they hate it, how crazy it is.' Everyone hates everything, everyone expresses pessimism, applied to everything. We were in the place in the trend where we could still find ways to apply the idea, when it was still provocative to read. Now, for me, it's obvious and tired.

Recessions are, to a degree, self-fulfilling. Optimism and pessimism are intangible, but are real things that have very real consequences for anything you do - your current project (if you even start it), your job, your relationships, your economy, your society. That's obvious and well-known, and I'm tired of people screwing up my life, my relationships, my community and country with this stuff. Nothing is stopping us from living fantastical lives.

dougmsmith · 3 years ago
I agree so much with this. I easily lost millions in compensation 2011-2017 by listening to the permabears and being unnecessarily risk-averse. So the theory went, surely the recovery from 2008 was incomplete/fake/etc. and we were moments from the next Great Depression.

I'm going to let you (all) in on a little, poorly-kept secret, also known as "software will eat the world": The expansion of the software economy is so interminably white hot that macroeconomic downturns are as significant as a buzzing fly. Another one, "Remote work will cause everything to get outsourced". No it won't. There's so much software to be written we can't comprehend it. One could say that humanity has 1% of the programming capacity it needs, and still be wrong because the nature of software makes this without solution.

djoldman · 3 years ago
Why are so many tech companies opening up an office in Texas?
bee_rider · 3 years ago
Maybe they want to test the robustness of their processes for power outages?
deeptote · 3 years ago
Don't forget the "location adjusted salaries" that pay 40% less for the exact same work.
fzeroracer · 3 years ago
Because they bought into the meme that Texas is cheap when in reality the high property taxes means it's increasingly becoming unlivable for your average person. It's really just a way to try and save on how much they have to pay people, but it's going to be harder and harder to entice people to move to Texas when the rent is soaring and the state government continues its culture wars at the cost of tax payer dollars.
treeman79 · 3 years ago
Low taxes. Low regulation. Business friendly environment. Lower cost housing.
reducesuffering · 3 years ago
These jobs are going to Austin, where a modest (for most of US) 4/2 Single family home within 20 min drive is now $23k/yr in property taxes, 4x national average. Essentially permanent $2k/mth rent even after paying off the $1m home.
nunez · 3 years ago
because austin* is so hot right now

Also, tax breaks, maybe, probably

* most of tech is settling in austin. Dallas and Houston aren't affected yet