Todd Suomela's Library tagged → View Popular, Search in Google
"I will divide my remarks into 8 parts; (1) I will argue that the Mortgage Interest Deduction is a residual of the 1913 tax code, and was not created to encourage homeownership; (2) that those on the margin of homeowning get little-to-no benefit from the Mortgage Interest Deduction, and that the policy therefore does little to encourage homeownership; (3) that the Mortgage Interest Deduction does encourage those who would be homeowners anyway to purchase larger houses than they otherwise would; (4) that even in the absence of the Mortgage Interest Deduction, owner-occupants receive a large tax benefit; (5) that phasing out the Mortgage Interest Deduction would encourage households to pay down their mortgages more quickly, and would therefore encourage households to rely less on leverage; (6) household deleveraging would lead to greater market stability, but would also mean that the revenues generated by the elimination of the deduction would be smaller than static estimates suggest; (7) at a time when the housing market remains quite weak, it is important that the Mortgage Interest Deduction be phased out carefully; (8) that if we do wish to encourage homeownership via tax policy, a targeted, refundable credit would be more effective than the current Mortgage Interest Deduction. "
the two American dreams - of homeownership and of unfettered economic mobility - may be in conflict, as homeownership, especially in downturns like today, impedes mobility and makes it harder for individuals to move to work and the labor market on the whole to adjust.
in list: Economic Crisis
Selected Tags
Related Tags
Top Contributors
Groups interested in home
-
Home Page
Items: 14 | Visits: 3429
Created by: Glenn Wolf
-
0000001 HOME 2
Items: 12 | Visits: 1076
Created by: James Cales
-
home
Daily URLs Organizer
Items: 24 | Visits: 800
Created by: Mary Therese Hattori
Diigo is about better ways to research, share and collaborate on information. Learn more »
Join Diigo
