The “fiscal cliff” has quickly become a commonly used term, but
exactly what it means isn’t all that clear, especially for real estate.
At it’s most basic level, it refers to sweeping tax cuts enacted a
decade ago that will expire at year’s end, so tax rates will
automatically rise to where they were before, while at the same time
automatic spending cuts—the sequestration enacted when the government’s
borrowing limit was raised a year ago–will take effect. Thus, the
economy faces a two-pronged hit: taxes going up while federal fiscal
spending goes down.
If Congress does nothing, that double hit would mean a negative
economic impact of about $650 billion, enough to shrink the economy by 4
percent and push the country back into recession, says NAR Chief
Economist Lawrence Yun.
For real estate, that has the potential to derail the recovery that’s
been slowly taking hold. Foreclosures would rise, home values would
drop, hurting households but also hurting FHA, which could get hit with
another wave of bad loans. That could put FHA into financial trouble.
Against this background, the federal government will be looking at a
lot of options for averting the cliff while also lowering the federal
budget deficit for the long-term. That puts the mortgage interest
deduction in the spotlight. But is it a good idea to make changes to
that tax provision?
Without a doubt, changing the rules of the game on MID now would mean
a tremendous hit on real estate markets and household finances, and it
could deal a blow to the broader economy, says Yun.
He and NAR economist Danielle Hale look at the different pieces in
play under the fiscal cliff debate and also the economic impact of
changing MID in the 9-minute video above. The information is intended to
be helpful as you try to put the fiscal cliff conversation into
perspective.
http://speakingofrealestate.blogs.realtor.org/2012/12/11/fiscal-cliff-whats-at-stake-for-real-estate/
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