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United States News Title: Hidden Costs That Cost a Lot Have you ever added up the cost of being allowed to keep a vehicle? Not what it cost you to buy it nor what it cost to maintain it. The other costs for things you didnt buy. And probably dont want. Like the annual (in most states) registration fee in quote marks to emphasize the etymological disingenuousness of the term since it is in fact just another tax. You arent getting anything in return for the money mulcted other than permission to use your vehicle (that probably also ought to be placed within quotation marks) for another year. Its analogous to the tax applied to your home, which the government will allow you to live for another year, if you pay the tax . . . on the house you thought youd paid off years ago. Same with vehicles. No matter how much you paid for it, you never stop paying for it. And what you pay in taxes is grossly disproportionate to what you paid for the vehicle because each year your vehicle is worth less while the registration tax never goes down. In my state, the annual registration tax is about $60. It may not sound like much, but consider the principle of compounding interest which is what this amounts to on the purchase of something not worth much anymore and worth less with each passing year. My truck is almost 20 years old. Its worth about $4,000. Over the course of the 12 years that I have owned my truck, I have been mulcted for $720 in registration taxes alone. Which amounts to about 20 percent of its current market value. The longer I own the truck, the less it will be worth and the registration taxes will become more disproportionate, to the point of confiscatory. Lets say I keep the truck another eight years which I plan to since the truck, itself, is paid for. Thats another $480 in addition to the $720 so $1,200 in total. Which is what the truck itself will be worth eight years from now. In effect, 100 percent taxation and thats just for registration. Which is the smallest tax applied to vehicle ownership. In my state, there is also a personal property tax applied to vehicle ownership as such. Unlike the registration tax which can be avoided by not driving the car (and by end-runs such as bolting Farm Use tags on your vehicle) the property tax is legally unavoidable in the states that impose it if you possess a vehicle and the state knows about it. It is a four-wheeled variant of the Marxist principle of applying perpetual taxes to capital things of value in order to prevent the accumulation thereof. To keep people working by obliging them to keep on paying. People who truly own things have little need for government and when government has little power over people who own things, it has little power over them. You see the point. At any rate, the property tax on vehicles is even more disproportionate and confiscatory because its greater in real terms and though it does decrease in accordance with the depreciating value of the vehicle, it plateaus at a certain point and continues to be applied, for as long as you own the vehicle and no matter how little it is worth. The property tax levied on my almost-20-year-old truck is still almost $100 annually. It was more five years ago, when my truck was younger and its book value higher. But for the sake of discussion, lets assume $100 annually over the past twelve years. Theres another $1,200 in addition to the $720 (so far) in registration taxes. Almost $2,000 in just these two taxes applied to the a nearly 20-year-old truck thats worth maybe $4,000. Thats 50 percent of its current value in taxes! Which are just some of the taxes vehicle owners are forced to pay. Each time you gas up, youre paying about 50 cent per gallon taxes. Assume a 15 gallon tank; thats about $8 in taxes every time you fill up. If you fill up once a week, thats $32 per month or $384 annually. Over ten years, thats $3,840 in taxes in my case, equivalent to almost the full market value of my truck! By itself. If you add in the registration and property punishment tax, its about 150 percent of the market value of my truck. And my taxes are low relatively speaking because my truck is old and not worth much vs. newer vehicles. Which may explain why new car sales are stalling out (see here). Not only have cars, themselves, become much more expensive to acquire, the cost to hold onto them has grown so high that even people who can afford to make the payments on the car cant afford to make the other payments to the government. Using dollars already shaved of a third or more of their original value by taxes applied to them, directly. Its interesting that progressives are silent on this matter of outrageously regressive taxation on a thing that, for most people, is at least as essential as food and even the healthcare the progressives bay endlessly about because without it, they cant get to work and without work they cant afford any of those things. People could probably afford healthcare if they werent taxed so brutally on their cars and everything else. But the silence of the progressives is understandable once you understand that progressives are actually elitists who dont want you to own or drive car anymore than they want you to ever own property outright or accumulate meaningful reserves of capital. Because that makes you independent of them. And they will do anything to prevent it. Subscribe to *Cars and Automotive* Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread |
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