The De-Riggable Podcast
Ben and Steve use this episode of De-Riggable to explore a truth most people sense but rarely analyze: every tax rule distorts something. Focusing first on Texas’s new homestead exemption increases — including expanded breaks for homeowners 65+ — they examine how incentives shift for both long-time residents and younger families trying to enter the market. Reduced property taxes for some mean higher relative burdens for others, and the renters — who already hold the least wealth — are left out entirely. Steve then compares this to New York’s rent control dynamic, where entrenched tenants stay is an episode about how systems drift, break, and maybe can be rebuilt. Read Steve's A True Free Market [https://www.amazon.com/True-Free-Market-Conversations-Economics-ebook/dp/B07949WD3S/ref=sr_1_1?crid=RF9KOTPVYBH0&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.hyamTLslGvBaoHkyHSa-aA.EVmNVnd3RTTIyCDE35zP8XhH-V46vspTHyd5k3Jv60g&dib_tag=se&keywords=a+true+free+market+stephen+taft&qid=1764001775&sprefix=a+true+free+market+stephen+taft%2Caps%2C92&sr=8-1] Note: Steve quickly learned there is no income tax in Texas, like there is in New York, but his point remains valid in the creation of unintended consequences, in general.
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