Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

"Opportunity zone" doesn't mean what you think it means.

E.g., there are census tracts in Cambridge/Somerville with six figure median incomes that are categorized as "opportunity zones". There are also a lot of census tracts in that area with much lower median incomes hiding an incredible amount of future earning potential (e.g. Harvard and MIT students, and esp. doctors doing their residencies at top hospitals).

Tax-free money flowing into those areas isn't going to help poor folk. It's going to fund the development of $3k/month luxury apartment buildings for housing young professionals who are priced out of buying anything, because billionaires are buying everything site-unseen in cash at $50k above asking. Don't believe me? Go on apartments.com and check out the rents/amenities of buildings that already exist in these "opportunity" zones.

And to be clear, I'm not super opposed to gentrification. However, I don't see any good reason why building luxury apartment buildings in some of the hottest rental markets in the country should be a tax-free activity.

If these were downtrodden areas starving for a cash infusion, this give-away of tax dollars might make more sense (although IMO is likely to do more harm than good). But you can be pretty damn sure that a sizable chunk of this money is going to flow into census tracts where not even a six figure salary can get you anywhere close to a down payment.

And even in areas that are legitimately run down, an influx of tax-free money competing with locals for housing stock is a good way to torpedo the sort of sustainable local wealth accumulation that happens when normal folk who live in the neighborhood are able to buy housing and storefronts.

So I'm very concerned for every area that is categorized as an opportunity zone, and pretty peeved that building luxury apartment buildings in fucking Cambridge is going to be a tax-free activity.

e: And I just looked around my home town in the midwest. There are big corn fields marked as opportunity zones, even though they're kind of out of the way and there are many other areas that would make a lot more sense to redevelop and where a capital infusion could actually create new opportunities. I happen to know the current owner of those tracts is a long-time supporter/donor to the current governor of that state. Unsurprisingly, turns out governors choose these "opportunity zones".

So, yeah, that's what this is: kickbacks to state-level political donors provided in the form of tax subsidies for billionaires (or at least millionaires).




Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: