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> In the Bay Area you're already subject to a form of wealth tax called property tax. And it's substantial.

No, it's not

> If you live in San Francisco you'll get charged 1.1801% every year [1] on the value of your wealth (property).

That might be the average amount of taxes on real property, but it's not the rate of property tax. That's capped at 1% of the tax basis value, which grows at a capped rate excluding sales and certain other qualifying events. There are also Mello-Roos assessments, but those are per-parcel not as-share-of-value taxes.

> If I bought a house in SF and live for another 60 years I would be taxed 60 times on that same asset.

At a declining rate, because property value tends to increase much faster, on average, than California allows tax assessment value to increase.

> It's not as if property tax has kept a damper on Bay Area house price inflation.

Property tax assessment increase limits have accelerated it because they discourage sale of property.




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