CNS News – by Terence P Jeffrey
Americans paid a record $540,701,000,000 in property taxes to state and local governments in fiscal 2016, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
That was up $16,748,620,000—or about 3.2 percent–from $523,952,380,000 in property taxes (in constant 2016 dollars) that state and local governments collected in fiscal 2015.
The prior national record for property taxes was set in fiscal 2009, when they hit $527,850,500,000 in constant 2016 dollars. Fiscal 2016’s record total of $540,701,000,000 was up $12,850,000,000—or about 2.4 percent—from that previous record.
The nationwide state and local property tax receipts for fiscal 2016 were released last week with the Census Bureau’s “Quarterly Summary of State and Local Government Tax Revenue for 2016: Q4.”
The fiscal year 2016 that the Census Bureau references in this data is the year that runs from July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016. That is because most states end their fiscal years on June 30.
The Census Bureau defines “property taxes” as “taxes imposed on ownership of property and measured by its value.”
“Property,” says the Census Bureau, “refers to real property (e.g., land and structures) as well as personal property; personal property can be either tangible (e.g., automobiles and boats) or intangible (e.g., bank accounts and stocks and bonds).”
Although total inflation-adjusted state-and-local property taxes hit a record in fiscal 2016, inflation-adjusted property taxes hit their per capita peak in fiscal 2009.
In fiscal 2016, the $540,701,000,000 in property taxes that state and local government collected equaled about $1,673 for every one of the 323,127,513 men, women and children the Census Bureau estimated were residing in the United States as of July 1, 2016.
In fiscal 2009, the $527,850,500,000 in property taxes (in constant 2016 dollars) that state and local government collected equaled about $1,721 for every one of the 306,771,529 men, women and children the Census Bureau estimated were residing in the United States as of July 1, 2009.
Most of the property taxes were collected by local governments. Of the $540,701,000,000 in total property taxes collected nationwide in fiscal 2016, according to the Census estimate, $16,040,000,000—or about 3 percent—was collected by state governments.
http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/540701000000-us-property-taxes-hit-record-2016
My friggin’ taxes on my house went up almost a 100 dollars this year, no thanks to that stupid Toyota Headquarters that they are building in Frisco, TX. Because of that, they are bringing in 5,000 Californians and employing thousands more Indians, a few hundred Texans and who knows how many illegal immigrants. So therefore, all of the farmland is being destroyed and turned into countless housing projects and development communities that are popping up overnight. No one wants the damn place to be here nor do they want thousands of people from other states and countries to be flooding in and disrupting whats left of our economy and beautiful scenery. The corporate mafia is forcing all of these unnecessary building projects on us and thus increasing our county taxes and forcing us to pay hundreds more. It’s insane. The F**Kers just can’t leave us alone. They can’t help themselves. All they want is all of the land for their commercial real estate because heaven forbid if we don’t have another Walmart, Target, Starbucks or Walgreens on every corner, life as we know it will cease to exists for them.
It disgusts me to no end. And the more you try to move away outside the area, the more the F**kers expand and invade in your area until there’s no land left but land for their business purposes and your left in a slum neighborhood. Kinda like the Israelis pushing the Palestinians further into a corner. It’s absolutely sickening.