Consider another invasion to the practice of tax preparation by commercial entities: enter MORTGAGE COMPANIES.
Many will say the recently-passed legislation with the $7500 credit is to help people buy houses, save houses, sell houses, whatever. And blame the gubbermint for yet another redistribution-of-wealth scheme whereby the money flows from the rich to the poor.
Better take another look. The first-time homebuyers will never see this money. This $7500 credit will be so intertwined with the mortgage process that the big lending institutions will be the first at the trough. It will be similar to a RAL, only hopefully less of a rip-off.
And yes, so-entwined with the mortgage process that the mortgage companies themselves will be entering the tax preparation business to perfect their interest in the $7500 credit, which will become their down payment. So the taxpayer consents to the mortgage company to prepare taxes in the year of purchase. Remember, the $500 repayments are tied into this process as well -- so the government now has an interest in a succession of tax returns - whereby the $500 annual repayment can now be added to the borrower's escrow account.
Mind you, the mortgage company will have no particular skills in tax preparation, except with respect to the single line-item credit. But that won't matter to the government. And the mortgage companies will not necessarily be trying to make money by preparing taxes either.
But, have no doubt about it, the big lending institutions are the REAL winners in this process and not the homebuyers, as the gubbermint would have you believe.
You heard it here first.
Many will say the recently-passed legislation with the $7500 credit is to help people buy houses, save houses, sell houses, whatever. And blame the gubbermint for yet another redistribution-of-wealth scheme whereby the money flows from the rich to the poor.
Better take another look. The first-time homebuyers will never see this money. This $7500 credit will be so intertwined with the mortgage process that the big lending institutions will be the first at the trough. It will be similar to a RAL, only hopefully less of a rip-off.
And yes, so-entwined with the mortgage process that the mortgage companies themselves will be entering the tax preparation business to perfect their interest in the $7500 credit, which will become their down payment. So the taxpayer consents to the mortgage company to prepare taxes in the year of purchase. Remember, the $500 repayments are tied into this process as well -- so the government now has an interest in a succession of tax returns - whereby the $500 annual repayment can now be added to the borrower's escrow account.
Mind you, the mortgage company will have no particular skills in tax preparation, except with respect to the single line-item credit. But that won't matter to the government. And the mortgage companies will not necessarily be trying to make money by preparing taxes either.
But, have no doubt about it, the big lending institutions are the REAL winners in this process and not the homebuyers, as the gubbermint would have you believe.
You heard it here first.
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