Trump socialism and housing finance
Various tax law scholars have commented on the tax fraud allegations in the recent New York Times story. Equally important is the story's reminder that our housing finance system, and the real estate fortunes it has spawned, have depended for nearly a century on the largess of government.
Fred Trump, the president's father, built the fortune that Donald Trump inherited after avoiding or evading millions in estate and gift taxes. Fred's fortune was almost entirely due to his savvy exploitation of federal government housing subsidies. When Roosevelt's New Dealers struggled to put the economy back on its feet, they invented the FHA mortgage insurance program, and Fred Trump was one of FHA's first profiteers. As recounted in Gwenda Blair's wonderful book, Fred went from building one house at a time to building Huge middle-class apartment complexes when he was first able to tap into government-backed FHA loans.
In his fascinating 1954 testimony before the Senate Banking Committee (begins at p. 395), Fred Trump explains how he purchased the land for the Beach Haven apartments for roughly $200,000, put the land in trust for his children and paid gift taxes on a $260,000 land valuation, and then obtained a a $16 million FHA mortgage to build the apartments. Fred's corporation owning the buildings netted $4 million from the loan proceeds above and beyond the construction costs, and the land belonging to the Trump childrens' trust was valued by the City tax assessors at $1.3 million as a result of the FHA mortgage transaction and apartment construction. In other words, Fred Trump parlayed his $200,000 investment into a $4 million cash profit for his business and a $1.3 million ground lease producing $60,000 annual income for his children. In his testimony he conceded that this would have been impossible without the FHA government loan guarantee.
Peter Dreier and Alex Schwartz have written a nice exposé of the irony in President Trump's proposals to slash the very government housing finance subsidies to which he owes his personal fortune.
Thank you for posting this is an important (and often overlooked) topic.
Posted by: Andrea Boyack | October 15, 2018 at 05:43 PM
This isn't socialism, it's kleptocracy.
Posted by: Knute Rife | October 17, 2018 at 05:54 PM
This topic is very much overlooked . But i agree this is more of Kleptocracy. Too many corrupt people exploit the government for their own personal gain.
Posted by: Rafiat O | December 14, 2018 at 05:41 PM
Rafiat i agree, i was going through this topic for research purposes and came across this blog, the topic is not one we talk about a lot, i wish we would but i feel like were all just used to things like this happening with government exploitation and them getting away with it with only a slap on the wrist. Some might even say these people are very smart .
Posted by: James Rotherford | December 14, 2018 at 10:15 PM