Higgenbotham wrote:
Scenario 4
Collapse back to basic industrial economy, GDP falls, then rebounds.
Fiat is money. Conventional investments rebound in value.
[...]
When I talk about investing in real estate, the underlying assumption is that the economy levels out at Scenario 4 (or better) or gets back to it within a short time.
If the world reserve fiat currency collapses I don't think you will get a new world reserve fiat money in a short time. The problem is that some entity controls the printing of the money. Why would all the different countries trust that entity with so much power? After world war II the US had all the power and much of the gold, and maybe after a world war 3 we could get a new world reserve fiat currency. To me it seems clear that the world is taking deliberate steps to move to where the dollar is no longer the world reserve currency. At some point I expect a panic flight from the dollar.
I am not sure what you mean by "collapse back to basic industrial economy" but this does not sound like something that you just "rebound" from. Hyperinflation destroys retirement funds, destroys savings, destroys whole life insurance, destroys debts, etc. Any long term contracts denominated in the hyperinflating currency are messed up. However, it does not seem to change the level of industrialization. Civilization does not usually break down. In fact, crime does not seem to usually go up all that much. Taking away guns from law abiding citizens in Jamaica has probably caused the murder rate to go up by a factor of 10 in the last 35 years. I suspect none of the 100 cases of hyperinflation increased the crime rate nearly that much.
My big problem with real estate is taxes. If they put on a 3% property tax (I think the rate in Pittsburgh, the last place I lived in the US) it nearly cuts the value of the property in half. Now instead of paying a 5% loan for 20 years you have to pay that and 3% for forever. This is like the government owning your land and you just renting. And it is very hard to know when you buy the land what the property taxes will be 5 or 10 years down the road. Anguilla just put on an income tax. I suspect this will hurt property values big time. Many rich people like to move to countries where there is no income tax and you have
financial privacy and this increases property values. But once you get income tax
financial privacy has to be tossed aside. Even increasing sales tax rates can impact real estate values. If the tax rates get too high in one location people and businesses will tend to move away and real estate prices will go down.