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Far more honest. A product you have for sale is worth...what it sells
for, eh? Why should I be able to write off a donation of a clapped-out old Junkercraft for $100,000, when it only fetches $9,000 at sale? Is it worth what is brings at a distress sale, or what it could reasonably expect to retail for? There is certainly abuse in the current system, and I saw some of that when I was involved in that industry. Your example of an appraisal being 11 times what an asset is sold for is pretty extreme. Once you have donated an asset to a charitable organization, you lose control over how it is marketed. Cash-strapped charities often dump donations to make payroll, rent, meet program funding commitments, etc. If you pay $100,000 for a Junkercraft, take good care of it for a few years, add some upgrades, and then get an indendent survey for $100,000 it's worth a figure closer to that $100,000 than the $9,000 you suggested in the hypothetical example. |
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