wealth - Infuse SA https://infusesa.org #NoBSZone Thu, 02 Jun 2022 15:27:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://infusesa.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/cropped-Icon-01-1-32x32.jpg wealth - Infuse SA https://infusesa.org 32 32 InfuseSA in the Community: Ibettink https://infusesa.org/infusesa-in-the-community-ibettink/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=infusesa-in-the-community-ibettink https://infusesa.org/infusesa-in-the-community-ibettink/#comments Sat, 19 Mar 2022 18:56:12 +0000 https://infusesa.org/?p=546 This week we’d like to give a shout-out to Ibett Shipley and her Ibettink at Huebner & Bitters in far north-central San Antonio.  They specialize in embroidery, invitations, and other personalized products and gifts, all delivered with stellar service. The personalization is further enhanced by custom Ibettink online stores, free of charge for various organizations,…

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Owner Ibett Shipley and InfuseSA Policy Director & Editor and board member Chris Baecker

This week we’d like to give a shout-out to Ibett Shipley and her Ibettink at Huebner & Bitters in far north-central San Antonio.  They specialize in embroidery, invitations, and other personalized products and gifts, all delivered with stellar service.

The personalization is further enhanced by custom Ibettink online stores, free of charge for various organizations, schools and associations.  They stick their respective logos on this coffee cup or that towel, and voila; it arrives at their doorstep in 10 days or less.

Ibettink’s survival during the government lockdowns of the last couple years showed classic American grit.  They did it with creativity, partially pivoting to making masks when no one knew for sure what was going around, and wanted to protect themselves and others.

They also printed up the first batch of InfuseSA shirts that you see us wearing around town. 

Ibettink is a great example of a couple things.  One, when a company succeeds in satisfying customers, it expands, until they tap out the local customer base. 

Then, if they haven’t already, they start selling outside their local borders.  This brings in revenue from abroad (whether outside their town, state or country).  In some instances, they might even open branches in other jurisdictions. 

This virtuous wealth-creation cycle leads to several small business opportunities, as it did for Ibettink. 

Enterprising entrepreneurs open restaurants, salons, autobody shops, etc.  Some might franchise dry cleaning, or postal delivery stores chains, for example.  Any of the former, like Ibettink, could find a niche, and morph into the latter, and the cycle keeps flourishing.

We salute establishments like Ibettink who navigated the thicket of public bureacracy to open their doors, and we work toward seeing those regulations slashed so more can enter the fray and push our society to more prosperous heights.

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A Home is a Basic Expense; Not a Wealth-Building Vehicle. https://infusesa.org/a-home-is-a-basic-expense-not-a-wealth-building-vehicle/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-home-is-a-basic-expense-not-a-wealth-building-vehicle Thu, 10 Mar 2022 00:13:28 +0000 https://infusesa.org/?p=509 “Homeownership is a path for building wealth in the U.S. The median homeowner had $254,900 in wealth in 2019, compared with $6,270 for the median renter, according to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances.“’It’s a wake-up call,” said Gay Cororaton, senior economist and director of housing and commercial research at NAR. ‘Policies have to…

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Vote “NO” on the Housing Bond

“Homeownership is a path for building wealth in the U.S. The median homeowner had $254,900 in wealth in 2019, compared with $6,270 for the median renter, according to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances.
“’It’s a wake-up call,” said Gay Cororaton, senior economist and director of housing and commercial research at NAR. ‘Policies have to be focused more on making sure that the lower-income and many more middle-income folks participate in the benefit of homeownership.’”

So says a report from The Wall Street Journal this morning.

Unless you live where many people want to be, it is and always has been misleading to call home ownership a “path for building wealth.” If anything, it’s an inflation hedge that guards against poor monetary policy and stewardship of the dollar.

The housing bond in May will not help this, and will arguably make things worse.

When the federal government, both the president and the Federal Reserve, support a weak dollar, a couple things happen. One, it makes some things more expensive because, since it has been devalued, it simply takes more dollars to buy things.

This is why the cost of basics such as food and oil/gas rise.

Two, future gains from investment (what actually drives economic prosperity; NOT consumer expenditures) become less predictable because of the weaker dollar, and uncertainty which direction the value of it will go. As a result, the price of gold goes up.

Another ‘asset’ that rises in value is housing. It’s why you see increased investment in rental properties, and home remodeling, for example.

City and county government know this, and cash in via property taxes. Compounding matters, they embody the true definition of greed in our society when they can’t be bothered to cut rates, nevermind doing the right thing and uprooting and abolishing the whole enterprise.

To think government-directed housing policy, which invariably invites cronyism and corruption, can fix this problem is the height of arrogance or ignorance, or both.

Vote “NO” on the housing bond.

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