It's personal. All of us have different personal styles, objectives, and priorities — in cars, life, and in finances. Car lease-versus-buy decisions must be made with your own lifestyle and priorities in mind. What's right for one person can be totally wrong for another.
You could prefer (and many people do) to eat a dozen donuts a day...but that doesn't make it a good or the right choice.
Your argument is simply fallacious.
The main issue I haven't bought up is the "opportunity cost" Opportunity cost is why buying or leasing new always loses. Opportunity cost asks what is the optimal use of the money, all things considered.
1st issue....transportation is a need, so that need must be met in some manner, but does it really need to be met with a $600 per month new car? Never.
So, if the choice is $600 per month for new, or $220 per month for used. Opportunity cost asks you should you do with that $380 difference. Is it really "better" to put it toward the new car...or something else (savings, etc). Better to have $22,800 in the bank after 5 years.
Also, the same argument even works against the "business" lease. Generally, the savings between a $2,000 per month BMW and a $300 per month "sensible" vehicle will off set any tax advantage that you "perceive." Especially in the case of a luxury car, it is not a dollar for dollar tax deduction. You must factor in the percentage of business use and then there is the IRS inclusion table that reduces (although, that is fairly minor). Moreover, the vehicle deduction only offsets income, as you know, it is not that you pay $25K less in tax, it is only that you get to reduce your taxable income by $25,000, so the tax savings only amounts to the marginal tax rate. Too keep the math simple, if you earned $250,000 without the vehicle deduction, and would earn $225,000 with the deduction. That puts you in the 33% bracket (married filing joint), either way. That means you only save $8250 in taxes (actually, the number is less, but for the sake of illustration, just keeping the math simple), that is $33,000 over 4 years in tax savings. Now, if you bought or leased a car for 300 per month, over 48 months (vs $2000), that is a savings of $20,400 per year, or $81,600. As such, it hardly seems reasonable to SPEND an additional $81,600 over 4 years to receive a tax savings of $33,000.
But, the argument that it is all "personal" preference is merely an admission of a fact. I agree, people have preferences and have choices. But that does not imply that it is right or smart to engage those preferences.
Comment