Taxing Matters
Overtaxed Member
No, it says that time is a factor in the depreciation. I never said that time is the only factor. And I don't think you really contend that time is NOT a factor in their condition, do you? Indeed, you say:That statement says time is the reason they depreciate.
That acknowledges what I think is evident: time is a factor in the condition of buildings, just as it is with anything else we create. The effect of time will vary substantially depending on exactly what that thing is, of course, as I said earlier. This is why the depreciation rules treat different classes of assets differently.When age is mentioned it is always accompanied with things referring to using age to speculate on condition or possibility of building materials used or other matters that age suggests may be a problem or even benefit but I haven’t found one that places a value simply due to age.
I don't really understand the push back on having depreciation for buildings or why you and TrustUser seem to regard buildings as somehow fundamentally different from the other things humans create. Neither of you seem to dispute that a building will waste away over time unless money and/or effort is spent to maintain that building, just like any other asset. It is that that principle that it will waste away unless that cost to maintain it is incurred that underlies depreciation. The fact that people do spend the money and effort to maintain buildings so that their values do not plummet the same way cars do does not change the fact that without the money and effort spent to maintain it the building will deteriorate and lose value over time. Do you disagree with that?