5/19/2009 11:03:00 AM
5/19/2009 11:05:10 AM
5/19/2009 11:08:20 AM
^ ^^ Wait, what? I am arguing against new legislation changing the rules to restrict the right of the citizenry to contract freely (sign a contract with rates that jump during delinquincy). I am arguing that it would further depress competition in the credit card industry. That competition has already been supressed by a repricing of risk should only make my argument stronger.
5/19/2009 11:48:07 AM
5/19/2009 11:51:12 AM
^^ and in doing so (arguing against rule changes) you're basically claiming that CC companies are the hapless victims of those nasty, card-abusing customers who pulled a fast one over on the CC companies all these years by fooling them into thinking they were good credit risks.
5/19/2009 11:56:16 AM
i'm not sure how, but i'm betting that LoanShark and E-Dogg would claim the gigantic gap between household debt and income is not really a big deal. Right? there is no debt problem for American households? http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2009/05/effect-of-household-deleveraging-on.html
5/19/2009 1:52:55 PM
For America households? No, there is no problem beyond that which we have had since debt was invented. That is because what we today call debt is a modern invention which has been used as a substitute for earlier forms of debt which are not tracked by your statistics. Previously, when you went to the appliance store and opened a line of credit they charged you 30-40% interest buried in the price of the refrigerator. The same happened all over town whenever anyone said they would let you pay in installments. It is estimated that the average New Yorker in once had 12 pawn shop claim tickets (collateralized debt). And that is how people handled debt in the age before unsecured loans. All that is gone now. When a head of household wants into the store now they just put it on the card. So, when you include estimates (hard figures do not exist) of these disperse forms of debt what you find is that, historically, American household indeptedness as a function of income has not changed much. All that has changed is the form of debt. And this has been undeniably a good thing, because it separated the transaction from the financing, allowing Wal-Mart to concentrate competition on low prices and the banks to compete on financing, each specializing the that which they have a strong cost advantage in, with the result of both lower interest rates and lower prices.
5/19/2009 4:28:39 PM
Feel free to link the Cato or whatever other conservative crap you got that from. Love to read more about it myself.
5/19/2009 4:48:40 PM
^ I have seen many other studies that come to the same conclusion, but the one below I already had bookmarked from a while back, so hopefully this will suffice:
5/19/2009 5:48:06 PM
Maybe it is in your link, I haven't read it yet, but I'm not disputing that credit cards have replaced money and a lot of other means of payment in recent times. What I am wondering, is just how bad off the statistics were in 1960 all the way until 1985 (when the move up in household debt really took off) that
5/19/2009 9:00:16 PM
The statistics were abhorent for good reason. First and foremost, as I said, most of what was used for debt was not considered debt. A pawn ticket was not considered debt, neither was placing an item on layaway, neither was paying for something in installments. Even in studies where trying to do so, it is very difficult to get information for comparison because back then every shop and store was a lending institution and therefore the information was exceedingly disperse. Compare that to today where household debt can be estimated to within a few percentage points just by collecting statistics from the largest institutions.
5/20/2009 3:46:21 AM
^The problem is that your analysis is crap and doesn't take into account common sense factors that we pretty much all know from experience:* Collateralized debt happens to be a lot fucking different from unsecured debt, in pretty much every way imaginable* People buy a lot more with credit cards than what was previously purchasable with pawn shop tickets, including day-to-day goods * The credit industry is marketed a lot differently and to a different demographic than the kind of debt you describe. College students in particular have a 15% response rate (!) to direct mailings for credit offers, and the process of leveraging obviously begins much sooner and for a much wider range of goods and services* Different incentives drive taking on debt to make purchases. Consumers with cash in hand may choose to open cards for rewards or "discounts" offered at department storesThe list goes on and on. You can't just make broad claims like "pawn shop debt was the same as modern consumer debt, in a different form OMGBBQ" and expect everybody to take it on face value. As to the separation of concerns wherein Wal-Mart competes on low prices and the banks on financing -- um, well, sorry to break it to you, but you may not have noticed that Wal-Mart has tried repeatedly to buy out banks with the rather obvious goal of becoming a banking institution itself. The only thing that stopped them was the regulatory climate. Do you really believe businesses dropped the pawn approach in the name of efficiency? I doubt it. In reality I suspect that the credit card institutions have an oligopolistic competitive moat around them that only the likes of Wal-Mart can truly overcome. The reality is that what you're calling a great separation of concerns, is more likely a true inefficiency where a few businesses with network effects (due to owning infrastructure and having consumer lock-in) gouge retailers at the point of sale.Oh, and in case you don't believe me:http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/16/business/16cnd-walmart.html?_r=2&ref=business&oref=slogin&oref=slogin ("Wal-Mart Drops Bid to Operate Its Own Bank")
5/20/2009 4:36:41 AM
I know they are different. But that they are different does not make the world as you say it is. Here is a document with lots of pretty graphs: http://banking.senate.gov/public/_files/ZywickiCreditCardTestimonySenate2122009.pdfAnd it shows that if you exclude mortgages the total consumer debt service to income ratio has actually been falling since 2003 (it oscillates in a fairly narrow range). Even including mortgages it has not changed much, going from 0.11 in 1980 to 0.14 as a proportion of income.
5/20/2009 9:26:48 AM
5/20/2009 10:02:28 AM
To further your point hunt, retailers are actually penalized for taking credit cards, as the credit card companies charge up to 2% of the purchase price to the retailer.
5/20/2009 10:06:11 AM
5/20/2009 10:10:35 AM
I thought we were talking about credit cards and consumer debt? And we do not yet have the statistics but I suspect the figures for mortgage debt are falling precipitously as we speak. ^^ They are, yes, but accepting credit cards is rational. If you are selling a service or product with huge margins then when a patron walks in, offers a credit card, and then walks out when you say that 2% was too much, you might think about signing up. Some people prefer using their card and therefore fail to carry enough cash. And you need to take into account the costs of accepting cash. Afterall, cash can be stolen, requires making change, and must be deposited each night, all expenses that are not iccured for a credit card transaction.
5/21/2009 10:26:32 AM
Voters Now Trust Republicans More than Democrats on Economic Issues
6/9/2009 6:27:34 PM
This just in: Americans short sighted, lacking in long-term memory.]
6/9/2009 7:04:11 PM
^ Well, that may be true. But it ain't like the Democrats are doing such a wonderful job.
6/9/2009 7:10:34 PM
6/9/2009 7:11:57 PM
^ Not me--never have been, never will be. But I do think that many of Obama's plans and those of other Democrats will prove self-defeating.
6/9/2009 7:14:53 PM
6/9/2009 7:35:01 PM
^ wat?
6/10/2009 10:43:39 AM
http://www.controller.ca.gov/eo_pressrel_5893.htmlCouldn't happen to a better state. However, this will have ramifications to the broader market. If we wake up one morning in about 50 days and find out that California has declared bankruptcy, the market will give up 5% easily.
6/11/2009 7:55:50 AM
In Poll, Obama Is Seen as Ineffective on the Economy [the headline before The New York Times changed it]
6/19/2009 8:50:48 AM
6/19/2009 9:27:44 AM
6/19/2009 9:31:55 AM
hooksaw[Edited on June 19, 2009 at 5:18 PM. Reason : .]
6/19/2009 5:16:23 PM
California has issued 50 million in IOUs already. Amazing.They are talking to GS trying to get access to China to sell their debt directly.[Edited on July 2, 2009 at 3:30 PM. Reason : .]
7/2/2009 3:28:35 PM
7/6/2009 4:20:01 PM
green shoots on every plate!
7/6/2009 5:24:09 PM
I haven't scanned the thread in a while. Has hooksaw admitted that the economy has tanked yet?
7/9/2009 9:04:52 AM
no, the fallback position was "wow, it's impressive that the country has survived as well as it has, even with a somewhat weakened economy. There are no bands of angry hoards roaming the streets scrounging for food yet - that's a statement on how strong our financial underpinning is!"
7/9/2009 9:28:31 AM
It is impressive that the economy has withstood so many attacks from the evil Obama administration!!
7/9/2009 10:13:09 AM
Why do any of you care what I think? I'm just some guy on the Internet--my metric isn't what's important. 1. Why not focus on the econometrics used by our current elected leaders: the Obama administration et al?Biden: 'We misread how bad the economy was'http://tinyurl.com/mvbzxc2. Why not focus on the fact that a relatively small portion of the so-called stimulus package has been distributed? What are "they" waiting for? Is the Stimulus Working?July 09, 2009
7/9/2009 5:00:30 PM
^^^ ahh. Well, this isn't over by a long shot.
7/9/2009 5:00:40 PM
Whoa whoa whoa...whoa. Politicians aren't good at forecasting the economy? The fuck you say!
7/9/2009 9:07:12 PM
like politicians know jackshit about economics (other than how to overspend)
7/13/2009 3:48:52 PM
White House putting off release of budget update
7/20/2009 9:19:24 AM
thanks, i'm so embarrassed
7/20/2009 9:43:50 AM
^ For Christ's sake, it was just a "BTW." Did you happen to notice the rest of the post?
7/20/2009 9:48:56 AM
It's pretty hard to take the rest of the post seriously when a 43 yr old douche bag yet again continues to correct grammar on a message board. If we were having this conversation in person and you did that to me, I'd smack you in your fucking face.In regards to the rest of your post, I think the majority of the Obama supporters that were here are probably a little bit on the fence to completely off the bandwagon (like myself). Supplanter is about the only guy I can think of that hasn't voiced at least 1 rather large concern about the way things are going.[Edited on July 20, 2009 at 9:56 AM. Reason : .]
7/20/2009 9:55:03 AM
^ 1. Is that a threat?2. And no you fucking wouldn't smack shit. 3. And I don't give a shit about whatever else you posted--it's meaningless bullshit just like all your other posts and your life.
7/20/2009 10:01:23 AM
^ Is that a threat?
7/20/2009 10:11:39 AM
7/20/2009 10:32:23 AM
thoroughly owned
7/20/2009 11:00:44 AM
7/20/2009 11:08:40 AM
It's probably less related to congress and more related to Goldman Sachs needs a week or two to start unwinding all the positions they've been buying over the last few months. Did you see their upgrades to the years end S&P number? That should work for the remainder of earnings season to hold the market here while they unload, and probably get short. Then the Fed/Treasury can release the budget and let everyone know how they are underestimating the recession and growth potential. Market sells off with GS profiting the ride down.
7/20/2009 11:50:13 AM