11/4/2007 10:24:24 PM
jebus.....does that exclude housing debt (mortgage)?
11/4/2007 10:25:54 PM
Basically, the American people are spending the economy into disrepair.
11/4/2007 10:26:21 PM
keep borrowing everybody. If we get it over 100 it resets!
11/4/2007 10:26:45 PM
basic micro economics should be manditory in high school
11/4/2007 10:27:49 PM
increased personal debt is strongly linked to increased carbondioxide
11/4/2007 10:33:01 PM
^^^lol. according to the graph, it's true.^^I thought it was... Civics/Economics?
11/4/2007 10:34:44 PM
i never took an economics class in high school. My civics class was 100% about how the fed gov works.I probably wasted 3 semesters on required "health" classes though.[Edited on November 4, 2007 at 10:45 PM. Reason : d]
11/4/2007 10:39:18 PM
It started to level off under Clinton, and has accelerated under Bush.
11/4/2007 10:42:00 PM
btw I found this herehttp://www.time-blog.com/curious_capitalist/
11/4/2007 10:56:26 PM
so, my father-in-law insists that the economic boom of the mid-late 90s was a case of Clinton being in the right place at the right time. i.e. it would have happened no matter who was in office and what his economic policy was. but he insists that the boom of the past 5 years has been due to the brilliant economic policy of the Bush Administration. given information like this graph and the collapsing housing market, wouldn't it be fair to say that Bush is in the right place at the right time too, except that instead of the economy being propped up by an exploding technology sector, much of which has continued to thrive and create thousands of jobs and tons of money, it's being propped up by credit card debt and unsustainable housing prices?
11/4/2007 11:13:44 PM
^I tend to think that the economy as a whole doesn't really give a shit who is president. Things are going to happen just about the same no matter who is in office.
11/4/2007 11:15:11 PM
^ For the most part, yes. But presidents like to take credit for good economic times. If that's the case, then they need to be held responsible for when the economy isn't doing well too.
11/4/2007 11:21:45 PM
11/4/2007 11:48:58 PM
The graph is very strongly correlated with Bush's presidency, but weakly correlated with other presidencies. I don't know if that's meaningful.A Fox News-y spin might be that under Bush Americans have been taking out loans at higher rates to start businesses and it's too early to say what the results are.
11/4/2007 11:55:07 PM
^ Preliminary reports indicate we're fucked.
11/5/2007 12:11:54 AM
so it seems like either we are about to plateau off or we are gonna keep going up at a good clipfirst i'd want to know what happened to cause the rising action, then i'd want to know the consequences of it keeping on rising and then the consequences of a plateau etc
11/5/2007 12:42:18 AM
is it about time to move to china?
11/5/2007 12:43:43 AM
11/5/2007 12:46:58 AM
^^^ Aren't you a business major? Shouldn't you be telling US those things?[Edited on November 5, 2007 at 12:53 AM. Reason : ]
11/5/2007 12:52:53 AM
they didnt talk about debt as a percentage of personal income graphs in ec 202 or 205...
11/5/2007 12:55:32 AM
11/5/2007 4:33:01 AM
Interpret this graph... Ok, it is a graph tracking the economic optimism of the American People. As during most of the 20th century recessions were frequent and threw a large percentage of Americans out of work it was a virtue to minimize household debt. Similarly, high interest rates equally rewarded debt adverse individuals. However, today, recessions are rare (every decade or so) and very shallow, throwing maybe 4% of households into involuntary unemployment. Equally, debt has become so easy to acquire, even when unemployed, that households no longer need to fear debt payments even if they do become unemployed. As such, households are taking advantage of a tendency for individuals to earn ever more money the older they get. As such, they are using debt to better balance income out over their lifetimes, which means building up debt while young and paying it off in middle-age, a long-time wish that in earlier eras proved prohibitive. As such, this graph is a good sign that things have gotten better and people know it. The sub-prime mortgage market is a small hiccup which will probably not even be remarked upon by future generations.[Edited on November 5, 2007 at 7:15 AM. Reason : .,.]
11/5/2007 7:13:07 AM
so, you really think that all these people have a plan to pay off their enormous debt later in life? You honestly believe that when people decide to put a gigantic purchase on credit, their line of reasoning is: "hmm..... well even if there is a recession, hopefully i'll not be one of the 4% of people that lose their job. plus, since I flip burgers at McDonald's for $7/hour, the people who do get laid off will probably start eating more McDonald's, so i'm pretty safe. I'll just buy this plasma TV and let it accrue 29% interest per year while I struggle to make the minimum payment, then in 15 years when I'm Assistant Manager I'll pay it back off!"
11/5/2007 8:59:54 AM
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9050474362583451279
11/5/2007 10:08:12 AM
11/5/2007 11:00:30 AM
11/5/2007 11:10:29 AM
I think its sad, but just another step further of no self responsibility. People clearly want a lifestyle they cant afford. THen bitch that they cant afford things like healthcare. Well I imagine you could afford it if you didnt keep a car payment, or CC debt. Being in debt has become normal and it is sad. However, if the cost of housing is factored into the graph, then things probably arent as bad as the graph would make out.
11/5/2007 11:11:14 AM
^^ ok, so how does that affect LoneShark's argument? He seems to be implying that people are willingly going further into debt because they believe that the US Economy has reached such a strong level that they will be able to pay it off in the future. People willingly going into debt would imply discretionary spending, not necessary spending like healthcare.
11/5/2007 11:22:42 AM
^you are correct, however that is an average. And there are alot of people who have thier houses paid off or pay cash. I can see your point though, it does seem unlikely.
11/5/2007 11:36:24 AM
More households have both parents bringing in income? Household debt would imply all the debt carried by all members of the household, while personal income would seem to imply being based on the individual. If during the times when it was common for only one parent to work , debt was ~40% of a single person's income, wouldn't it make sense that when both parents are working debt would be ~80% of a single person's income?
11/5/2007 11:45:05 AM
i'm not sure..... the graph needs to be explained better. but overall, i think it would make sense that if 2 people are working in a household instead of one, overall debt should go down......
11/5/2007 11:59:11 AM
11/5/2007 1:30:07 PM
Didn't Bush brag about home ownership being at an all-time high a couple of years ago?
11/5/2007 2:15:27 PM
here's a speech from 2002 where he set out goals of home ownership (uhhh..... and some other stuff too)
11/5/2007 2:25:25 PM
haha, its almost comical what people will blame on govt.The solution is simple. You dont allow the govt to bail out people's bad decisions. However, if you did that, you would eliminate the democratic party. Just messin around.
11/5/2007 3:45:10 PM
^ The Republicans too nowadays.A somewhat humorous view:
11/5/2007 3:45:18 PM
^sadly, you are right about the repubs these days. Hopefully whatever got into GW isnt contagious.
11/5/2007 3:49:21 PM
11/5/2007 3:53:28 PM
^ I hope there would be something more substantial to your belief that this has no effects, because the reasoning "because there was never a problem before, there never will be a problem" doesn't really make a lot of sense.
11/5/2007 3:57:25 PM
^well the reasoning is ultimately economic -- people are making a voluntary choice that is improving their standard of living, and they have the ability to do so as a direct result of the increased flexibility and responsiveness of the marketplace.It's a microeconomic application of the same national debt problem, there's a certain equilibrium range of debt-service payments that's going to exist in any given household. The interest rate climate and availability of capital have allowed them to obtain previously out-of-reach goods (like a home) while remaining at that range.For people who go over, they're going to go bankrupt and if there are enough of them there will be brief economic fallout and life will move on, as other companies, consumers and individuals in the marketplace pick up the remains. For everyone else, they've bettered themselves immediately with no negative consequences.
11/5/2007 4:02:36 PM
^ There will be a number of people that will go bankrupt just cause of overextension. Those people will then not be able to buy as much as they were beforehand. So that would affect the national economy as a whole cause as was pointed out, 70% of our national economy is consumption. So if not only people that go bankrupt, but others that just feel like their credit is getting tighter spend less, you can see how this could cause a problem.
11/5/2007 4:08:39 PM
^^ You're neglecting the correlation between debt, interest rates, and inflation, and how this relates to the fact that 70% of the economy is consumer spending.
11/5/2007 4:10:42 PM
^ & ^^The fact 70%+ of the economy is consumer spending makes this *less* of a problem, not more -- consumers are the more flexible party relative to the government. That's why our national debt has climbed while our standard of living has climbed even faster, compared to other national economies that have stagnated.I mean, Japan's savings rate is huge...---
11/5/2007 4:16:31 PM
11/5/2007 4:45:08 PM
define "on time" for someone attempting to pay off $25k of credit card debt at 25% interest by making the minimum monthly payment.
11/5/2007 4:48:25 PM
on-time would be in agreement with the contract they agreed to abide by. What is your point?BTW: rainman's video is hilarious. My favorite quote is: "Why do governments choose to borrow money from private banks at interest when gov't could create all the interest-free money it needs, itself?"Friggin hilarious.
11/5/2007 4:52:45 PM
i guess our points are exactly the same. Yes, it is true that most people have no problems making their contractually agreed payment "on time". In the case of credit cards, that means they can continue to make the minimum payment indefinitely, while never actually decreasing the principle. It seems to me, though, that the actual point is to pay the debt off in full at some point, which many of these people will never actually be able to fully do so.
11/5/2007 5:02:23 PM
11/5/2007 5:20:31 PM
agentlion, such is their decision. What you need to recognize is that "the point" is dictated by the micro-economic individuals in question. If they arrange their circumstances such that a large percentage of their annual income goes to debt payments then that is their business. There is no "right" level of debt. If you know some individual that is struggling or otherwise living unsustainably then find them help. But don't look at national statistics and try to generalize everyone. Americans have had ready access to debt for over a generation with no discernable long term trends for bankruptcy or delinquincy. As such, since Americans have not demonstrably become less capable of managing their debt we must conclude that Americans are capable of managing the current much higher debt levels. And as I explained, there are plenty of reasons to believe debt has become far more manageable today. Also, as the graph shows, Americans are capable of reducing their debt levels if the risks associated with debt grow. Specifically, if world war breaks out or the belief in economic stability suffers. People will re-locate to smaller houses, get their cars to drive longer, and stop taking trips to Europe.
11/5/2007 5:24:39 PM