Moral hazard is what has landed the economy in such a mess, how can increasing this be of any benefit whatsoever.Posts like yours make me want to vomit. The "moral hazard" argument is morally bankrupt. You were lucky...end of story.
Those people that are hopelessly in debt should be looking at the personal bankruptcy route, which in my opinion is something the state can actually do something to speed things up.There are people on their knees in this country and they require society's assistance. If there are opportunistic freeloaders out there who will try and abuse any rescue package then we should devise a plan to weed them out. But the existence of such people isn't an excuse to not help those in difficulty. And if people can't be compassionate enough to help others, they should think selfishly about those who are drowning in debt. If there is large scale debt forgiveness, people will re-enter the economy and start spending which should benefit us all.
Spending is what got us into this trouble. What is needed above anything else is savings. And it is totally untrue to suggest that money is already available for any large scale private debt write off.As for those questioning where the money will come from to fund this debt forgiveness, the money's generally already been provided. The debts have been recorded as bad debts in the financial statements of the banks and written off. The banks' balance sheets have already taken the hit.
When I was offered a 92% mortgage for 6 times our combined income I took out an 85% mortgage for 3 times our combined earnings. I also made additional payments over 3 years that reduced the LTV to 75% of the original price. We had two modest cars that were over 5 years old. When after 10+ years of house price increases prices started going down I put the house on the market and sold it within 3 months because I had advertised it for 15% less than all other similar houses available in the area. Absolutely none of this was down to luck.
(nods)One of my neighbours on the other hand took out 100% mortgage, took out loans and credit card debt to furnish the place, and then after 12 months remortgaged to buy two brand new cars. He is one of the people that is now hopelessly in debt that would benefit from debt forgiveness.
Locally we may be able to deal with the problem with a streamlining of the bankruptcy laws, but that seems to be a form of specific debt forgiveness by another name
So we’d end up with bust pension funds, no credit flows and a very peeved China (the country that spent the last 10-15 years buying up American debt to keep the dollar strong and their exports cheap). The Chinese won’t let that happen without a fight and I mean a real fight with guns and tanks and stuff. Historically plenty of wars and invasions have been started over debts and even bond markets (the British and French invaded Egypt over bond defaults).
Sovereign government are now so indebted that they are effectively dependent on unelected financiers beholden to no one controlling the world economy. That bothers me.
To be honest I don't think it is canniness. I basically stuck to the mantra of spend what you have and don't borrow for luxuries. While there have been some exceptions where I took out interest free credit to buy a TV or car, I did so while having the cash already saved. Over the years I have had many people criticize and even make fun of me for the way I approached my finances. What annoys me most is that some of the same people now say I was so lucky, when luck had nothing to do with it, just simple financial prudence. And this is something that has gone very astray in this country in general.I am hugely impressed at your canniness and apart from your selling of the house at the right time and the right price, this broadly mirrors my own experience. I sold two houses to buy one and didn't extend, merely renovated bathrooms and the utility. I didn't buy cars on the mortgage. I didn't buy a second home or a buy to let. I generally stayed within my means and my overdraft and loans were well-managed and I didn't miss payments. Any subsequent difficulties have arisen not from a lack of prudence, competence or willingness to work, but simply a lack of work in the building industry.
However let's not confuse fiscal prudence with morals.
I disagree, if they lose their house and the content they will still be able to rent. But this seems to be a touchy subject with a lot of people in Ireland. Since we sold the house in early 2008 we have been renting and moved three times before we found the right house with a great landlord. The mentality from all my Irish friends and colleagues was that I should wait 6 months for things to settle a bit and then use the proceeds from the house sale to have two house deposits. When I said that I was going to wait years before I even consider buying a PPR I was again criticized and ridiculed. What I am basically saying that there is absolutely nothing wrong with renting whether single, as a couple or as a family, whether it is by choice of force of situation.The problem is that if everyone pursues all such people for debt recovery and takes goods in lieu, these people will have no place to live, possibly no means of support, no transport and their kids will suffer hugely.
Of course some voters are going to raise this, but everybody tries to get something for free, and people in general are pretty averse to accepting that they made a mistake and they have to live up to it.Sean Gallagher reports that debt forgiveness is an issue repeatedly raised by voters.
Its all too easy for people with huge financial acumen and a moral imperative to dismiss this out of hand.
I fully agree. But the mistake was to plug the hole in the banks by bailing out bank creditors, and this mistake should not be repeated again.Finding billions to plug the holes in bank balance sheets while offering no real alternatives to those caught in the wrack appears to be politically unwise.
Locally we may be able to deal with the problem with a streamlining of the bankruptcy laws, but that seems to be a form of specific debt forgiveness by another name
I agree, a lot of debt will have to be written off, but again it should under no circumstances be at the expense of the taxpayer. But what we are seeing now is governments around the world scrambling to patch holes on a sinking ship. Governments created the debt problem and now everyone is expecting that the same institutions are actually able to fix the problem with more interventions that do not force all the burden on the creditors.Globally however, if we don't find some sort of reset button, then I fear that the global situation, with interest on the principal growing and large economies like America simply continuing on running up huge deficits and rolling over loans to finance wars and huge military spending, is unsustainable.
This is the reason I considered universal debt forgiveness in the first place.
Since we sold the house in early 2008 we have been renting and moved three times before we found the right house with a great landlord.
...
What I am basically saying that there is absolutely nothing wrong with renting whether single, as a couple or as a family, whether it is by choice of force of situation.
In terms of debt forgiveness, to me, there are 3 kinds of people. Firstly, there are those who have lost their jobs and are struggling to pay things back, and secondly, those who got completely carried away and borrowed left right and centre and even if they are working, can't carry the debt burden they've loaded on themselves.
I disagree, if they lose their house and the content they will still be able to rent. But this seems to be a touchy subject with a lot of people in Ireland. Since we sold the house in early 2008 we have been renting and moved three times before we found the right house with a great landlord. The mentality from all my Irish friends and colleagues was that I should wait 6 months for things to settle a bit and then use the proceeds from the house sale to have two house deposits. When I said that I was going to wait years before I even consider buying a PPR I was again criticized and ridiculed. What I am basically saying that there is absolutely nothing wrong with renting whether single, as a couple or as a family, whether it is by choice of force of situation.
There are 3 kinds of people; those who can count and those that can't.That's two kinds of people Mpsox.What's the third?
That's two kinds of people Mpsox.What's the third?
....
- Firstly, there are those who have lost their jobs and are struggling to pay things back, and ....
- secondly, those who got completely carried away and borrowed left right and centre and even if they are working, can't carry the debt burden they've loaded on themselves.
- In addition, we're losing flexibility in the workforce due to the inability of people to move for work due to negative equity.
There are 3 kinds of people; those who can count and those that can't.
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