And most of those people are paying their mortgages on time but it's getting the economy nowhere, a point that continues to elude most, as consumption expenditure is moribund. Add exchequer austerity to that and you get 14% unemployment and 87000 people emigrating ( Eurozone unemployment just hit 12% for the first time ever last month ). But I guess we gots to put manners on the people who were bold boys and girls in the noughties.........unless you're a banker.
take 150,000 people or so in arrears...give them debt forgiveness, let them start spending (of course all that spending will be in Ireland!), and the economy will get going again.
Wow, did'nt reliase that was all it would take ...let the debt write-off begin!
the figures show that saving is now miles ahead of spending.
And that, I think, is the answer to the ridiculous suggestion that we should write off debts "so that people can become economically productive again". The people who are not in debt are just as capable of spending. Why favour one over the other? There may be other reasons for writing down debt, but this isn't it. Any debt written down has to be paid for by someone, so anyone promoting debt forgiveness needs to stop just parading their own magnanimity with other people's cash, and say where they think the money is coming from.
I would agree that the banks should share the pain to the same degree that struggling borrowers are and will feel for a long time to come-but sadly thanks to that famous October 2008 night, that means every taxpayer of this country gets hit every time there is a re-structure or debt deal.
However, I do hope that those that can pay are coralled by every bank and made to feel the same hardship and austerity as those that want to pay their debt - but just cant. If this happens, I would begin to think we are making progress with 'moral hazard' and introducing confidence back into the economy.
Some of our deluded government ministers think the same . In Economics that part of income that is not consumed ( spent ) is classed as savings - the savings you are talking about are debt repayments. You can cut it whatever way you want but this country is at least a generation a way from recovery unless we address our overall indebtedness.
Ah right, and we're not paying the price now? The Exchequer adjustments needed for obliterated tax revenues are €3.5bn this year, €3.1bn next year and €2.5bn the year after. #Austerity rocks
That would come close to my opinion too
Demoivre - I really think you are missing the point. By a long way.
One of the main issue with getting the economy going is confidence. What this means is getting people to spend rather than save. It's not altering what money is there - there is ample saved money in the economy, but people are saving for the rainy day, worried that more bad stuff is around the corner. The idea that giving the flahulach more money to waste is laughable....
It has proven to work very well in the US thank you very much! And Iceland has actually written down loans to 110% of the value of their house and guess what, yep, their economy is growing faster than the US and Europe. So pause and think about that for a moment, debt forgiveness isn't necessarily a case of letting people off scot free, it actually serves the economy as a whole and everyone living in it better in the long run!
We've had the mother of all property crashes and those losses need to be crystallized sooner rather than later so the economy can start functioning normally. Saddling people with debt and negative equity for the next 20 years certainly isn't going to help anyone.
Ok perhaps Iceland is not a good example when you factor in all the inflation as outlined in your post. How about the US and non recourse loans? Hand back the keys and the shortfall is written off. That's as real as it gets with regards to debt write off!
In the states if you cannot pay your mortgage then you lose the asset. If the bank has many defaulters then it closes.
Isn't this the way it should be......basic market forces allowed to play out naturally?
The notion of people having to hand back their home and being chased forever and a day for the balance is just ludicrous......and so is forcing people to live within incredibly tight budgets for potentially the rest of their lives!
Isn't this the way it should be......basic market forces allowed to play out naturally?
The notion of people having to hand back their home and being chased forever and a day for the balance is just ludicrous......and so is forcing people to live within incredibly tight budgets for potentially the rest of their lives!
I don't disagree. In the states though it's not completely plain sailing todeclare bankruptcy, you really have to be in dire straits, unemployed or already having payments garnished from your income, you home is on the brink of being foreclosed on, you owe taxes, you're being sued.
There are two types of bankruptcy, chapter 7 which is basically if you are unemployed and can't repay anything, in this case you lose everything.
Or chapter 13, whereby you enter into a repayment programme for between 3 and 5 years.
It stays on your record for 10 years, meaning that you'll probably get a loan in the future, but you'll pay more interest.
There is no solution anywhere whereby you walk away and suffer no ill effects from bankruptcy/debt write-down. It just doesn't happen. A lot of people in this country are jumping on a bank wagon that doesn't exist.
Good to get a deeper insight into the US Bankruptcy process. I totally agree that there is no ill side effects from any type of debt writedown and again so it should be. But these ill effects shouldn't be near half as bad as being given a budget that strips borrowers of living a decent economic life in the long term.
The notion that there is lots of 'strategic defaulters' is nonsense in my opinion, off course there will be a few but so be it, that's life! It shouldn't influence a policy that will help the vast majority of distressed borrowers.
The amount of stress being put on people by our system is frightening. In the last two weeks two men took their own lives in my area due to debt stress. Both with young families.
This thread has probably scared off the OP and others. I'm as mad as anyone with stratetic defaulter but that debate should be elsewhere.
And the people who won't be spending because they are paying higher taxes to fund this don't matter!take 150,000 people or so in arrears...give them debt forgiveness, let them start spending (of course all that spending will be in Ireland!), and the economy will get going again.
Wow, did'nt reliase that was all it would take ...let the debt write-off begin!
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