| In today’s age home loans hang like an axe waiting to fall on our neck the day we are unable to service them. There’s going to be a future generation which not have access to ownership at all. Everything they use will be subscription based. Only large private corporations will own assets. Time has proven over and over again how a private corporation can begin to flex their power to extract the last pound of flesh from a customer. I am beginning to feel that there almost needs to be a moral debate and long term evaluation of the subscription economy. It needs significantly more regulation that the asset selling industry needed. A subscription economy can leave a person in a lurch the day s/he is out of a job. At least with asset ownership one had a few things one could completely rely on like music in the house, a car to drive to search for a job. I truly dread the day when everything turns subscription only. https://techcrunch.com/2018/03/26/bmw-and-lexus-look-to-car-subscriptions/amp/ |
Where there may be an issue is if it increases the efficiency too far. For example, it could make getting a new Lexus every year affordable to more people so more will do it. I can imagine that this will exacerbate excessive consumption rather than reduce it.
Now, in a very real sense this is less elitist than requiring upfront payment so it's not so clear cut, morally speaking.
As to the idea that this is an issue if you lose your job. Sure. If you don't have savings and aren't insuring your payments for your essentials then you could have an issue. But it's not dissimilar to assets, you're just running a more predictable risk.