|
|
|
|
|
by lowracle
2727 days ago
|
|
>But at the world level, it's just some of us choosing to consume more than we produce right now, and others of us choosing to consume less than we produce right now. Isn't it the actual problem though ? When a small portion of people consume a lot less than what they "produce", and another big portion of people borrow from them to consume more than what they produce, isn't it an indicator of rising inequality ? This imbalance can't last forever, and either it provokes a cascade of default and threatens the stability of the economy, or it keeps the big portion of people in an interest rate paying spiral, slowing the growth of the economy. Either way, I don't see it as a good thing at all |
|
Why not? Debt doesn't necessarily resolve itself by default. Most of it is just lifecycle timing differences.
If I'm 40 years old, I'm saving for the future. I consume less than I produce, and I lend the surplus now so I can get it back later plus interest.
> interest rate paying spiral, slowing the growth of the economy
When I was 20 years old and early in my career, I didn't want to wait to pay cash for a house and car. Then I consumed more than I produced, and I'm thankful that debt allowed me to do that.
So more debt actually increases the growth of the economy, since it allows people to buy houses and cars earlier in their lives. Reduce debt and the economy shrinks (which is basically what happens when central bank raises interest rates).
> isn't it an indicator of rising inequality?
At any given moment, some families, companies and governments want to save, and others want to consume. Debt lets us trade time preferences so we all get more of what we want, when we want it.
In my example, I'm lending money to the United States so I can get it back 10 years from now.
That's not causing inequality, it's giving me the freedom to produce now and consume later.