The bailout won't stop the credit crunch, it can't possibly address the problem. The underlying economic problem is the reliance on financials. Without production of tangeble goods there is no economy, there is only gambling.
The bailout won't stop the credit crunch, it can't possibly address the problem.
Without production of tangeble goods there is no economy --- darkbeaver.
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Wrong !
Production of Tangible goods is no safety valve under a credit crunch.
Even when manufacturing and farming comprised the dominant share of the market just before the DEPRESSION the economy still went bad when banks stopped lending, when credit terms tightened, when the money supply contracted.
Yes I know that Jim but without the industrial base there is no sound economy.
---------------------------------Darkbeaver------------------------------------------------------------
You ever hear of that book, "Who moved my cheese?"
It discusses a well-known human tendency to stay in a holding pattern, the repeating of same things everyday. The need for sameness is equated as comfort, as stability.
But doing the same thing results in atrophy, and so as 1st world economies we must reach for the vanguard moment of advancing technology.
The history of the Textile Industry is a great example of a manufacturing item that keeps going to the cheapest labor market. From England in the 1700s to the North America in the 1800s, to different countries in Asia, then Central America.
I'll grant you that as a national security concern a subsidized manufacturing base might be necessary.
A: make the increased payments, which many can't regardless of keeping their jobs or not since their income hasn't increased enough to afford the payments at a higher interest rate.
OR
B: Sell the house before the interest rate adjusted. If you have a 7 year ARM, and you can sell in 6 years, there is no problem. You'll never have to make the higher payments that will come when the rate adjusts.... oh, unless you can't sell your place because housing values decrease.
-----------------------------------------------Tracy-------------------------------------------------
Regarding your choice A:
I recall a mortage officer explaining that as time goes by I will be earning more over the years and so being too afraid to take a tight budget now may hurt me down the road because I didn't take the chance, the leap of faith.
And since I can actually afford it despite a tight budget I should do this rather than incur the cost of doing nothing or renting.
As it turned out he was right on. That was the early 90s.
My income skyrocketed making my payments seem easier each year.
It all depends. Such advice was legitimate then.
Regarding your choice B:
How can anyone predict a lowering of house values?
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These decisions all come down to taking a chance. Life is a chance. We live in risk.
We have to decide the cost of doing nothing or doing something.
Not even the experts have a crystal ball.
I don't think it is as simple as pure greed or uncontrollable impulses.
A highly informative video that traced the cause of our current crisis that had its roots planted 12 years ago.
I enjoyed the music, I didn't know this old machine had good sound, I think I'll get a headset.
Very fast but informative partisan flick I thought. Obama's a monster, McCain's a monster the whole system is full of monsters.
I enjoyed the music, I didn't know this old machine had good sound, I think I'll get a headset.
Very fast but informative partisan flick I thought. Obama's a monster, McCain's a monster the whole system is full of monsters.
I don't see why the average American tax payer should do anything to help the wall street brokers and big banks.
----------------------------------------sensfan--------------------------------------------------------
Answer:
Any one of us who has worked in the last few years have 401k retirement funds and pension funds.
Half of working America and Canada has investments in these funds.
That's a lot of working people. In fact that's probably the entire middle class.