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Showing posts with label debt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debt. Show all posts

Monday, March 26, 2012

Deadbeat Nation: RJ Eskow


We've spent billions of dollars - perhaps trillions - to rescue big banks. But instead of dialing back on the risky behavior that shattered the economy in 2008, they're doubling down on it. And when their bill comes due we won't just be asked to pay it again. We'll be asked to take the blame for it again, too.
But who are the real deadbeats in this country? Banks ran up a huge bill in the years leading up to the financial crisis - a bill which the rest of us have been paying since 2008. And guess what? They're doing it again.
Take student loans. Americans owe more than a trillion dollars in student loans, a figure that's growing by $50 to $60 billion every month. Now we've learned that as many as 27% of these loans are delinquent, meaning they're more than thirty days past due. That amounts to roughly $270 billion in troubled loans - most of which have been guaranteed by the US taxpayer.
We've already rescued American banks with hundreds of billions in public money, which saved them from the consequences of their incompetent underwriting of mortgage loans. Now we're about to do the same thing with student loans.
They "privatized" Sallie Mae, the government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) created to help students borrow for their education, and its greed-crazed executives went on a grotesque spending spree.They used their government backing to pay themselves inflated salaries and bought corporate jets so they could travel in luxury. Yet, without irony, their backers and shills shrieked "socialism!" when wiser heads wanted to stop private-sector skimming at the expense of our nation's students. (See "Sallie Mae's Jets.")
And now that their loans are going bad, who will pick up the tab? It won't be those high-flying executives.
Student loans aren't the only burden young people - and the rest of us - are carrying today. Today's college seniors are also graduating with an average of more than $4,000 in credit card debt - and then entering an economy where only 46 percent of their peers in the 18-24 year old age group have jobs. That's the lowest percentage since the government began tracking these figures in 1948.
Credit card debt is another exploding area of risk for America's too-big-to-fail banks - and therefore for the Federal government. In this country there are now more than 50 million American Express credit cards in circulation, along with 176 million Mastercard credit cards and 261 million Visa credit cards. That's nearly half a trillion active credit cards from these three companies alone.
Credit cards are unsecured debt, meaning that nothing has been put up as collateral if the borrower defaults. Credit-card holders owed a reported $771 billion - more than three-quarters of a trillion dollars - in the second quarter of 2011. The average amount owed by a credit-card-holding household was more than $16,000.
And the debt train's picking up speed. Lenders wrote off about $250 billion in bad credit card debt between 2008 and 2011. Credit card debt increased by more than $36 billion in the fourth quarter of 2011, which was 30 percent more than the increase in the same quarter of 2010 and and more than twice the increase during the same quarter in 2009. (Source: CardHub.com)
But banks aren't pushing this kind of risky debt on consumers anymore, are they? They've learned their lesson, right? Wrong. Credit card solicitations were up in 2011. And the worst offender is Citigroup, the too-big-to-fail superbank that only exists because of Washington's 'bipartisan' agreement to allow the merger that created it. Last year it mailed out more credit-card solicitations than there are people in the United States (346 million credit card offers in a nation of roughly 308 million people, according to the Wall Street Journal).
In fact, the total number of direct-mail solicitations mailed out by credit-card lenders in 2011comes to nearly five billion.
But then, why not chase down those bad risks and write as many as you can, if you're a too-big-to-fail bank? Someone else will pick up the tab if they go wrong.
When you add up all the forms of consumer debt in this country - medical bills, mortgages, credit cards, student loans, car loans, and other forms of indebtedness - the Federal Reserve Bank of New York says the total amount owed by consumers is now more than $11.5 billion. These runaway debts aren't just another big bill the taxpayer may have to pay to the banks someday soon. They're a burden to individuals and families - and an obstacle to economic recovery.
The banks pay out huge fees to advertisers, psychologists, and other consultants so that all of their solicitations and offers are as persuasive as possible. So first they'll convinced Americans to borrow money - something that's easier to do now that the banks' own recklessness has left many people with no alternative but to borrow.
Then, when billions of dollars' worth of those loans turn out to be unpayable, they'll blame the very same consumers they've just prodded, pressured, and persuaded into borrowing. We'll be subject to another round of lectures about 'reckless consumers' who are 'living beyond their means,' even as we're writing fat checks to the people who got rich convincing them to borrow the money in the first place.
Americans have become indentured servants working in thrall to their lenders, manipulated into borrowing money by their culture and chained to bad debts by their FICO scores. When things go wrong with their own finances they pay the price. And when things go wrong with the finances of the banks that lent them all this money - often at usurious rates - they pay for that, too. And they'll go on paying until it becomes politically unacceptable to protect Wall Street at Main Street's expense.
There are those who will fight any attempt to rescue underwater homeowners on the grounds that it would "reward the undeserving" - and will then fight just as hard to protect banks from the consequences of their own actions. They'll lecture Americans on their "exorbitant" borrowing while rescuing the institutions that spent billions of dollars persuading them to borrow in the first place.
The real debt in this nation is the one that bankers owe the rest of the country. And as long as our politicians are allowed to rescue banks while ignoring consumers, it's a debt that will continue to go unpaid. And it's a debt that will continue to grow.
We need to tell the deadbeats that their credit's no good with us anymore - and that it's time to make good on what they already owe.
Richard (RJ) Eskow, a consultant and writer (and former insurance/finance executive), is a Senior Fellow with the Campaign for America's Future and the host of The Breakdown, which is broadast on WeAct Radio, AM 1480 in Washington DC.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

You and I are In Debt – So? (EXCELLENT ESSAY!)


UPDATE 9-27-11:  When I first wrote this blog, it was to open a new conversation about debt, how we got here, and what to do about it both as citizens and as societies.  As things have progressed, or should I say regressed, I am discovering with others the daunting and growing problems we face.
This is now Day Ten of the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations, and the world is beginning to take note of the complaints being made there.  Wall Street is the enemy, not Main Street.  Police “Serve & Protect” selectively…and it would appear only when video cams are at the ready to show their transgressions.
In that spirit, I think the reading below will make even more sense to you.  Got a debt story?  Would love to hear from you…
You and I are in debt, and I mean this in the broadest possible sense.  Physically, Emotionally, Mentally and – perhaps even – Spiritually.
Our national debt now hovers at $14 trillion, 532 billion and counting, equivalent to $46,630 per citizen or $130,000 per taxpayer!  Check out our “Debt Clock” – http://bit.ly/3pbLQ2 – and see the wheels fly by, moving higher, and higher, and higher.
It is the purpose of Written Off – America and Americans (WOAA), a book-in-process which is scheduled to be published this winter 2011, to explore this subject in ways that many of its readers will find hopeful and useful.   How did we get here, how can we get OUTof this mess, and just what is stopping us from doing just that?  Oh yes, and who, really, is responsible for this and how do we hold them accountable?
Since its inception in Spring, 2010, WOAA has morphed into something I would not have imagined – and we can blame (thank?) “Crowd-Sourcing” and Social Media for its evolution.  Contributors weighed in from LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and an international roster of blogs to provide the Wisdom of Crowds to both form and inform the subject matter.
Written Off – America and Americans was initially intended to serve its readers as a simplified blueprint for surviving and thriving in the Great Recession.  It take its instructional place, as one contributor surmised, somewhere between “Bankuptcy for Dummies” and theHarvard Business Review.  Its source would be unassailable – the people most affected and least heard from - you and me.
That was then, this is now.  WOAA is growing to fit a much more important role.  Drawing on the wisdom of those who are at daily battle with economic forces that seem impossible to surmount, WOAA will provide its reader with both armament and battle plans that are proving victorious.
What is it evolving to become?  An Activist Guide for people who refuse to be “written off”and who are rolling up their sleeves to do something about it.
WOAA started out to be a primer for people to understand and deal with the world’s economic meltdown – as seen through my eyes as a lifelong credit, collections and customer service professional.  (A “bill collector,” as it were.)  As time went along, and contributions flowed in, it became obvious that merely helping people to “understand and “deal with” the Great Recession and its effects were not going to cut it, and that the perspective of a credit professional was too narrow to meet the subject matter.
WOAA is being molded by its contributors to fill a role as a bright light to expose abuses by Big Business, Big Banks, Big Education and Bad Government and their Hired Guns.  It is evolving into a How-To manual of clear paths and workable solutions which can be put into action by Everyman and Everywoman.  Call it, “Revolution for (no-longer) Dummies.”
WOAA intends to make sense of the incomprehensible – that this world’s economic well-being has been placed in the care of the incompetent or the immoral and that only the strongest actions and remedies will correct this dangerous spiral downward.
A compelling reason – requiring meaningful action!
You and I who owe and are owed and who are now citizens of a debtor nation must arrive at a new sense and definition of what constitutes debt, the extension and use of credit.  We need to reasses the role played by financial institutions and government oversight, the optimum way in which excesses can be corrected, and how all this knowledge and determined action will frame our lives as individuals and as a nation in the coming century.
We simply cannot continue on as a nation of debtors and a debtor nation.  What must be corrected are the abuses of credit grantors and the abuses by the user of credit.  We must review and rescind the laws and regulations that unfairly impact both the creditor and the debtor.  We must root out and punish the money manipulators who – in the Wall Street tradition of “greed is good” – end-run the system and engineer financial meltdowns the like of which we in the U.S. and the global economy have experienced and will continue to experience unless systemic changes are installed.
WOAA intends to see that, once we define and understand this delicate dance between those who owe and those who are owed, we will be better prepared to either bear the yoke or even free ourselves from it.
It will be about not just surviving this economy, but thriving in it, and see that everyone has this opportunity.
Is that positive enough?
But, can we get there from here? That is, sanity in how we practice commerce and financial relationships over the insanity of never seeming to learn from the past and being forever bound to its “laws??  No, because here is a state of mind – even a shared hallucination – which cannot understand that the only way a world works best is by seeing to it that it operates on a win-win basis – the there that everyone wants.
The state of “there” requires that we adopt – in advance – a physical, emotional, mental and spiritual state of abundance and financial grace – one in which we will operate even though the world around us does not support that way of doing things.  Yet.
The bottom line is this.  There has to be a better way to manage that concept called credit and debt.  The contributors to WOAA know that this is so, and that it can be learned and practiced.  WOAA will be your handbook and guide to that better way.  Better yet, you can help fulfill the role as a guide or activist in partnership with other contributors to this book by sharing your thoughts, experiences and solutions.
If all of us don’t make it, none of us will make it.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Debtocracy - full version

For the first time in Greece a documentary produced by the audience. "Debtocracy" seeks the causes of the debt crisis and proposes solutions, hidden by the government and the dominant media. 


Friday, June 3, 2011

Debtocracy: Full version

For the first time in Greece a documentary produced by the audience. "Debtocracy" seeks the causes of the debt crisis and proposes solutions, hidden by the government and the dominant media.

Editor/Script Katerina Kitidi Kris Chatzistefanou
Scientific Research Leonidas Vatikiotis
Animation Magda Plevraki  Sokratis Galiatsakos
Music  Giannis Agelakas  Ermis Georgiadis
Aris RSN

http://youtu.be/qKpxPo-lInk