DebtFreeMe,
I recognize that American fiscal policy means a lot to you, but please tell me that you are up to date on economic principles past 1912. Too many metalbugs choose to stack because they are spooked by their government (which they have full control of, they just don't know it). Don't be a dinosaur--learn how the world is working around you in the
present day.
In the event of a default there is no additional money to be spent, thus no spend, spend, spend. In the event of a bailout (with money that is created out of the Feds printing press) the value of the dollar drops thus purchasing power drops, thus no new purchasing power (real money assets) are created, thus no, spend, spend, spend… In the event taxes are used to bailout the default, this is simply moving money from one persons pocket to another, thus no real economic growth will take place, one person will spend, spend, spend while the other will be taxed rather than being able to spend the money they actually worked for.
What the hell do you mean default won't cause more spending? When has any default ever not caused more spending?? The government is going to bailout the bad debt, so those who borrowed more than they could afford are going to continue to borrow more than they can afford. Spending habits will be reinforced, because those paying their debt responsibly will have a heavy load to carry. Those borrowing irresponsibly will get a free ride to just borrow and spend more.
Also, bailouts have no effect on the value of the dollar. Did the dollar collapse because we bailed out the automakers? No.
This statement alone shows that you have no understanding of money, credit, debt, reserves, or any other concept associated with them, or the foundation by which any of them are created, destroyed, or dreamed up (fiat money)... It would take too long to correct this here, but you could look at this book Ludwig von Mises, The Theory of Money and Credit [1912]
http://files.libertyfund.org/files/1061 ... k_v6.0.pdf and it will get you going in the right direction.
Your statement shows that you are a dinosaur. I'm impressed that you have picked up on the computer. I sure hope you believe in fiat enough to invest in your 401(k) or other money market accounts. I don't care how much conviction you have in your beliefs--putting your eggs in one basket is unsound.
You are incorrect on this, the value of a degree will move with the market demand, I have little doubt that there was a time that a person with a degree in culinary arts could get a good job working up to be a chef, today that will probably get you a job at olive garden, right next to the high school kid… The market will decide the value of the degree, just as it did for houses, and where there are too many for the need that the market has, the value will only go one direction, and folks with Bachelors Degree’s are already seeing the value of there degrees dropping…
You didn't understand the point. I'll rephrase: student loans by definition cannot go "underwater". Even if potential employers would rather hire highschoolers than college graduates, the underlying value of the loan is not represented as collateral to the banks. When homes were suddenly worth less than what the bank was owed, what happened to the shortfall? A student loan does not have the same underlying value implied in the loan. There can be no "pinch", even if we continue towards default.
Trillions of dollars where lost when home owners defaulted on their mortgage payments… That’s not the same as a bubble pop?
The housing bubble was based on inflated prices. The prices
were the bubble. Once that bubble popped and prices came down,
then defaults became a lucrative option to many. The bubble isn't in the bad debt, but in the inflated prices that lead people to accept that bad debt. And this is my point about the educational bubble--is tuition really going to come down any time soon? I don't think so. I think a college-degree has almost become a requirement to be in the middle class.
That alone show it will be well over $100 billion, by about 2.5 times, and even that is probably a low ball estimate if things were to start rolling like the home mortgage market did.
Nobody knows how big the bailout will have to be. But you can rest assured that it is not going to sink the ship. We are currently running a $16 Trillion debt and still experiencing GDP growth and job recovery. (Disclaimer: please do not take this as me advocating our national debt. Just think for a minute and evaluate whether or not our economy can withstand a few hundred billion in student loan bailouts. I think it obviously can.).
The US government has no function by which it creates wealth (money), therefore it cannot pay the debts. Those debts are paid by other people, (through taxes, devaluation, confiscation, or many other means of wealth destruction) thus no benefit will come on a Macro scale, only a misallocation of assets will take place through a forced redistribution of wealth.
You can't have it both ways. I agree with you that the government doesn't
create wealth, but I also realize that the government doesn't
destroy wealth. They just spread it somewhere else (often into their own bureaucratic inefficiencies).
Final Note: You guys all seem hell-bent on not hearing any line of economic thought that doesn't agree with your own. That is fine. But I would strongly urge you to reconsider your portfolio and strategy if the best financial argument you have is that "fiat will always collapse!!!". While I agree with you 100% in wishing we were on a gold standard, I am not going to ignore all of the ways to make money in the current day and age. My 401(k) gets matched out each paycheck, my savings get dumped into money market accounts, I buy silver and gold every chance I get, and I am working away at my mortgage--an investment in my home. No matter what happens in the next 20 years, I will be prepared. Will you?
"Don't ask for guarantees. And don't look to be saved in any one thing, person, machine, or library. Do your own bit of saving, and if you drown, at least die knowing you were headed for shore."