Take to my Gold Site

See my Gold, Silver, Stock and Commodity page here
Photobucket

Friday, May 14, 2010

Bailouts not the solution to too much debt

Bailouts have now proceeded from the corporate, securities, banking and insurance sectors to the sovereign nation/state and even to regional sovereign blocks (EU). None of this has addressed the basic problem of rising debt. In fact, the bailouts are almost certainly just making things much worse.

We tend to get confused because we think that different rules somehow apply than those with which we are more familiar, such as bringing up our own kids. In the past, if our teenagers got into debt, we would probably have had a little chat with them about the potential dangers of debt. If they ignored our advice and got into debt further and got beyond their ability to service that debt, they might show up on our doorstep and ask for a bailout. Some of us might choose to help out, but only if the kids handed over their credit cards for shredding and agreed to a balanced or surplus budget regime. In other words, they would have to live within their means. At the same time, they would be told that if this happened again they would be on their own.

Now let's compare this with what we are doing in the financial world. We are telling nations that we will bail them out if they tighten up a bit and run smaller deficits (increase their outstanding mortgages at a slower rate). And even that is  a lot of hogwash, coming from the "parent" states who themselves are running deficits. So it's like telling your children not to keep borrowing faster than you are. The only thing temporarily keeping things afloat is that people still have some (misplaced) confidence in the parent states (like the U.S.). When you look at the skyrocketing deficits and growing debts of the U.S., it is sheer lunacy but this is where we have come.

Getting back to the parenting analogy, the big risk of these uncontrolled and spreading bailouts is that the kids are going to take the parents down with them. So instead of a relatively nasty and uncomfortable but small and containable default, we are risking the entire financial structure.

The only solution to too much debt is less debt, not more debt!