America - its government, businesses, and people - are nearly $60
trillion in debt, according to the latest economic data from thethe St.
Louis Federal Reserve. And private debt - not government borrowing - is
the biggest reason for the huge deficit.
Total US debt at the end of the first quarter of 2014, on March
31 totaled almost $59.4 trillion - up nearly $500 billion from
the end of the fourth quarter of 2013, according to the data.
Total debt (the combination of government, business, mortgage,
and consumer debt) was $2.2 trillion 40 years ago.
“In 50 short years, debt has gone from being a luxury for a
few to a convenience for many to an addiction for most to a
disease for all,” James Butler wrote in an Independent
Voters Network (IVN) op-ed.
“It is a virus that has spread to every aspect of our
economy, from a consumer using a credit card to buy a $0.75 candy
bar in a vending machine to a government borrowing $17 trillion
to keep the lights on.”
According to a 2012 study published in the Economist, rapid
growth in private debt is a better predictor of recessions than
increases in public debt, growth in money supply, or trade
imbalances. Consumer credit in the US rose by 22 percent over the
last three years, reaching a record-high $3.18 trillion in April,
the Fed reported on Friday.
Credit card use (or revolving credit) rose by $8.8 billion, while
non-revolving credit like auto loans and student loans made by
the government surged up by $18 billion in April. Non-revolving
credit jumped by 8.2 percent over the last year, while revolving
credit only rose 2.2 percent over the same time period.
“For a while after the recession it was trendy to cut up your
credit cards and get out of debt,” Michael Snyder wrote in
an
InfoWars op-ed. “But that fad wore off rather quickly,
didn’t it?”
Snyder noted that 56 percent of all Americans have a subprime
credit rating, and that the average monthly car payment in the US
is $474. He added that 52 percent of homeowners are overextended
on their mortgages and “cannot even afford the house that
they are living in right now.”
Debt is hurting young adults the most. Millennials say they are
spending at least half their monthly paychecks on paying off
debt, a recent Wells Fargo survey found. And two years out of
college, half of all graduates are still relying on their parents
or other family members for some sort of financial help,
according to a University of Arizona study, which also found that
only 49 percent of graduates are working full-time.
"Whether or not a weak labor market is increasing the need
for intergenerational support -- a likely driver in today's
economy -- our data clearly showed that many young adults today
may not be earning enough to make it on their own, even when
working full time," the report stated.
Most of the debt that young adults face is student loan debt,
which totals more than $1.2 trillion, according to the Federal
Reserve. Of that debt, approximately $124 billion is more than 90
days delinquent.
“What we have done to our young people is shameful. We have
encouraged them to sign up for a lifetime of debt slavery before
they even understand what life is all about,” Snyder wrote.
The Congressional Budget Office predicts that the economy will
stall by 2017 because Americans will continue spending, but wages
and wealth won’t be going up - leading to increased income
inequality in the country, the Guardian reported.
“That ever-increasing gap between income and consumption has
been filled by borrowing,” the
Guardian said. “These were the debt dynamics in the
lead-up to the recession. But they are also the dynamics leading
out of the crisis, and continuing today with no end in
sight.”
Economists have not agreed on how to stave off the impending
crisis. But Americans’ addiction to spending on credit will not
help.
“The problem is, the more debt we have, the more future
income must be used to pay the debt and its interest, which
reduces the money we have to spend on things. This works to slow
the economy,” Butler wrote.
“Eventually, the negative effect of the debt load becomes
stronger than the positive effect of the added spending and a
recession is triggered — or worse.”
No comments:
Post a Comment