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bobbyw24
10-22-2009, 07:32 AM
An Unsustainable Path of Debt Expansion

Mises Daily by Thorsten Polleit | Posted on Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Debt Growth Exceeds Income Growth

In Q2 2009, total debt outstanding in the United States — financial plus nonfinancial debt — amounted to 373.4% of GDP.[1] At the start of 1952, the debt-to-GDP ratio stood at only 130%. In fact, in the last decades the rise in total debt has increasingly outpaced nominal income — a development which gained momentum after the erosion of the last vestiges of the gold standard in the early 1970s.

http://mises.org/images/3754/Figure1.png

The current upward dynamic of the debt-to-GDP ratio is economically unsustainable. It cannot go on forever. To see this, let us assume that the total debt-to-GDP ratio does continue to grow at the average rate at which it has expanded from Q1 1971 to Q2 2009 (case 1 in the chart above). The total debt-to-GDP ratio would exceed 600% at the start of 2029 and reach more than 1000% in 2050.

If one assumes that the total debt-to-GDP ratio will expand at the average growth rate seen from Q1 1995 to Q2 2009 (case 2), a level of 600% would be reached as early as the middle of 2024, and the ratio would go up further towards 1300% by the end of 2050.

Interest payments on total debt would rise substantially as a percentage of GDP. If one assumes that the average interest rate was 4% in Q2 2009,[2] total interest payments amounted to 15% of GDP. In case 1, interest payments would double by the middle of 2038, while in case 2 this level would be reached in the middle of 2031.

Continue:

http://mises.org/story/3754

bobbyw24
10-22-2009, 08:25 AM
Credit is No Silver Bullet

Jeff Cornwall

Washington seems to only have one solution for any economic problem -- debt. Want to stimulate housing? Pump in debt. Want to rescue banks and big business? Pump in debt. Want to stimulate consumer spending? Manipulate credit card rules to encourage more debt.

And now their solution to helping small business? Pump in more money for SBA loans.


"...[I] is not the silver bullet that is going to propel small business owners to start hiring again. The primary problem facing small business owners right now in terms of job creation is not access to credit, it's a lack of sales, customers and confidence. Small business owners are unlikely to invest in hiring or expanding their businesses when sales and profits are so weak.


I could not agree more. Debt is not the answer. Certainly access to credit is important over the long-term, but we have structural problems in our entrepreneurial economy that are tied to high and complex taxes and over regulation. But easy access to credit right now will make matters worse for many of these small firms by adding debt load to their overhead and doing nothing to improve their sales or their long-term cash flow.

http://www.drjeffcornwall.com/2009/10/credit-is-no-silver-bullet.html

Mahkato
10-22-2009, 08:35 AM
Digg: http://digg.com/business_finance/An_unsustainable_path_of_debt_expansion