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TomCADem

(17,387 posts)
Mon Jul 30, 2018, 11:32 PM Jul 2018

Consumer debt is at an all-time high. Should banks be worried?

With Republicans extending billions in tax cuts to the rich, as well as rolling back consumer protections and financial regulations, is it any wonder that average Americans are going deeper and deeper in debt while wages stagnate. Of course, Trump and Republicans are too busy taking a "victory lap" with the mainstream media playing along.

https://www.americanbanker.com/news/consumer-debt-is-at-an-all-time-high-should-banks-be-worried

September 2008 was one of those rare interludes when the world shifts beneath your feet. Markets froze. Fabled banks stood on the precipice. The U.S. government, after initially standing by idly, brought out its bazooka. After a generation of deregulation, it genuinely seemed possible that the U.S. banking system would be nationalized.

The crisis had immense economic and political consequences over the following decade. It helped fuel the rise of the Tea Party, and later, both Trumpism and the anti-corporate left. It led to new regulations that transformed banking into a safer, far more boring industry. And it wreaked havoc in tens of millions of American lives. Foreclosures became an epidemic. College graduates were forced to move into their parents' basements. Aging workers had their retirement plans upended.

But 10 years later, what's remarkable is how little the financial crisis changed Americans' relationship to debt and savings. We still borrow more and save far less than prudence would dictate.

U.S. household debt, which declined between 2008 and 2013, has rebounded sharply. By the first quarter of 2018, it was at an all-time high of $13.2 trillion. The composition of our debt has changed, and we've been better able to manage our obligations, thanks in substantial part to an extended period of low interest rates. But the crisis did not teach us a lesson about the perils of borrowing too much.
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Consumer debt is at an all-time high. Should banks be worried? (Original Post) TomCADem Jul 2018 OP
What's missing from those raw number is PoindexterOglethorpe Jul 2018 #1
k&r Demovictory9 Jul 2018 #2
Car loans are the bubble this time JCMach1 Jul 2018 #3

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,855 posts)
1. What's missing from those raw number is
Mon Jul 30, 2018, 11:57 PM
Jul 2018

exactly who owes that debt. Where along the income spectrum those debtors are.

How much is student loans? How much is mortgage obligations? How much is unsecured debt (credit cards)? How much is payday loans?

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