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Edited on Wed Dec-31-08 03:13 PM by Kurt_and_Hunter
This is so simple it will never be proposed, let alone tried, but it would actually work. Since Obama is on holiday I'm sure he has time to catch up on his DU lurking and he's free to appropriate my solution. :)
The federal government offers to buy up one trillion dollars of consumer debt. You owe $15,000 in credit card debt to Citibank. The government pays off the card and you now owe the government $15,000 at something like Prime+1. Let's call it 8%.
Here is what just happened...
1) Since your debt is at 8% instead of 20-25% Your monthly minimum payment went down $100-$200... whatever it works out to. That is equivalent to a pay increase and, unlike a stimulus check, you get that benefit every month.
2) You have an empty Citibank card you can buy things with. (At the usual 20-25% rip-off interest rates.) Since you now owe the government $15,000 you are still in debt and the card company will probably want to reign in your limit some, but even if they cut the credit limit on your now paid-off card from $15,000 to $5,000 you still have $5,000 more credit than you did last week.
3) Most risk in the existing consumer debt market has vanished, improving the balance sheets of all financial institutions. And the creditor banks just got the biggest cash-flow infusion in history.
4) Credit card banks now have fistfulls of cash and a strong incentive to restock their consumer debt income streams, so they will have to compete with each other for consumer credit. And since they are not holding all that perilous existing debt they have less incentive to jack up rates, close credit-lines, etc..
5) The government has a trillion dollars in debt earning 8% financed by selling treasuries at 3.5%. (Which are still in high demand because of the global situation.)
This would hit like a bomb. Economic activity would increase 10% in a week. No debt principal is forgiven so there's nothing for the public to get too exercised about. People who managed their debt better don't gain as much, but that will apply to any stimulus package. When you help the people or corporations that are in trouble you will inevitably subsidize bad behavior to some degree.
And the banks don't lose because they have already decided their consumer debt portfolios are a negative... why else are they withdrawing so much credit and jacking up rates more? This would be a rescue for them. Plus, I assume the government would offer the banks a fee for continuing to collect the debt at the new low interest rate. They're already set up for it.
And it would benefit mortgage foreclosures. Almost all home-owners have credit cards. Anyone who is in default on their mortgage but hasn't already maxed out their credit cards isn't very serious about paying their mortgage. So this would be equivalent, for most households facing foreclosure, to readjusting their mortgage by a percent or two.
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