The Debt-Peonage Society?
by
Sean Corrigan
by Sean Corrigan
Dear
Mr. Krugman:
I
have to say that if you borrow money you should be obliged to make
the best effort you can to repay it, whatever the circumstances.
You should certainly have to sell your assets to maximise this total
though you should then stand discharged of further obligations,
allowing you to make a fresh start, albeit with few material possessions
as the price of your improvidence.
After
all, you voluntarily entered into a contract to that effect; but
then, so did the lender, so he, too, has to take whatever lumps
are left over once you've done your best to negotiate, possibly
under the oversight of an honest legal system (sadly, a Utopian
premise, I fully realize). That might encourage him
to think twice, next time, about just why he is
extending loans and to whom and ideally absent the FDIC and
Fed, who only serve to introduce collectivist moral hazard
your lenders' lenders (whether depositors or security holders) might
want him to exercise a little judicious restraint, too.
I
would also hasten to add that this should apply rigorously and without
exception to everyone from the unlucky Little Man to the largest,
rent-seeking, mega-corporation entering Ch11 for the umpteenth time
and grabbing for taxpayers' money as it does.
If
debt carried a few real penalties, it might not be so enticing a
temptation and so avoidable hardship, the misallocation of resources,
and ultimately moral degradation might all be lessened as a
result (not that a Keynesian would be able to grasp this line of
argument).
It
might also lead people to reexamine the whole corrupted monetary
and political system in which they live, instead of consoling themselves,
amid their economic and political impotence, by anticipating the
paper gains in their plasterboard palaces and thus running up even
more potentially crippling liabilities, for no more useful purpose
than to maintain their otherwise unaffordable, Sunday-supplement
lifestyles.
If,
instead, we allow the bleeding hearts to make excuses for
and dole out goodies to everyone who abandons thrift and
then loses a bet with Dame Fortune, we are effectively taking the
make-up from the prudent and giving it to the prodigals, whether
through taxation, higher lending/insurance costs, or monetary inflation.
We
are also rewarding the foolish via their prior, credit-financed
enjoyment of goods and services which were subsequently left uncompensated
but which were thus initially bid higher in price, to the detriment
of those who could have paid, cash on the nail, out
of principal or income.
It
should be obvious that the adoption of such perverse incentives
however ostensibly compassionate the motives would
lead to even more debt peonage, not less!
I
should have thought a man of such eminence in the field as you would
have recognised this basic economic verity, whatever his political
sensibilities might be.
With
regards,
Sean Corrigan
March
10, 2005
Sean
Corrigan [send him mail]
is an investment analyst in Switzerland.
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