>What do you do when you beg someone for their money? You comply! You don't come out for the streets saying you won't pay!
It's not like the creditors were helping from the goodness of their hearts. They made stacks of money off it, off those imposed austerity measures, off (if you excuse the description) of bleeding the working class dry. Let's not forget who profited the most off the situation generated by the European debt crisis: big German banks...
It's in the citizen's rights at least to protest for an alternative solution.
Blaming the big German banks is counterproductive when the real culprit is always the government that does the borrowing and the spending, along with the people that elected them.
It’s how socialism works. Spend other people’s money on handouts then blame capitalism for the public debt.
It worked out rather the other way around, though, did it not? Namely, the consequences of the risks taken by the big banks in pursuing aggressive lending policies were effectively socialized, while profits remained private. Even in the case of the large sovereign bailouts (most prominently Greece) most of the money went directly towards debt servicing and associated expenses, further socializing risks taken by private banks.
I'm not expressing any value judgment on these decisions in this post, but it seems to me the basic terminology is hard to dispute.
>the real culprit is always the government that does the borrowing and the spending
By that logic, I assume that in the case of the subprime crisis of 2008, you also think that the culprits are the indebted families, right? Not the banks that pushed loans on people who clearly couldn't afford them, who set up a system that richly rewarded them for that, that hoodwinked their clients and the public, that stacked regulators with friends to look the other way, that stacked universities with "economists" in conflict-of-interest to tout that their practices were a-ok, that paid themselves billions in bonuses with taxpayer money after the working class bailed out their losses... Not those people, right?
>It’s how socialism works. Spend other people’s money
It's always funny to me that the people who get trillion-dollar bailouts to recoup their losses and keep living an elite life of luxury have the gall to call others out on "handouts".
Anyway, you forgot to set that quote over a photo of Margaret Thatcher /s.
>It’s how socialism works. Spend other people’s money on handouts then blame capitalism for the public debt.
That's how an economically careless welfare state works in a capitalist economy. What you are describing is social democracy, which is not the same as socialism and never has been in the history of the movements or any terminology recognised by social scientists.
Socialism is direct worker control over the state and social means of production (to the point where Karl Marx considered the term synonymous to "Communism"), while social democracy is a liberal capitalist economy in which the government (which owns very little social means of production itself) funds welfare programs through taxes.
Lending is a two party interaction. Both sides have responsibilities and not holding German banks responsible for their profligate lending is bad. It is well known what happens when a country is flooded with credit at low interest rates. You shouldn’t just blame on party of the two party interaction.
While this is true, the borrower is going to know their financial situation better and have somewhat more control over it, so it would make sense to blame them more.
There's economic research that shows it's more efficient to regulate (in some sense, "blame") the lenders, because borrowers are often desperate. When you're desperate, you have reduced capacity to objectively judge the consequences of borrowing and are also less sensitive to "blaming", potential penalties for overborrowing, etc.
From this perspective, putting all the blame on borrowers while exonerating the banks is exactly the opposite of what we should be doing as a society, if we want to avoid another debt bubble.
I'd fully agree with you if we were talking about small entities. Maybe we can not expect every citizen to fully learn the details and pitfalls of all those financial constructs available and thus want to protect them with regulation. But when we are talking about nation-states... whom else can we expect that kind of due diligence from to make properly informed decisions and understand the consequences if not governments of nations, representing millions of people?
Lets imagine some democracy votes an incompetent fool into their highest office, who starts making "bad deals". Would you expect other countries to not agree to those deals for reasons other than their own interests?
Actually, it's not. Borrowing money is the sole responsibility of the borrower, who decides how much money he wants to borrow based on the impact it will have on their finances.
For a loan to materialize, the borrower needs to be aware of how much it will cost him and for how long he will have to repay or service the loan.
That's all the borrower's responsibility.
Only after the borrower is aware of the immediate and long-term impact of his actions will the borrower petition a lender to execute the loan. The lender's only role in the deal is to double-check the borrower's assumptions to ensure the borrower is actually capable of keeping his word and pay back the money he is borrowing.
It's also extremely disingenuous to criticise higher interest rates as they are a safety mechanism that reflects the borrower's ability to repay future loans, and are supposed to act as pressure to dissuade the borrower from digging himself into a finantial hole.
> You shouldn’t just blame on party of the two party interaction.
That's simply wrong on so maby levels. The only part who holds any form of responsibility is the borrower. He's the one making the decision to ask for more loans being fully aware of his financial situation and the impact the new loans have on his cash flow. He is the only part of the arrangement who actively petitions for the deal and has full and complete access to his economic state. The borrower is the only part who has the legal power to sign on the loands. The borrower is the only part who actively seeks the loans and actively engages with each and every single lender in the world to fulfill his desires for more debt.
Your belief about the state of knowledge of borrowers is wrong. I teach mathematics at a community college and it is clear that a knowledge of percents and the impact of compounding is lacking in a large portion of the population. In my state a state senator once claimed that since funding to the college system was increased 5% after a 5% decrease this meant that the college system’s funding had been fully restored. Do you understand why this indicates that the state senator doens’t understand percents? Do you see the error? Most people don’t.
There are lots of cases where borrowers do not understand all the terms of the loan. Have you read and understood every single loan document you’ve signed? I doubt it. Your belief that only the borrower actively seeks loans is can easily be dispelled by watching TV and seeing ads for loans.
It’s hard to understand how you can write
Borrowing money is the sole responsibility of the borrower...
And the write
The lender’s only role in the deal is to double-check the borrower’s assumptions to ensure the borrower is actually capable of keeping his word and pay back the money he is borrowing.
Today I learned that lenders cannot deny loans, poor souls forced to give money away to everyone that asks for it, without any kind of background checks.
Lenders can deny loans and they can also reflect the risk in the interest rate. However, lenders only provide their input after the borrower evaluates the impact of a loan on their finances and decides based on his evaluation that he clearly and unambiguiusly is willing and capable of servicing and repaying such a loan in full. Only after that decision is expressly made by the borrower can lenders be involved, and their involvement is restricted to rubberstamp the deal decided by the borrower.
It's not the lender's responsibility to concern itself with the consequences of the lending for the borrower. I understand the impulse to hold people to act with more care for others, but I think it's ultimately counter-productive to absolve the party that is fundamentally the only one responsible of their responsibility for their predicament. This is a government when we're talking about, not a child.
It is the lender’s resposibility (and the govrernment’s responsibility to regulate lenders) when said lenders can loan enough money such that that economy is wrecked if the loans are paid back. Making one bad loan is not a problem. Making millions of bad loans that endangers the economic well being of a nation is a problem.
That depends. Usury is a counter example. There's a reason loan sharks are viewed with disdain. That isn't to say the borrower doesn't bear any responsibility, but consent, apparent or real, is insufficient to categorically absolve the lender.
It's those childrens' parents that are responsible for empowering a responsible government, not German parents.
I mean we can blame the Germans, but it's not going to change anything. Borrowers will find someone to lend to them. It's only the borrower who can avoid getting under crushing debt.
It's not like the creditors were helping from the goodness of their hearts. They made stacks of money off it, off those imposed austerity measures, off (if you excuse the description) of bleeding the working class dry. Let's not forget who profited the most off the situation generated by the European debt crisis: big German banks...
It's in the citizen's rights at least to protest for an alternative solution.