Life in Hock
We live in a society driven by debt.
Cars, for example, have become hugely expensive (even on the low end) relative to what people can afford – because of the easy availability of credit. Which is the nice word used to speak about debt, intended to encourage us to get into it.
It takes at least $15,000 or so to drive home in a “cheap” new car, once all is said and done. And the “cheap” car will have to be registered, plated and insured.
It runs into money.
And most new cars cost a lot more money. Which most people haven’t got. So they get debt. A loan. Which, when it becomes commonly resorted to as a way to live beyond one’s means as a lifestyle, drives up the cost of life for everyone. Including those who try to live within their means – or better yet, below them.
Myths, Misunderstandings and Outright lies about owning Gold. Are you at risk?
When most people (when enough people) are willing – are eager – to go into hock for the next six years in order to have a car with an LCD touchscreen, leather (and heated) seats, six airbags, a six-speaker stereo, electronic climate control AC and power everything – which pretty much every new car now comes standard with – the car companies build cars to satisfy that artificial demand.
Artificial because based on economic unreality. That is a good way to think about debt. It is nonexistent wealth.
You are promising to pay with money you haven’t earned yet.
And maybe won’t.
The car market has become like the housing market – which has also been distorted by debt to a cartoonish degree. The typical new construction home is a mansion by 1960s standards. Not that there’s anything wrong with living in a mansion. Or driving a car with heated leather seats and climate control AC and a six-speaker surround-sound stereo and six airbags and all the rest of it. Provided you can afford it.
Most people can’t.
Normally, that fact would keep things in check. There would be mansions, of course – and high-end cars, too. But only for those with the high-end incomes necessary to afford them. Everyone else would live within their means. We wouldn’t be living in this economic Potemkin village that appears prosperous but is, in fact, an economic Jenga Castle that could collapse at any moment.
There would be a lot less pressure to “keep up with the Joneses”… as they head toward bankruptcy and foreclosure.
As society heads that way.
Like the housing industry, the car industry has ceased building basic and much less expensive cars because of easy and grotesque debt-financing.
Which is tragic.
There ought to be (and would be) a huge selection of brand-new cars priced under $10,000 were it not for the ready availability of nonexistent wealth (.e., debt and credit).
Cars many people could pay cash for.
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