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Be prepared for the next great transfer of wealth. Buy physical silver and storable food.
“At this juncture . . . the impact on the broader economy and financial markets of the problems in the subprime markets seems likely to be contained” – Ben Bernanke, March 28, 2007
“I don’t think student loans are a financial stability issue to the same extent that, say, mortgage debt was in the last crisis because most of it is held not by financial institutions but by the federal government” – Ben Bernanke, August 7, 2012
Please mark your calendars accordingly as yesterday the Chairman just guaranteed that student loans will be cause for the next “financial stability issue.”
Here are the facts, courtesy of a just released expose on the WSJ:
And last but not least, those ever-altruistic baby boomers:
“The boomers are the first generation shifting the cost of college to their kids,” both through increased student borrowing and reduced taxpayer support for higher education, says Susan Dynarski, a professor of education and public policy at the University of Michigan.
Because leaving them with $16 trillion in public debt is not enough.
* * *
Here is the issue in a nutshell: college tuition, just like government spending, is off the charts. Both are so high, that on an unlevered basis, the payback rate is N/M. Note the use of the world “unlevered” as it is one which will never occur, before the next systemic reset, when talking about anything involving the government. And what leverage does is mask true supply and demand. If college tuition was representative of real supply and demand, prices would be tumbling on average. Instead the easy access to student debt makes college seem quite affordable at any price point and thus there is no pressure to lower the equilibrium price. Which explains this chart, where the government-funded student debt surge is merely there to fill the needs of all those kids going to college, all of whom will never be able to pay it off especially as America increasingly transitions to a part-time worker society.
But at least they too, like their parents and grandparents, are indentured debt servants, just like the government wants.
And to the perpetually wrong Bernanke, the thinking is that if more people are on the same wavelength as the US Treasury, i.e., so deeply in debt that everyone will be begging for a dollar devaluation and/or debt hyperinflation, then the Fed will be not only able, but encouraged to debase the US currency at will.
Sadly, Bernanke is and always has been wrong, and when the student loan bubble does pop, and it will, the cost will once again fall squarely on the shoulders of that one nearly extinct species: America’s middle class, which not only generates positive cash flow, but, gasp, saves a little money here and there.
Make no mistake: they are squarely in Bernanke’s bulls eye, and are slated for extermination at all costs. In a world in which everyone is broke and defecting from every game theory equilibrium possible, those who still play by the rules are the system’s mortal enemies.
In the meantime, we can’t wait for Obama’s next brilliant contraption: cash for flunkers.
via zerohedge
2012-08-08 21:12:10