by GoIllini » Mon 26 Sep 2005, 17:44:05
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Eventually, I believe that US government insolvency will lead to a round of hyperinflation, but I think that this is several years down the road and that something will be done in the meantime to indemnify the financial interests from the effects of this hyperinflation, perhaps by allowing them to charge interest on private debts that would compensate for the effects of inflation. (I am potentially talking about million percent interest rates here.)
Won't happen. Ex-post-facto laws and legislatures modifying the terms of signed contracts are unconstitutional. The government has the right to grant the privilege of bankruptcy to debtors, but it can't say,
"I know you agreed to a fixed 6% interest rate on that mortgage, but we're going to knock it up to 1006%" without a constitutional amendment or giving you the money to pay the extra interest.
If this did happen, considering that 90% of the country is in some kind of debt already, we could expect widespread revolts. Considering other dire predictions about wars in other countries, any "interest readjustment" without a constitutional amendment (requiring 75% of the support of the population) would effectively be an a new bankruptcy bill that read: "easy bankruptcy; just revolt".
Otherwise, it's also important to note that 3006% interest with 3000% inflation isn't that bad. Just take what you'd earn in a bad recession, multiply it by 30, take your mortgage payment and multiply it by 30, and you'll be in great shape. And something tells me that if you can't a mortgage payment at 3000% interest, you won't be able to handle other living expenses with 3000% inflation.
I would also add that most credit cards don't have fixed APRs. That is to say, if the prime rate goes up to 3000%, the interest you pay on your credit card is liable to go up to 3012%. So please, please, please, please: pay off your credit cards, and unfixed loans, first. Nothing is stopping your creditors from jacking up your interest on those in the event of hyperinflation.