by Roy » Sun 14 Jan 2007, 09:53:50
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')kay what about this arguement.
Take out a mortgage you can service in the near term on a property with long term value (e.g. farmable) even if you have some doubt about the economy remaining strong enough to stave off mass bankruptcies, forclosures and the like.
Be able to service the loan long enough so you dont get tossed out in the early waves of forclosure
Cease to pay it when the currency collapses/or pay it completely off if it inflates out of sight.
Live happily ever after (or until the starving hoardes descend upon your property)
Ugh. Nevermind. Is this even an excercise worth undertaking.
Pea-Jay, you just read my mind there!
In fact that's exactly what I've planned. If, for some unknown reason, our economy continues as is, business-as-usual, what debt I do have is not a stretch on my budget.
Personally I doubt seriously that business as usual will continue to see my daughters graduate college (4yo and 5yo). Yet, if you had asked me two years ago, I would have thought that we would be worse off by now due to all the economic imbalances we have. Yet, the machine just keeps on running somehow.
How much longer? That is question.
I see an increase in demand for locally grown produce in the next few years and hope to be in a position to become a producer within the next 3 years.
IMO the best thing to do is to plan for multiple outcomes and have a way to position oneself to the best advantage regardless of what happens (ie TSHTF, depression, or business as usual).
I'm not borrowing any more money from a bank though, I can tell you that.