by shortonsense » Sun 15 Nov 2009, 12:09:01
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AirlinePilot', '
') I'm sure 1982 was bad, but the destruction in asset wealth both tangible and intangible this time FAR outweighs anything since GD1 and we are nowhere near out of the woods yet. Unless of course you are OF2, AntiDoomer, or SOS.
I don't know Airline, if someone buys into the "gee haven't Americans been stupid with their credit fueled spree" over the past decade, I'm not sure I assign any connotation to your lack of credit expansion other than YEE HAH!!
Seriously, we had an asset bubble. A good one. Its been punctured, and I have a tough time buying into the concept that this is a BAD thing, and then trying to use this assumption to claim it makes the current recession ( or not ) worse than the one in 1982. Its about time people got a decent smack in the face for being ignorant enough to think that market cycles only go up, or that real estate investing is a surefire hit.
Certainly I've been watching the credit available to the average consumer ( defining myself as an average consumer ) over the past 18 months now, and certainly rates have gone up, and certainly the lending practices I have been familiar with over the past decade have changed from the larger entities ( GMAC and such ) to smaller and local ones, like a decent local bank or credit union.
But it hasn't been a BAD thing, its just been a change, rates are slightly higher for the same types of products ( cars mostly ) and a credit card or two has tried to zap me with those "gee lets raise his rates for fun!" routines which you see on the nightly news. But I don't know...I don't think any of this is BAD, its just more similar to the old days, and people are perhaps unhappy with the lack of low interest, high octane fuel being pumped into the economy at the consumer level drying up...I say its a good thing and maybe we should listen better to our parents and grandparents who learned their lessons during the REAL depression.