Advertise On EU-Digest

Annual Advertising Rates

10/3/11

Debt Jubilee could solve the economic crises

The idea of substantial debt restructurings and a haircut for bondholders has been raised by financial pundits, including Barry Ritholtz and Chris Whalen, two popular analysts and bloggers.

Renowned economist Stephen Roach, currently non-executive chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, has gone a step further, calling for Wall Street to get behind what others have called a “Debt Jubilee” to forgive excess mortgage and credit card debt for some borrowers. The notion of a Debt Jubilee dates back to biblical Israel where debts were forgiven every 50 years or so. In an August appearance on CNBC, Mr. Roach said debt forgiveness would help consumers get through “the pain of de-leveraging sooner rather than later.”

But it’s not just the liberal economists and doom-and-gloom financial analysts calling for a great haircut. Even some institutional investors, who might suffer some of the impact of debt reductions on their portfolios, are seeing a need for a creative solution to the mess.

EU-Digest

1 comment:

Jim Briggs said...

While recent stock market troubles may have prompted economists to call for a "debt jubilee" or a "bondholders haircut", debtors in the third world have been calling for a jubilee for decades.

In America: governments, businesses, individuals are now buried under a mountain of debt. A mountain of debt that will never be repaid.
Who will borrow when they can't make the payments on the debt that they have already? The math alone calls for a system reset, a debt jubilee.

Investors are already losing... in a rigged monetary casino that rewards usury, speculation, and currency manipulation while looting main street.

There is a moral principle that debts should be honored. That is, debts between businesses that buy and sell real products, not bundled ponzi schemes, debts between individuals, between friends and businesses that know each other to be rational and moral, debts based on investments where there is a rational expectation of return.

There is also a moral principle that unjust debts should be cancelled, and usury legislated against. Debts that are 'odious', debts based on fraud, debts to dictators, debts arranged by oligarchs without the consent of the general population (the 99 percent who have been left out of the equation), debts based upon compound interest upon compound interest, that should have been written off long ago, the debts need to be cancelled in a general jubilee.