Jan 9 2011

A lesson in college debt – Student loan debt increasing at a rate of $170,000 per minute. Student loan debt will hit $1 trillion in 2012. For-profit schools take the place of subprime mortgages.

College loosely defined is an educational institution or as we are now seeing in the US a place where young people go to dive into a pool of debt.  A college education was never a guarantee to a lucrative and well paying career.  In a time when the middle class was more robust college was a major bonus for those who had the desire to attend.  Affordable state colleges and non-impacted community colleges allowed virtually anyone with a desire to learn an avenue to educational growth.  If your desire was to transfer to a four year university the path was easily accessible.  Vocational programs did not require multiple year waiting lists like many nursing programs do today for example.  A college degree certainly offered a solid advantage and more importantly did not put students into life altering debt.  That is the major difference in this modern era of mega debt.  In the past college cost more in time than it did in money.  Today you have it costing more with student loan debt passing the $880 billion mark and far outpacing the $796 billion in outstanding revolving debt that includes credit card debt.  Many parts of higher education are now in a bubble similar to the housing market.

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Jan 6 2011

FDIC and US banking industry continued insolvency – 11 percent of US banks are labeled as troubled financial institutions. CEO on the record of exporting American middle class.

The US banking system is largely a system based on consumer confidence.  You would require the confidence of Zeus if you had $13.3 trillion in assets backed by an FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) that is practically insolvent.  Even as the stock market solidly recovers to the green the state of the average American’s financial health is in jeopardy.  1 out of 3 Americans has zero in retirement savings so the hope is that somehow Social Security will be around or maybe there is no longer term strategy since they are merely struggling with daily financial existence.  There seems to be this premature joy about the preliminary jobs report but much of this was based on low wage temporary retail hiring for the holidays.  Not much a surprise there and did they not get the memo that 14 million Americans are still unemployed?  However the banking industry is still in serious problems.  Over 11 percent of all US banks are considered “troubled financial institutions” based on the optimistic FDIC quarterly report.  The numbers are of course a lot worse but thanks to the suspension of mark to market banks can pretend empty shopping malls in the barren desert or flailing condos are somehow valuable assets.  The FDIC just like much of the big banking industry players is performing a dance of economic delusion.

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Jan 4 2011

Federal Reserve welcomes a Brave New Economy – how the Fed is robbing the public in open daylight. Maiden Lane Special Purpose Vehicles purchased toxic mortgages like option ARMs and commercial real estate.

The global economy seems to be facing a Brave New World envisioned by Aldous Huxley where the world is operating under a command economy and all citizens are psychologically conditioned from to birth to value consumption.  The Federal Reserve is the ultimate spend more than you earn machine.  It is amazing that a few hours after the US national public debt crossed the $14 trillion threshold (yes, we crossed this line on the last day of the year) that this euphoria is setting in only because people spent money during the holiday season.  “Ending is better than mending” is a platitude repeated in Brave New World.  It would seem that with credit cards burning holes in wallets many went ahead and spent money they did not have this holiday season.  The conditioning has been strong and has provided substantial distraction from the bigger heist committed by the Federal Reserve.

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Dec 31 2010

Credit card withdrawal – Banks pull the plug on consumer revolving debt. Credit card debt outstanding contracts from nearly $1 trillion to $800 billion. Bankruptcies on the rise even with tougher bankruptcy laws.

When people talk about the credit bubble they typically refer to the housing bubble and the trillions of dollars of debt secured by real estate. Yet the credit bubble also applies to student loans, government debt, and those pesky wallet hugging credit cards.  The American economy has embraced credit cards as quickly as apple pie or a weekend picnic at the park.  During this holiday season many people pulled out the plastic and loaded up on debt to face a hefty bill come 2011.  While banks have generously gorged at the taxpayer bailout trough, they have slowly put a tourniquet on the amount of credit Americans can access.  In other words banks have applied standards to American consumers that they are not willing to adhere to themselves.  The total amount of credit card debt outstanding has contracted vigorously since the debt crisis emerged.

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