businesstrade.jpg

Compound Interest and the Debt Bubble

$
Daily Business Report
M A R K E T S
Mercantile
Article Archives
US Economic Forecast for 2012 and the Election Year Cycle
Shop the Local Merchant Economy
Right to Work vs Union State Economies
Rational Tariffs Lower Irrational Trade Deficits
International Business - Davos Style
Banking, Housing and Mortgages
David Stockman's Viewpoint on the Obama Budget Disaster
Regulations Harm Small Business and Protects Corporations
Gas Prices as an Indicator of Energy Costs
Governments Acting as Venture Capitalists
College Education Economics
Industrial Wind and the Production Tax Credit
Medicare and the Ryan Budget
U.S. Corporate Tax Rate Consequences
Corporate Spying and Intellectual Theft
The Foolish Exporting Natural Gas Policy
A Matter of Time for a VAT Tax
Big vs Small Bank Loans
Bankruptcy Trends in the Post Meltdown Era
Money Center Banks and Stricter Financial Oversight
Electric Power Generation under NYS Article X
Growth in the National Debt
Advantages of Chinese Trade Policy
Unemployment as a Lifestyle
Immigration Hurts American Employment
Bank for International Settlements on Big Banks
Small Business Assault from Obamacare
Compound Interest and the Debt Bubble
The Federal Centralization Economy
Parking Offshore Profits Hurt the Domestic Economy
The Record of Olympic Economics
Financial Algorithmic Trading
Goldman Sachs Above the Law
The MF Global Magical Mystery Tour
Destroying Internet Freedom by Taxation
The Permanent Unemployment Economy
Jackals of Jekyll Island - Federal Reserve Audit
QE3 Blowing Up the Debt Bubble
Riots Over Rotten Apple Mania
Gap Between College Costs and Inflation
Counterproductive Minimum Wage Mandates
Derivative Meltdown and Dollar Collapse
Central Banks Game Plan: One World Currency
European Commission Single Supervisory Mechanism
Lunacy of FEMA Hurricane Insurance Subsidy
Taxmageddon Holding Hands while Jumping Off the Cliff
The Direction of Equities in the Obama Economy
Is it FAIR to Tax the Rich out of Business?
California Dreaming: Bankruptcy, Pensions and Taxes
Pay Differential - Private Sector and Federal Government
Long History of HSBC Money Laundering
Swan Dive of 2013 Economy
Federal Reserve May Pause Quantitative Easing
The Economics of Sequestration
The state-owned Bank of North Dakota
Chinese Takeover with Free Trade Zones
Low Interest Rates Impoverish Savers
Bond Bubble Expectations
Currency Wars - Race to the Bottom
Government Subsidizes and Bankrupt Companies
Economics of Gun Control
Refuse to Buy or Sell with the Federal Government
The Cyprus Great Bank Robbery
Keystone Pipeline Blockage
Move Over IMF for the BRICS Development Bank
Obama Budget Proposes Cuts to Social Security and Medicare
The Risk and Reward of Bitcoins
Farm Supports and Social Welfare
Internet and Sale Taxes Dialectic
The Warren Buffett House of Cards
IRS as a Political Hit Squad
Revenue Budget Projections
Google and the NSA Connection
The Roubini - Faber Debate
Hydrofracking Boom or Bust
Goldman Sachs - first learn, then earn and serve
The Federal Reserve after Ben Bernanke
Implications of a Pyrrhic Real Estate Rebound
The New Normal: Part-Time Employmentyment
U.S. & Europe Trade Deal Honeymoon
Detroit City Bankruptcy Blues
J P Morgan and Commodity Manipulation
Strange Business Success Ventures
Business of Evangelism Religion
NFL Marketing Machine
Privacy Gone on Offshore Assets
Chinese Banks Quasi Government Institutions
Forecasts of a Doomed Economy
Financial Meltdown Five Years After
Corporate Profits and Worker Unemployment
Renminbi Soon to Be a Reserve Currency
Rehypothecation of Collateral
IMF Proposal to Tax Bank Deposits
Transfers excluded, JP Morgan Chase is Wired
Insurance Companies Profit from Obamacare
Climate Change by Executive Order
Economics of Non-governmental Organizations
Why Business Franchising is a Bad Deal
The Business of the Christmas Season
China Becomes Largest Trading Nation
Obamacare as a Jobs Killer
Does a 100 Trillion Debt Total Matter?
Underground Commerce is the Real Economy
Technology and the Future of Jobs
The Japanese Debt Economy
Individual Wealth in Perspective
Inevitability of Financial Bubbles
Russian Sanctions Backfire
Is the Dollar and Equities Ready to Crash?
Economic Reality of a Wealth Tax
How stable is the Bond Market?
Are International Stocks Safer than U.S. Equities?
David A. Stockman - The Great Deformation
Chinese and Japanese Deflationary Economies
Euro Crisis Deepens
Russia's SWIFT Settlement Alternative
The Swiss will not have more EU QE
Business of Global Warming Fraud
Economics of NYS Southern Tier Secession
Fear of IRS Tax Audits Diminish
Where is Global Economic Growth?
Government's share of minimum wage increase
Economic Growth Is Impossible
Replace the Business Cycle with Permanent Poverty
Who benefits from the lifting of Iranian sanctions?
Who Wins in a Currency Devaluation War?
Labor Day when there is no work
Municipal Bankruptcies and more on the way
Undeniable Social Security Demographics
Grinch that stole Christmass
Business Mergers Soar in 2015
The Chinese Market Crash
Driverless Vehicles Powered by Artificial Intelligence
U.S. Banks Ready for Negative Interest Rates?
International Trade Sinks with the Baltic Dry Index
SunEdison Green Power Bankruptcy Inevitability
Another Record Collection from Federal Taxes
Absurd Valuations on Unprofitable Tech Stocks
BREAKING ALL THE RULES
BREAKING ALL THE RULES Forum
BATR Index
hub
Corporatocracy
Forbidden History
Reign of Terror
Stuck on Stupid
Totalitarian Collectivism
Global Gulag
Inherent Autonomy
Radical Reactionary
Strappado Wrack
View from the Mount
Solitary Purdah
Dueling Twins
Varying Verity
911 War of Terror
HOPE

compoundinterest.gif

Compound Interest and the Debt Bubble

"Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. He who understands it, earns it ... he who doesn't ... pays it." Albert Einstein

Without a comprehensive understanding in this axiom of the financial universe, much of public policy and finance is incomprehensible. The different positions of the borrower and the lender is obvious, but the notion that one can earn enough interest on savings to maintain the purchasing power of the principle is a bygone fantasy in the era of low interest rates.

Here is how
compound interest works for the depositor.

An amount of $1,500.00 is deposited in a bank paying an annual interest rate of 4.3%, compounded quarterly. What is the balance after 6 years?

The balance after 6 years is approximately $1,938.84.

Contrast the difference between being the lender to that of the debtor and you get a very different result.

A
Dr. Cabler provides this account.

"If someone came up to you on the street and said they would give you a crisp, new $20 bill, and the only stipulation is that you give them back $40 tomorrow, you’d probably tell them just what they could do with that $20 bill.

Anyone you ask would say that’s a bad deal, but when you demonstrate that borrowing money by using credit cards and consumer debt is exactly the same thing, these same people (who are in debt) give a puzzled look, and for some a light turns on and they begin to understand. But for others, they just refuse to see that debt, and the compound interest that comes with it is a major drag on your finances and ends up making your poorer ever single time."

Therefore, the simple distinction between earning next to zero interest on your bank deposits, while paying usury rates on your consumer debt charge cards or lines of credit, is a guaranteed formula for personal bankruptcy.

Now deepen this dilemma with the insights learned from the national Ron Paul effort to educate the public on the horrors of the privately owned Federal Reserve System.

Eric Padden clarifies the sham that underpins the monetary fraud that enslaves the entire planet, in Inflation explained - Dollar Bubble - Government Debt Bubble.

"Most people do not understand that we don’t just print the money via the Fed. We borrow it at interest and it is that compounding interest that is the root cause of the enormous government debt bubble we have today.

The most frustrating part of this to me is that it is completely unnecessary. Our currency should simply be created through our treasury as described in our constitution without interest. In this way we could pay off our deficit in no time and build a healthy economy.

Every since the Fed ( a private banking cartel with its roots in Europe ) hi jacked our economy in 1913 the dollar has lost 98% of its purchasing power due to the constant, systematic increase in our money supply. Ever increasing Inflation is the only possible result of the Feds monetary policy."

This simple and accurate explanation goes unknown to the average indebted serf who is desperately carving out a meager existence. This strangle hold burden built upon debt created fiat money is an engineered system of theft and subjugation. The obligation bubble that grows exponentially without any prospects of paying the interest without the infusion of higher levels of new Federal Reserve debt is the fundamental mechanism that guarantees an ultimate default.

The eternal debate is between the natural deflationary forces seeking to cleanse the excessive leverage and the hyperinflation urges to keep infusing the next fix of liquidity to band-aid a terminal Ponzi scheme of larceny. In either case, the underpinning objective is to get out of paper debt obligations or claims on loans that can no longer be serviced.

Transferring out of accounting ledger entries into solid assets requires a foreclosure on the entire financial debtor economy. Do not be fooled that a recovery is possible. Rational people intuitively struggle to pay off or down their debt. However, the dramatic forces of fractional reserve banking provide the financial power to throw the system into receivership.

Michael Hudson in
Productivity, The Miracle of Compound Interest and Poverty, makes a case why the poor always gets poorer.

"And indeed today, markets are shrinking in many countries. But not because people are saving out of prosperity. The jump in reported "saving" in the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) in recent years has resulted from repaying debts. It is a negation of a negation – and hence, a statistical "positive."

Paying off a debt is not the same as building up liquid savings in a bank. It reflects something that only a very few economists have worried about over the past century: the prospect of debts rising faster than income, leading to financial crashes that transfer property from debtors to creditors, and indeed polarize society between what the Occupy Wall Street movement calls the 1% and the 99%.

"Wealth creation" by debt leveraging – that is, asset-price inflation – was celebrated as a post-industrial economy, as if this were a positive and natural evolution. But in reality it is a lapse back into a rentier economy, and even into a kind of neofeudalism. The post-2008 bailouts have vested a new rentier elite to lord it over the 21st century, thanks to the fact that most gains since 1980 have gone to the 1% – mainly the financial sector, not to the 99%."

This is not simply a class struggle equation that blames the much-maligned 1%. The basic banking racket is the cause of the continuous bust cycles. During each of these designed implosions, the international banksters consolidate their control over the finances of their indentured customers.

As the final bubble approaches, an eruption of volcanic propositions is poised to realign the entire monetary structure of world commerce. Face facts, the banks are ready to foreclose on the assets they do not already dominate.

James Hall – July 11, 2012

Discuss or comment about this essay on the BATR Forum

a free speech forum open to the public
BATRforum.gif

This site  The Web 

marketslogo.gif

tumblr page counter